Rush of Blood Read online




  Mark Billingham has twice won the Theakston’s Old Peculier Award for Best Crime Novel, and has also won a Sherlock Award for the Best Detective created by a British writer. Each of the novels featuring Detective Inspector Tom Thorne has been a Sunday Times bestseller, and Sleepyhead and Scaredy Cat were made into a hit TV series on Sky 1 starring David Morrissey as Thorne. Mark lives in north London with his wife and two children.

  Visit the author’s website at: www.markbillingham.com

  Also by Mark Billingham

  The DI Tom Thorne series

  Sleepyhead

  Scaredy Cat

  Lazybones

  The Burning Girl

  Lifeless

  Buried

  Death Message

  Bloodline

  From the Dead

  Good as Dead

  Other fiction

  In The Dark

  Copyright

  Published by Hachette Digital

  ISBN: 978-0-74812-049-9

  All characters and events in this publication, other than those clearly in the public domain, are fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

  Copyright © Mark Billingham Ltd 2012

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the prior permission in writing of the publisher.

  Hachette Digital

  Little Brown Book Group

  100 Victoria Embankment

  London, EC4Y 0DY

  www.hachette.co.uk

  For Mum and Dad

  Contents

  Also by Mark Billingham

  Copyright

  Prologue Florida

  Part One Angie and Barry

  One

  Two

  Three

  Four

  Five

  Six

  Seven

  Eight

  Nine

  Ten

  Eleven

  Twelve

  Thirteen

  Fourteen

  The First Dinner

  Fifteen

  Sixteen

  Seventeen

  Eighteen

  Part Two Sue and Ed

  Nineteen

  Twenty

  Twenty-One

  Twenty-Two

  Twenty-Three

  Twenty-Four

  Twenty-Five

  Twenty-Six

  Twenty-Seven

  Twenty-Eight

  Twenty-Nine

  Thirty

  Thirty-One

  Thirty-Two

  Thirty-Three

  Thirty-Four

  Thirty-Five

  Thirty-Six

  Thirty-Seven

  The Second Dinner

  Thirty-Eight

  Thirty-Nine

  Forty

  Forty-One

  Part Three Marina and Dave

  Forty-Two

  Forty-Three

  Forty-Four

  Forty-Five

  Forty-Six

  Forty-Seven

  Forty-Eight

  Forty-Nine

  Fifty

  Fifty-One

  Fifty-Two

  Fifty-Three

  Fifty-Four

  Fifty-Five

  Fifty-Six

  Fifty-Seven

  The Final Dinner

  Fifty-Eight

  Fifty-Nine

  Part Four Sue

  Sixty

  Sixty-One

  Sixty-Two

  Sixty-Three

  Sixty-Four

  Sixty-Five

  Acknowledgements

  PROLOGUE

  FLORIDA

  It’s all wrong.

  The light winking on the blue mirror of the pool, the sunhats and the sweating beer bottles clutched in their fists. The drone of insects. The smell of warm skin slick with suntan lotion.

  All of it.

  It couldn’t really be any more unsuitable, bearing in mind what’s happening. One of them thinks there’s a word for it, for that … clash, but he can’t remember what the word is. The six of them just listen and shake their heads, trying their best not to let the woman see how awkward they’re feeling – God, that would be terrible, all things considered – but it only makes the situation worse. Now, they’re worried that they just look even more relaxed, even more insensitive. Like they don’t give a shit about the missing girl.

  It makes them all feel even guiltier.

  I mean, clearly it’s just a question of ‘context’ or whatever you call it, because for the previous thirteen days the picture could not have been more perfect. Wasn’t that exactly what they’d paid their money for, and weren’t they there to relax? But that was before the flashing lights on the roofs of cars were visible through the palm trees. Before there were cops and State Troopers running about and radios crackling.

  On top of which, the woman herself seems pretty relaxed about it all.

