Death Message (11 page)

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Authors: Mark Billingham

Tags: #thriller

BOOK: Death Message
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Thorne's smile died quickly, as he began to reflect on what would be as cold an act of revenge as he had ever come across. 'If
I'm
right about this, and the Black Dogs wanted Brooks to suffer for killing their old president, they certainly picked their moment. They waited until just the right time, when they could really fuck up his life.'
'Or the
wrong
time,' Louise said. 'And the wrong bloke. Because they're getting it back in spades now, aren't they?' She got up and took the plates and mugs through to the kitchen; shouted back to Thorne over the noise as she loaded them into the dishwasher. 'Even if it is Brooks,' she said, 'we still don't know what this photo business is all about. Why he's sending them to you, I mean...'
But before Louise had even finished speaking, Thorne suddenly felt as though he might know; could feel a dreadful possibility rushing towards him. What had Louise said before? 'That's a high-security prison, with some serious company...'
He got up and grabbed his phone; dialled the number that Sharon Lilley had given him as he was leaving the pub.
He could hear the music in the background, the chat of her fellow-drinkers, when Lilley eventually picked up. He wasn't hugely surprised that she was still where he'd left her.
'It's Tom Thorne. Listen, I'm sorry for calling so late.'
'Lucky you caught me,' she said, slowly. 'I was about to head home.'
'Just one quick question.' Something began to jump in Thorne's stomach. He took a deep breath and asked which prison Marcus Brooks had been released from.
Got the answer he didn't want to hear.
And then, Thorne
knew.

 

