Vendetta (2 page)

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Authors: Dreda Say Mitchell

Tags: #Mystery & Detective, #Crime, #Fiction, #Suspense, #Thrillers, #General

BOOK: Vendetta
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Waited.

The dialling tone echoed in his ears. It rang. And rang. Then voicemail:


I’m not around at the moment. But I’ll get back to you as soon as I . . .’

He clicked off. Tried again. This time he noticed something strange about the sound coming through the phone. It had an echo like it was . . . He pulled the phone back from his face. Listened. He was right, it was coming from somewhere in the hotel room. He moved towards the wardrobe where he’d found her bag but the ringing got fainter. He headed towards the bathroom. The sound got louder. He stepped back inside the chilled room as the ring bounced loud and clear against the walls. Mac rushed towards the shower curtain around the bath. Loud ring.

Reached the outside of the shower curtain as the call went to voicemail. As Elena’s sweet voice pulsed in his ear.


I’m not around at the moment . . .’

His hand reached for the curtain.


But I’ll get back to you as soon as I can . . .’

His palm caught the material.


Please leave a message.

Swept it back.

The mobile slipped from his fingers. Instinctively Mac recoiled. There was something in the bath that he wasn’t expecting to see. A body. Slumped over at the waist. Head snapped forward. Dark, neck-length hair, toned even darker in patches by something matting it together. He knew what that something was. Blood. What kept him rooted still wasn’t the body; wasn’t the blood-gelled hair. It was the tiled walls. White tiles coloured with the scattered debris of human offal. Brains. There was no smell, but his nostrils twitched with an imagined gut-churning stench.

His mind started spinning again. What the heck was he doing in a dead-beat hotel with a dead body? Should only have been him and Elena . . . Elena. Mac’s gaze slammed away from the tiles back to the body. The blood iced over in his veins.

No.

No.

No.

Couldn’t be . . . He wouldn’t allow it to be . . . He reached for the body . . . stopped before he touched it. He couldn’t leave any fingerprints. Instead he tucked one hand into the bottom of his T-shirt. Reached over with his covered hand and touched the shoulder of the body. Pushed back. The body slammed backwards. Mac gagged at what he saw – a bloody mess where a face had once been. No eyes, no nose, no mouth, no . . . nothing. The hair was a woman’s, the clothing was a woman’s. The trousers were . . . Mac reared back when he saw the mobile phone lying between the legs. Elena’s mobile, in its distinctive lilac protective case with the bunny ears, soaked in blood.

But that can’t be Elena. He shook his head. It couldn’t be . . . But the body’s left arm proved him wrong. Just above the left wrist was a small red star tattoo that he’d only ever seen on Elena. The left hand rested flat against the stomach. And at the wrist was the bracelet she always wore, with its fine, delicate gold links and tiny bunny-rabbit charm.

‘No . . .’ He let out an agonised whisper as he sagged to his knees by the tub, crippled by the thought of another death that had devastated his life. His right knee hit the edge of something hard on the floor. Mac looked down. A gun.
His
gun. His Luger P8. Mac picked it up. An automatic reflex, he sniffed the barrel, confirming what he already suspected, that it had recently been fired. Had he done this? Had he killed her?

The sound of sirens ripped up the air outside the hotel.

two

Mac rushed to the bedroom window. Peeped outside. Police were gathering on the pavement and more cars were pulling up. Men in uniform looking upwards. Whispering to each other. He had no idea why. But he knew he had to go. Now. Make it downstairs before the cops got inside the hotel. He glanced over at Elena’s bloody body. God, he wanted to take her with him, but he couldn’t. But he could take one thing. He ran back to her body. Tucked both hands under his T-shirt again. Unclipped the bracelet from her wrist. Dropped it into his pocket.

