Can Anybody Help Me? (21 page)

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Authors: Sinéad Crowley

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‘No.'

Claire had allowed the silence to build to see if he'd wade in any further. But Bradley seemed determined to stay silent. Moments before she would have done so, Flynn jumped in.

‘So, you got advice off another fella and didn't like it, was that it?'

Claire glared at him – she had hoped silence would encourage Bradley to hang himself. But apparently good cop was the way to go. Or maybe it was a male bonding thing. Bradley visibly brightened and nodded his head furiously.

‘Well, yeah. I didn't get on with the first fella. So I decided to go with O'Mahony Thorpe.'

‘And he said he'd find you a tenant?'

‘That's right. Yeah.'

‘And where did you meet Mr Berry?'

She watched, fascinated, as his colour rose again, until the three of them jumped at the sound of a knock on the door. Siobhan O'Doheny came into the room and Claire glared at her, but the young guard was undeterred.

‘You're needed in the office …?'

Claire had grumpily emerged to be told that Cormac Berry
had been found. No criminal mastermind. His phone had tracked him to a base station in south Donegal and a local patrol car in Inishowen had spotted him at a filling station just twenty minutes after an alert had been issued. They'd allowed him to pay for his fuel and three Mars bars before informing him he was wanted to help the Gardaí with some inquiries.

‘Couldn't believe he'd been caught.'

Siobhan smiled as she recounted the message passed on by the Donegal guards, two of whom were at that moment speeding towards the capital, the young estate agent folded into the back of their car. Claire didn't doubt it. Her mental picture of Cormac Berry involved too many nights spent in front of a computer screen and, she reckoned, very little knowledge of the outside world. It was quite possible he'd imagined Co. Donegal was the far side of the moon. In the end it had taken less than three hours to find him.

He was expected in Dublin by 7 p.m. She relayed this information to Bradley back in the interview room and was rewarded by a sigh and the spilling of thick salty tears. It only took moments for the entire story to come spilling out like rice from a leaky bag.

Berry, when he had arrived, unshaven, shaken and hungry had confirmed every word of it.

O'Mahony Thorpe had seen its business flat-line after the bust, but the company thought they had a foolproof way to get it afloat again. Being a landlord was, these days, an expensive business. Putting a property on the market cost at least a thousand euro up front, between registration charges, a second-home charge, a total repaint and refit. And the bills kept coming. Maintenance fees. Property taxes. But O'Mahony,
or possibly Thorpe, had come up with a plan. The government couldn't get at your money if they knew it wasn't there in the first place. So the solution was simple. They were, Berry had explained, gloomily, something of a matchmaking service, uniting broke landlords and tenants who needed to live under the radar or were willing to do so for a reduction in rent. O'Mahony Thorpe took ten per cent off the top. The result? Happy landlords, happy tenants, and a government that didn't get a penny from the transaction.

It was that sentence that had finally brought forth a protest from Ella O'Mahony. She'd turned up minutes after Berry had arrived at Collins Street and had debriefed him after his questioning. But, at eight o'clock at night, the smart business suit had been replaced by jeans and a pink fleece jacket. Most of her authority had been left behind in her wardrobe with the Chanel. She had raised an eyebrow when Berry had mentioned the word ‘desperate', and a hand when the whole issue of tax evasion had come up.

‘Now, we're not taxation specialists, it's up to the individual owner to …'

But Claire, who was wearing one of her better-cut work jackets that day, had silenced her with a look. They could figure out the details later. There was no doubt the company had a loophole that would see them emerge on the right side of the law, probably leaving some eejit like Berry to carry the can for the damage. Frankly, she didn't give a crap what they'd been doing with their Monopoly board, she just wanted to know who had brought Miriam Twohy back to 123 Merview, when and why.

