by Sarah Hilary
To Alison Graham
Contents
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
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Acknowledgements
1
London looks so different in the daylight. Undressed somehow, indecent. And that’s before you count the people, those who belong here and the ones who never will, the lost and the found.
I’d been watching the street for over an hour when I saw her, coming out of the house. I hadn’t even known there was a house here – thinking it was all offices, restaurants and coffee shops. When last night I’d followed Joe only to lose him on this street, I’d said to myself he must have slipped into a late-night restaurant, expecting the bill to be paid by the stranger who’d picked him up earlier in the evening. Joe always attracted strangers. I’d said to myself they were hungry – Joe was always hungry – and they’d stumbled on this strip of West London with its bright lights and dirty pavements, the hot smell of cooking from kitchens. In daylight, it all made another sort of sense.
The street looked grey and tight-lipped. The girl leaving the house was the only colourful thing in it; so colourful, she hurt my eyes. I watched her swaying down the steps from the house, yellow pigtail bumping at her shoulder. Twenty-three or so, in a lilac coat and scarlet jeans, an easy smile on her lips. One of those world-at-her-feet girls, every birthday with a cake baked and candles burning, unwrapped presents lying in a welter of red ribbon. No one had ever abandoned her, or turned their back. She’d never know loneliness, never find herself without friends or hope. Hard not to feel a sharp little stab of anger at her complacency. Her life was so easy and she didn’t even know it, how suddenly the world could cave at your feet, swallow you whole.
I wondered what had happened inside the house to put that smile on her lips. Such a strange house to find hidden away here, so narrow it was nearly invisible. Three storeys of brown brick with a white wreath moulded to its door below a window of wrinkled glass. No bell to be rung; she’d raised her fist to knock. I hadn’t seen who opened the door since a lorry blocked my view, as it had last night. But now I’d seen the house, it seemed obvious to me that this was where Joe had disappeared last night. The woman who’d picked him up – she must live here. They’d been hungry, I’d got that much right, but it wasn’t food they’d wanted. In the nightclub, she’d singled Joe out, imagining he was alone. Well, he was. I’d been there in the background, but we weren’t together. Joe hadn’t noticed me following him to the club. He hadn’t noticed me in days. As for the woman, she’d had eyes for no one but Joe. The girl coming down the steps from the narrow house could be her daughter, they were so alike, each so blonde, like an over-exposed photograph. Joe’s woman had worn a belted black satin coat and high heels, showing enough skin at her throat to make you wonder whether she was wearing clothes underneath, her hair pinned up out of the way. This girl wore a pigtail tied with a black bow. She’d spent half an hour inside the house; I’d noticed her going in, and I’d seen her coming out. Six shallow steps led up to the front door. More steps led down to a basement but that was hidden behind railings, hard to see from a distance.
I’d had time to study the house from my seat in the window of the coffee shop that called itself a diner. Hungry’s, the name painted above an ancient awning. The faces of celebrities stared from the walls, actors and singers who’d gorged here on toasted sandwiches and lemon meringue pie. I couldn’t afford the pie or even a plate of toast. I’d scraped together the last of my loose change for the cup of tea I was sipping as slowly as I could. The diner was warm and greasy, smelling of bacon fat and coffee grounds. They let me sit in the window undisturbed. It’s possible they thought me a good advert with my grumbling stomach and pinched face, the face of Hungry’s. Traffic trundled past the window, indifferently. I might have been invisible for all the notice anyone took. I was used to that, it didn’t bother me, but the street did.
