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Authors: Graham Hurley

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BOOK: Nocturne
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I

d half-rehearsed what I was going to say but the words came out in
the wrong order.


I

ve go
t a problem,

I told him.

It

s…
I can

t


I looked wildly
round. The waiting room was filling up again, and two youths nearby
were watching me with interest. One of them had a newly stitched
wound under his left eye.


You want to come round the back?

The young policeman was indicating a gap in the counter. I stepped
through. A door led to the main part of the police station. At the end of
a corridor, beside a drinks dispenser, he showed me into a small bare
room with a table and three chairs.

I sat down. My Berghaus was dry now but my jeans were still
soaking.


You want to take that thing off?

He was nodding at the anorak. I
was cold. I shook my head. None of this felt right.

The young guy searched round for a pad. The drawer in the desk
made a hollow metallic clang as he pushed it shut.


So what can we do you for?

He was looking at me. I thought I detected a smile but I could
easily have been wrong. I gave him my name and told him where I
lived. Then I explained about Gilbert. Trying to be fair meant that
the account took much longer than I

d intended. At the end of it, he
got up and left the room. Outside, in the corridor, I could hear him
feeding coins into the Automat. His face reappeared round the
door.


Sugar?

I nodded. I was looking at his pad. Apart from my name and address
he hadn

t made a single note. He returned with the teas. He had huge
hands and there was a tattoo of an eagle on one forearm. After he

d sat
down, he toyed with his pen, watching me.


You

re saying
you lent this guy your key?


Yes.


Wasn

t very clever, was it?


I…
we were friends. I

d no idea. Not then.


But six weeks? Isn

t that a bit…

he tapped the pen softly on the
edge of the table,


swift?


Not really.


Are you always like that?


Like what?


So trusting?

I reached for the tea. In truth, it was a question I

d often asked
myself, but coming from this hard-eyed young man it sounded
infinitely more menacing. Maybe he had a point. Maybe it was crazy
taking people at face value.

Crazy?


I
think he

s the mad one,

I said defensively.

Don

t you?


I

m not sure. I can think of saner things than lending a stranger my
flat keys.


He wasn

t a stranger. Not then.


So you say.


I mean it. There was nothing, no clues, nothing. It just seemed
normal.


Sleeping in your bed?


Before. I meant before.


I know, I heard you.

He was fingering the empty pad.

Look at it his
way. He

s living on top of you. It

s all nice and cosy. You

re letting him
shop for you, run the odd errand, whatever. That

s how relationships
start, isn

t it?


Of course.


So


he shrugged,


why the surprise?

I stared at him, not quite believing what I

d heard. I

d come, with the
greatest reluctance, to seek a little protection, a little redress, a little
comfort. There were laws here that I thought could help me, anti-
harassment laws, anti-stalker laws. Yet here I was, the tables turned,
bringing accusations on myself. I

d been too forward. I

d led him on.
Poor Gilbert.


What about keeping the keys, though? What about the cats? What
about breaking in that night? Scaring me shitless?

A smile this time, definitely.


You

ve got evidence ?


Evidence of what?


That it happened?

For the second time in a minute, I thought I had trouble with my
ears. Then my disbelief gave way to something a bit earthier.


For God

s sake,

I snapped.

I

m not making this stuff up. The guy

s
crazy. He walks round and round, day and night. He makes holes in
my ceiling. He watches me, listens to my conversations, keeps tabs on
my friends. He

s obsessed. It

s bloody obvious.


Friends?


Yes, people who come round, visitors


I loosened my jacket,
exasperated,


friends.


They

ve seen anything? These friends?

His hand was hovering over the pad now, the pen uncapped. I
thought about the question. Brendan? The odd mate from work? The
occasional pal from university days? Had they had dealings, first-
hand, with Gilbert? Could they support my story?


No,

I said uncertainly.

It

s just me really.


But what about the night you mentioned? The night he came
down?


I was by myself, if that

s what you

re asking.


No one for company?


Absolutely not.


Maybe that

s the answer then. Maybe you need protection.

He
looked at me, newly thoughtful.

It can be a. problem, living alone,
someone like you.

He let the thought hang between us. I was beginning to feel
uncomfortable and angry again, too. What right had this man to
lecture me on the way I chose to live? On how daft I was to rely on my
own company? I

d come, after all, with a story to tell. If it hadn

t, so
far, produced the response I

d anticipated, then maybe that was my
fault.


He

s violent, too,

I said.

And I can prove it.


How?

I told him what I knew about Witcher, the previous tenant, and how
Gilbert had beaten him up. After I

d spelled Witcher

s name, and given
him the address on Denman

s Hill, I waited for him to finish scribbling
on the pad.


You

re telling me this Witcher bloke

s gay?


Yes, apparently.


And he told you what happened? Getting beaten up? All that stuff?


No, he wouldn

t.


Then how do you know it

s true?

I mentioned Frankie. The ballpoint slowed, then stopped.


This guy Witcher didn

t report the incident?


I don

t think so.


He ended up in hospital and didn

t say anything? Didn

t contact
us?

‘I
don

t know

I


The policeman stood up and left the room. Minutes later, he was
back again.


You

re right,

he said briefly.

His name

s not on file.

He began to
circle the room, hands in his pockets. I heard him stop behind me.

This Frankie. You say he

s gay, too?


Very.


And he has something going with Witcher?


Yes, that

s the impression I got.


Pity.

He stepped into view and made himself comfortable on a
corner of the desk.

Straight, he might have been some use to us. The
way it is, the evidence is tainted.


Because he

s gay?


Because he

s got something going with Witcher. The other fella,
your fella


He shrugged.

Who

s to say Frankie didn

t do it?
Where

s the proof?

I nodded, saying nothing, interested only in where this interview
might lead. All this clever speculation left me cold. I wanted hard,
practical things. I wanted someone up there, someone in a uniform to
search Gilbert

s flat, someone to find the other set of photos, someone
to concentrate my poor mad neighbour

s mind.


Tell me what you

re going to do,

I said bleakly.

Only this is getting
beyond a joke.

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