Dont believe her, p.1

Don't Believe Her, page 1

 

Don't Believe Her
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Don't Believe Her


  Don’t Believe Her

  Jane Heafield

  Copyright © 2021 Jane Heafield

  The right of Jane Heafield to be identified as the Author of the Work has been asserted by her in accordance to the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

  First published in 2021 by Bloodhound Books.

  Apart from any use permitted under UK copyright law, this publication may only be reproduced, stored, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means, with prior permission in writing of the publisher or, in the case of reprographic production, in accordance with the terms of licences issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency.

  All characters in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

  www.bloodhoundbooks.com

  * * *

  Print ISBN 978-1-913942-23-6

  Contents

  Love crime, thriller and mystery books?

  Also by Jane Heafield

  Part I

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Part II

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Part III

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Acknowledgements

  A note from the publisher

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  Also by Jane Heafield

  Dead Cold

  Part I

  1

  LUCY

  You’ll get two versions of this story. But Mary is a liar. Don’t believe her. Not one word. What I’m about to tell you is the truth. And it all started with a terrible accusation…

  We weren’t expecting visitors at The Cascade, so it was a shock to get a rap on the door. I opened it to see two of my husband’s male friends, and his sister.

  I’d been with Tom for eight years, married for five, and in all that time Mary and I had never seen eye to eye. We have nothing in common except being roughly the same age: we don’t like the same music, or hobbies, or food; we’re even opposites in appearance, with Mary six inches shorter at barely five-and-a-half feet, skin pale, hair long and black. About the only thing we did agree on was a love of apple juice. And, of course, that the other woman in Tom’s life was a pain in the backside.

  I didn’t even know why we had this enemy status. I didn’t take Tom away from his family, because they lived near us, and I don’t stop him seeing his friends or indulging his hobby. I always wondered if it was because we didn’t have children. Mary was infertile, so maybe it was a sore point that she hadn’t been gifted a niece or nephew.

  Or perhaps it was because, at forty-three, I was an eyebrow-raising eighteen years his senior. But I was guessing. In eight years of antagonising me, she’d never provided an answer or even a clue as to why I rubbed her up the wrong way.

  Anyway, here she was, wearing a face I suspect she’d honed and reserved solely for me: obvious distaste at sharing the same air.

  ‘Are you here for Tom?’ I said. The door was only halfway open and I partially hid behind it, with a foot pressed against the wood as a stopper in case Mary tried to barge inside. I saw Tom’s rusty spare key in her hand; if not for my own on the inside of the locked door, she would have walked straight in.

  ‘Who else? He’s missed my calls today.’ For a petite girl as pale as a vampire, Mary had a potent anger. She was an assistant amateur football coach and Tom had told me he’d seen lads bigger than him cow before her.

  One of his friends said, ‘It’s trucker night.’

  Tom and his friends love monster trucks. Four of them – including this pair – own and operate one called Animal, and on this Sunday night it was on show at an event in Manchester, some thirty miles from The Cascade.

  The Cascade, by the way, was the name of the getaway cottage Tom and I were staying at. Cullerton, in the constituency of Chorley, Lancashire, is a tiny village off the A675, about half a mile east of Abbey Village and a few hundred metres north of Rake Brook Reservoir. Tom and I liked to rent the place a couple of times a year to unwind and usually picked rainy weekends.

  It was summer, but we’d been blessed with a very wet pair of days. When the skies soaked the land, the brook right outside the cottage turned from idyllic to manic and the noise was song-like. There was a very picturesque waterfall, hence the name Cascade.

  ‘But you weren’t supposed to come here,’ I told them, which was true. The plan had been for Tom to leave the cottage in the early evening and meet his friends at the event, since there was no point in his travelling back to Sheffield, where we, his friends and sister lived.

  ‘Well he wasn’t answering my calls, so I came to make sure he was coming,’ Mary bellowed. ‘So where is he?’

  ‘He’s…’ A loose grip of my mobile phone caused it to slip out of my hand. I bent to pick it up. ‘Tom is not available.’

  ‘What’s that mean?’ Mary jerked a thumb over her shoulder, to where Tom’s BMW 3 Series was parked on the dirt track running past the cottage. Mary’s sports utility vehicle and another car are parked near it. ‘He’s not out at all. His car’s here. Why hasn’t he been answering my calls?’

  ‘No, he actually is out. He stayed on the walk.’

  I explained. Earlier, Tom and I had crossed a makeshift bridge over Low Man Brook, a tributary of the River Darwen, and taken a stroll along a hiker’s path through the woodland, heading for a pub/restaurant called the Fox and Hound a couple of miles away. Shortly thereafter I got tired and wanted to return home, but didn’t want to ruin Tom’s hike so convinced him to go on. I said I would take the car and meet him later. I returned to the cottage without him.

