The Lie (26 page)

Read The Lie Online

Authors: C. L. Taylor

Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Suspense, #Contemporary Women

BOOK: The Lie
12.62Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
Chapter 43
Five Years Earlier

I wiggle the handle up and down several times then put my shoulder to the wood and push as hard as I can, but the door to Isaac’s study doesn’t so much as creak. It can’t be locked, it just can’t. It’s always open. I wiggle the handle one last time then give up. I’m going to have to leave without my passport.

The patio is still crammed with people talking, laughing, dancing and singing. Everyone is gathered in a circle around the firepit, a goat revolving slowly on a spit above it. Hot fat drips into the fire, making it spark and crackle. The air is thick with the smell of meat, spliffs and smoke. Kane and Shona are sitting to the left of the fire. He’s wrapped around her, one hand on her bare thigh, the other around her waist. Shona rests into him, eyes closed, hands slapping against a pair of bongos that are gripped between her knees as Kane sings a Nepalese folk song I don’t recognise. Beside them, Gabe and Raj are deep in conversation. As I watch, Gabe glances across the circle to where Sally and Isis are sitting together in silence. They’re watching Paula as she twirls and spins around the fire, dancing to the beat of Shona’s drum.

Sitting nearest the garden are three of the new arrivals. The flat-nosed girl has twisted her blonde hair into a bun and adorned it with vibrant pink orchids. Her sparkly vest top looks out of place amongst the tattered T-shirts and faded combat shorts. So does her brunette friend’s full face of make-up. They’re both talking to the tall, slim guy who arrived with them, gesticulating wildly with their hands, touching him on the shoulder or the knee as they wail with laughter. He raises a cup of home brew to his lips and takes a sip, his eyes darting from one woman to the other as though he can’t decide which one he likes best.

Sitting nearest the house is Isaac. He is flanked either side by Leanne and Cera. Daisy is on his lap, her arms twisted around his neck, her head resting against his shoulder, her face tipped up towards his. He holds her loosely, one hand gripping a drink, the other a spliff. Daisy is mid-story, her cheeks flushed, feet wiggling as she smiles up at him, but Isaac is only half listening. He nods at her every couple of seconds then his gaze flicks back to the rest of the group and beyond them towards the orchard and river. Is he looking for Al, too? I take a step backwards, towards the house, but my heel catches on a metal bucket. It clatters to the floor, spilling water onto the patio.

Isaac twists round to see what the noise is. “Hello, Emma.”

The smile slips from Daisy’s face and she pulls herself into him so she can whisper in his ear. He nods, then extends an arm and crooks his index figure, gesturing for me to approach.

A smirk plays on his lips as I walk towards him. Daisy reaches up a hand and caresses the side of his cheek, her eyes never leaving my face.

“Hello, Emma, we haven’t spoken since your detox ended.”

“No, we haven’t.”

“I’ve been busy.” He gives Daisy a squeeze. She squeals with delight and nuzzles her face into his chest.

“The dress suits you.” Isaac looks me up and down again. “It’s very … simple.”

Daisy snorts with laughter and presses a hand to her mouth. She’s wearing one of Cera’s long, turquoise skirts and a white vest top with no bra. An indigo headscarf is twisted in her hair.

“Did you enjoy your detox, Emma?” Isaac asks.

“Yes,” I say evenly.

“Are you grateful?”

I grit my teeth and nod. The sooner he gets bored with this game, the sooner I can slip away and leave.

“Great. That’s very good. Would you do anything for Ekanta Yatra, Emma?”

“Of course I would, Isaac.”

He gestures towards the centre of the patio with a nod of his head. “Would you put your hand over the fire, Emma?”

The fire crackles and spits as the goat revolves round and round and round. Its eyes are black holes, its jaw slack, tongue protruding. The skin on its face is red and crisp.

“Of course.”

“Go on, then.” As he points at it, Daisy tumbles from his lap and gives a snort of indignation.

“Okay.”

I take a step towards the fire. Isaac isn’t going to make me go through with this. He’s just showing off. He’s playing with me to amuse Daisy and Leanne.

“Hurry up!” he shouts, and I take another step forward. The flames leap and crackle, and then it hits me – a wall of heat so overpowering I’m forced to retreat. As I step back, I smack straight into Leanne. She’s twisted her hair into two tight buns on the top of her head. Her long pink fringe hangs over the thick black frame of her glasses, but I can still see her eyes, piggy-small and dark behind the glass.

