Read What Came Before He Shot Her Online
Authors: Elizabeth George
Tags: #Mystery, #Thriller, #Crime, #Suspense, #Contemporary, #Adult
Ness had only one way to survive a reference to her father, and that way was retreat: a distancing that she effected by allowing that hot stone always within her to grow in size until she could feel it climbing a burning path to reach the back of her tongue. Contempt was what she experienced when anger did its work upon her. Contempt for her father—which was the only safe emotion she could harbour towards him—and even more contempt for her aunt. She said, “What’re you twisted ’bout? I make rollies, innit. Shit, you the sort always t’ink the worse.”
“Speak English like you were taught, Vanessa. And don’t tell me you’ve been making rollies when you’ve got a packet of cigarettes big as life inside that rucksack. Whatever else you think, I am
not
stupid.
You’re smoking weed. You’re running round truant. What else are you doing?”
Ness said, “I tol’ you I wa’n’t wearin that bloody kit.”
“You mean me to think this is all a reaction to having to wear a school uniform you don’t like? What sort of fool do you think I am?
Who’ve you been with all these weeks? What’ve you been doing?”
Ness reached for the packet of Wrigley’s. She used it to gesture at her aunt, a movement that asked—with no little sarcastic intent—if she could chew a piece of gum since she wasn’t, apparently, going to be allowed to smoke. She said, “Nuffi nk.”
“Nothing,” Kendra corrected her. “No-thing.
Nothing
. Say it.”
“Nothing,” Ness said. She folded a piece of gum into her mouth.
She played with its wrapper, rolling the foil around her index finger and keeping her gaze fixed on it.
“Nothing with who, then?”
Ness made no reply.
“I asked you—”
“Six an’ Tash,” she cut in. “All right? Six an’ Tash. We hang at her house. We listen to music. Tha’s it, innit.”
“She’s your source? This Six?”
“Come
on
. She’s my mate.”
“So why haven’t I met her? Because she’s supplying you and you know I’ll twig it. Isn’t that right?”
“Fuck it. I
tol’
you wha’ the papers ’s for. You goin t’ believe wha’
you want to believe. ’Sides, not like you
wanted
to meet anyone, innit.”
Kendra saw that Ness was trying to turn the tables, but she wasn’t going to allow that to happen. Instead she resorted to an anguished, “I can’t have this. What’s
happened
to you, Vanessa?” in that age-old parental cry of despair, which is generally followed by the internal query of, What did I do wrong?
But Kendra didn’t follow up her first question with that silent and self-directed second one, for at the last moment, she told herself that these were not her children and technically none of them should even be her problem. Since they had an impact on her life, however, she tried another tack, without knowing her words formed the single query least likely to produce a positive result. She said, “What would your mum say, Vanessa, if she saw how you’re acting now?”
Ness crossed her arms beneath her breasts. She would
not
be touched in this way, not by reference to the past or prognostication of the future.
Although Kendra didn’t know exactly what Ness was up to, she concluded that whatever it was, it had to do with drugs and most likely, because of her age, with boys as well. This added up to news that wasn’t good. But beyond that, Kendra knew nothing aside from what went on on the estates round North Kensington, and she knew plenty about that. Drug purchases. Contraband exchanging hands. Muggings. Breakins. The occasional assault. Gangs of boys looking for trouble. Gangs of girls doing much the same. The best way to avoid putting yourself into harm’s way was to walk a narrow path defined by school, home, and nothing else. This, apparently, was not what Ness had been doing.
She said to her, “You can’t do this, Ness. You’re going to get hurt.”
“I c’n take care of myself,” Ness said.
That, of course, was the real issue. For Kendra and Ness each had an entirely different definition of what taking care of oneself actually meant. Rough times, disease, disappointment, and death had taught Kendra she had to stand alone. The same and more had taught Ness to run, as fast and as far as her mind and her will would take her.
So Kendra asked the only question left to ask, the one she hoped would get through to her niece and mould her behaviour henceforth.
She said, “Vanessa, d’you want your mum to know how you’re behav-ing?”
Ness raised her gaze from the study she was making of her chewing gum wrapper. She cocked her head. “Oh yeah, Aunt Ken,” she finally replied, “like you’re really going to tell her that.”
It was a direct challenge, nothing less. Kendra decided the time had come to accept it.