This street and I were old enemies. I’d walked it many times but never spied the narrow house, too busy being the eyes in the back of Joe’s head as he scored whatever he needed to get through another night, or another day. He couldn’t stand to be cold, he said, as if what he was scoring was a woolly scarf rather than a Class A drug. We’d been homeless for six weeks. It’d been all right while the summer lasted, but the year was turning and Joe with it, turning away from me. We were sleeping on the Embankment, not far from this street which was home to dealers and addicts, and well-heeled West Londoners. I’d thought it had no houses, only places to eat and work, like the restaurant with its mirrored tiles, the office block with its smoked-glass windows. Between these two, the narrow house was slipped like a lover’s note, long forgotten. It must have been a listed building to have survived the surrounding development. Five ornate plaster letters ran across its face, ‘Starl’, edited by the loud red front of the restaurant where last night I’d expected to find the woman in the satin coat buying Joe his supper. But it was the house that had swallowed them. Last night, after I’d given up searching, I’d retreated to our spot on the Embankment, missing Joe’s warmth at my back. This morning, I’d gathered the last of my change and come here to keep watch for him, not knowing what else to do. I was responsible for Joe, that’s how it felt, that’s how it was. And he was in the narrow house across the street, I was sure of it. But just as sure he wouldn’t want rescuing, not by me who hadn’t the cash for a second cup of tea, let alone whatever was on offer across the road.
The girl with the pigtail was coming towards me, swerving through traffic. Away from the house, towards the diner. My teeth twinged from the tea. I had to steady my hand on the cup.
She dragged the door open, letting in a lick of wind and litter.
She was younger than I’d thought, acne spoiling the beige mask she’d made of her face, and achingly pretty with big blue eyes and a plump pink mouth sitting open over white teeth. At the counter, she ordered a skinny latte in a sleepy voice. Did anything ever put a crease in her nose, or make her curl her hands into fists? Did she sit up in the night as I did, icy sweat on her shoulders, straining to see in the darkness whatever it was that’d scared her awake? I couldn’t imagine it.
Her coffee was served in a takeaway cup. She sat at the table next to mine and took out a phone, pecking at it with painted fingers, her free hand stroking her throat. ‘It’s me.’ She stretched the personal pronoun to two syllables. ‘I got it, but I turned it down . . . No, listen, it was weird. Like the whole set-up, just really weird.’
She was talking about a job. In the narrow house, across the street. Could this be my way in?
‘Dr Wilder.’ She lowered her voice to a lazy purr. ‘Robin.’ A pause, her fingers walking up her neck, before she laughed. ‘God, no. He’s ancient!’ More laughter. ‘Later, okay? Yes, yes I will.’
/> I stood as she ended the call, cocking my head. ‘I couldn’t help overhearing,’ I said.
‘Excuse me?’
‘I work for Gazelle, the recruitment agency? Our offices are just up the road.’ I gestured vaguely then gave what I hoped was a conspiratorial smile. ‘I’ve sneaked out for a coffee break!’
She blinked to bring me into focus. Girls like her never noticed me unless they made a special effort. I had a useful face, the kind that gets me out of trouble, now. When I was younger, it gave me away, over-sharing my sadness or rage. My face left me nowhere to hide, that’s what Meagan Flack said. But I’d trained it to be a good face, a mirror face, giving back what people wanted to see.
‘Oh . . .’ The girl perked her lips into a smile. ‘Sorry, are you recruiting on your coffee break? Only I’ve just turned down a job offer. I need some time to regroup.’
‘Of course. But you did say Dr Robin Wilder? From—’ I nodded towards the narrow house.
‘Starling Villas,’ she supplied. ‘Yes. Why?’
She was frowning finally, the smallest dent in her self-confidence. Had she taken the trouble to study me, she might have questioned my alibi. For one thing, my hair needed washing and my teeth a good brushing. But she didn’t take the trouble. I calculated she didn’t need the job she’d been offered in Starling Villas; she’d walk into another easily enough. I indicated we should sit, making a gesture of confidentiality of the kind I’d seen from social workers, and the police.
‘I probably shouldn’t be telling you this, but we’ve had a little trouble over there.’ I lowered my voice, forcing her to lean into me. ‘Dr Wilder . . . Let’s say he isn’t the kind of employer I’d want for my sisters.’ I was going to say for myself, but judged sisters to be better.