“Go on” – she shoves me between the shoulder blades – “do what you’re told.”

I take another step forwards. The repetitive bang-bang-bang-bang-bang of Shona’s drum, and the wailing of Kane’s song, grows louder, drowning out the chatter. My eyes water as I approach the fire. The goat, above it, spins round and round, the black sockets where its eyes should be gazing up into the dark sky then at me, then down at the ground. There’s a crack, then a pop, and its lower jaw drops to the ground. Paula stoops to pick it up then squeals with pain, drops it and dances away, her arms twisted above her head like the branches of a vine. I glance back at Isaac. Daisy is back in his arms and they’re both watching me, their eyes glazed with booze, their mouths twisted into amused smiles.

“Carry on!” Isaac shouts.

All I need to do is hold my palm between the goat and the fire for a couple of seconds and then I can go. If I do it quickly, it won’t hurt.

“Emma.” Leanne moves so she’s standing beside me, one hand shielding her face from the heat of the fire.

I reach out a hand towards the flames. They jump and dance towards the tips of my fingers. I instinctively curl them into my palm.

“I’ve only ever wanted us to be friends, Emma.”

Time slows as I turn to stare at her. And in that second, that split second when I realise that she’s lying, her hand reaches out, whippet fast, and slaps mine into the heart of the fire. Sparks fly, the fire roars, ash spills onto the floor and I snatch my hand back.

At first I feel nothing.

And then it comes.

A wave of pain so violent my knees give way and it’s all I can do to stand upright.

The drumming stops, Kane falters mid-note and falls silent, and everyone stops and stares.

Flat-nosed Girl raises a hand to her gaping mouth and covers it. The guy beside her half rises, and the skinny brunette stifles a nervous laugh. Daisy, her arms still wrapped around Isaac’s neck, meets my gaze. There’s no compassion in her eyes, no concern, no regret. She regards me dispassionately, the same way she looked at the gecko after she’d stamped on it.

“She’s okay.” Leanne’s voice cuts through the silence. “Just a bit pissed. Step away from the home brew, everyone. It’s more lethal than it looks.”

Flat-nosed Girl snorts from behind her hand, the tall guy sinks back to his knees, and the brunette laughs openly.

“Come on, you.” Leanne grips my elbow and yanks me away from the fire. “You need to have a lie down.”

As she pushes me roughly out of the circle, Kane catches my eye. His tongue protrudes from his mouth and he licks his top lip.

“Wait your fucking turn.” A hand circles my wrist as Johan yanks me away from Leanne. He half walks, half marches me towards the door and plunges my hand into the metal bucket I kicked over. There’s barely any water left in the bottom but the relief is immediate.

“Thank you,” I gasp as he crouches beside me. “Thank you.”

His lips part as though he’s about to reply, but then he shakes his head and looks away, his hand still gripping my wrist.

“Ladies, gents!” Isaac rises to his feet. “Now the town drunk is receiving medical attention, I thought I might say a few words.

“Abigail, Lesley, Caroline and Jake, I can only apologise for the meagre meals we’ve served you today. We might have the best chef in the whole of the Annapurna range” – he nods towards Raj, and Kane gives a solitary clap – “but he can’t work miracles when we’re running low on food. Not to worry, though, because we’re going on a Pokhara run tomorrow. I say we, but I actually mean Gabe and Al.”

The new girls cheer drunkenly, totally oblivious to the concerned looks being passed between the established members of Ekanta Yatra.

“Any questions?” Isaac asks, his arms crossed over his chest, daring someone, anyone, to ask the obvious question about Gabe and Al’s safety. When no one speaks up, Isaac sits back down and Daisy leans in to him and kisses him hard on the mouth. A second later, the drumming, singing and chatter resumes and Johan stands up, tugging me onto my feet. The instant my hand leaves the water, my palm pulses with pain.

“So you’d do anything for Ekanta Yatra, would you, Emma?”

He pulls me away from the group, towards one of the smaller firepits that light the steps down to the garden.

“Please.” I try to dig my heels into the soft earth, but he’s too strong. “Please, don’t make me put my hand in the fire again. Please, Johan. Please.”

He reaches into the back pocket of his shorts and hands something to me. “It’s Al’s passport. Throw it into the fire, Emma.”

I look at the small, maroon book in my good hand. Al’s passport isn’t just her way out of the country. It’s proof of who she is. Without it, they could dispose of her as easily as they disposed of Ruth.

“Do it, Emma.”

