Nightshade: The Fourth Jack Nightingale Supernatural Thriller (29 page)

71

N
ightingale took the Tube to Camden and walked to the park. He got there at a quarter to eleven but Mrs Steadman was already there, sitting on a bench overlooking a group of children playing on a slide under the watchful eyes of their mothers. She was wearing a thick coat and the same scarf that she’d had on in the dream. She smiled up at him as he sat down next to her. ‘I hope you don’t mind me contacting you like that,’ she said.

‘Can anyone do it?’ he asked.

‘With practice,’ she said. ‘I can lend you a book that will teach you the techniques.’

He nodded. ‘I’d like that.’

‘It’s a lot less useful than it used to be,’ she said. ‘These days we have Skype and email and mobile phones. But when I was younger it was often the quickest way of contacting someone.’

One of the children yelled as he sped down the slide but he fell awkwardly and burst into tears. His mother rushed over and scooped him up, smothering his cries against her chest.

‘Do you have any children, Mrs Steadman?’ Nightingale asked.

She shook her head and smiled wistfully. ‘No,’ she said.

‘I’m not sure if I want them or not,’ said Nightingale. ‘I don’t think I’d make the best of fathers.’

‘I don’t think anyone really knows what sort of parent they’ll be until the day that the baby arrives,’ said Mrs Steadman. ‘They have a way of bringing out the best in people.’ She sighed. ‘And the worst.’

Two little girls sat down behind the swings and began to play pat-a-cake. ‘Why did you want to see me, Mrs Steadman?’ asked Nightingale.

Mrs Steadman watched the little girls play their game. ‘You heard about the girl who was taken in Southampton? Isabella Harper? The paedophile and his girlfriend, remember? They took her to a house outside Southampton and abused her.’

Nightingale nodded. ‘They deserve to be strung up,’ he said. ‘But the way the world works, she’ll walk and he’ll do ten years.’ He shuddered. ‘They almost killed her, didn’t they? If the cops hadn’t got there in time she’d be dead.’

‘I’m afraid it’s not as simple as that,’ said Mrs Steadman.

‘She’s all right now, isn’t she? She’s back with her parents.’

‘As I said, it’s difficult to explain,’ said Mrs Steadman. She sighed again and lowered her eyes. ‘What I’m about to tell you is going to sound so fantastic that you simply won’t believe me. But I can assure you that it’s the absolute truth.’

‘You’re starting to worry me now, Mrs Steadman.’

She looked up and her coal-black eyes bored into Nightingale’s. ‘You have every reason to be worried,’ she said. ‘We all do. What has happened is so awful, so terrible, that it puts everything at risk. Everything.’

‘Just tell me what’s happened,’ said Nightingale. ‘How bad can it be?’

‘Very bad,’ said Mrs Steadman. She took a deep breath and exhaled slowly. ‘The police didn’t arrive in time, Mr Nightingale. Little Isabella was dead. She came back to life, but it’s not Isabella. Something came back but it wasn’t her.’

Nightingale felt the hairs stand up on the back of his neck. And he turned up the collar of his raincoat. ‘She’s possessed? Is that what you mean?’

‘There is no she,’ said Mrs Steadman. ‘Isabella is dead. But something has taken the place of her soul, something evil, something that is determined to cause havoc and misery.’

‘But I’ve seen her on television. She’s a happy, smiley little girl. Wouldn’t her parents have seen something?’

‘Whatever it is has learned to hide its true identity. They see what they want to see, their dear darling daughter. They don’t see what lies within.’

Nightingale pulled his cigarettes out of his pocket but when he saw a look of disdain flash across Mrs Steadman’s face he put them away hastily. ‘So what is it you want from me?’ he asked. ‘Please don’t tell me you want me to organise some sort of exorcism.’

Mrs Steadman shook her head. ‘An exorcism wouldn’t help,’ she said. ‘An exorcism is called for when a demon takes temporary possession of a body. Once the demon is exorcised, the person can go about their life again. That’s not what’s happened in this case. Isabella is dead. Nothing we do will bring her back. She has been possessed by a Shade. And Shades cannot be exorcised.’

‘Shade? Is that what it’s called?’

‘I’m not a great one for labels,’ said Mrs Steadman. ‘But they have been called that and it’s as good a label as any.’

‘So what is it you want me to do with this Shade?’ asked Nightingale.

Mrs Steadman smiled thinly. ‘Let’s walk, shall we?’ she said. She stood up and they walked down the path together. ‘You trust me, don’t you, Mr Nightingale?’

‘Of course.’

‘And you know that I’m a good person.’