Her face stayed smooth, untroubled. ‘Why not?’
‘He can be a hard taskmaster.’ She remained blank so I tried, ‘He’s not the best boss. He doesn’t always pay his bills.’ I was warming to my theme. ‘And he has a temper. We’ve had . . . complaints.’
I put a pause there, for her to fill in the blank.
She blinked her indignation. ‘They didn’t say anything about any of that, at my agency.’
I sipped at my cold tea. ‘He’s clever at covering his tracks.’
‘I still think they should’ve said something. I was alone in the house with him. I mean, he said he was alone.’
‘You didn’t see anyone else in the house?’
She shook her head. Had I made a mistake?
‘I felt I had a duty to speak up when I overheard you on the phone.’ I looked her over, taking care to be impressed by what I saw. ‘You know, my agency has a lot of good vacancies for young professionals.’
‘Oh, it’s not that.’ She tossed her head. I’d always imagined that was an expression people used in books, but she actually did it. ‘It’s not like I’m desperate.’
‘That’s what I thought. Let someone else be the one he pushes around and doesn’t pay!’
‘You should tell the police what he’s like.’ She sipped at her coffee. ‘Seriously. I knew it was weird but not everyone has my instinct.’ She was psychic, on top of everything else.
‘The job offer. Was it for . . . ?’
‘PA. He has like a ton of boxes and books. He said it needs sorting out but frankly it’s a mess in there.’ She inspected her glossy fingernails. ‘I’m going to make a complaint to my agency. They said it was different to an office job as he’s working from home or whatever, but they didn’t say anything about him being a pervert, or not getting paid.’
Nor did I say anything about him being a pervert. She’d made up a story in her head, admittedly with my help, a tale to tell her friends. She was shiny with it. I’d given her something better than a boring job shelving books and sorting boxes, ruining her nails into the bargain.
‘I’d rather you didn’t say anything to your agency.’ I frowned, as if thinking it over. ‘I mean, you could, but my agency is working with the police and HMRC to gather evidence. I’d hate anything to get in the way of that.’
‘Oh, right.’ She nodded, bored with me now. ‘I wish I’d known about all this when I was over there, that’s all. I’d have told him where to stick his job.’
‘I thought you did tell him.’ I switched on a big smile then dimmed it to a frown. ‘Are you sure he understood you turned it down?’ Had she lied about it, told him she’d think about it? Under the table, my feet danced with impatience.
‘I’ll make it clear to him now.’ She tossed her pigtail over her shoulder, reaching for her phone.
I listened while she made the call in a freeze-dried version of her voice, all the warmth iced out of it. The voice she used to break up with men. She’d broken up with plenty of men, I could tell. She took pleasure in disappointing Dr Robin Wilder, killing whatever hope he’d had of her accepting his job offer. She’d be dining out on my story for months.
We left Hungry’s together, the girl sipping her coffee as she swayed towards the tube station. I waited until she was out of sight before I crossed the road to Starling Villas, climbing the six steps to the door with the plaster wreath.
Setting my nylon rucksack at my feet, I lifted my fist and knocked. I told myself this was it, my one chance to get inside the house which had swallowed Joe last night. I knocked and then I stepped back with the morning’s traffic running behind me, waiting for him to answer.
2
I swear the house shivered as I stepped inside. A passing lorry would be the logical explanation. Starling Villas was built long before any dream of cars or lorries. It had the stifled chill of a museum, shadows marking the places where furniture once stood and paintings hung. Its hall was tiled in black and white, doors leading to rooms left and right. A spiral staircase with banisters like bars climbed up to the bedrooms and down to the basement. It was exciting to be inside the house. My heart tapped in my chest. The girl with the pigtail hadn’t exaggerated the boxes: dozens snaked about the hall and again in his library where he led me. I wondered briefly what was inside the boxes, but decided it didn’t matter. What mattered was that I was inside, out of the wind and rain, away from people’s feet. Right at that moment, nothing mattered more, not even finding Joe. The house smelt as I did, of neglect. I’d washed in Hungry’s lavatory, doing what I could with my hair and clothes, but homelessness has its own scent. In the diner, my smell was masked by the odour of fried food. There was no such reprieve here.
