The Tied Man

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The Tied Man Page 37

by Tabitha McGowan


  Finn rolled his eyes. ‘You have distinct dominatrix tendencies, woman. What if I need a piss?’

  ‘Then I’m sure there’ll be a Ming vase lurking around somewhere.’

  *****

  At half past one in the morning, Nat suddenly pushed his chair back and linked his hands behind his head.

  Finn gripped my wrist. What’s wrong?’

  ‘Nothing at all, mate. Nothing at all,’ Nat said. ‘To quote every Hollywood hacker cliché in existence, I’m in.’

  I gave Finn’s hand a squeeze and stood up. ‘I’d better go and shout Henry.’

  *****

  Gabriel escorted Henry right to the door of the study and patted him firmly on the back. ‘It’ll be all right, I promise.’

  ‘And you’re sure you’ll be okay by yourself, Gabriel?’ Henry asked. ‘If anything happens, or you hear anything, or need -’

  ‘Henry, there are busier graveyards than this place. I’ll be fine.’

  ‘Yes, but -’

  ‘If there’s the slightest problem I hereby promise to scream like a girl,’ Gabriel said, then looked across at me. ‘Sorry.’

  ‘I’ll forgive you this time,’ I said. ‘How’s the new job going?’

  ‘On balance, I’d say I prefer performing in front of a few thousand adoring women, but ‘Security Guard at the Castle of the Damned’ comes a pretty close second. I should be fine, as long as there are no ghosts.’

  ‘Well done.’

  ‘Thanks. It’s just really… weird, basically. We’ve got a couple of guests in the larder, the big Irish axe-murderer’s in Finn’s room, Dalziell’s in that bloody torture chamber set-up with the two weird American guys, and Her Ladyship’s in the wine cellar. Everyone’s out for the count, it’s dark, cold, and as spooky as all shit.’ For a second Gabriel’s self-assured façade slipped away, then he squared his shoulders. ‘Right then, better go and see if anyone needs room service, eh? Good luck, all of you.’

  ‘Watch out for the White Lady,’ I called at his retreating back, and he flicked me two fingers. I shut the door to keep the heat in the room, and returned to Finn’s side. He lit another cigarette and shut his eyes.

  Nat clicked the mouse and a spreadsheet filled the screen. ‘Well thank you very much, Lady Albermarle. See? Sheet after sheet of names, addresses, even telephone numbers, all in alphabetical order. The document’s even called ‘Address Book’. The depraved clearly have no imagination whatsoever. Not that I’m complaining.’ He clicked through a couple of pages. ‘And there we go. ‘Henry Masterson: Contacts’ and ‘Finn Strachan: Contacts’, complete with notes. Oh, sometimes it’s very nice indeed to be right.’

  Henry bunched an immaculate handkerchief in his hands. ‘What does it say?’

  ‘Let’s see.’ Nat reopened the page. ‘Oka-ay – according to this, your mum’s in a care home – Safe Harbours – in Westhill, just outside Aberdeen. Booked in as ‘Audrey Smith’.’

  ‘I’d never have found her,’ Henry said in a small voice. ‘I mean, who would think of Aberdeen? And ‘Smith’? There must be thousands of Smiths out there…’ he used his handkerchief to dab at his eyes. ‘Oh my. Thank you so much… I’ll just sit here and compose myself for a minute, if I may?’ He blew his nose, and added, ‘Marguerite. That’s her name. Marguerite Masterson. Not bloody ‘Audrey’.’

  ‘I’ll make sure that gets passed on, mate,’ Nat said, then turned to Finn.

  ‘Oh Christ,’ Finn murmured and buried his head in his arms. ‘I don’t… Shit, Lili…’

  ‘It’s okay. It’ll be okay, I promise,’ I soothed, and wrapped my arms around him.

  ‘It’s your sisters, yeah?’ Nat asked, and Finn nodded in reply, beyond speaking. ‘Yup. Here we are. Looks like Niamh’s got herself a flat in somewhere called Finglas, and Sinéad’s living with her.’

  Finn took a deep breath. ‘Finglas. Does it… does it say how they’re doing?’ he asked.

  Nat scrolled down. ‘Um, yeah – Niamh’s in her first year of midwifery training, and got a boyfriend who’s a tattoo artist. Sinéad’s in her third year at secondary school – bit of a rebel, according to this, but doing okay… Bass player in a goth band -’

  Finn gave an involuntary choked sob. ‘The bitch. Oh, that fucking, fucking bitch.’