I look past the patio to the gate. Without the key, my only way of escaping is to go over it. There’s a broken ladder patching up the goat enclosure. If I could find a way to untie it, it might still be useable.

“Now!”

I was going to take Al with me, but then I found my tablets in her backpack. Why would she do that? I thought I could trust her, but then I thought I could trust Daisy, too.

“Throw the passport in the fire now, or I’m taking you back to the hut for another detox.”

I shake my head. “No. I’m not doing it.”

I have to trust Al. I have to.

I hug my injured hand to my chest. It hurts so much I want to tear it from my wrist.

“Do it.” He thrusts the passport into my right hand. “Throw it in the fire. Now. Do it now!”

“No. I can’t. I can’t.”

“Then I will.”

He snatches it from my hand and throws it into the firepit.

“No!” Johan grabs me as I reach for it. He locks me in his arms as the flames lick at the edges of the passport then creep across the book, turning the maroon cover black. When the passport is no more than grey dust, he shoves me in the direction of the huts.

“Start walking, Emma.”

Chapter 44

“Where’s Al?” I ask as we cross the wooden bridge, the huts in our sights. “At least let me say goodbye to her, Johan.”

It’s dark, and with the fires burning brightly on the patio in the distance, his face and body are in silhouette as he looms beside me.

“I know Gabe’s going to kill Al tomorrow,” I say. “He’s going to bring her body back here afterwards and tell everyone they were attacked, then she’ll be cremated on the banks of the river. Just like Ruth was.”

Johan says nothing.

“Convince him that Gabe should take me instead. I know he trusts you; he listens to you. Tell him I tried to hurt you. Tell him I wouldn’t sleep with you. Tell him—”

“I can’t do that, Emma.”

“You can. You can convince him.”

“I can’t convince Isaac to do anything, no one can.”

“But you’re one of the original founders. You’ve got power, you’ve—”

He laughs hollowly. “You’ve got no idea.”

“But—”

“Emma, the passport I just threw into the fire wasn’t Al’s. It was Frank’s.”

“Frank’s?” All the hairs go up on my arms and I hug myself, suddenly icy cold.

“I took his passport from him a few days ago, before one of Isaac’s sessions. You saw me. You also saw what happened to him the other night.”

My heel catches on a rock as I take a step backwards, but I don’t gasp or cry out. “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”

“Yes, you do.” He takes a step towards me. “You saw what happened down here, by the river. You were watching from behind a lavender bush.”

He saw me. He saw me watching when they killed Frank. That’s why he’s brought me down here. To kill me too.

“No.” I turn to run, but Johan’s too fast. He scoops me up off my feet and presses a hand to my mouth. His lips brush my ear.

“Don’t scream.”

I twist and kick but he holds me firm.

“I’m not going to hurt you, Emma. I’m going to help you escape. Al’s leaving tonight and she wants you to come too, but I had to check we could trust you. That’s why I asked you to throw her passport into the fire. It was her idea. She knew I still had Frank’s passport. She said we’d know if you’d bought Isaac’s bullshit if you threw it in the fire. Leanne betrayed her, and she had to check if you would, too.”

“Leanne?”

“The knife, Emma. Al was the only other person in the kitchen apart from Leanne, Sally and Raj when the knife disappeared, so they knew she must have taken it to give to you. Isaac wanted to find out if you were still loyal to Al – that’s why Cera asked you where you got it from – and when it turned out you still were, that was it, the decision was made for Gabe to kill Al. Isaac thought it was too dangerous if she stayed in Ekanta Yatra.”

“So why not kill me, too?”

“Because he wants to break you. That’s what the detox was about. If he can’t seduce or manipulate people into this way of thinking, he tries to break them physically instead. There was no detox when we first started this place. There was no
law
about not being in a couple. There was no reserving the new joiners for sex. I had to pretend I wanted to have sex with you to protect you.”

“From who?”

“Kane. He wanted to sleep with you. He’s only a junior member of Ekanta Yatra so he would have had to wait until after I’d slept with you.”

“But you slept with Daisy after her massage. Cera said Isaac was supposed to sleep with everyone first.”

“He wasn’t interested in her; he was after you. I didn’t want to sleep with Daisy, but I couldn’t arouse suspicion, not after what happened with Ruth.” He glances up towards the patio. The fire is still burning and Paula, and someone else, are running around it, jumping and skipping. “Ruth came here as a visitor, with Sally, a couple of months before you guys. She was different from anyone who’d been here before. She was strong and feisty and opinionated and—”

“Like Daisy.”

