The Judas Scar (36 page)

Read The Judas Scar Online

Authors: Amanda Jennings

Tags: #Desire, #Love Triangle, #Novel, #Betrayal, #Fiction, #Guilt, #Past Childhood Trauma

BOOK: The Judas Scar
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Sophie stayed staring at the clouds. ‘We shouldn’t talk about it;

you love him and it’s not fair for me to bad-mouth him.’

Harmony smiled. ‘You’ve done nothing but bad-mouth him since she died.’ She rolled back to stare at the clouds again. ‘Please tell me.’

Sophie didn’t answer immediately. ‘He broke my heart, that’s all,’ she said at last. ‘Mine and Mum’s. I loved him so much. He was my world.’ She hesitated. ‘He left the day she found out about the breast cancer.’

‘No, surely you’ve remembered that wrong,’ Harmony said.

‘The same day?’

‘I was with her. She was crying. There was a typed letter in her hand. It must have been from the hospital. She sat me on her lap and I cuddled her and told her it would be okay. When he came home she handed him the letter and I watched his face. Everything went dark, like he was cross with her.’ Sophie paused. ‘That night I heard him shouting. I sat in the corridor outside their room and I heard him say we were suffocating him, which I didn’t understand then, I thought he meant actually suffocating. And then I heard him tell her he didn’t want to spend the rest of his days looking after her. That he was a free spirit, not a nursemaid. Then he started screaming at her, telling her to stop crying, to stop laying on the guilt. It scared me, and when I heard him coming out of their room I ran back to bed and hid beneath the covers. He was gone in the morning.’

‘Poor Mum,’ said Harmony. ‘I can’t imagine how desperate she must have felt.’

‘He took his toothbrush, his passport and all the money in the joint account, and just left us. I used to sit there sometimes, watching her sleep, her face pale from vomiting, those drugs attacking her body along with the cancer, and think about how he’d broken her heart. How he’d left me to look after her, left me to try and be both a mother and father to you. I gave everything up when she died: my exams, my friends, my life. I wanted to be an architect. Did you know that?’ She turned her head to look at Harmony.

‘I had no idea. I thought you weren’t interested in exams. I thought that’s why you left school.’

‘No, I left school to look after you.’

‘I’m sorry you had to do that.’

‘Don’t be sorry.’ Sophie looked back at the sky. ‘It’s not your fault. And it was worth it; you did so well. I’m very, very proud of you. As proud of you as I am of my sons.’

Harmony squeezed her hand and felt Sophie squeeze her back.

‘I called him the day after she died. Dad, I mean.’ Sophie’s voice was soft and distant. ‘I found an old number for him and talked to a woman who knew where he lived. He was living just north of Birmingham. I was terrified before I phoned. I remember shaking so hard I could hardly dial the number. The first time he answered I put the phone down as if it had bitten me. Then I plucked up the courage and rang him back and told him that she was gone and that Nan didn’t really want us to move in with her and could we come and stay with him.’

‘What did he say?’ Sophie didn’t answer.

‘Tell me.’

‘He said he wasn’t interested in us.That as far as he was concerned he wasn’t our father.’

Harmony was quiet for a moment or two. ‘Why didn’t you tell me?’

Sophie looked at Harmony. ‘I didn’t want to hurt you. I knew how important it was for you to love him. It gave you strength, and I didn’t want to take that away from you.’

A large white cloud crept across the sky, changing shape imperceptibly as it went, from one nothing to a different nothing.

‘What do you think Mum would say to me now?’

‘She’d tell you Will didn’t do it. She’d say you were a daft idiot for sleeping with that nutter and then she’d tell you she loved you more than all the grains of sand in the world.’

Harmony smiled. ‘I’d forgotten she used to say that.’ She thought of her mum sitting on the edge of her bed and stroking her forehead just before she turned the bedside light off.

I love you. How much? So much.

How much is so much?

Oh, goodness, more than all the grains of sand in the world.

Is that lots?

Gazillions. It’s the biggest number you can think of plus a million.

And then she’d kiss the very tip of her nose and tuck the sheets snugly around her.

‘I miss you, Mum,’ Harmony whispered at the clouds.

They lay there until the grass grew damp and the sun set below the houses at the end of the garden.

‘Do you want to stay here tonight?’ her sister asked as they walked into the house.

‘No, I’m okay. I want to get up early in the morning and do some gardening. I want it to look nice in case Will comes home.’