  Nat left the computer to crouch by Finn’s side. ‘Hey, take it easy! I’m sorry – is there something wrong with the info? I mean, that’s all good, isn’t it?’

  ‘She said… she said they were on the fucking game, didn’t she? Told me they’d followed their arsehole of a big brother into the family business…’ He finally unfurled his arms to look at me, his face filled with anguish. ‘And I fucking believed her. Stupid bastard that I am…’

  Nat placed a hand on Finn’s arm. ‘You know, I really think it’s time we finished her now, yeah?’

  *****

  You want to make the call?’ Nat picked up the telephone and held it out to Henry, who was now attempting to wear a path in the Turkish rug with his constant pacing. He stared at the handset in complete horror.

  ‘Oh no. No. I couldn’t. I wouldn’t know what to say, where to start…’

  Finn dragged on his cigarette and rested his forehead on the arm of the divan. ‘Sort that man out. Now,’ he whispered, ‘because if he doesn’t shut up and stand still I will kill the little fucker.’

  ‘It’s okay,’ Nat said, hastily. ‘I’ll do it. I’ll put it over the speaker, shall I?’ He pressed a series of buttons and the digitised sound of a phone ringing filled the room. After an eternity, there was a muted click.

  ‘Hell-o?’

  I recognised the voice immediately, and Nat gave me a thumbs-up. ‘Can I ask who this is, please?’ he asked.

  ‘This is Sergeant Edward Newton, Northumbria Police. But you can call me Ed.’

  Nat grinned. ‘Evening, Ed. Good to talk to you again.’

  ‘How’s it going there, son? Everyone okay?’

  ‘Hello, Call-Me-Ed,’ I said. ‘It’s Lili here.’

  ‘Well it’s lovely to hear your voice, sweetheart. And that lad of yours?’

  ‘He’s here. He’s good. Just about in one piece.’

  ‘That’s very good to hear.’ There was genuine relief in Ed’s voice. ‘I’m so bloody sorry it’s taken me so long to get back to you. The Chief Inspector was a bit keen to have his mates handle the case – should have known the dodgepot was up to something. We’ll get things sorted now though, love. I promise.’

  ‘Good. Because I really want to go home.’

  ‘Well let’s make a start, shall we? Nat – have you got some addresses for me, son?’

  ‘Yup,’ Nat said. ‘Have you got a pen handy?’

  *****

  The porcelain trinket dish that Finn was using as an ashtray began to overflow as he stubbed out one cigarette after another, and the study was enveloped in a haze of smoke. I sat by him and watched the snow whirl against the glass and pile up on the windowsills.

  At twenty past two, the phone rang again.

  ‘Here we go,’ Nat said, and picked up. ‘Hi there.’

  ‘Ed Newton, reporting in.’ His equable voice filled the room. ‘Everything still okay at your end?’ There was a soft hiss and crackle of static on the line.

  ‘Seems to be.’

  ‘Good, good. Now look, the bloody weather’s taken a turn for the worse; some Arctic front or other moving in just in time for Christmas. If there’s a bit of a delay getting to you in the morning, don’t fret. I’ll hotwire a snowplough if I have to, but we’ll get there.’

  ‘No problem. We’ll just keep everyone in their rooms until you arrive.’

  I thought I heard Ed stifle a laugh. ‘Excellent. Must have been some nightcap eh?’

  ‘Must have been,’ Nat agreed.

  ‘Right then, on to the important stuff. I’m delighted to inform you that Marguerite Masterson’s currently having a cuppa with two young PCs from the Grampian force, and I’ve just had a call from my contact
in the Garda to say that they’re taking Sinéad and Niamh Strachan straight to a safe house as we speak. Apparently as soon as I mentioned the name ‘O’Halloran’ they decided not to take any chances.’

  ‘So they’re safe?’ I asked.

  ‘Yes, Lili, love. They’re safe,’ came the reply.

  Finn

  All bets were off.

  Somewhere in the distance, Henry started snivelling, and I turned to Lilith. ‘Could you give me a hand to get to the window, please? Think I need some air.’

  ‘Sure.’

  I made my way to the French windows and pushed them open. Snow flurried around our faces, and at last I could breathe. ‘It just doesn’t seem real, Lili. I trust the fella, don’t get me wrong, but I don’t think it will, not until I hear their voices, see them. If they want to see me…’ I was caught off-guard by the sudden catch in my voice.