“She was nothing like Daisy. She was kind and gentle and loyal. She was loyal to me.” He rubs his hands over his face. “We slept together and got closer, closer than we should have. She figured out what was going on here, and we were going to leave. We were going to convince as many people as we could to leave with us. It was all going to plan until Isaac decided he wanted to sleep with her and she refused. A couple of days later, she disappeared, and Isaac told everyone she’d gone on the Pokhara run with Gabe. When I found out, I went for him, but Kane and Jacob were with him and they pulled me off. He said that if I so much as looked at him the wrong way, he’d kill one of you. He said he’d kill Al. Isaac’s not homophobic but he is a control freak and he doesn’t know how to deal with her. He told Isis what Leanne had told him about Al’s dead brother, but it backfired.”

“Because she freaked out?”

“Exactly.”

“But surely people would get suspicious if Gabe came back and said there’d been another attack.”

“Not if Gabe said Al decided to leave when they got down to Pokhara. There are a hundred thousand places on the mountain where you could hide a body and no one would ever discover it.”

“We have to take more people with us. There are other people who want to leave. Raj, Sally …”

Johan shakes his head. “Do you trust them? Enough to risk Al’s life? Because Ruth and I were planning on taking half a dozen people with us, but one of them betrayed us. They told Isaac. He could have killed us both, but that wouldn’t have satisfied him. He wanted to see me suffer. He wanted to put me on a leash and get me to jump, roll over, beg. He enjoys it, Emma. He gets a kick out of playing with people. Leanne’s the same. You know she was the one who told Frank that you liked him, don’t you?”

“No!”

“Isaac asked me to check on him one night, and he told me. He said she encouraged him to make a move on you because you were too shy to initiate anything. You have to be very careful who you trust, Emma. Very careful indeed.”

The sound of drumming drifts down from the patio. Other instruments, too – guitars, tin whistles and tambourines. I look for Leanne but there are too many people dancing now, spinning and jumping and twirling each other around, blocking my view. Why would she have done that? She can’t have known he would have attacked me. She probably wanted him to make a move on me in public and embarrass me – raise a cheap laugh for her and Daisy. I look back at Johan.

“I don’t trust anyone.”

“Do you trust me?”

“I don’t know.”

He looks at me for several seconds then nods, as though satisfied with my answer. “Let’s go and find Al.”

We keep to the perimeter, walking single file along the fence.

“If anyone sees us” – Johan pauses to look back at me – “we tell them we’re on patrol. If they insinuate we just slept together in one of the huts, we play along with it. Okay?”

I nod. The palm of my hand is burning and blistering from the fire. I couldn’t speak even if I wanted to.

We move quickly as we head up towards the house. Johan strolls ahead, swinging his arms, his head up. He glances over towards the patio as we pass the party, but I keep my own gaze firmly fixed on his back.

Act natural.

Someone screams and my heart jolts with fear, but the sound is followed by the sound of laughter and Paula swearing loudly. Johan doesn’t so much as twitch. Instead, he continues his even-paced march along the curve of the fence past the main gates and around the log pile then turns sharply and slips into the shadows by the side of the house. He draws to a halt underneath the window of Isaac’s study then glances back to check I’m still with him.

“Okay?” he mouths, and I stand beside him, my back pressed against the wall, my heart pounding in my chest.

He doesn’t wait for a reply. Instead, he gestures upwards with his index finger. The main study window is closed but the smaller window above it is open. It’s eight feet up and the opening is tiny, but it’s a way in. It’s the only way in.

Johan interlinks his fingers, arms straight, and nods at me then the window.

“Is Al in there?” I whisper.

He nods then gestures for me to put my foot in his hands. I slip off my flip-flops, put my hands on his shoulders and place my foot in his interlocked fingers. He nods.

One.

Two.

Three.

I’m launched into the air.

I reach for the window and fasten my fingers over the sill. There’s a grunt below me as Johan rearranges his grip on my right foot and pushes. My body jolts upwards a couple of inches, but it’s not enough for me to hook an arm over the window. I’m still too far away.

“Put your left foot on my head,” Johan hisses. “Use me as a step.”

He heaves me up again and my left leg waves wildly in the air as I search for traction. It connects with something solid then slides away. Johan swears under his breath.

“The next time I push, you need to pull, Emma. Pull yourself into the window. Ready? One, two, three.”

