A Killer Came Knocking

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by S. B. Caves




  A Killer Came Knocking

  Table of Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Dedication

  Epigraph

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Chapter Thirty-One

  Chapter Thirty-Two

  Chapter Thirty-Three

  Chapter Thirty-Four

  Chapter Thirty-Five

  Chapter Thirty-Six

  Chapter Thirty-Seven

  Chapter Thirty-Eight

  Chapter Thirty-Nine

  Chapter Forty

  Chapter Forty-One

  Chapter Forty-Two

  Chapter Forty-Three

  Chapter Forty-Four

  Chapter Forty-Five

  Chapter Forty-Six

  Chapter Forty-Seven

  Chapter Forty-Eight

  Chapter Forty-Nine

  Chapter Fifty

  Chapter Fifty-One

  Chapter Fifty-Two

  Epilogue

  Acknowledgements

  Copyright

  For Benicio. Love you, son.

  Things will go wrong in any given situation, if you give them a chance.

  ─ Murphy’s Law

  Chapter One

  The boy had grown into an ugly man.

  He lumbered along with the shopping trolley, a creased, too-small polo shirt pulled tight over his rounded shoulders and gut. Patchy stubble sprouted over his face, as coarse as Velcro. A chunky gold bracelet hung from his thick wrist; a gaudy contrast to the dull, illegible tattoos that crawled up his arms.

  Jack might not have recognised him at all were it not for the eyes. Those speckled green eyes were like emeralds thumbed into a lump of unbaked dough, his stare piercing and effortlessly intimidating. The man had only glanced at him in passing, but it had been long enough. Beads of sweat burst through Jack’s pores.

  Placing his basket on the ground, Jack reached out to the nearest shelving unit for support. The supermarket swam around him, his throat closing. He couldn’t seem to take the gulp of air that he needed and his heart thumped angrily in his chest. My god, I’m going to have a stroke, he thought wildly, as the pressure built up inside his head.

  Gradually, the dizziness dissipated, and the supermarket snapped back into focus. He picked up his basket, inhaling as deeply as his lungs would permit, and staggered on after the man with the green eyes.

  He caught up with him in the pasta aisle. Jack touched the bulge on the breast of his jacket, feeling for the folding knife he kept handy for slashing boxes open at the warehouse.

  The man stopped, and ten feet behind him, Jack did the same. The man scanned the range of pastas, idly handling a few packets before settling for fusilli. As he tossed the packet in his trolley, he abruptly turned and stared directly at Jack, frowning.

  Jack whipped his head toward the sauces on the shelves in front of him, making a pantomime of choosing before picking something at random. The glass felt slippery in his hand and he nearly dropped it, but the weight of the knife in his jacket pocket reassured him. He looked back over at the man, but he was gone.

  Jack hurried down the aisle and emerged near the busy checkouts into oncoming traffic. His thighs crashed into a woman’s trolley with a clang, and she yelped in fright as he muttered an apology, stepping around her. It was almost five in the afternoon and the supermarket was bustling with mums and school kids, the aisles clogged. Jack spun around, scanning the herd, but couldn’t find his man. He picked his way through the congestion, relieved when he found him again a few aisles down.

  The boy who had ruined Jack’s life was hiding somewhere in the blubber of this grotesque man. A single drop of sweat trickled down the trail of Jack’s spine, and he shuddered. The supermarket lights were too bright, the music too loud. Jack’s fist tightened around the handle on the basket until the plastic dug into his calloused palm.

  I could kill you now, Jack thought, transfixed by the fold of flesh that spilled out from the man’s shirt as he reached for something on the top shelf. He stared at the shiny stretch marks on the man’s love handle and thought, I could walk up to you and stab my knife into your neck, twist the blade, and you’d be dead before anyone could staunch the wound.

  There was something vaguely disappointing in seeing what the boy had become. Killing this pitiful man would almost be doing him a favour. He owed him a debt, and Jack had waited twelve years for repayment. He intended to savour every last ounce of misery that he could squeeze out of him, even if he went to jail for the rest of his life.

  The man rounded the corner and grunted as he waddled down toward the tills. The queues were long and sprawled into the aisles. The man with the green eyes said, ‘Fucking hell,’ loud enough to earn a glare from the woman waiting in front of him.

  Jack lingered by the magazines, submerged in the cacophony of beeps from the scanners. He was hot all over, and his stomach felt watery, as though a surge of vomit might rise up his throat at any moment.

  Over the hubbub of the supermarket, Jack saw the man mouth something to the checkout lady. It was probably a complaint if his facial expression was anything to go by. The grooves of his furrowed brow looked deep enough to plant crops in, and the crescents of tiredness carved beneath his eyes aged him another decade. If Jack’s maths was correct, the man would be pushing thirty by now, and yet he looked closer to Jack’s age.

  At forty-five years old, Jack Bracket was physically stronger than he had been in his twenties, but of course he’d never so much as lifted a dumb-bell before that night when the boy came knocking. Now Jack could bench-press over a hundred kilos if his back was co-operating. Years of hauling boxes had played havoc with his sciatic nerve. He might be strong, but one sneeze or cough at the wrong moment and he’d be laid up for a week.

