Authors: Peter Robinson
Over the next two days, the weather, though still chilly, continued to improve. Sue took to hanging around the area by the factory almost constantly. All the time she felt as if she were looking
over her shoulder for the police, when she was the one who should be doing the watching. She read the papers every morning, but they reported no change in Keith’s condition or in the state of
the police investigation. In a way, though she still felt nervous and paranoid at times, she took heart that nothing had happened yet. Surely they must have reached a dead end or they would have
been on to her already? Nothing could stop her now. She was meant to succeed. Her task was holy.
She kept a low profile in Rose’s and the Brown Cow, but found that now she had the man in sight, she could even recognize his squat, dark figure from the woods above the factory. She also
investigated another pub, called the Merry Monk, at the bottom end of the council estate, and found that from one of its small windows in a dark corner she could just about see across the waste
ground down to his cottage at the end of the row. As she had expected, his comings and goings were irregular, and as far as she could make out, he lived alone. She would have to know her
opportunity when it arose and grab it without hesitation.
First, she wanted him to
know
that she had found him. When she finally lured him to his death, she wanted him to know who was doing it, and why. He would be asking for it. But she had to
do this without causing undue danger to herself. Also, though she was certain this time, after her mistake she wanted more confirmation. She needed proof. If she killed or wounded another innocent
man in the area, her chances of success would be practically nil. Slowly, as she watched him, she began to form a plan.
She almost bumped into him on her way back to town from Rose’s Cafe at five-thirty-five on her second day of full surveillance. He was walking the other way, back towards the factory. She
averted her face, but for a moment she could have sworn that he noticed her. He didn’t know who she was – she would have felt that kind of recognition jolt her like an electric shock
– but perhaps he connected her with the woman he’d seen yesterday in the newsagent’s. Or perhaps, given what he was, he looked at all women that way. Sue hurried on with her head
down and didn’t stop until she got to the end of the street. From there, hidden by the wall of the corner house, she saw him in the distance by the loading bays talking to a man in a white
smock and trilby, probably a foreman, who gave him some papers. Her man got in his van and drove off.
Sue carried on walking down the lane. She hadn’t got far before he passed her, then he turned right, towards the junction for the main Scarborough road. It didn’t mean that he was
going to Scarborough, of course, as it was one of the few ways out of the town and could lead to York or to the Leeds area. But one thing was for certain: he was out on a job and he wouldn’t
be home for a while. Sue hurried down to the main road, but he was nowhere in sight. She walked north a little way on the pavement, then doubled back on the dirt path that eventually curved around
past his cottage.
Sue’s heart felt as if it were in her throat as she approached the cottage. Coming from that direction across the waste ground, she couldn’t be seen from any of the other houses on
the row. Luckily, too, there were no buildings on the other side of the street, only the scrub ground that sloped up to the council estate. She could be seen from her little window in the pub, but
it was still early in the evening for drinkers, and there was no reason why anyone enjoying a pint and a chat in the Merry Monk should make the effort of looking out of that particular window,
especially as it meant pulling the curtain aside a little. Even if they did, what they saw would mean nothing to them.
She had thought of waiting until dark, but that meant she would need a torch, which would, in the long run, give her much more risk of being spotted. No, this was better: a blind approach at a
time when most people would be busy preparing their evening meals anyway. She had already noticed that he kept his curtains closed whenever he was out, and that would keep her hidden, should anyone
pass by, while still giving her enough light to search by.
There was only one small window in the side of the house that faced the waste ground, and that was too high to reach. A kitchen extension built on the back, which also shielded her from the
neighbours’ view, looked more promising. The back door itself was solid and locked, and the curtained window that probably led into the living room or dining room also proved impossible to
open. The kitchen window looked like a better possibility. The wood was old and the unfastened catch had been painted over in the open position long ago.
