Dead Simple
had severe brain damage. Likely to be a vegetable if he survived. Mark swallowed, his mouth dry. He’d known Josh since they were thirteen, at Varndean School. Luke and Michael, too, of course. Pete and Robbo came later: they’d met in a pub in Brighton one boozy night in their late teens. Like Mark, Josh was methodical and ambitious. And he was good-looking. Women always flocked around Josh the same way they went for Michael. Some people had natural gifts in life, others like himself had to struggle every inch of the way. But even at the young age of twenty-eight, Mark had seen enough of life to know that nothing stays the same for very long. If you were patient, if you bided your time, sooner or later you’d get a lucky break. The best predators were the most patient ones.
Mark had never forgotten a wildlife documentary he’d seen on television, filmed in a bat cave in South America. Some tiny micro-organism fed on the bat guano on the floor of the cave; a maggot ate the micro-organism; a beetle ate the maggot; a spider ate the beetle; then a bat ate the spider. It was a perfect food chain. The bat was smart, all it had to do was shit and wait.
His mobile rang. It was Michael’s mother, her third call to him this afternoon and her umpteenth today. He remained as unfailingly polite and friendly as ever. There was still no news of Michael, he told her. It was terrible, he really had no idea what had happened to him, the plan had been simply to go on a pub crawl, he could not imagine where Michael might be now.
‘Do you think he could be with another woman?’ Gill Harrison asked in her timid, gravelly voice. He’d always got on quite well with her, in as much as it was possible. Her husband had gassed himself before he and Michael had met, and Michael said she had retreated into a shell and stayed there ever since. From the photos of her around the house she had been quite beautiful when younger, a blonde bombshell. But ever since Mark had known her, her hair was prematurely grey, her face dry and creased from chain smoking, her spirit withered.
‘I guess anything is possible, Mrs Harrison,’ Mark replied. He thought for a moment, choosing his words carefully. ‘But he adored Ashley.’
‘She’s a lovely girl.’
‘She is, could do with her back here – the best damned secretary we ever had.’ He toyed with his mouse for a moment, moving the cursor idly around the screen. ‘But you know drink sometimes makes men do irrational things—’
As the words came out he instantly regretted them. Hadn’t Michael once told him that his father had been drunk when he killed himself?
There was a long silence, then she said, very placidly, ‘I think he’d have had long enough to sober up by now. Michael’s a good and a loyal person. Whatever he might have done drunk, he would never hurt Ashley. Something must have happened to him, otherwise he would have called. I know my son.’ She hesitated. ‘Ashley is in a terrible state. Will you keep an eye on her?’
‘Of course.’
There was another silence then, ‘How is Josh?’
‘Unchanged. Zoe’s staying in the hospital. I’ll go back there and sit with her – as soon as I’ve finished in the office.’
‘You’ll call me the moment you hear anything?’
‘Of course.’
He hung up, stared down at his desk, picked up a document, and something caught his eye beneath it. His Palm.
And as he stared at it, cold fear swept through him. Oh shit, he thought. Oh shit, oh shit, oh shit.
16
After leaving Detective Superintendent Grace, Glenn Branson headed back across town in the pool car he had taken, a blue Vauxhall that reeked of disinfectant – the result of someone either throwing up or bleeding in it last time it had been used. He parked it back in its space in the lot behind the bland edifice of Brighton police station, and walked into the rear entrance and up the stone staircase, to the office he shared with ten other detectives.
It was 6.20; his shift technically finished every day this week at 6, but he was swamped with paperwork after a major drugs bust on Monday, and had permission to do overtime – and he needed the extra cash. But he was going to do only one hour today, until 7. Ari was going out, on another of her self-improvement courses. Mondays she did evening classes in English literature, Thursdays she did architecture. Ever since their daughter Remi had been born she’d gone into panic mode about her perceived lack of
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