  Still, he stood trembling at the sight of this oafish, ungainly man who looked as though he’d struggle to tie his own laces. But no, that wasn’t quite correct. The man may have been overweight and unco-ordinated, but he did look strong – not gym strong perhaps, but he had the kind of natural, rugged strength that you could only inherit.

  The ground felt spongy beneath Jack’s feet as he followed the man through the automatic doors and out of the supermarket. He gave him a few yards of slack, but wanted to be closer, close enough to pick up his scent, to hear him breathing. A low throb of panic tingled through him for fear that he might lose his target again, that the man would evaporate among the other shoppers. All those years of fruitless searching, harassing the police for updates, pleading with them to widen and extend their efforts, all for nothing. Then, by chance, he literally bumps into the boy in broad daylight and it was all too convenient. The unreality of it clung to him like a fever.

  Jack’s footsteps echoed through the basement-level car park. He blinked sweat out of his eyes, fumbled for his keys, and made
a beeline for his van. From his vantage point behind the pillar, he watched the man shuffling up to a spotless black Mercedes that looked as though it had just rolled out of the showroom.

  Jack waited for the man to pull out of his spot and then drove after him.

  Chapter Two

  As soon as Jack got home, he retrieved his address book from the bottom of his sock drawer and thumbed it open to Emily’s number. The ink on the page was faded, the paper slightly crinkled. He returned downstairs and located the house phone. How long had it been since he’d made a call on this thing? He couldn’t remember. May always called him, but that was the only time his phone ever rang. He’d had a mobile once upon a time, but he couldn’t get on with it; didn’t like the ritual of buying credit, charging it. Too much hassle.

  With the receiver nestled between his head and shoulder, he squinted at the number and stabbed the buttons with his finger. In the seconds before the call connected, he tried to remember the last time he had spoken to Emily. She’d called him to see what his Christmas plans were. She and her housemates were having a little gathering for Christmas lunch and, knowing he’d probably spend the day alone, invited him to come over. He’d told her that he might, but as they said their goodbyes, they both knew he wouldn’t make an appearance. That had to be at least five, maybe six years ago. Definitely before he met May.

  ‘Hello?’ Emily’s painfully familiar voice answered, and in that instant, Jack forgot why he was phoning.

  ‘Hello, is that Emily?’

  A pause. ‘Yes. Can I ask who’s calling please?’

  ‘It’s Jack.’ He switched the receiver to his other ear and wiped his hands on his jeans.

  He was about to narrow down the list of Jacks by offering his surname when she said, ‘Jack? Oh my goodness. How are you? It’s been so long.’

  ‘Yes, yes it has,’ he said, surprised at how easily a smile now came to his face. Christ, it was so nice speaking to Emily. Why on earth had he not kept in touch? ‘I hope I’m not disturbing you, am I?’

  ‘No, definitely not.’ It sounded like she was smiling too. ‘This is a very welcome reprieve from the dishes.’

  ‘Oh good…’ He trailed off to silence, could hear her TV on in the background. ‘I… um, well, I was wondering if we might be able to meet up.’

  ‘Yes, that sounds great,’ she replied eagerly. There had been no lingering moment of uncertainty, no pause to dredge up an excuse. ‘What’s your schedule like? What are you up to these days?’

  ‘I’m still at the warehouse, but I sort of make my own hours, so I’m flexible.’

  ‘Great.’ But now there was a pause. The TV in the background muted. ‘Is everything OK, Jack?’

  He allowed a couple of breaths before replying. He regretted not rehearsing the call beforehand, but knew that if he had, he probably wouldn’t have picked up the phone in the first place. He would’ve found some way to talk himself out of it, to convince himself that he was wrong about the man at the supermarket.

  ‘I have something I need you to see. Are you around tomorrow at all?’

  * * *

  Emily was waiting for him on the doorstep. To Jack, it looked as though she had hardly aged, but then again, he was well overdue a visit to the optician. And the dentist. And the doctor, ignoring their letters about a prostate examination. May was right; he really did need to start taking better care of himself.

  He brought the van to a halt and gave her a wave. Emily’s face brightened. She shoved her hands into her jacket pockets and made her way to the passenger side. She opened the door, inviting a gust of bitter cold wind into the van.

  ‘You look well,’ she said, leaning over for a hug.

  ‘You too. I was literally just thinking that you haven’t changed a bit.’

  ‘You must be joking,’ she laughed and touched her hair self-consciously.

  ‘No, seriously. You look just like—’ He stopped. It was too difficult to say what he had wanted to. She’d picked up on it too, and her eyes darted away from his. ‘You look good. So? What’re you up to these days?’ He pulled away from the kerb. The lavender sky was darkening to plum. It’d be full dark in less than an hour.

  ‘I’m working for a charity at the minute. It’s only temp work, but’ – she shrugged – ‘the money’s good. It’s an eight-month contract, so I’ll be looking for something else soon. Other than that, just more of the same really.’

  He nodded. ‘I’ve got the heating on. Let me know if you’re too hot.’

  ‘No, it’s lovely, thank you.’ She touched the heater. ‘It’s been freezing lately.’