Sue wedged the heels of her hands against the crossbar and pushed up. At first nothing happened and she thought that perhaps the window too had been painted shut. But the paint was cracked and
peeling on the outside, and before long it began to shudder upwards. Sue paused after she had made a space big enough to enter, but there was no sound; nobody had heard her. Nimbly, she slipped in
over the kitchen sink and closed the window behind her. The palms of her hands felt sore and sweaty from the effort.
She had no idea what she expected to find – walls daubed in blood, perhaps, or heads on spikes and violent red graffiti scrawled over whitewashed walls: 666 and THE WHORE MUST DIE –
but she wasn’t prepared for the sheer ordinariness of the place. The only uncurtained window was the one through which she had climbed, and that let plenty of light into the kitchen.
Everything was in its place; the washing-up lay in the draining rack; glasses and plates shone like new. The surfaces were all clean, too, and the room smelled of lemon washing-up liquid. A
refrigerator she could see her reflection in hummed; cans of soup and tins of spaghetti stood in an orderly row on a shelf above the dining table, with its salt and pepper set out neatly on a mat
at its centre. Even the small cooker was spotless.
The living room, where light filtered in pale blue through the thin curtains, was just as tidy. Magazines stood in the vertical rack by the hearth, corners and pages aligned so they looked like
one solid block as thick as a telephone directory. A pipe rack hung above the mantelpiece, and the air was acrid with the smell of stale smoke. In the corner near the window was a television on a
stand with a video on the shelf beneath it and, next to that, a cassette storage rack with a varnished wood finish – and not a speck of dust in sight. What did this man watch? Sue wondered.
Pornography? Snuff movies?
But when she examined the cassettes, she saw they were all ordinary enough. He had labelled each one in clear print, and most of them were simply tapes of recent television programmes he must
have missed while out driving: nothing more interesting than a couple of episodes of
Coronation Street,
no doubt taped while he was out on a delivery, a BBC2 wildlife special, a few American
cop programmes, and two movies rented from a local shop:
Angel Heart
and
Fatal Attraction.
They weren’t exactly
Mary Poppins,
but they weren’t hard-core pornography
either.
An old sofa sat in front of the fireplace, its beige upholstery protected by lace antimacassars, and one matching armchair stood at a precise angle to it. Like the rest of the house, the room
was small and spotless, and as far as Sue could make out in the faint light, the walls were painted light blue, rather than papered. The only thing that struck her as at all odd was the complete
absence of photographs and personal knick-knacks. The mantelpiece was bare, as were the solid oak sideboard and the walls.
There was, however, a small bookcase by the kitchen door. Most of the titles were on local history, some of them large illustrated volumes, and the only novels were used paperbacks of
blockbusters by Robert Ludlum, Lawrence Sanders and Harold Robbins. Bede’s
History
was there, of course. Sue picked it up, and noticed that the old paperback had been well thumbed. One
passage, in particular, had been heavily underscored. Sue shivered and put the book back.
Upstairs revealed nothing different about the owner of the cottage. In the bathroom, every fixture, fitting and surface looked in shining pristine condition, and in the bathroom cabinet, various
pills, potions and creams stood in orderly rows like soldiers at attention. There was only one bedroom: his. The bed was made, covered in yellow nylon sheets, and there was nothing in the drawers
and cupboards but carefully ironed shirts, a couple of sports jackets, one pressed suit, and neatly folded underwear and socks. The place seemed to have no personality at all. Was he really her
man? Surely there ought to be
some
sign beyond the book.
Back downstairs, Sue looked for a cellar door but couldn’t find one. Perhaps it was just as well, she thought. She was feeling edgy being there at all; if she found a body in the cellar
she didn’t know how she would react. But that was silly, she told herself, just nerves. He didn’t take the bodies home with him.
She opened the doors of the sideboard and found a little port, sherry and brandy, along with glasses of various shapes and sizes, place mats and a white linen tablecloth. In one of the top
drawers were the everyday odds and ends one needs around a house: fuse wire, string, candles, matches, penknife, extra shoelaces, pencil stubs.