Baby,
I'll probably keep this one short, because I'm so wiped out, and even though I know I won't sleep for very long, I'll have to get up and out. I need to walk when I wake up, to keep moving. If I just lie there, things that I don't want to think about for too long get in my head, and I'm afraid they might stick, and I can't stand it.
Actually, the walking has been brilliant. You probably think that sounds stupid, or like I'm taking the piss, because of how much I used to hate it. You couldn't even get me to walk to the bus stop, remember? It's weird, but it makes me less tired, not more. I can't explain it. It sharpens me up, you know? Like the exercise did when I was inside. I just go for miles every night, don't matter where, and when I get back here, things are a bit clearer. It isn't like I might forget what I'm going to do or anything, but it helps me focus.
It reminds me why I'm doing this. Why I don't really care about anything except doing it.
Last night, after I sorted Hodson out, I walked towards these lights I could see out of the window. Across fields and a motorway. I know they were just houses and cars and whatever, so don't think I'm going totally mental, but while I was walking in the dark, up to my knees in mud and shit and Christ knows what, it felt like I was getting closer to you and Robbie. Like you were both waiting in the lights somewhere.
I had to stop myself running in the end.
Like I said, mental. I'm even grinning about it a bit myself now, because I could hear you pissing yourself while I was writing it!!
Kiss him for me, will you?
I'm sending kisses and all sorts of other stuff to you as well, COURSE I AM. I'll write again soon, tomorrow maybe, but now I've got to at least try and get my head down. I'm so fucking tired.
Sleep well, angel.
X
EIGHT
The last time Thorne had seen Stuart Nicklin had been across a crowded courtroom at the Old Bailey, when he had spoken from the witness box at his trial. But the last time he had been this close to him, Thorne had been screaming and spattered in blood. A school playground in Harrow. A man dead at Thorne's feet and a woman, a police officer, dying a few yards away while he could do nothing. 'Congratulations on being alive,' Nicklin had said to him, smiling. 'Being alive's the easy bit though, isn't it? It's
feeling
alive that's the hard part.'
Thorne had reacted then, lashed out, and watched Stuart Nicklin spitting out the wreckage of teeth and long strings of blood as he was finally seized and led away.
The smile growing broader as he went.
That winter had been mild, and terrible. Nicklin had killed at least four people himself - three young women and an old man - and been directly responsible for as many deaths again. One of them, a man named Martin Palmer, had murdered two women at his behest; killings he had carried out simply because he had been easy to manipulate, and too terrified of his tormentor not to.
Nicklin had learned early that fear was the most powerful weapon of all. He wielded it as skilfully as any butcher used a blade and with as much deadly force as the police marksman who had finally gunned down Palmer in that school playground, five years before.
It had been a little under two hours on the train to Evesham, then a fifteen-minute cab ride from the station to the prison. Thorne hadn't eaten anything the whole way, and now, staring at Nicklin's wide, rejuvenated smile, he was happy to put the feeling in his stomach down to hunger.
'I feel like I should be sitting in a swivel chair,' Nicklin said. 'Stroking a white cat or something.'
'This'll have to do.'
'I was expecting you sooner, if I'm honest.'
'I only got the first picture four days ago.'
'Oh, I take that back then. Sorry.'
'I should think so.'
Nicklin nodded, pleased with himself. 'I told Marcus you were the right man for the job...'
HMP Long Lartin in Worcestershire housed around six hundred of the country's most dangerous adult prisoners. Stuart Nicklin certainly fitted into that category. Thorne would never forget the face of a boy named Charlie Garner. A child forced to watch while his mother had been strangled; to sit alone for two days with her body, starving and dirty and howling.
Thorne looked at Nicklin, seated across from him behind a shiny, battered table. He was wearing jeans and training shoes. A dark blue bib over a light grey sweatshirt.
Not a monster, certainly.
However those readers of the Daily Mail and others of a similar persuasion chose to label the likes of Stuart Nicklin, however the word seemed the only one fitting to describe what they had done, Thorne found it hard to believe that such offenders were naturally
evil
. The description suggested that others were naturally
good
. This was a concept Thorne found equally tricky to grasp. And it introduced a religious connotation into the discussion which made him hugely uncomfortable.
Nicklin was a man, not a monster...
'You had lunch?' Nicklin asked. Thorne shook his head. 'Very good today.' He patted his belly. 'Piling on the pounds, of course, but I'm hardly the type to work out all day, am I?'
A man Thorne would be happy to see die in prison.
In the pub the night before, Lilley had talked about there being a couple of those she'd put away on whom she'd always keep a watchful eye. Observe their progress through the system. It was the same for Thorne, and Nicklin was top of that mercifully short list.
'Why is he sending the pictures to me?'
Nicklin pretended to be taken aback. 'Bloody hell. You don't want to waste any time, do you?' The voice was quieter than the one Thorne remembered, and coarser. He presumed that Nicklin, like many prisoners, was smoking heavily. 'On a promise later on?'
'You're not as fascinating as you think you are,' Thorne said. 'And I get bored very easily. Why am I getting the pictures?'
Nicklin raised a hand to his face, brushed delicately at the side of his nose for a few seconds. 'That was a favour to me,' he said.
Thorne tried hard to show nothing. 'Why does Marcus Brooks owe you any favours?'