And it was a sobbing Berry who had finally admitted that
he hadn't a clue. Merview, he'd stuttered had been a particularly difficult block of apartments to rent. The half-finished exterior hadn't helped, nor had the management company's reputation of leaving CCTV cameras broken and the property unsecured. So when Berry had got a call from a man – that was the only description he could give, a man – offering the entire asking price if he could move in the following week, he hadn't argued. He was calling from abroad, the tenant had told him. He needed a central apartment on a short-term let while working in Dublin. His new job was cash-in-hand so the O'Mahony Thorpe ‘arrangements' – Claire could imagine Berry's manly chuckle at the word – suited him down to the ground. No he didn't need to see the place, he'd checked it out on the web and it suited him just fine. He'd call into the office to pick up the keys himself.

At this, Claire finally saw a glimmer of hope.

‘You met him then?'

But Berry had sunk even lower in his chair.

‘No. He said he couldn't call in during office hours … I left the keys at reception. The girls just said a man picked them up and left.'

‘And he didn't sign for them?'

‘No.'

Berry looked positively nauseous now.

‘He posted out the tenancy agreement, the one I showed you.'

Claire thought back to the unreadable squiggle, and sighed.

‘Have you CCTV in the office?'

‘No.'

For Jaysus' sake. Berry admitted he had asked the agency receptionist if she could remember the man who took the
keys, but all she could come up with was tallish, pleasant, with brown hair. Or maybe he'd been wearing a hat. She wasn't sure.

‘How do they know?'

Flynn's voice echoed around the room.

Berry sniffed loudly and wetly and Claire resisted the urge to hand him a hanky.

‘Know what?'

‘Know to contact you? How did he know that your agency were the crowd to go to if you wanted to be a little … lax with arrangements?'

Berry looked at his hands. Beside him Ella O'Mahony stiffened, and then sank her head into her hands.

‘Just tell her, Cormac.'

The young estate agent shifted in his chair.

‘We use the internet.'

‘To advertise?'

‘Not exactly.'

And haltingly, in a monologue punctuated by more tears, he had explained. He was a regular, he said, on discussion forums. Sites where people came together to give out about the State of the Nation and the property crash and the mess everyone was in. Claire had a vague idea of the sites he was talking about; Matt had used them quite a bit when they were buying their own home. Back then it had all been about releasing equity and homes abroad. Now they were full of wounded people.

Bradley's user name had been Desperate Landlord. Berry had read the post and sent him a private message, offering a quick and cheap solution to the mess he'd landed himself in. And when a poster calling himself ‘Short Term Let' had posted
a message looking for that very thing, he'd realised he had a match.

‘Can I be prosecuted for this?'

Claire could feel the blood in her temple pulsating. She had just spent seven hours dragging forth the information that he had taken part in a scam that allowed a murderer to rent a flat without anyone being able to identify him. A small, red-cheeked snot-nosed baby girl had been left without a mother. And all Cormac Berry was concerned about was his own skin.

She didn't say any of that, of course. Instead she had muttered something about files and DPP, and had walked away.

The baby kicked her hard in the ribs and she groaned. She had forgotten to eat again. Well, half forgotten and half been unable. Flynn had gone to the chipper at some stage during the evening, but greasy food wasn't her friend anymore and she'd already had two chocolate bars from the station vending machine that day. Her stomach turned over at the memory and she could feel bitterness rising up her throat. Pregnancy. The gift that kept on giving. She leaned over to check the glove compartment for a spare package of Rennie, and then sat up straight again as the bump got in the way.

Matt was staring straight at her.

She smiled, and then realised her husband couldn't see her. He was standing, fully clothed at their bedroom window, the blinds pulled back, the room backlit by a small glowing light that presumably came from his mobile phone. He would be able to see the car, and possibly her outline, but not the expression on her face. Mobile phone. Bollocks. She reached for her handbag and remembered that she'd switched hers to silent
during the interviews and had forgotten to turn the volume up again.

Bollocks. Eleven missed calls, three text messages. All from Matt. The first, a gentle, ‘how're things? Ring me.' The second, an hour later, ‘just let me know all is okay.' The third, sent at midnight, ‘Jesus, ring me, Claire. Am worried.' All unanswered. And then the succession of missed calls. There were voice messages too. She didn't have the energy to listen to them though.