When she opened the second drawer, though, Sue’s breath caught in her throat.
There, laid out neatly in a row on a lining of faded rose-patterned wallpaper, were six locks of hair, each bound in the middle by a pink ribbon. Six victims, six locks of hair. Sue felt dizzy.
She had to turn away and support herself by gripping the back of an armchair. When she had fought back the vertigo and nausea, she turned to look again at the sight she found so gruesome in its
simplicity and ordinariness. Nothing too grotesque for this man: no severed breasts, ears or fingers, just six locks of hair laid out neatly in a row on a lining of faded rose-patterned wallpaper.
And, further back in the drawer, a pair of scissors, a roll of pink satin ribbon, and a long knife with a worn bone handle and a gleaming stainless-steel blade.
But it was the hair that really captured Sue’s attention. Six locks. One blonde, three brunettes, two redheads. She reached out and touched them, as she would stroke a cat. She could even
put names to them. One of the red locks, the darkest, was Kathleen Shannon’s; the blonde was Margaret Snell’s; the curly brunette lock had belonged to Kim Waterford; and the straight,
jet-black strand was Jill Sarsden’s. None of them was Sue’s. He must have been disturbed before he got around to taking it, she realized. No doubt it was the last thing he did, take a
souvenir. And the police had never said anything about it – which meant either that they didn’t know, or that they were keeping the knowledge up their sleeves to deter copycats and
check against phoney confessions, and, of course, to verify the true one, if it ever came.
Well, Sue thought, here was an oversight she could rectify easily enough. She pushed back her wig, picked up the scissors, and carefully snipped off a lock about two inches long, exactly the
same length as the others. She then bound it neatly with a piece of ribbon and placed it in line with the rest.
Now, she thought, pleased with herself, just wait till he notices that. She was convinced that he drooled over his trophies every day, and what a bloody shock he’d get when he found
another lock of hair there. Not only would he know there was someone on to him, he would probably know who it was. And that was just what Sue wanted.
The house was silent except for the sound of Sue’s heart beating, but she still felt uneasy. It was time to get out before he came back. She slid the drawer shut and hurried back to the
kitchen window.
KIRSTEN
That summer, Kirsten took long, brooding walks in the woods and reckless drives in the countryside. Close to the end of the university term, about the same time she had been
attacked a year ago, the killer found his sixth victim – the fifth to die – in a quiet Halifax nursing student called Jill Sarsden. Kirsten pasted the photo and details in her scrapbook
as usual.
At home, she pretended all was well. The dark cloud still troubled her, bringing painful headaches and bouts of depression that were difficult to hide. But she managed to convince Dr Craven that
she was making excellent progress since discontinuing the analysis, and the doctor’s opinion helped to reassure her parents. If she was occasionally quiet and withdrawn, well, that was only
to be expected. Her parents knew that she had always valued her solitude and privacy anyway.
In her room each night, she kept at the self-hypnosis, but got no further. The directions she had read in the book were simple enough: roll your eyeballs up as far as you can, close your eyes
and take a deep breath, then let your eyes relax, breathe out and feel yourself floating. She had even delved back into earlier memories of pain as practice – the time her finger got trapped
in a door when she was six; the day she fell off her bicycle and needed stitches in her arm – but still she couldn’t get beyond the odour of fish without feeling overcome by a sense of
choking panic.
One hot, bright day in late July, she stopped in a Cotswold village for a cold drink. Walking back to the car, she noticed a craft centre in an old stone cottage and decided to have a look
inside. The cottage had been extended at the back and part of it converted into a glass-blowing studio. Kirsten watched entranced as the delicate and fragile pieces took shape from molten glass at
the end of the tube. Afterwards, as she browsed around the shop, she noticed a row of solid glass paperweights, like the one in Laura’s office, with colourful abstract designs trapped inside
them. The rose pattern appealed to her most, and she bought it, feeling great satisfaction at the smooth, slippery weight in her palm. And it gave her an idea.