  Mary took out her mobile phone and made a call. I said, ‘Don’t bother phoning Tom. He left his mobile phone here.’

  She called anyway. My uninvited guests raised their eyes skyward as we all heard the faint ringing of a mobile from the bedroom upstairs.

  Mary snorted like a bull about to charge. ‘This is the tenth time he’s not answered. I called him about midday to remind him what time we’d be here. It isn’t like him to not answer all day. I don’t like this. Is this because of the argument?’

  ‘What argument?’

  She gave another snort, but this time one of derision. ‘Don’t act all innocent. Tom told me all about it. He said you were shouting at him in the pub last night. Is this because you haven’t had your tablets?’

  Embarrassed, I glanced at Tom’s two male friends and noticed they had taken a couple of steps back, obviously perturbed at watching Tom’s sister and wife argue. ‘I wasn’t shouting at him. We had a falling out because he was smoking his vape and getting a funny look. He ignored me when I told him to put it away. It had nothing to do with my medication. Then we left, and we were fine. If we had fallen out, we wouldn’t have taken that walk this morning, would we? Couples fight, not that you’d know.’

  That barb at the end stung, I could see, but she ignored it. ‘So where is he? Did something happen at the pub to cause another falling out?’

  ‘I just told you–’

  ‘Not last night, you fool. Today. At the Fox and Hound, where you said you were going. You drove to meet him. Was there another so-called falling out there?’

  ‘I didn’t meet him. I got sidetracked. He’d already texted that if I changed my mind about meeting him, he’d see me back here later.’

  ‘Texted?’ She loaded the word with mockery. ‘His phone is right here.’

  ‘I meant he said it. On the walk, when I was about to head back. He said it to me then.’

  I could tell she didn’t like this answer, given the imperceptible shake of her head. Even Tom’s two friends looked at each other suspiciously. Mentioning a text had been a silly slip, but I knew my error now gave the impression I was lying, although why she’d assumed that was beyond me. What could I possibly be hiding?

  So I got defensive. ‘Look, why is this so hard to understand? Tom and I went for a walk this morning. I got tired and hurt my foot. I told Tom to go on without me, and he said if he didn’t see me at the Fox later, he’d see me back home.’

  ‘Okay, nice and clear, thank you,’ Mary said with sarcasm. ‘Except he went out this morning and it’s nearly eight at night. I must have misunderstood something, because I know you can’t be claiming he’s still out on that same walk.’

  ‘No, he hasn’t come back yet.’

  Tom’s two friends pulled puzzled faces and checked their watches. I knew what Mary was going to say next. ‘Tom never misses appointments, and he knew we were coming. A nd you say he’s still out from this morning? Are you sure something else didn’t happen?’

  ‘Like what? Yes, I’m sure. Maybe he forgot about the truck event.’

  That claim raised eyebrows – three sets. ‘He never misses a truck show,’ one of his friends said. Now, clearly, they were all doubting me.

  ‘Look, ask Tom when he comes back. I don’t know the answers. Maybe he’s on his way to the event right now. Maybe he was still a little annoyed at me so didn’t mention it. Which brings up a point, actually. Why did you all come here? You should be down at the event, wondering where he is. Turning up here like this you would have missed him.’

  ‘We decided to come pick him up, that’s all,’ Mary answered. ‘Good job we did, or we wouldn’t have found out something dodgy is going on.’

  ‘Nothing dodgy is going on.’ Five seconds ago I felt weighed down by their eyes, but now I only feel rising annoyance. I shouldn’t have to accept being interrogated on my own doorstep. ‘Look, Tom’s not here, so you have no reason to be. Go to the truck show and maybe you’ll find him. I’m closing the door now. Goodbye.’

  I tried to shut the door, but she stepped forward and put a hand on it. ‘Calm down. We’ll go in a minute. I need Tom’s mobile phone. There’s a number I need out of it. So you’re going to have to let me in.’

  I told her I’d go and fetch it instead. I didn’t really want to let them in, because the house was a little messy, but I made the mistake of leaving it open.

  The mobile was on the vanity desk in our bedroom. As I picked it up, I heard:

  ‘I need to use your toilet.’

  I nearly jumped out of my skin. Mary was in the doorway, having crept upstairs right behind me. She had clearly taken the open front door as an invitation to enter. I clutched the phone to my chest. ‘It’s rude to sneak behind me like that. What exactly do you need from Tom’s phone? I don’t think he’d like you snooping in his private property.’

  She almost spat at me. ‘I’m his sister. What secrets would he keep from me?’

  ‘Then I don’t want you seeing text messages between us. For all I know he’s taken sneaky pictures of me getting undressed. Tell me what you need from it and I’ll find it.’

  ‘He took a photo of an internet voucher.’