Her husband moved away from the window. She could feel his anger radiate through the pane. There would be no cuddles this evening, so.

CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE

Do you ever hit your LOs?

MammyNo1

I don't mean a belt or anything *blushes* but when they are bold? Like a tap on the bum or anything? Just curious to know what people think

IrishMammyinTraining

God no. I mean my DS is only 7 months old but no I can't imagine ever hitting him. No. A big no no for me

MrsDrac

It's a no here too. We were given the wooden spoon when we were kids and I still remember it. Horrible. I'd never hit LO.

Mam23

No but I can understand why people want to! DS is going through an awful clingy stage at the moment and he never stops whingeing. I just pull him away, use naughty step etc etc. Not sure if it's effective but I'm trying anyway. Have sky plussed SuperNanny *lol*

MammyNo1

Oh. Okay. Thanks girls.

Reeta

Is everything okay pet? I mean, I know some people see no problem with slapping children, we all probably got it growing up LOL and each to their own, but you really don't sound happy today.

MammyNo1

Yeah great thanks. It's just DH got a bit frustrated last night and made a swipe at DS. He didn't hit him or anything I mean. Just, like a swipe across the back of the legs.

   Well it hit his nappy really. God it sounds way worse written down.

LondonMum

Sounds really tough hon. How are things between you two?

RedWineMine

I don't like the sound of this, are you worried about anything else?

LondonMum

+1 to RedWineMine
Mammy No1 are you okay?

THINGS GOT WORSE

MammyNo1

Hi girls. Just going to write this down because if I don't do it straight away I don't think I'll have the courage. Girls, DH hit me last night. We were having a row … well it wasn't a row really, I just annoyed him. He was really down, he's had an awful few days, he went for a job and he didn't get it and it was terrible, they made him feel really small
. So he had a few drinks on the way home and then he had a few cans in front of the TV. And then he said he was going out again and I asked him not to … oh thinking back on it it was a stupid thing to do, I should have left it, he needed to get out and clear his head. But I was thinking of money and wanted him to stay in and I just said look would you not stay in for the night and we'll watch a bit of TV. And he hit me. Well it was more of a slap really. On the side of my face. It's not bruised or anything. Just my ear is kind of sore but he didn't leave a mark or anything. And the kids didn't see anything they were in bed. Girls do you think I pushed him too far? I can't live like this … hate seeing him so miserable but I don't want our kids to get upset either … haven't told anyone else, too upset and embarrassed and I've a brother and he'd kill him if he found out. Which I don't want. Crying now. Going to post this before I change my mind.

MeredithGrey

Jesus. I'm so sorry chicken. But can't say I'm 100% surprised. Not sure what to say to you really. But I wish you
had someone to talk to in real life. I know you don't want to talk to your family but is there a friend or someone you can talk to? You shouldn't have to go through this alone.

RedWineMine

Google your local women's refuge. Get in touch with them straight away. Sorry but once is once too many. They'll tell you what to do. Internet forums are all very well but this is too serious. Sorry to sound harsh but you have to get out of there. Where is he today? Is he in the house?

MammyNo1

Thanks RWM. He's around at his Mams. Don't worry, it's not like he's a violent person or anything. It was just a once off, I really pushed his buttons. Kind of regret posting now really. We'll be okay. But thanks for the support girls.

AislingGeal

I agree with RWM. Don't want to go into the details but we had something similar in my extended family. The woman in question stayed with him too long and it got nasty. Men like this don't change. Please keep yourself safe, and your children.

Della

I'm going to PM you my phone number. If there's anything I can do, anything at all …

MyBabba

Oh God I'm crying here reading this. I hope you are okay.
I think I know which part of the country you are in. I'm going to PM you to see if I can help at all. Kisses

LondonMum

+1 to MyBabba. Anything at all we can do let us know

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