Ran into the main room. Scooped up Elena’s handbag and belongings and dumped them into his rucksack. Shoved on his denim jacket and grabbed up his bag in one smooth move. Flicked the jacket’s hood over his head to hide the shower cap. Breathing hard, he opened the door. Sweat pooled down his face as he checked the corridor. Not a soul in sight. He left the room. Made his way to the top of the stairwell. Peered over the rail. It was a dizzy, three-floor drop, but if he leaned over, he could just catch the goings-on at reception. Not a soul in sight again. Most importantly, no cops.

Mac began to walk downstairs as casually as he could. He hit the second floor. The first floor. Was halfway down the final set of stairs when he heard the doors to the hotel swing open and footsteps below. Mac twisted around. Crept back up the stairs. The voices could be heard clearly above.

‘Good morning. We’re the police . . .’ There was a brief pause while ID was no doubt being shown. ‘We’ve had a phone call this morning from one of your guests. She says she heard a commotion in a neighbouring room last night, room 19 . . .’

Mac could almost hear the shrug of shoulders from the receptionist. The cop went on. ‘And when she left this morning, she found what she thought looked like a bloody footprint outside the room. She says she alerted you but you didn’t seem very interested. We’d like to have a look at this room, please.’

Mac tensed. How the hell was he going to get out of this?

The receptionist asked, in a foreign accent, bored, as if she’d been asked this question too many times in the past, ‘Commotion? Blood? This is just silliness. Have you got a warrant?’

‘No, we haven’t got a warrant – are you saying we need one? That you’re not willing to help? Are you sure about that . . . ?’

Silence. Then the cop continued, ‘OK – have you got a key for room 19?’

Mac thought fast. Safest thing to do was to carry on as if nothing was happening. Walk down the stairs, out through reception, past the cops all nice and innocent. He hitched the handle of his rucksack higher on his shoulder as he pulled himself off the wall. Took two steps to reach the top of the stairs. Stopped. Then he took the first stair; already he looked like a fugitive. He had a clear view of the people below. Three cops. All male. Two uniforms, the other plainclothes. Female receptionist next to them with a half-gone ciggie between her fingers. She moved, accompanied by two of the policemen.

They turned towards the stairs.

Mac took the next step.

They reached the bottom of the staircase.

Mac’s foot hovered over the next step. He let it fall.

The receptionist climbed up ahead of the police, smoke drifting out of her mouth.

Mac watched the top of her bleached blonde hair as he took a step. Then another.

The tops of the cops’ heads came into view. They were both looking down so they hadn’t spotted him yet.

The cigarette smoke floated up towards Mac. Stung the inside of his nose.

Just one more step and the receptionist would definitely see him.

One of the policemen abruptly stopped. Crouched down to inspect something. ‘This could be blood’. Turned his head and called out to the uniformed cop left in the reception, ‘Make sure no one leaves the building . . .’

Mac rapidly retraced his steps towards the higher floors. Kept going. And going. Adrenalin and his head wound made him giddy. He reached the top floor. And froze. Waited to hear footsteps. Then he heard them, somewhere not too far below. Mac kicked back into gear. Knocked on the door of the first room he came to.

‘Room service,’ he said in a low voice.

No response. He tried the handle.
Shit
. Locked.

He kept up the pattern of ‘room service’, shoving down the handle of each room he came to. But they were all locked. It was going to be game over if he didn’t get into one of these rooms soon.

There was one room left. Room 28. The door was flung open after he called out ‘room service’. In the doorway stood a woman, middle-aged, with hair a sleek black that matched her spikey false eyelashes, body-hugging leather top and trousers, and hands jammed, fuck-you style, on her hips. Before he could speak she spat out, ‘Room service? In this fleapit? Piss off mate, I’ve got work to do.’

She slammed the door in his face.

Below there was the sound of a key turning in a lock and the sound of heavy feet filing into room 19.

It was too late now for Mac to go downstairs; there was nowhere to hide upstairs. He looked upwards. Ran his gaze along the ceiling. There had to be an attic somewhere. Even a skylight. But where? Where?

