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If I Never See You Again

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by Niamh O'Connor




  ABOUT THE BOOK

  On the streets of Dublin, one woman tracks a terrifying killer.

  The Detective

  Meet Jo Birmingham – single mum, streetwise detective, and as spiky as hell.

  Recently promoted, she is one of the few female detective inspectors on the Dublin police force. But with a failed marriage behind her and two young sons at home, trying to strike the right work-life balance has run her ragged.

  The Serial Killer

  When Jo identifies the missing link in a chain of brutal killings, she comes under fierce scrutiny from her male colleagues, especially her boss and ex-husband Dan Mason. But as the body count rises, so do the body parts. As fear stalks the city, it soon becomes obvious that a serial killer is at large.

  A Chilling Game of Cat and Mouse

  And so Jo embarks on a terrifying psychological journey to find out who the killer is, and how he is choosing his victims. Soon she is involved in a deadly game in which the killer is always one step ahead. Because he knows all the rules . . .

  Contents

  Cover

  About the Book

  Title Page

  Prologue

  Monday

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Tuesday

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Wednesday

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Thursday

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Friday

  Chapter 44

  Chapter 45

  Chapter 46

  Chapter 47

  Chapter 48

  Chapter 49

  Chapter 50

  Chapter 51

  Chapter 52

  Chapter 53

  Chapter 54

  Chapter 55

  Chapter 56

  Chapter 57

  Chapter 58

  Chapter 59

  Chapter 60

  Chapter 61

  Chapter 62

  Chapter 63

  Chapter 64

  Saturday

  Chapter 65

  Chapter 66

  A Note on Separate Legal Representation

  About the Author

  Also by Niamh O’Connor

  Acknowledgements

  Copyright

  If I Never See

  You Again

  Niamh O’Connor

  Prologue

  Even locked in the boot of a speeding car, all Stuart Ball could think about was how he was going to score his next fix. He was sick, that was why. Sick when he had drugs and sick when he hadn’t. He was so used to being sick that even being folded in half in the boot of a cold and speeding car wasn’t his priority. The gear was the only thing on his mind. The first turn-on of the day was always the best.

  He tried to move his arm a bit to get at his back jeans pocket where he kept his morphine tablets. He needed his napps to stop getting sick. But his arm was jammed between his legs and a sharp, metal car jack. The car was jolting him about too much. He couldn’t budge.

  Stuart started panicking that he’d dislocated his shoulder. It was mad. He was fretting about the problems he’d have trying to score with a gammy arm instead of whatever the people who’d bundled him into the boot of a car were planning to do with him next. But what if his lighter didn’t work? It had been acting up, kept blowing out.

  He was sweating now. He liked everything right was why. His works – a spoon and lighter – were hidden in the sole of his trainer. His emergency gear was tucked in a condom up his jacksie. Lemon juice he could manage without and his belt would do as a tourniquet. But what if they didn’t stop near a Spar, where he could buy a new lighter? He wouldn’t be able to walk far with a bust shoulder.

  It must be ex-Provos driving the car, he thought. Since the ceasefire, former members of the Provisional IRA had been muscling in on everyone’s territory. Nobody else would have had the balls to burst into his ma’s flat and abduct him. He was a Skid. They ran this town. When his mates found out it would mean carnage. The Shinners thought their war was over; it had only just started, man.

  If it was them . . . he hadn’t seen who whacked the back of his head. When he first came to he couldn’t believe what was happening. He actually thought the sickness might be playing tricks on him. Then again, maybe it was the visitor who’d called to him earlier that morning asking one too many questions.

  The only thing he knew for definite was there was going to be big trouble. Their biggest mistake was taking him from his ma’s. She was from the country. She worked as a cleaner in Clerys and had never missed a day’s work in her life. She didn’t understand drugs. How did you explain horse to someone who got off on the smell of a chicken roasting on a Sunday? How did you tell your ma hurting people was easy when you needed a score? There were no words to describe a good goof. It was just a feeling. Like watching the best film you ever saw and being in it at the same time, without even having the telly on.

  Suddenly his eyes were stinging like fuck as the boot of the car opened and the light flooded in. He hadn’t even noticed the car stopping. He tried to cover them with his hands but the ex-Provos, or whoever the fuck they were, reefed him out. He was in agony. His shoulder was definitely dislocated now, if it hadn’t been earlier.

  ‘What the fuck is going on, man?’ he roared, trying to get his hand to his shoulder to push it back where it should be. When he saw the shotgun he shouted, ‘Not me bleedin’ knees, no way, man.’ But when he saw the vice the words just choked in the bottom of his neck somewhere. For the first time he wasn’t worrying about smack. He was too busy thinking about dying.

  MONDAY

  1

  Dublin Docklands. Late June. Mid-morning. Drizzle blew in from the slate-grey River Liffey across North Wall Quay and down Castleforbes Road. It smirred the hoists and jibs of a rusting old harbour gantry and coated the glass of the tilting barrel Convention Centre. Grit rising from a construction site squared off by lengths of blue-ply hoarding turned to grime. The building behind the barrier was an unfinished apartment block – abandoned, like a lot of other sites around the city, when the recession hit. Steel cables still protruded from the concrete. Clear blue plastic tape fluttered where it had come away from the seals of PVC windows and doors.