  ‘It’s so crazy,’ she says, and raises her hands in a ‘stay where you are’ gesture when one of them tries to get up from the sunbed. ‘I feel stupid putting everyone to all this trouble.’ She takes a step away and says, ‘No, really,’ when another asks if there’s anything they can do. ‘It’s fine, honestly …’

  Later on, talking in whispers, one of the men says, ‘Why should we feel guilty? I mean, there was no shortage of people out looking for her, and it’s not like we didn’t offer to help, is it?’

  His wife shrugs. ‘There’s not much we can do about the sunshine, is there?’

  A couple of the others nod.

  ‘Disparity,’ one of them says. ‘Is that the word?’

  So, they eat their final meal together and try to enjoy the last night of their holiday. They talk about how the woman’s daughter has probably just gone to the mall, if she hasn’t turned up already, and keep talking in much the same way even though the police cars are still around the following morning. On a full flight back to Gatwick, they try and fail to sleep. Scratchy-eyed, they eat their foil-wrapped meals and watch movies, and several pick at the skin that is already peeling from chests and shoulders. They stay cheerful, more or less, but each of them is thinking about the woman by the pool and a smile that quivered and died. That kept on dying, a little bit quicker each time it was cranked into place.

  Thinking about her insistence that everything would be fine, that everything was fine, and the words – spoken with something approaching irritation – when she glimpsed what she took to be sympathy.

  ‘She’s missing,’ the woman says. ‘That’s all, just missing. So, don’t even think it.’ And her voice rises just a little and cracks, and just before she pushes her sunglasses back into place, there’s something fierce and tight around her eyes.

  ‘My daughter is not dead.’

  PART ONE

  ANGIE AND BARRY

  From: Angela Finnegan [email protected]

  Date: 16 May 17:31:01 BST

  To: Susan Dunning [email protected]

  Cc: Marina Green [email protected]

  Subject: Dinner!!!

  Hi All!

  You know how you meet people on holiday and say things like ‘we really must stay in touch’? I bet you’re regretting swapping those email addresses now. Ha ha!

  Seriously though, it was an amazing holiday even if it did end a bit oddly, so I thought it would be great if we could all get together. So, me and Barry would love it if the four of you could come to dinner on Saturday, June 4th. I know it’s a bit of a trek down here to deepest, darkest Crawley but I do a mean bread and butter pud and I promise to send out sherpas if you get lost!!

  Talk to the boys and let me know ASAP, but I really h
ope you can all make it.

  Lotsa love,

  Angie xxx

  PS. Been looking at the local papers on the internet and still no sign of that poor girl. Can’t imagine what her mother must be going through. Horrible, just horrible.

  PPS. Can’t remember, but is anyone a veggie?

  ONE

  Angie moved slowly along the aisle, nudging the trolley with its squeaky wheel past white meat and along to red, picking up some bacon – which they needed anyway – before turning and heading back again. Still trying to decide between chicken and lamb. Chops or coq au vin.

  She’d originally wanted to do something themed. A holiday-style menu to remind them all of their fortnight in the sun, with piña coladas to kick things off. Seafood had been the obvious choice, a chowder perhaps – if she could find the clams – and then some sort of fish for a main. She had even gone online and found a recipe for Key Lime pie.

  Barry had said it was a stupid idea, so she’d let it go.

  She glanced down into the trolley, wondered if she should get some ice cream to go with the frozen pizzas she’d picked out for the kids. It was all quick and easy and it would be handy to get dinner for the pair of them done and dusted before her guests arrived. She knew that Laura and Luke would be happy enough with that arrangement; keen to stay out of everyone’s way and not have to join in with boring grown-up conversations. One night in front of the computer couldn’t hurt, assuming that any homework had already been done.

  Barry was in charge of all that.