  ‘Oh, I know. The mornings are the worst.’

  They slipped into silence. It didn’t feel awkward the way it probably should have. When he pulled up at a traffic light, Emily said, ‘Where are we going?’

  ‘Not far. It shouldn’t take more than half an hour, forty-five minutes at the most. That OK?’

  ‘Yeah, sure. I’m allowed to stay out late tonight.’

  Jack wasn’t sure what she meant. When she didn’t elaborate, he said, ‘Are you seeing anyone at the moment?’

  ‘Roger. Been about two years now. We’re thinking of getting engaged, then maybe moving in together after Christmas.’

  ‘Really? That’s nice. You going to buy in London, or…’

  ‘No, we’re not buying,’ she laughed. ‘I’d need to win the Lottery before I could think about doing that. We live together at the minute, but you know, housemates and things, it gets crowded. How about you?’

  ‘No plans to move.’

  ‘No. I meant, are you seeing anyone?’

  ‘Oh, sorry. Yes. Her name’s May, but she was born in June. I always mention that to her and she hates it. She has a sister called April who was born in January, if you can believe that.’

  Emily laughed. It was a nice, musical sound. ‘You been together long?’

  ‘Going on four years,’ he said, nodding. ‘She’s a good woman. You’d like her.’

  They filled in the gaps for the rest of the journey. Emily hadn’t really settled in a career these past few years, but instead just bounced around from job to job, doing enough to pay her share of the rent. The minute she truly started to resent a job, she jacked it in without a second’s hesitation. He admired that about her; she didn’t get tied down to something she didn’t like, which he supposed was why she’d never been married. She broke off her last engagement, to Doug (a name Jack remembered because she’d signed a couple of Christmas cards from the two of them), about eight years prior because they ran out of things to say to each other. ‘And to be honest,’ she added, ‘I’m not completely sold on the idea of moving in with Roger, just in case things go pear-shaped. But I have to grow up some time, don’t I?’

  ‘Don’t be so hard on yourself.’

  ‘It’s true though, isn’t it? I mean, I’m thirty-eight soon, unmarried, no children, renting with a bunch of stragglers. The house is like a hippy commune. It’s like I never moved on from student life. Not exactly a picture of success.’

  ‘But are you happy?’ Jack glanced at her briefly.

  Emily made a clicking noise with her tongue, mulling it over. ‘I’m not unhappy, let’s put it like that.’

  ‘I guess that’s fair enough.’

  ‘What about you? Are you happy?’

  ‘I’m…’ He was about to say something convoluted but stopped himself. ‘I don’t know. I don’t think it’s an easy question to answer really. Let’s just say I have my good days and I have my not so good days.’

  Jack turned into the road leading to the Frazier Avenue estate. Street lights lined the walkways, bleaching the pavement with their ghostly glow. Jack parked in front of a tall, grim tower block barnacled with satellite dishes, and shut off the engine. The sound of a dog barking somewhere in the distance bounced off the buildings.

  ‘This it?’

  ‘Yeah,’ Jack said over the ticking of the cooling engine.

  ‘OK. So what are we
doing here?’

  Jack reached into the glove compartment and withdrew a bottle of dark rum that he’d bought specially for this outing. He handed it to her. ‘You still drink, don’t you?’

  ‘Rum? Are we going to a party?’

  ‘No. But take a few sips anyway. Trust me.’

  She eyed him quizzically and then uncapped the bottle and took a large gulp without grimacing. When she tried to hand the bottle to him, he shook his head. ‘No. Keep hold of it.’

  ‘All right. What’s this all about?’

  Jack flexed his fingers. He struggled to swallow before saying, ‘Yesterday when I was shopping, I saw a man I recognised. He had these green eyes, these unmistakeable green eyes.’

  ‘Jack…’

  ‘Please, let me finish. I recognised the man because he was the one that killed Kate.’ It sounded strange coming from his lips, a thought that’d brewed in his mind like a storm cloud for over twenty-four hours. He expected to be interrupted again, and when he wasn’t, he continued. ‘As soon as I saw his face I knew it was him. He’s older now, obviously, but except for a bit of weight and a beard, he’s exactly the same. Same green eyes. Same pig nose.’

  Emily took another nip from the rum and left the cap off.

  ‘I watched him go to his car, and then tailed him to that building,’ Jack pointed through the windscreen toward the tower block. ‘The man who killed your sister lives there. I followed him into the building and kept behind him when he went up the stairs. He went to the eighth floor and that’s where I left him, but I held the landing door open so I could see which flat he was going to.’ He exhaled, suddenly breathless from the tale. ‘Emily, I know where he lives.’

  She didn’t speak for a long time. She just sat there, chewing it over, sipping from the bottle.

  ‘How can you be sure it’s him?’

  ‘The eyes. I could never forget those eyes, Emily.’

  ‘That doesn’t mean it’s him. There are a lot of people with green eyes.’

  Yes, there are, Jack thought absently. ‘I could never forget his face. If he was standing in a crowd of a thousand people that all looked similar, I’d be able to pick him out. Ever since that day, it’s all I’ve ever thought about. It’s him, Emily.’

 

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