While Kendra could have taken them by car, she opted instead for the bus and the train. Unlike Glory, who in the past had always accompanied the Campbell children to visit their mother because she wasn’t otherwise employed, Kendra had a job to go to and a career to develop, so the children were going to have to make the journey to Carole Campbell by themselves after this. To do that, they’d need to know how to get there and back on their own.
Crucial to Kendra’s plan for the day was that Ness should not know where they were going initially. If she knew, she would bolt and Kendra needed her cooperation even if Ness didn’t realise she was giving it.
She wanted Ness to see her mother—for reasons that Kendra could not express either to herself or to the girl—and she also wanted Carole Campbell to see Ness. For mother and daughter had had a bond at one time, even through Carole’s terrible periods.
They began their journey on the number 23 bus to Paddington station. As it was a Saturday, the bus was overly crowded since the route would take them to the top of Queensway where, at the weekends, hordes of kids hung about the shops, cafés, restaurants, and cinemas.
This, indeed, was where Ness thought they were going, and when they approached the appropriate stop in Westbourne Grove, the fact that Ness automatically stood and began to head for the stairs—for they’d crammed themselves into the upper deck of the bus—told Kendra a great deal about where her niece had been spending her time during the days when she was meant to be at school.
`Kendra caught the back of Ness’s jacket as the girl started to negotiate her way down the aisle. She said, “Not here, Vanessa,” and she held on until the bus was moving again.
Ness looked from her aunt to the fast disappearing vista that was the corner of Queensway. Then she looked at her aunt again. She realised she’d been had in some way, but she didn’t yet know in what way it was since, always with Six and Natasha as her companions, she’d never ridden the number 23 bus any farther than Queensway.
“Wha’s this, then?” she said to Kendra.
Kendra made no reply. Instead, she adjusted the collar of Toby’s jacket and said to Joel, “You all right there, luv?”
Joel nodded. He’d been assigned the job of seeing to Toby, and he was making the best of it that he could. But he felt agonised down to the roots of his hair about the responsibility. For on this day, Toby had been in a state from the minute he’d awakened, as if he’d had preter-natural knowledge of where they’d be going and what would happen when they got there. Because of this he had insisted on bringing his life ring with him fully inflated, and he’d made a spectacle of himself, tiptoeing along, muttering, and fluttering his hands around his head as if he were being attacked by flies. It was even worse inside the bus, where again he wouldn’t take off the ring for love or money. Neither would he deflate it in order to make more room for his family or the other passengers. At Kendra’s suggestion that he do so, he’d said
no
and
no!
louder and louder and he’d started crying that he
had
to keep it on cos Gran was coming for them and anyway Maydarc
told
him it was helping him
breathe
and he would
suff’cate
if anyone took it from him. Ness had said Shit, give it
here
, then, and had taken matters into her own hands, which only exacerbated a bad situation that was already causing everyone’s attention to fall upon them. Toby began to shriek, Ness began to snarl, “I am narked now, mon. You got that, Toby?” and Joel cringed and wanted more than anything just to disappear.
“Vanessa,” Kendra said firmly to her, in part to defuse the situation but also in part because Ness would be required to remember the route in the future, “this is the number twenty-three bus. You’ve got that, right?”
“You are startin to vex me as well, Aunt Ken,” was Ness’s reply.
“Why I need gettin it, anyways?” She didn’t add
bitch
, but it was in her tone.
“You need
gettin it
because I’m telling you to get it,” Kendra told her. “Number twenty-three bus. Westbourne Park to . . . Ah yes. Here we are. To Paddington station.”
Ness’s eyes narrowed. She knew very well what debarkation at Paddington station likely presaged. Along with her siblings, she’d been to this place many times over the years. She said, “Hey. I
ain’t
—”
Kendra grabbed her arm. “You are,” she said. “And if I know you, the last thing you really want is to make a scene like a five-year-old right here in front of strangers. Joel, Toby? Come along with us.”
Ness could have run off when they alighted, but in the past few years she’d become a girl who liked to plan her defiance for a moment when the other party least suspected that defi ance was on her mind. Running off as they made their way into the cavernous railway station was the
expected
response, so Ness adopted a different strategy.