  She picked up a large pack of chicken breasts. She saw that the meat was organic, clocked the price and quickly put it back again. Right idea though. Lamb was nice enough, but it could be a bit tricky, what with some people preferring it pinker than others, and Barry had always enjoyed her coq au vin. She reached for a cheaper pack …

  ‘I just thought it would have been nice,’ she had said. ‘A bit different.’

  ‘I don’t see the point.’

  ‘There’s no point, it’s just a bit of fun, that’s all. Cooking something Floridian.’

  ‘What?’

  ‘Something that comes from Florida.’

  ‘I know what the word means,’ Barry said, eyes narrow. He crushed the empty beer can he was holding, opened the lid of the bin in the corner of the kitchen and tossed the can inside. ‘I’m just trying to work out why the hell you’re saying it. It’s poncey.’

  ‘Look, it doesn’t matter.’

  ‘The whole thing’s poncey, you ask me.’ He slammed the lid of the bin shut and walked across to the fridge. ‘You’ll make us look stupid.’

  ‘Fine, I’ll just do chicken or whatever.’ Angie reached for the cloth that was draped over the edge of the sink. ‘That OK, then?’ Rubbing at a smear on the granite worktop, she watched as her husband stared into the fridge for almost half a minute, then closed the door again without taking anything out. There was a bit more hair gone at the back, she noticed, and the mottled roll of fat above his collar seemed that little bit thicker. Not that she was in any position to talk, of course. ‘OK, then,’ she said to herself.

  ‘Yeah, fine, whatever.’

  He walked behind her, put his hands on her shoulders and kissed the back of her head. She carried on rubbing at the granite, though the smear had already gone.

  ‘Can’t see why we’re even bothering though, to be honest,’ he said. He moved away and pulled out one of the seats at the breakfast bar. ‘Haven’t we got enough friends?’

  ‘It’s just a get-together, that’s all. Sort of an add-on to the holiday kind of thing.’

  ‘Why do we want to do that?’ he asked. ‘I mean, it all went a bit weird at the end.’

  ‘Only at the end.’

  ‘That girl and everything.’

  ‘All the more reason. It’s something we’ve got in common, isn’t it?’

  ‘So, because of that we have to go to all this trouble?’

  ‘You don’t have to do anything,’ she said.

  ‘You know what I mean.’

  ‘You got on all right with Ed and Dave, didn’t you?’

  He shrugged. ‘They were nice enough.’

  ‘And the girls.’

  Barry rolled his head slowly around on his neck. ‘Ed’s wife was all right, but that what’s-her-face … Marina … got right on my nerves.’

  ‘Really?’

  ‘A bit full of herself, I reckon.’

  Angie just nodded, happy to let him think he was being clever. She knew very well he was only pretending not to like Marina Green because he fancied the arse off her. Because he was a sucker for big tits and an over-the-top dye job. Angie had watched him ogling her on the sly, saucer-eyed behind his knock-off Oakleys, pretending he was still reading his paper as she climbed out of the pool in a bikini that anyone could see was too small for her.

  ‘Well, I think she’s nice,’ Angie said.

  ‘Up to you.’

  ‘I think they’re all nice, and providing you make an effort we’ll have a nice evening.’ She could hear raised voices in the lounge, an argument about what to watch on TV. She opened the kitchen door and shouted at her children to stop bickering. When she turned back into the kitchen, Barry was standing, rubbing the belly that strained against a maroon polo shirt.

  ‘What about the diet?’ he asked.

  She considered the fact that he was almost certainly more concerned about her putting on a few pounds than him. She thought about the two cans of lager he’d got through in the half-hour since he’d come in from work and the empty crisp packets she was always digging out of his car. ‘I’ll do fruit for pudding,’ she said. ‘It’s just one night.’

  ‘It won’t be though, will it?’ He slid a hand beneath the shirt, began to scratch. ‘We have them over here, then each of them invites us to their place, whatever.’

  ‘What’s wrong with that?’

  ‘Like I told you, we’ve got enough friends.’

  ‘Name them,’ Angie said.

  ‘Excuse me, could I just …?’