‘He
will
come home, Harmony. I know he will.’

When Harmony finally fell into bed, after staring at rubbish on the television until her eyes grew sore, she shuffled over to Will’s side and pulled his pillow into her. She loved the way it smelled so strongly of him, a musty manliness mixed with his deodorant and shampoo.

She woke in the middle of the night with a start, thinking her phone had rung, that it was Will calling. But the phone registered no missed call; she’d imagined it, the ringing only a dream.

‘Please come back to me, Will,’ Harmony said, her voice loud against the dark silence. ‘I miss you so much it hurts.’

 

She slept heavily and when she woke it took a few moments for her to work out where she was. The bedroom seemed alien and it was only as the fug of sleep lifted that things began to appear familiar. She put her dressing gown on and went into the kitchen to make some tea.

The doorbell rang, making her jump. She glanced at the clock on the wall; it was half past seven. It rang again. And then again.

‘Oh my God,’ she whispered under her breath, as a sudden fear gripped her. ‘Luke.’

Her stomach knotted. She pulled her dressing gown tighter around her body. She wouldn’t answer it, she’d pretend she wasn’t here. But the ringing became incessant. She crept through the living room and peered carefully through the window.

But it wasn’t Luke. It was Emma. Her heartbeat slowed as the panic left her. She went to the front door and buzzed her in, then opened the door to the flat. The two of them stood and stared at each other. Emma looked tired, as if she hadn’t slept since she’d last seen her, and was dressed in the same tracksuit and sweatshirt.

‘I’m sorry it’s so early,’ she said. ‘I wasn’t sure what time you left for work.’

‘I’m working at home today. I can’t face the office at the moment.’

‘Oh. Right.’ Emma’s fingers pulled at one of her sleeves and her foot tapped nervously.

‘Do you want to come in?’

Emma hesitated then stepped into the flat.

They sat at the table in the living room. Harmony didn’t speak. She had nothing to say. She sat as if made of stone and stared at Emma.

‘I told the police Ian was lying,’ Emma finally said, her voice weak, almost a whisper. ‘I told them he was at home with me that night. I told them to talk to the supermarket where he bought the film. He was there around eight. They’ve probably got him on their camera things.’ She took a deep breath. ‘He wasn’t with Luke Crawford.’

Harmony covered her face with her palms and let the words sink in. Relief crept over her so that she found she was shaking uncontrollably. Just like that, she was going to get her husband home. She became aware of Emma on the other side of the table. As she looked at her, relief was replaced by anger.

‘Why did he lie?’ she demanded. ‘How could you do this to us? I can’t even begin to understand what you did.You’re supposed to be my best friend.’

‘Ian was involved in something at work. He … ’ She broke off and sniffed loudly. ‘He was stealing from the company, and not just petty cash. He was stealing hundreds of thousands of pounds. I had no idea. That was why he was being secretive and drinking. It wasn’t another woman at all. It was because he was about to be found out. All I know is we would have … ’ She stopped herself. ‘He told me we would lose everything and he would go to prison unless I lied about him being home that night.’

‘And you were willing to send Will to prison instead? For murder?’

‘I had no idea Will was involved,’ she said quickly. ‘Neither Ian or I knew anything. I didn’t even know there’d been a … ’ Emma paused for a moment. ‘A murder,’ she said in a hushed tone. ‘All I knew was Ian telling me we were up shit creek and if he didn’t tell everyone he was in London all night with Luke we’d lose the house, our savings, the children would have to leave their school, and he’d go to prison.’ She looked at Harmony. ‘Ian had been stealing money from the bank. Siphoning it off. Luke was involved. He’d told Ian about this scheme, said everyone was doing it, that all Ian needed was a good lawyer to cover his tracks. He was paying Luke a lot of money in fees, but of course,’ she paused, ‘Luke made sure nothing could be connected to him. That’s why Ian was in such a state. The idiot wanted to get out but was in too deep, and when Luke threatened to expose him unless he helped, well, he panicked. Ian had no idea why Luke asked him. It was only when I heard your message on the answer phone, when you told me Will had been arrested for something that happened that night, that I realised it might be linked.’

‘But even then, when you knew Will was involved, you knew he was sitting in some shitty cell awaiting a murder trial, you didn’t say anything.’

‘We didn’t know what to do. We kept going over it, we had such vicious rows, and we sort of convinced ourselves it was fine, that the two things were unrelated. Ian told me Will would get off if he was innocent.’