  On the eighth floor of an east-facing balcony, Detective Inspector Jo Birmingham silently cursed whatever excuse of a foreman had downed tools before erecting any protective railing around the ledges. She reckoned within a matter of seconds the surfaces would become slippery. Running her fingers through her highlighted hair, cropped at the back, Jo took another small step forward. Directly in front of her, a little girl with eyes screwed shut was perched on the ledge, holding hands with a man in a pair of dirty trainers whose lace
s were undone. His knuckles had gone white.

  ‘I want to go home,’ the child said.

  ‘We are going home, Amy,’ the man answered.

  ‘Sir . . .’ Jo called. She moved stiffly towards him, one hand stretched out. ‘Amy needs to come to me, so you and I can talk . . .’

  He gave a quick glance over his shoulder.

  Tight, confused sobs erupted and convulsed Amy’s tiny frame. ‘I want Mum,’ she said.

  ‘That bitch doesn’t want us, don’t you understand?’ he answered.

  Amy lost her footing and, with a sudden spray of gravel, was swinging from his hand. Her legs curled against the drop.

  The man’s back arched, he hauled her back quickly, shooting Jo a look that said it was her fault.

  ‘Get the fuck away!’ he warned.

  ‘Back up, Inspector, he’s losing it,’ Detective Sergeant John Foxe directed through Jo’s earpiece.

  Jo saw red. She had two sons of her own plus a broken marriage under her belt. The thought that her ex-husband could resort to something like that so as to have the last, self-pitying word in the name of love . . . Bile rose in her throat. Pulling herself together, she made some quick mental notes.

  She could see Amy was the man’s princess. She was dressed all in pink; butterfly clips held her hair off her face; she wore pretty lace-trimmed socks under sparkling Lelli Kelly sandals that cost 50 even as ‘authentic’ fakes from the street traders. Maybe too well dressed, like this is a special day.

  Advancing another hair’s breadth, she said: ‘My name is Jo Birmingham, what’s yours?’ Less than five feet separating them now. Close enough to see the way the man’s limbs jittered. Don’t let him be on crack. It was already over if he was on crack.

  ‘Dad’s name is Billy,’ Amy answered.

  Jo gave her a reassuring nod. ‘Billy, I know you love Amy. She’s beautiful. You must be very proud.’

  ‘We’re going to be together, just like old times,’ he said, almost to himself.

  Amy began to squirm. ‘Daddy, stop it,’ she said.

  A megaphone boomed from the street below. ‘Please stay still. You are at risk of falling.’

  Jo drew a breath. Recovering quickly, she inched forwards again. Four-foot gap now. Amy was pulling back from her father, now gripping her upper arm.

  ‘You’ve always protected Amy, always done your best for her.’ Jo’s voice was harder. ‘You’d never do anything to hurt her. That’s not what you want.’

  ‘I can’t leave her on her own.’ Billy was panting with exertion. ‘She needs me to keep her safe. She wouldn’t be able to cope if something happened to me.’

  Jo’s stomach lurched. ‘Ever hear a heart break, Billy?’ she asked.

  No answer.

  ‘It starts off so low in the gut, it’s hard to tell if it’s human or animal. When it rises, the word “no” is in there somewhere . . .’

  ‘Too much, Inspector,’ the earpiece warned.

  But Jo wasn’t finished. ‘You want to take your own life, Billy? Fine by me. But Amy wants to live, to have children of her own. Do you really think you’ll be up there playing happy families, watching over her, if you take all that from her? Why don’t you ask her? Ask Amy what she wants?’

  ‘Step back, Birmingham,’ Foxy remonstrated.

  ‘You coppers, you’re all the fucking same,’ Billy hissed.

  Jo could hear Foxy breathing. ‘How’s that?’ she asked, sliding her weight on to the other foot.

  ‘Persecute someone like me, someone who’s worked his whole life even when I’d have been better off on benefit. Take my missus’s word over mine soon as I put one foot wrong, and try and take everything from me. Put a barring order on me so I can’t go near the house that I paid for, and force me into supervised visits with my own kid.’

  Amy yelped.

  ‘You’re hurting her,’ Jo said.

  Billy didn’t seem to have heard. ‘And why? Because I’m an easy target, right? Your lot have got jobs for life, so what do you care about catching real criminals? You take the easy option. Threaten to lock up someone like me for not paying a television licence. Well, if you think I’m going to pay for a telly being watched in the house I’m not allowed to set foot in so my ex and her latest fancy man can cuddle up in front of Corrie, you got another think coming!’

  ‘Plasma screen, right?’ Jo asked. ‘A thirty-two-inch, is it?’

  Billy frowned.

  ‘New man in your wife’s life flash, is he?’ Jo asked. ‘Bet it’s one of those state-of-the-art home-entertainment systems, right?’