She tried to shake off her aunt’s grip. She said, “All right. All
right,
”
and she even attempted to speak what was, to her, her aunt’s excessively irritating Lady Muck English. “You can let go now,” she went on. “I’m not doing a bloody runner, okay? I’ll go, I’ll go. But it won’t make a diff ’rence to anything, cos it never does. Gran ain’t told you that? Well, you’ll see fast enough.”
Kendra didn’t bother to correct either her lapses in grammar or her pronunciation. Instead, she rooted twelve pounds from her bag. She gave the money to Joel and not to Ness, whom she didn’t trust, no matter the girl’s ostensible cooperation. She said, “While I do the tickets, you lot go over to WH Smith. Buy her the magazine she likes and her sweets, and get something for yourselves. Joel?”
He looked up. His face was solemn. He had just turned twelve—one week into it—with the weight of the world settling on his shoulders.
Kendra could see this, and while she regretted it, she knew there was also no help for the matter. “I’m depending on you. You keep that money from your sister, all right?”
“I don’t want your bleeding money,
Ken
dra,” Ness snapped. “Come
on
.” This last she said to her brothers, leading them towards the station’s WH Smith. She grabbed Toby by the hand and tried, by pressing down on his shoulders, to force him into walking on the flat of his feet instead of on his toes. He protested and squirmed to get away from her. She gave up the effort.
In the meantime, Kendra watched to make sure they were heading towards WH Smith. She went to fetch their tickets. The machines were out of order as usual, so she was forced to join the queue in the ticket hall.
The three Campbells negotiated the surging crowd, most of whom were jockeying for position to stand with their gazes fixed on the departures board as if they’d just received word of the imminent Second Coming. Joel guided Toby through the travelers, in Ness’s wake, pointing out sights like a demented tour guide to keep his brother moving forward: “Lookit dat surfboard, Tobe. Where you ’spect dat bloke is going?” and “You see dat, Tobe? They were triplets in dat pushchair.”
In this way, he got his brother into WH Smith, where he looked around for Ness and finally caught sight of her at the magazines. She’d selected
Elle
and
Hello!
and she was heading for the display of sweets and other snacks when Joel caught up with her.
If anything, it was even more crowded in WH Smith than it had been on the concourse. Toby’s life ring made things worse for them in the shop, but this difficulty was ameliorated by the fact that he stuck to Joel’s side like a foxtail in fur.
He said, “I don’ want crisps wiv flavours, dis time. Jus’ the reg’lar kind. C’n I get a Ribena ’s well?”
“Aunt Ken didn’t say about drinks,” Joel replied. “We’ll see wha’
kind of money we got left.” It would be little enough, and Joel saw this when the boys joined their sister. He said to Ness, “Aunt Ken di’n’t say two magazines. We got to have enough money for her chocolate, Ness.
For the snack ’s well.”
“Well, sod Aunt Kendra with a broomstick, Joel,” was Ness’s reply.
“Gi’ me the money to pay for these.” She gestured with
Hello!
On its cover, an antique rock ’n’ roller posed toothily, displaying his twentysomething wife and an infant young enough to be a great-grandchild.
“C’n I get a Milky Way?” Toby asked. “Crisps, Milky Way, and Ribena, Joel?”
“I don’t think we got enough to—”
“_Gi’ _ me that money,” Ness said to Joel.
“Aunt Ken said—”
“I got to bloody
pay,
don’t I?”
At this, several people turned in their direction, including the Asian boy who was working the till. Joel flushed, but he didn’t give in to his sister. He knew he’d get hell from her later on, but for now, he decided he’d do as he’d been told and damn whatever consequences Ness would force him to face.
He said to Toby, “So what kind of crisps you want, Tobe?”
Ness said, “Shit. You are one pathetic—”
“Kettle Crisps okay?” Joel persisted. “These here don’t got flavours on them. These do you okay?”
It would have been a simple matter for Toby just to nod so that they could get out of the shop. But as usual, he went his own way. In this case, he decided he had to look at each bag of crisps on display, and he refused to be contented until he’d touched every one of them as if they were possessed of magical properties. Ultimately, he chose the one Joel had been holding out to him all along, making this choice based not on nutritional value—of which as a seven-year-old he knew nothing at all and cared even less—but rather on the colour of the bag. He said, “Dat one’s real pretty. Green’s my favourite. Di’ you know dat, Joel?”