'I suppose you could say that I took him under my wing.'
'I bet you did.'
'Showed him the ropes when he got here.'
Thorne had already checked. Like many prisoners, Brooks had been moved around. He'd spent time in Wandsworth and Birmingham before arriving at Long Lartin towards the end of the previous year. 'Was that all you showed him?'
'No point. I could see Marcus wasn't interested in anything like that.'
'Which probably made it even more exciting, right?'
'Where are you dredging this stuff up from?' Nicklin asked.
At the time of his arrest five years before, Nicklin had been married for several years, but he'd lived a number of lives under assumed names, and had worked, during one of them, as a rent boy in the West End. Thorne had no idea if Nicklin had a conventional sexuality of any sort; only that he would fuck anyone, in any way necessary, to gain power over them.
'We were close,' Nicklin said. 'Friends.'
'This is all very heartwarming...'
'I was around to dole out the odd piece of advice when he came in here, and he did the occasional good turn for me. There's always someone wants to have a go at the local nutter, you know? Marcus helped me out once or twice.'
'I thought you could look after yourself,' Thorne said. 'I heard about that poor bastard in Belmarsh.' Thorne had been sent a full report when, two years previously, Nicklin had left a fellow inmate brain-dead after calmly but forcefully jamming a sharpened spoon into his ear.
Nicklin beamed. 'I'm touched that you've been taking an interest.'
'Well,' Thorne said, 'I
worry
. We all do. Me and the families of the men and women you killed. Charlie Garner's grandparents. We like to be double sure you're still where we think you are. That you haven't got creative with the bed-sheets or a bottle of smuggled painkillers.'
Nicklin's expression didn't waver. 'Seriously, I'm touched. And it's good, you know, that the pair of us have been keeping an eye on each other.'
Thorne felt the colour rising. 'What?'
Nicklin waved the question aside, as though he preferred to delay such prosaic push and shove for a little longer. 'You've not changed much, I don't think.' He pointed at the straight scar that ran along Thorne's chin. 'This is new. And there's a lot more grey in the hair. Looking pretty good, though.'
Thorne could not say the same thing. He didn't know if the baldness had been Nicklin's choice, but the creased and pitted head only emphasised a weight gain far greater than might normally have been expected from an extended diet of prison food. If his teeth were looking better, the other features had sunk into the jaundiced flesh of his face. A rash of tiny whiteheads was clustered just inside one nostril. There was dry skin along the lines of both lips. But the eyes were warm still, and seductive.
'What did you mean?' Thorne asked. 'When you said Brooks was doing you a favour.'
The Legal Visits Area was little more than a large corridor with a series of interview booths running off it. Each had a thick, Perspex wall at the front, so that the prisoner could remain 'in sight and out of hearing' of the prison officers on patrol, with CCTV cameras angled in such a way that any documentation could not be seen. On either side, inmates were meeting with solicitors or probation officers, and muffled voices, raised as often as not, bled through the flimsy partitions that separated one booth from the next. For a few seconds before he spoke, Nicklin gazed around as if he'd never been there before. As though he were suddenly amazed at the dirty finger-marks on the glass, at the drabness of the pale yellow walls and the MDF. 'You do know about his girlfriend and the kid?' he said. 'The reason why this is happening?'
Thorne nodded.
'Right, well, you can imagine how fired up he was then. A fortnight before he was due to get out. He went through that whole fucking hippy-dippy range of shit you're supposed to go through when you lose someone: guilt, denial, rage, acceptance, whatever. Only he went through them fast, and he never quite got to the nice toasty part at the end. Marcus was just left with the rage, and it did him a power of good. It made him able to deal with what had happened, to make decisions. It
reconfigured
him.'
'Why was he so sure it was the Black Dogs who were responsible?'
'Someone in here passed the word. I don't know who, but those fuckers made certain he got the message.' Nicklin widened his eyes. 'They wanted him in pain, and he was. He still is, I know that much. But now, so are they. All he talked about before he got released was how much he was going to make them suffer in return. We talked about it a lot.'
'You must have fucking loved that,' Thorne said. 'Someone else you could send out there and encourage to kill.'
'I did nothing, I swear. Marcus didn't need any encouragement. I just made the odd... suggestion.'
'The pictures?'
'I asked if he'd mind sending you the messages.'
Thorne leaned forward, but Nicklin did not back away an inch from him in return. 'Where did you get my number?'
Nicklin puffed out his cheeks. 'For someone who clearly has a brain, you can be as thick as shit sometimes. And careless.'
Thorne's mind was racing through scenarios. He knew Nicklin was good with computers, and must have had access to them inside. Had he been hacking into phone records? If he could get
them
...
'Three things.' Nicklin raised his fingers one at a time. 'Shop around for your utilities. Try to keep that overdraft under control a bit. And stop eating so many takeaways, or I swear you'll end up as porky as I am.'
Thorne took a few seconds to get it, then almost laughed, despite the horrendous possibilities. 'You've had someone going through my bin?'
'A friend of mine who lives in your neck of the woods pops by now and again to rummage around for me. Has done for quite some time.' He paused, gave a wry smile. 'I think I know you pretty well now, and I do mean above and beyond what brand of washing-up liquid you use.'

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