  ‘Birmingham!’ Foxy growled.

  ‘You ever think about the future, Billy?’ Jo went on quickly. ‘About what you’d really like to do with your life, I mean?’

  No answer.

  ‘Everybody has options. Sometimes people forget that. Me, I’d pack this gig in,’ Jo said. ‘If I had the choice, you know what I’d do? I’d become a stay-at-home mum. I’d give my right arm for it, do you know that? I’d do it properly, ’course. Make my own bread, pasta, jam. Go to seed? Yes please. Anything beats waking my little one at half six in the morning and handing him a slice of toast to eat in the car on the way to the crèche for breakfast. Might even get time to clean my car out, so it wouldn’t have to carry a public health warning. My idea of heaven is to get a wash of clothes dry before I have to wash them again. I don’t get time to pull them out and stick them in the dryer half the time.’

  ‘Stand down, Inspector,’ Foxy said.

  Jo pulled the plug out of her ear. ‘I’m sorry, here I am talking about me, when this is all supposed to be about you, isn’t it, Billy? I haven’t even told you yet that, until relatively recently, suicide was still considered a crime. I believe the correct legal term is felonia de se. Latin. Translated, it means if you do decide to jump, make sure you finish yourself off, because if you survive, I promise you that TV licence will be the least of your worries.’

  Billy threw Jo a look as if she’d lost it. In that instant, Jo lunged and grabbed Amy, dragging her to safety. Jo looked over her at Billy. He was squatting like a skier at the top of a slope. She gulped in horror. And then he sprang – back arched, fists curled into balls at the end of up-stretched arms.

  ‘Daddy!’

  But Billy was gone.

  2

  Billy popped his head back over the ledge. ‘No hard feelings, Sarge,’ he said, pulling himself up and disconnecting the harness.

  Jo took her trainee headset off. ‘I’m a detective inspector.’ Ideally, she’d have been able to add ‘fuck you!’, but Amy was still within earshot, so instead she added, ‘I was promoted, remember?’

  ‘’Course you were,’ Billy said with a wink.

  Jo placed her hands on her hips and looked away. It was all she could do not to wipe the smug look off his face by telling him exactly how it felt to have colleagues with lower conviction rates promoted above her head just because they’d joined the right golf club. She bet he’d never given a victim his home number, or stayed up all night to hold their hand and listen, or even dreamt of offering them a bed. Mostly she’d have liked to test his knowledge of the names of the civil servants in the Justice Department, the people whose day she prided herself on making infinitely more difficult with a phone call sounding off about yet another failing of the justice system. But Jo knew she’d have been wasting her breath. She’d only be the butt end of a joke later. And ‘fuck you’ would have felt so much better.

  She turned to face the half-dozen other gardaí on the hostage-negotiation training course, some twenty feet away, grouped behind a monitor like on a movie set, and shouted over: ‘Wrong bloody call, Foxy! And don’t get me started on the mouthpiece on the megaphone . . .’

  ‘Can I go now?’ Amy asked, tugging her arm.

  Jo knelt down on her hunkers and smiled, then waved Amy’s Garda Reserve mum over, before unhooking the little girl’s safety equipment. ‘’Course you can, sweetheart, and by the way you were absolutel
y brilliant.’

  As soon as the two were reunited, Jo headed across the balcony to Foxy, dipping sideways briefly to cup her high heels back on – unsuitable, she knew, but her one-woman stand against institutional misogyny. Her rank entitled her to be in plain clothes so she also wore skirts as a rule, though they restrained her thighs a bit when she had to run.

  Straightening up, she scanned the skyline. The city sprawled out from under the world’s tallest sculpture – the needle-shaped Spire – like it had been pinned down. During the boom, the march of theme pubs and Michelin star restaurants with original art on the walls had driven the line between the city and the suburbs further out. In her experience, the cut-off point was not a street name; it was the choice between heroin or cocaine. Charlie was as social as a handshake among the Prada-clad professionals when there was money swilling around. But now that the bubble had burst, smack was claiming whole new territories in the suburbs.

  The other members of the force dispersed rapidly as she continued on over, leaving only the slight, silver-haired John Foxe in her line of vision. ‘I had him,’ she said. ‘He’d engaged.’

  Foxy looked unconvinced. Jo sighed. She respected Foxy – he’d taken her under his wing when she was a new recruit. He was old school – grouchy, but highly principled. As the station’s ‘Bookman’, he was responsible for setting up all the major incident rooms, but his doggedness in applying the theory could be infuriating when on a job. Jo thought of herself as being the complete opposite. It was how she compensated for the gap between justice and the law. It hadn’t done her career any favours, but nothing riled her like a system that didn’t let the people most affected by the crime talk. The barristers could talk, the judge could talk, the accused could talk if they liked. But the family of a murder victim was expected to sit in court and listen while the person they’d loved and lost was assassinated all over again by the defence. If it was a headline-grabbing case, they were lucky to get a seat at all and had to stand through graphic and harrowing evidence . . .

 

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