‘One of the best, Mrs Steadman. What’s wrong? There’s something you don’t want to tell me, isn’t there?’

‘I have to tell you,’ she said. ‘What’s worrying me is how you’ll react.’ She stopped and looked up at him. She really was tiny, Nightingale realised. She barely reached the middle of his chest. Her jet-black eyes bored into his. ‘The Shade is using Isabella’s body as a vessel. A container. If you kill the vessel then the Shade will die with it. Providing you do it in a particular way.’

Nightingale frowned. ‘What are you saying, Mrs Steadman?’

‘You have to kill the demon, and the way to do that is to kill the body it’s inhabiting.’

‘You’re asking me to kill a nine-year-old girl?’

Mrs Steadman shook her head. ‘Isabella is dead already. Nothing will change that. But the empty shell that is left has to be destroyed. That is the only way to stop the Shade.’

‘And I do this how?’

‘You have to use knives that have been blessed by a priest. Knives made from pure copper. Three of them. In the heart and in both eyes.’

Nightingale took a step back. ‘Are you insane?’

Mrs Steadman shook her head sadly. ‘I almost wish that I was,’ she said.

‘You’re asking me to shove knives into the eyes and heart of a nine-year-old girl?’

‘No, I’m asking you to kill a Shade. The girl is already dead. The Shade does not exist outside the girl. It is only when the Shade is in possession of the girl that it can be killed. Do you understand what I’m saying?’

‘I understand, but that doesn’t mean I can do it.’

‘Somebody has to, Mr Nightingale.’

‘Have you ever killed a Shade?’

‘That I can’t do,’ she said. ‘It has to be …’ She paused and then grimaced. ‘It has to be someone like you.’

‘But before, you found someone to do it?’

She nodded slowly. ‘Yes. It was difficult, but yes.’

Nightingale rubbed his face with both hands.

‘I realise it puts you in a terrible position,’ she said.

Nightingale lowered his hands and looked at her. ‘How can you ask me to do something like this?’

‘I have no choice,’ she said. She reached over and gently touched him on the arm. ‘I am sorry, Mr Nightingale. Truly.’

72

N
ightingale waved at the barman, pointed at his empty bottle of Corona and mouthed ‘One more’. The barman nodded and went off to get a bottle from the fridge. Nightingale’s phone rang. He fished it out of his raincoat pocket and looked at the screen. It was Jenny.

‘Where are you?’ she asked.

‘The pub?”

‘Doing what?’

‘Well, gosh, Jenny, what do people usually do in the pub?’

‘Are you working?’

‘Not as such.’ The barman put a Corona down in front of Nightingale, a slice of lime sticking out of the neck.

‘You said you were going to see Mrs Steadman.’

‘I did.’

‘And you said you’d be right back.’

‘There’s been a change of plan.’

‘What’s going on, Jack?’

‘Hell, Jenny, can’t I have a beer in peace?’

‘You know that Mrs Hawthorne is here? About her husband.’

Nightingale swore under his breath. Mrs Hawthorne was a housewife with four children who suspected that her husband was playing fast and loose with his secretary. Nightingale’s initial enquiries suggested that she was probably right, but to prove it she was going to have pay another couple of grand. He’d forgotten that he’d arranged for her to come into the office.

‘Jack, are you there?’

‘I’m sorry, it slipped my mind. Can you tell her I’m on a case and that I’ll call her this evening?’

‘She’s not going to be happy, Jack. She’s come in all the way from Gravesend.’

‘What do you want me to do, Jenny? Open a vein? I fucked up. I’m sorry.’

‘Where are you?’

‘I told you. The pub.’

‘Which pub?’

‘The Swan.’

‘Bayswater Road?’

‘That’s the one.’

‘Don’t go anywhere.’

‘I wasn’t planning to,’ said Nightingale.

‘I’m serious, Jack. Stay put.’ She ended the call.

The barman was watching him with a sly smile on his face. ‘Wife giving you grief?’ he said.

‘As good as,’ said Nightingale, pushing the slice of lime down into the bottle with his thumb.

‘Women, hey? Can’t live with them, can’t strap them into a car and send them over a cliff.’

Nightingale looked at the barman. He was in his fifties, with receding grey hair drawn back into a ponytail, and a beer gut that strained at his dandruff-flecked shirt. ‘You married?’

The barman grinned. ‘Three times. Got my fourth off the internet. Latvian.’

‘Nice,’ said Nightingale. ‘How’s that working out?’

‘So far, so good.’

Nightingale raised his bottle in salute. ‘I’ll drink to that.’

Nightingale was on his fourth Corona when Jenny slid onto the stool next to him. ‘What’s wrong with you today?’ she asked.