‘What do you mean
if
?’

‘I knew he was. I never doubted him. We should have told the police, I know that, but Ian was in such a state. I—’

‘Don’t even go there!’ shouted Harmony, shaking her head at Emma’s audacity. ‘I can’t talk about this anymore. It’s too upsetting. Luke killed a man and then tried to frame my husband and it nearly worked because my best friend lied.’ Emma’s face crumpled and she tried to reach out for Harmony. ‘No, Emma.’

Emma didn’t move. ‘I’m so sorry, Harmony. I … didn’t … I know you must hate me.’

Harmony looked at her friend and felt her hardness towards her recede a little. ‘I don’t know how I feel about you,’ Harmony said. ‘To be honest, I’m just relieved you told the bloody truth.’

‘Will he be okay now?’ Emma asked. ‘They’ll arrest Luke? You’ll be safe and they’ll let Will come home?’

‘I hope so,’ Harmony said. ‘I hope to God they will.’

C H A P T E R    T H I R T Y - O N E

Luke set the alarm for five in the morning. It was his favourite time of day. The air was fresh and London was only just beginning to wake properly. He put his dressing gown on and made himself a strong coffee, so strong it was almost as thick as soup. He drank it down in one and then turned the tap on and rinsed the cup. He dried it carefully and then opened the cupboard and placed the cup neatly beside the others.

He went into his bedroom and opened his wardrobe. He unwrapped a suit from its dry-cleaning bag and took out a brand new shirt. Then he opened a drawer, took the wooden box out and opened the lid. He stared at the Swiss Army knife and stroked his finger over its polished red handle. He took it out of the box, opened the blade of the knife and stared at the cold message Will’s father had had etched into the shining metal.

He remembered the first time Will had shown him the knife. They’d gone to the woods and made spears out of ash branches chatting happily while one of them carved a point on one end of his stick and the other smoothed his with a stone. Then they swapped. They’d pretended they were pirates, marooned on an island, surrounded by cannibals.

‘Don’t let them see you,’ Luke whispered to Will as they hid in the bushes and watched the cannibals walking across the field to play rugby. ‘If they catch us, they’ll eat us.’

And the two of them had run in the opposite direction, leaping over fallen tree trunks, scrabbling up slopes, and finally scaling the branches of the huge oak tree and whooping from the leafy canopy like Red Indians as they brandished their sharpened spears.

Luke reached for the photograph and slipped it into his inside jacket pocket with the penknife. Then he looked around his bedroom. He’d taken the rest of the photos to the dump in West Norwood. It felt odd to see them lying on the piles of household waste in that big stinking hanger, cars reversing in and out, people depositing all manner of things, things that had once meant something, that had once had purpose but were now disposable. He saw the satisfaction on their faces as they dusted off their hands and climbed back into their emptied cars, feeling freer, feeling cleansed.

He drove out of London and headed onto the M25. His head was strangely clear. Alastair Farrow was there, of course, but not at the forefront. He wasn’t sure at what point he’d decided to kill him. He thought back to the night his wife died, to the row they’d had, his temper flaring uncontrollably, the look of hurt on her face as he’d screamed at her to leave him alone. Her begging him to stop shouting. Telling him she couldn’t take it anymore. That she couldn’t help him. Tears had scorched her face. Her beautiful rounded belly stretching the fabric of her dress. Then later answering the door to the sombre-faced policemen. His world ceasing to turn. He had sat on the floor of their kitchen, destroyed, memories of what happened at school battering him.

He remembered a few months later, sitting alone in silence on the sofa in his new apartment, tears falling unchecked down his cheeks, struggling to draw breath. He needed to know where they were and what they were doing. Farrow and Will. Those two boys responsible for this. Farrow, the monster who violated him, damaged him, defiled him, then left him in the woods alone, and Will, his friend, the boy who’d untied him from the cross, the boy who pledged his loyalty in blood, who then betrayed him like Judas Iscariot.

Both men had been easy to track down. Will English had a photography business in south-west London. Luke had pored over its website until he’d memorised every word, every image, on it. Trading had recently ceased. There was an apologetic voicemail message from Will, pathetic in its plaintive humour, making light of the economic downturn with a second-rate quip about the recession. Then there was a wine shop. A little-used Facebook account with no privacy settings. A beautiful wife, pictures of whom filled the gallery on the photography website. There were other people in the photos too. And a wedding.

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