  ‘They will,’ Lilith said, with such certainty that I nearly let myself believe her. Just enough to stop me becoming as big an eejit as Henry. Lilith placed her hand over mine on the balcony rail, and we watched the snowflakes settle and thaw on her golden skin.

  The silence was broken by Henry blowing his nose again. ‘Right, enough of my nonsense. Coffee. That’s what we all need. I’m sure you’ve still got work to do, young man. I may not be able to assist with the technology, but I can certainly provide you with sufficient fuel for your labours.’

  ‘I’d appreciate that,’ Nat said. ‘I could do with caffeine hit before we go into round two.’

  ‘And then I should really go and relieve Gabriel. The poor boy must be worn out.’

  ‘That’s a bit full-on for your first date, isn’t it?’ I said.

  For a second, Henry’s bottom lip wobbled, then he gave a snot-ridden giggle. ‘Finn Strachan, don’t be dreadful!’ he chided, and tears sprang to his eyes again. ‘Oh goodness, Finn, it’s true, isn’t it? They’re safe?’

  ‘Yeah, little man, it’s true.’

  Then the waterworks started again, and before I could stop him, he caught me up in a bear hug. ‘Oh, for crying out loud.’ I looked down at Henry’s tear-stained face, and tentatively returned the embrace. ‘Now pull yourself together, you daft wee puff.’

  *****

  Henry delivered enough coffee to start his own outlet then disappeared again to clean something or other, or maybe even to play hide-and-seek with Gabriel. As much as I was delighted for my fellow captive, I was glad he was staying out of my way for the next stage. I wasn’t even sure I wanted to be there myself.

  Nat was still hammering away at the keyboard. ‘Finn, if you’re up to it, I could do with a hand sorting out some of these names and faces?’

  ‘It’s more a question of you being up to it,’ I said, wondering what the hell our fresh-faced young saviour would make of Blaine’s gallery of depravity. Mainly starring me.

  We both started at the sudden clatter as Lilith fumbled her coffee mug and bounced it across the floorboards. ‘Oh bugger,’ she mumbled, and I realised she’d just fallen asleep sitting up.

  Because I hadn’t slept properly for the best part of a decade, it was easy to forget that other people needed to, and about two hours too late, I realised Lilith might drop at any moment. ‘Ah hell, sweetheart, you must be knackered.’

  ‘I’ll manage. Don’t want to leave you with all this.’ She sounded drunk with fatigue.

  ‘I reckon I’ll be all right with Nat for a little while, and you’ll be close by. I can do this, Lili. Promise. I need to do this.’ I kissed her again, breathing in her warmth to help carry me through. ‘And let’s face it, it’s the very fuckin’ least I can do.’

  ‘As long as you’re sure. But wake me in an hour, okay? Not a minute longer.’

  ‘Of course.’ I hauled myself up and grabbed the fleece blanket from the table. A fresh strip of temazepam lay under it, and I palmed it; as ever, Lilith had thought of everything. She piled all the cushions together and lay down, her eyes closing as soon as her head touched the makeshift pillow. I draped the blanket over her, then took my place in the seat next to Nat. ‘Ready.’

  ‘Right then, I’m going to have a good look around, see what else is on here. Then with your help I’m going to parcel it up, and anything that looks remotely illegal gets sent to Ed’s IT bod. Anything else that just looks dodgy as fuck, I follow Lilith’s order and use it to cause as much damage to the existence of those involved as I possibly can, in the time I have available. And don’t worry – I can pixelate your face out of anything that’s on there before we send it to anyone. Let’s keep exposure for the guilty, shall we?’

  I hadn’t even thought about who might get to look at Blaine’s collection after the night was through. ‘That’d be good of you.’ I took a quick look around the room. ‘Before we start, would you do me a favour?’

  ‘Sure.’

  ‘Would you check out what’s in those decanters on the cabinet there? Think I might need one of them.’

  As I popped six temazepam into my palm, Nat got up to inspect the bottles. He took the lid from each one, and gave it a good sniff. ‘Dry sherry, and a fairly decent Scotch, I’d guess.’

  ‘The Scotch sounds the best bet. Don’t think I’m much of a sherry man.’

  Nat passed me the decanter. I threw the tablets into my mouth and washed them down with a couple of gulps of something that tasted like TCP, but worse. ‘Fuck, that’s rank – give me Irish any day. Okay, let’s do this.’