He went to tap on the door of Room 28 again but thought better of it. Instead he tried the handle. In her eagerness to get back to work, the woman had left it unlocked. The woman looked round in shock when Mac entered. She opened her mouth but it snapped shut when Mac flipped his jacket back, displaying his Luger. She backed into the room while he clipped the door shut with the heel of his boot. ‘I’ll be in and out of here quickly so that you can get on with your business.’

Her business was an overweight man, spreadeagled and tied to the posts of the bed with a Union Jack-patterned hood over his head. He looked back at the woman and saw what he should have seen the first time he clapped eyes on her – the hard face of a woman who’d been turning tricks for a long time.

She hissed at him, ‘What do you want?’

‘I want to know how to get into the attic.’

‘The
attic?
Look mate, if you’re looking for money or drugs, I can’t help.’

Mac walked towards her, but she stood her ground. But instead of stopping when he reached her he carried straight on past. Didn’t stop until he reached the bed. She let out a gasp when he pulled out the gun and aimed it at the head of the hooded man.

‘A dead punter is bad for your business. And your DNA will be all over the body, condoms or no condoms . . .’ Mac shook slightly as his own words echoed around his head.

The man on the bed began bucking against his bonds, making muffled sounds.

‘You know this hotel, so stop dicking me around and tell me where the attic is.’

She looked at the Luger. Looked at her customer. Back at Mac. ‘There’s a storeroom at the end of the corridor. You can get up to the attic through that. I’ve seen the owner doing it.’

‘Get his wallet,’ Mac said, gun still fixed on the other man.

The prostitute rushed over to the man’s clothing on the seat of a chair and rifled through his jacket. She handed Mac a tan-coloured wallet.

Mac shoved the wallet into his pocket and said to the man, ‘If the cops come knocking, you say nothing. You might think that you can make a deal with them so that nice wife of yours at home won’t find out about your out-of-office-hours activities.’ He didn’t need to ask if the man had a woman waiting for him at home; his type always did. ‘But I’ve got your wallet, which means I’ve got your name, which means I can find out where you live. If I get to hear you’ve been opening your mouth, one morning your wife’s going to get a small package. Inside that package will be your wallet with a little note about what you’ve been doing when you said you were working hard to support your family.’

Without another word, Mac headed for the door. As he opened it, the woman called out, ‘Hang on, you can’t take his wallet, I haven’t been paid yet . . .’

Mac put the gun away. Closed the door. The storeroom door was white and flush with the wall, explaining how Mac had missed it earlier. But now he had no problem prising it open and switching on the light. Small, littered with paint pots, old carpet and mattresses. And resting against the wall was a stepladder, which led up to a trapdoor with access to the attic. He closed the door behind him. Climbed up the ladder, his bag bumping against his back. As he went up and opened the attic door, he heard voices and footsteps in the corridor outside.

‘Get everyone out of these rooms and make them assemble downstairs.’

‘Yes sir.’

‘And you – are there any other rooms up here?’

The receptionist’s voice told him, ‘Yeah – there’s a storeroom and an attic upstairs, but we don’t use them much.’

Mac scrambled up into the attic. Pushed inside. Caught the trapdoor and gently eased it back into place so it made no sound. The place was dark, so Mac used the torch on his mobile to check out the space. He found an old tea chest that he moved over the trapdoor so that it couldn’t be opened from below and then he examined the roof. No skylight. He was trapped. And now he could hear voices below him in the storeroom.

Mac carefully examined the roof, through which he could see occasional chinks of sunlight. He reeled back in surprise when he kicked over a bucket that had been catching rainwater and sent a couple of gallons of water spilling out over the floor. Down below he could hear the voices of the police becoming more urgent. Standing on the sodden floorboards, with the silence of a thief, Mac began tearing away at the damp and moulding lining of the roof where the rotting wood strained under the weight of the slates above. Someone started pushing and then banging against the other side of the attic door.

three

It was only a matter of time before they got in. Mac kept tearing and pulling until he was through to the cracked and loose slates themselves. Pulled them off. Laid them to one side, one on top of the other. Flushes of fresh air blew into the musty attic and oblongs of daylight began to appear.

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