  Standing there, with the double bed between us like a barrier, I accessed his photos, and sure enough what she wanted was there. I held the device out and showed her, but kept a tight grip in case she tried to reach over the bed and snatch it. Also leaning and reaching out her arm, she took a photo of the photo with her own device.

  ‘Now I need that toilet.’

  Before I could object, she zipped into the bathroom and slammed the door. Suspicious that she might try to look around the bedroom if I left, I stayed put. Not that I had a chance to move – within a second of entry, she yanked the door open.

  ‘What’s this mess? What’s happened in here?’

  She returned inside. I moved into the doorway so I could see. She was pointing at blood. A spattering of it in a series of thin lines across the sink and the floor. She was aghast.

  ‘I thought it had been cleaned up,’ I said.

  ‘You thought you’d cleaned it up? Is this Tom’s blood? What the hell happened?’

  I moved past her so I could grab toilet paper with which to remove the mess. ‘Tom cut himself. I thought he’d cleaned it up. He said he would. I was downstairs, so I didn’t see what happened.’

  ‘So how do you know what happened?’

  I was squatting down in order to mop up the mess and she stepped closer, to tower right over me. I didn’t like my vulnerable position so stood. The top of her head didn’t even reach my nose, yet I felt trapped. I tried to step back, but the toilet was right there.

  ‘Tom cut himself on one of the taps. He came downstairs with a bandaged finger. I thought he’d cleaned it up. He said he had.’

  Mary grabbed my arm with the speed of a striking cobra. The shock caused me to drop the balled, red-stained toilet paper.

  ‘And what’s this?’ she said, lifting my arm so I could see. Right below where her stick-like fingers barely encircled half my biceps, my yellow blouse had a thin streak of blood. I stared at it in horror. ‘Is this Tom’s blood? How can it be if you were downstairs? And if he’d bandaged it already? How could it get on you?’

  I avoided her intense green eyes. I focused on the ragged bloodstain below my elbow, amazed that I had missed it all day. ‘No, that’s my blood. I had a nosebleed. That’s where I wiped it.’

  I tried to pull my arm free, but Mary had a firm grip. ‘You had a nosebleed?’ she said, mocking my claim. ‘That’s stupid. This isn’t a nose-wipe stain, it’s more like from flying blood. And no way would prim you go out in this blouse if it was stained.’

  Mary let go of my arm – more of a push away, actually – and pulled out her handkerchief and dabbed at the sink, and scrutinised the blood staining the white material. I used that moment of distraction to slip by her, to stand outside the bathroom. ‘The taps are clean,’ she said. ‘What, he cleaned the taps and left this mess on the sink and floor?’ She balled up the handkerchief and put it in her pocket.

  ‘Maybe he didn’t see the…’ I stopped, very aware how silly my answer was going to sound.

  Mary slapped at both of the taps, hard, five, six times, and even scraped the back of her hands all over them. It was a maniacal gesture. ‘And how can a tap cut you? They’re rounded and smooth. They’re not cutting me, look. You better tell me what really happened.’

  I remember thinking the same thing about the taps, so her doubt had a strong foundation. But I’d had enough of her attitude, here in my own place. ‘Well I don’t know how he cut himself, if it couldn’t have been the taps, like you so professionally demonstrated. Look, I need to tidy. Tom’s not here and you got what you wanted, so I’d like you to leave.’

  I didn’t even get time to clear the doorway. She pushed past me and headed out. I followed at a careful distance. She said nothing until she was outside, where she turned towards me as I stopped in the doorway. Tom’s friends had waited exactly where they stood. ‘Something’s not right here. Tom wouldn’t miss the truck show. You’re lying about something.’

  Time seemed to have looped. Again she stood slightly in front of her comrades, while I half-hid behind the oak front door with a foot braced to prevent it from being pushed open. I told her to go try to find Tom at the event.

  ‘Oh I will. I’ll scan every face in there. And if I don’t see him, I’m coming right back here, Lucy. And I’m bringing the police.’

  I almost dropped to my knees. ‘Why would you want the police?’

  She jerked her head as a way of telling Tom’s friends it was time to leave. ‘Come on, I’ll explain in the car.’

  As they walked away, the friends looking thoroughly confused, I called out, ‘What are you talking about, Mary? What do you mean, bring the police?’

  She didn’t answer, but I heard her say something to the pair of friends about a ‘tap’. I stayed by the door until their car had turned on the dirt road and gone. As it pulled away, all three occupants glared.

  I didn’t like that look. I didn’t like the horrible feeling I was getting. The blood and Tom’s not being here appeared a little suspicious, I had to admit, but surely they couldn’t think I’d done something to him? That I’d hurt Tom so bad he was going to miss the truck show. He was twice my size, which made the idea preposterous.

 

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