  Angie blinked and apologised to the man who was stretching to reach past her for something. She nudged the trolley with the squeaky wheel out of his way and wondered how long she had been standing there, staring blankly at the meat like a mad woman. She glanced down at the pack of chicken that was still in her hand.

  The shiny pink flesh, pressed tight against the polythene wrap.

  She dropped the meat into her trolley and moved quickly towards the till. Remembering that last meal the six of them had eaten, the blood-red sunset and all the police cars back at the resort. It would be strange, she thought, to see them all again, eight weeks and a world away from where they had met.

  A holiday to remember, in spite of everything.

  Finnegan Bros. That’s what it said on the signs and on the sides of the vans and on that overpriced headed notepaper he never wanted in the first place.

  Bros. Brothers. Two of them …

  You wouldn’t know that though, Barry thought. Not the way he was spoken to sometimes, and dismissed. The way he got given the runaround like he was just another employee.

  Adrian was the younger brother, that’s what made it even harder to stomach. Three years younger, but while Barry had been getting his hands dirty, Adrian was the one swanning about at college just long enough to get some poxy business management qualification. Now he seemed to think he was Alan Sugar or something and that some pointless bit of paper made his contribution to the firm more important than Barry’s.

  Well, it fucking didn’t.

  Barry slammed the heel of his hand against the steering wheel, pulled it left and put his foot down hard to take the Audi past some idiot doing forty miles an hour in the outside lane like a tit in a trance.

  Forty-five minutes each way, just to take abuse from some moron who was still complaining that work on his loft extension had ‘not been completed to a satisfactory standard’. A window that didn’t shut properly, a radiator that leaked, shit like t
hat. Forty-five minutes each way, on a Saturday afternoon, while his brother sat at home watching Sky Sports and playing with his kids.

  His jammy bastard brother, who still got to see his sodding kids.

  A Saturday, for crying out loud, when he’d been working his arse off all week … and to cap it all, the punter had still not been happy. Whined like an old woman, called him a cowboy, then, after all that, said he might just as well phone Adrian to get it sorted out.

  Typical.

  ‘Should have spoken to the organ-grinder in the first place.’ That’s what the cheeky bastard had said. Took a good deal of self-control on Barry’s part to keep his fist from flying into the little turd’s sweaty, red face … a job he’d certainly have completed to a satisfactory standard.

  It was time to get things straight with his brother, Barry knew that. Time to have it out. It was a speech he had rehearsed often enough and the list of grievances just kept on getting longer.

  ‘Saturday, Ade? You’re taking the piss, same as you always do …’

  Not that he hadn’t been happy enough to get himself out of the house while Angie was busy cleaning the place from top to bottom, digging out the flash crockery, getting everything ready for dinner. And he guessed that she was equally glad to see the back of him while she arranged the candles and polished the sodding cat.

  ‘You should say something to him.’ He could hear her saying it. Had heard her saying it, too many times. ‘You need to tell him you’re not putting up with it any more.’

  Easy for her to say. Same crap he used to get from his ex.

  Stand up to him, you’re the eldest.

  Be a man …

  He leaned on the horn, up the arse of some other idiot who refused to move out of the way. He saw the bloke check his rear-view. Barry raised his arms and shouted, ‘Come on …’

  ‘Barry’s the practical side of the firm and I’m the nous.’ Adrian was fond of trotting that one out. A hand on Barry’s shoulder, like as not, while Barry did his best to smile about it.

  ‘He’s the muscle and I’m the charm …’

  He was though, that was the problem. Always had been. Your little brother … birds from the trees … sand to the Arabs … all that carry-on. Adrian was the one who found the customers and pitched them quotes at just the right level. Who kept them sweet when every job went over time and over budget. He was the one who kept the fresh contracts rolling in, which was what paid for the Audi and the child support and the holidays to effing Florida, which was why Angie needed to shut the hell up and stop needling him.