‘I’m just blowing off some steam,’ said Nightingale. ‘I’m the boss. I’m allowed.’

Jenny slid a cheque across the bar. ‘Mrs Hawthorne paid up.’

‘Good to know.’

Jenny put the cheque into her handbag, a beige Prada. The barman came over and winked at Nightingale. ‘The wife?’ he said.

Jenny glared at him. ‘His assistant,’ she said. ‘Get me a glass of Chardonnay and a pair of scissors.’

The barman frowned. ‘Scissors?’

‘Someone needs to put that rat on your head out of its misery,’ she said.

‘I’d get her the wine, because she probably means it,’ said Nightingale. The barman scowled and moved away.

‘How many have you had?’ asked Jenny.

‘Now you’re my mother?’

‘I’m not your wife or your mother, Jack. I’m your assistant and your friend.’

‘I know,’ he said. ‘I was trying to lighten the moment.’

‘What’s wrong, Jack?’

Nightingale shrugged. There was no way that he could tell Jenny what Mrs Steadman has asked him to do. ‘I just felt like a beer.’

‘Where did you go today?’

Nightingale took a long pull on his Corona and shrugged. ‘I went for a walk,’ he said. That was partly true, at least.

‘This isn’t fair,’ she said.

‘What isn’t?”

‘You keeping stuff from me like this.’ The barman placed a glass of wine in front of her and then waddled over to the far end of the bar. ‘Don’t you trust me?’

Nightingale looked across at her. ‘Of course I trust you. More than anyone. You know that.’

‘So why won’t you tell me what’s going on?’ Nightingale drained his bottle. He was about to wave for another when Jenny put a hand on his arm. ‘Please don’t,’ she said.

‘You won’t believe me,’ he said. ‘And if you do believe me you’ll think I’m crazy for even considering it. And if I do what she wants, and I tell you, then you’ll be an accessory …’ He tailed off, shook his head and stared at the bar.

Jenny tightened her grip on his arm. ‘She? Who are you talking about?’

Nightingale turned to look at her. ‘Trust me, you don’t want to know. Just leave it be.’

She shook her head fiercely. ‘Tell me.’

Nightingale closed his eyes and sighed, then nodded slowly. ‘Okay, but don’t say I didn’t warn you.’

73

J
enny sat back, a look of horror on her face. ‘You are kidding me,’ she said. They had moved to a corner table, away from the barman’s baleful stare. There he’d told her everything that Mrs Steadman had said to him.

‘I wish I was,’ said Nightingale.

‘She wants you to kill a nine-year-old girl?’

Nightingale nodded.

‘With knives? In her eyes and heart?’

‘That’s pretty much it.’

‘What are you going to do, Jack?’

Nightingale flashed her a tight smile. ‘Oh, I thought I’d pop around this evening and do the dirty deed. Like you do.’

‘I’m serious.’ Her face had gone pale and there was a small vein throbbing in her left temple.

‘I can see that.’

‘You should call the police.’

Nightingale shrugged. ‘The police wouldn’t get it. They’re not geared up to dealing with demons and stuff.’

‘I mean the stupid old woman, Jack. She’s clearly deranged. Mad as a bloody hatter and dangerous with it. She might find someone stupid enough to do what she says. She should be sectioned.’

‘What?’

‘Sectioned. She needs to be in a place where she can’t hurt anybody.’

Nightingale swirled his beer around and watched the slice of lime bob up and down. ‘Mrs Steadman isn’t crazy,’ he said.

‘How can you say that? You think it’s rational behaviour to go around talking about sticking knives into kids?’ She drained her glass and pushed it across the table to him. ‘Get me another, will you? If I go anywhere near that barman I won’t be able to stop myself grabbing his pony tail.’

‘He’s just bought a mail order bride,’ said Nightingale, getting to his feet. ‘A Latvian.’

‘God help the poor girl,’ said Jenny.

Nightingale went over to the bar and ordered a glass of wine and a Corona. ‘She’s a bit of a ball-breaker, isn’t she?’ asked the barman, nodding at Jenny.

‘She’s okay,’ said Nightingale.

‘I prefer Eastern European women. Easier to handle.’

‘Nah, she’s fine,’ said Nightingale. ‘She likes you.’

‘Like fuck she does.’

‘Seriously. She only acts like that when there’s attraction. It’s what she does when she’s flirting.’

‘Seriously?’

‘On my life,’ said Nightingale. The barman gave him his drinks, Nightingale paid and carried them over to Jenny. ‘Mrs Steadman knows what she’s talking about,’ he said as he sat down. ‘Up until now she’s always made a lot of sense.’

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