Dr Wilder, to give him credit, did not wrinkle his nose. ‘I wasn’t expecting any other applicants.’ He had his phone in his hand, fresh from her break-up call.
I waited to see if he would recognize me. I had the strongest sense we had met before. Was he in the club last night, with the woman in the black satin coat? I hadn’t seen anyone else, but all of my attention had been on Joe, who’d been restless for days. I had been on high alert for his desertion. As soon as the cold weather came, I knew, he’d start looking for a place to lie low. Joe didn’t always make the best choices, even he would have to admit that.
‘I came on the off-chance. A friend of mine at the recruitment agency mentioned you were looking for someone?’
Someone blonde and pretty, over-exposed. I was nothing like that. I saw him gathering the right words with which to dismiss me without causing affront. Manners mattered to him, as did privacy. He hadn’t wanted to conduct this conversation on the doorstep. Since answering the door, he’d avoided looking directly at me but it was possible he had excellent peripheral vision. As I did.
‘Do you have secretarial training?’ he asked now.
‘Of course.’ I had the idea he was checking the air for the flavour of my lie. Lies taste different to the truth. I’d conducted my own checks, catching a whiff of burnt toast and brown dust as we’d walked through to his library. It was tidy, if you looked beyond the boxes littering the room, but it needed a deep clean. The whole house did. ‘I can cook, too. And clean.’ I didn’t smile, in case he thou
ght I was joking. ‘I’m a quick learner.’
And you’ve just been let down by someone who thinks you’re a pervert.
‘I don’t know . . . I wasn’t expecting anyone else.’ He frowned, thrown. ‘I like things in order and right now this is a mess. I’m sure you understand.’
I understood. He didn’t care for surprises or strangers, people who knocked on his door without an appointment. I wasn’t what he’d wanted. Nor was he what I had expected, Dr Robin Wilder of Starling Villas, London W8. For one thing, he wasn’t ancient, no more than forty. And he was attractive, at least to my mind. His eyes were grey, under straight black brows. His dark hair curled in feathers across his forehead. His nose was broad at the nostrils, his mouth curved by a long upper lip. His hands were lean and long-fingered, the kind that could be clumsy yet precise. Men’s hands fascinated me. If I shut my eyes, I’d see Joe’s hands, slim and sunburnt. But I didn’t shut my eyes.
‘I’m a quick learner, and a hard worker. I’ve worked in houses before. Is it just you here or—’
‘It’s just me, now. In the Villas.’
I waited for him to qualify the statement. Given his age, had he grown-up children, a dead mother, an estranged wife? But he nodded as if he’d said everything necessary for me to understand the set-up here. Just him, in the Villas. I said, ‘It’s a beautiful house.’ Let him taste that lie.
He didn’t seem able to tell me to leave, any more than the staff at Hungry’s who’d let me sit so long in the window. He should be sending me on my way. Instead, he looked at the boxes as if they intimidated him. It was the mess, I decided. Some people can’t stand mess. Everything else in the room was neat and – what were the words he’d used? In order. His desk had a pot to hold pens, a tray for letters. The bookshelves were full but not crowded, each spine turned the correct way. Lamps were angled here and there, pointing light precisely where it was needed. Only the boxes spoilt the impression, dumped on the floor and in the chair behind his desk. He was a meticulous man, besieged by boxes. As we stood there, he reached a hand to rest it on the nearest box, the same brown cardboard cube as the others, sealed right round with tape. The kind of box that held important papers. His hand lay on the spot where packing tape criss-crossed the seams. Private papers, confidential.