  *****

  It was never going to be pretty. Sometimes it was just words – letters to Blaine, detailing yet another dissolute request; letters from Blaine, detailing her price once that request was granted. And then there were the photographs. Picture after picture of every tawdry encounter she had arranged. I had no memory of some of them – nights when I’d got sufficiently blasted to sail through without ever remembering – and others that I recalled all too well.

  Nat just needed verification: was the name correct? Were there any details missing? Did I want to add anything? All asked without a trace of disgust or, even worse, pity. Just dispassionate, calm questions to fill in the gaps. Not for a second did I regret putting my trust in this man, but I was glad I’d kept hold of the whisky, foul ditch water that it was.

  Three hours in, with Lilith still crashed out on the divan, we got to the shots I’d been dreading: my encounter with the fuckers currently locked in the dungeon. I managed to handle myself better this time, but they were no easier on the eye.

  It was the first time that Nat reacted to anything that he’d seen. He sat back and pinched the bridge of his nose, and exhaled slowly. ‘Well, she’s certainly thorough,’ he said.

  He’d just spent the best part of a night looking at me laid bare in every sense of the word and still he managed to look me in the eye. I was impressed. ‘Sorry for doubting you. Before. All of this -’ I gestured at the computer and the selection of gadgets across the desk. ‘I’m not exactly an expert, as you can guess. Just didn’t seem possible, that’s all…’

  ‘Not a problem. Nearly there now: just keep telling yourself, this time tomorrow you’ll be in Santa Marita.’

  ‘Yeah. Yeah, I guess I will. Shit.’ I’d barely dared think of the aftermath, never mind discuss it.

  ‘It’s a good place to heal,’ Nat said. ‘Trust me.’

  ‘It’ll need to be.’

  ‘It worked for me. Remember I told you about doing this as my Masters’?’

  I nodded.

  ‘Well towards the end, it really started to get to me. And I mean really. I know it’s nothing like being on the receiving end, but I stopped eating, sleeping, all that stuff – turned out my computer was a hell of a lot easier to switch off than my head. Had a complete breakdown by the time I was twenty two,’ he said, matter-of-factly.

  ‘No shit.’

  ‘Oh yeah, full-on meltdown. My mum and dad were all for getting me sectioned, so I did a geographical – that’s how I ended up in Santa Marita. Now life’s all sun, sea and
an award-winning dope farm.’

  ‘Nice. That where you met Lili?’

  ‘S’right.’ All the time we were talking, Nat was typing away.

  ‘Does she know? About the, er…’

  ‘Crack-up?’ Nat smiled. ‘Can you imagine being with Lilith for more than a minute and her not know everything about you, just by looking at the way you hold your knife and fork?’

  ‘Not now you come to mention it, no. Seems a bit harsh, mind – dragging you back into all this shite if it’s already sent you up the wall the once.’

  ‘That’s how I knew it was important.’

  I smiled. ‘She’s a fuckin’ force of nature once she gets going, mind you.’

  Nat glanced over to where Lilith slept. ‘She’s amazing,’ he said, and just for a moment he looked like he’d been kicked in the balls.

  I didn’t know what the hell to say. ‘Um, sorry?’ I volunteered.

  Nat shrugged, and gave me a rueful grin. ‘Ah, fuck it, I can wallow around in a mire of self-pity as much as I like, but at the end of the day she chose you, mate. I’ll live. Eventually.’ He cracked his knuckles and straightened the keyboard. ‘So. Shall we continue catching bastards?’

  ‘Good plan.’ I had another mouthful of the bilge-whisky; to my surprise, there was only an inch left in the decanter.

  ‘Right, let’s get rid of that chamber of horrors.’ Nat opened another file, and a new picture came up on screen. For once, it didn’t involve me; it was a shot of a client that Blaine had dealt with personally. The face was vaguely familiar, but I couldn’t quite place him; to my surprise, Nat clocked him straight away. ‘I don’t think we let Lilith see this one,’ he said.

  Lilith

  ‘Let Lilith see what?’ I asked.

  ‘Ooh, fuck.’ Finn actually laughed, which was the last thing I expected to hear right now. Nat just sat there and looked sheepish.

  ‘This,’ he finally said, and angled the screen towards me.

  It was a picture of my father, lying on a bed. He was wearing a giant nappy and precious little else, an oversized dummy hung around his neck, and he was cuddling an Albermarle teddy bear. ‘Oh, the ridiculous old man.’ I pushed back the blanket and went to take a closer look.

 

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