He launches me upwards again and I reach up with my right hand. My arm goes through the window but I slide down again before I can hook my armpit over. The sill scrapes my forearm as I slip back down.

“Fuck.”

Johan wraps his arms around my legs and lowers me to the ground. He gestures for me to stay where I am, then edges along the wall and peers round the corner of the house. A couple of seconds later he inches back to me.

“People are starting to drift away from the party. We need to hurry.”

“We’ll have to break the window.” I glance over towards the log pile. “If we hold something soft against the window, it will help deaden the sound.”

Johan follows my gaze, indecision written all over his face as the drumming increases and Kane starts singing again. I don’t wait for him to reply; instead, I sprint towards the log pile, grab the biggest one I can carry and run back to the window.

“Take off your T-shirt then hold this. Careful, there are a couple of rusty nails sticking out of the side.” I wait for him to pull off his T-shirt then exchange it for the log and hold the thin material up to the window, just below the catch. The drumming grows louder, Kieran sings and a woman screams with excitement. “Now!”

There’s a dull thud, a cracking sound and the tinkle of falling glass. Johan taps at the T-shirt and more glass shatters and falls away, littering the floor of Isaac’s study. I pull the T-shirt away. There’s a fist-sized hole in the window. Wordlessly, Johan takes the T-shirt from me, wraps it around his hand and wrist and slips his arm through the hole. He twists his hand around so he can reach the catch. A second later, the window flies open and he swings himself up and through it.

I keep one eye on what’s happening through the study window, one eye on the corner of the house. Every sound from inside Isaac’s study is amplified as Johan drags the desk away from the rug, the legs screeching on the wooden floor.
Come on, come on, come on.

He rolls up the rug and opens the hatch then disappears into the hole.

Come on, Johan. Come on.

I hear the footsteps just as Johan’s blonde head pops up through the hatch, and then a cloud of cigarette smoke drifts towards me, followed by Gabe.

“Gabe!” I throw myself at him as he rounds the corner, and wrap my arms around his neck. The weight of my body knocks him off balance and he stumbles backwards, away from the window.

“Emma?” He pushes me away and looks me up and down. A wry smile lifts the side of his mouth. “Are you pissed?”

I put a hand on his chest, stroke my thumb over the worn material of his T-shirt and smile. “I might be.”

“I heard about you putting your hand in the fire.”

“It was a dare. Seemed like a good idea at the time.”

“Right.” He moves to walk around me.

“I’ve got a better idea.” I take a step in sync with him, blocking his path. I keep my hand on his chest and lean towards him so our faces are inches apart. “Why don’t we go and talk about it somewhere more private? Somewhere like … I don’t know … the huts?”

“Why go all the way down to the huts? Why not have a conversation right here?” His hands snake around my waist and he pulls me close, pressing his groin into me as his thick, wet tongue searches out mine.

He walks as we kiss, moving me away from the bright lights of the house and into darkness. We stop abruptly as the backs of my thighs make contact with the log pile, and he presses himself into me, forcing me to lie back against the wood. He hitches up my dress and his hand snakes its way up my thigh. I stiffen as his fingers pluck at my knickers, and a wave of panic crashes through me.

I can’t do this. I can’t do this. I can’t. I—

I twist from side to side, but the more I struggle, the more frantic he becomes, grabbing at my breasts with one hand, yanking down my knickers with the other.

Where are Johan and Al?

There is the sound of a zipper being pulled, a low grunt, and then a sound I’ve heard before. The sound of a football being kicked. Only this time it’s followed by a violent crack, like a butcher’s knife cleaving through bone, and Gabe’s lips slip from my mine. They trail down my cheek, striping my skin with saliva as the full weight of his body collapses onto mine. Before I can move, scream or cry, Johan appears behind him. He grips Gabe’s shoulders and hauls him off me, then tosses him roughly to one side. Gabe’s body slips down the log pile and falls to the ground with a soft thump. Johan throws something at the body. It’s the log we used to smash open the window. The three nails on the end are dripping with blood.

Someone leans over me. Someone with pale skin, terrified eyes and bleach-tipped hair clinging to her forehead.

“He’s dead,” Al says. “Gabe’s dead.”

Other books

Foreign Correspondence by Geraldine Brooks
In the Wake of the Wind by Kingsley, Katherine
The Great Night by Chris Adrian
Eagle's Honour by Rosemary Sutcliff
Jurassic Park: A Novel by Michael Crichton