Page 15 of Liar Liar


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Sanderson sipped her drink and cast a discreet look at her watch. She had been here for over an hour now and she had the distinct impression she was starting to arouse the regulars’ curiosity. The Hope and Anchor was a pub on the edges of Millbrook that had seen better days. The wallpaper was bubbling, the carpets were worn and the whole place had the feel—and smell—of a water hole gone to seed. The lager was cheap and the clientele cheaper, so it still attracted a certain type of crowd. Sanderson had dressed down to try to fit in with the ex-cons and wannabe villains who patronized this establishment, but she had the feeling she still stood out too much. Her clothes were a bit too new, a bit too clean in comparison to the stained track suits and hoodies worn by the other drinkers. Moreover, she’d washed her hair last night, which couldn’t be said for the gaggle of girls touting for free drinks and cigarettes at the bar. Their lank hair and scruffy appearancesuggested they didn’t think much of other people’s opinions and probably not much of themselves either.

Sanderson picked at one of the corners of her coaster and cursed her luck. What was the point in her arranging dates? Something always seemed to come up to put the kibosh on them. It wasn’t Helen’s fault—someone senior needed to be running the stakeout, and her boss didn’t know she had dinner plans, but still... The simple truth of it was that she was tired of being single and was irritated by the fact that work always got in the way. Before she’d joined the force she’d had a run of boyfriends—handsome, fun, likable guys whose company she’d enjoyed. But as soon as you put on the uniform, something changed. It wasn’t just that your life was not your own anymore or that you often worked nights. It was something to do with being a copper. Women were supposed to like men in uniform, but it didn’t work the other way round. Were men intimidated by female police officers? Were they uncomfortable with the authority they had over them? Were they worried that they would be pulled up for every minor vice or misdemeanor? Whatever the reason, they seemed to back off. No doubt about it, the uniform was a massive turnoff.

Sanderson finished her drink and returned to the bar for a refill. She chided herself for being so negative. Surely it was possible to find someone—Charlie and many others like her had managed it. Privately Sanderson rather envied Charlie—her happy home, her baby girl. She knew it meant sacrifices on a personal and professional level, but at least itmeantsomething. Charlie’s life seemed very grounded compared to hers. But she was never going to get there unless she tried, and she had been looking forward to meeting Will tonight. He sounded like fun from his e-mails, had an interesting job and he was certainly easy on the eye.

The question was whether she would make it. Helen had told the team that finding Gary Spence was their top priority, and a number of his known haunts were now under surveillance. His home, his mates’, a couple of snooker halls and this pub—a place he liked to frequent at theend of a stressful day, extorting money from desperate debtors who hadn’t read the small print properly. As Sanderson returned to her seat in the corner, she felt several sets of eyes following her progress. Did they suspect her? Or did they just like the look of her? It was feasible that they had already called Spence and warned him not to come. It was impossible to tell and as with all stakeouts, there was only one way to find out.

Watch and wait.

23

He recognized her immediately. As she put on her protective suit, mask and goggles, he took in her trim figure. She was pretty and well groomed, her glossy chestnut hair always secure in a very professional-looking bun. He had observed her at a number of burned-out properties over the past year, diligently carrying out her work, and had even looked her up on Facebook. Her name was Deborah Parks and he always felt a little charge when looking at her.

She had been working at Travell’s Timber Yard since lunchtime. The massive site looked like a war zone—the main warehouse had burned to the ground, as had most of the stock, temporarily turning the skies over this part of town black. It’d been an amazing thing to witness and had drawn big crowds, but now they had all disappeared. Back toTheX FactorandCelebrity BB. They thought the show was over. They didn’t value what was right in front of them. They couldn’t see what he couldsee.

Deborah Parks was on the move now, entering the shell of the warehouse and temporarily out of view. A couple of uniformed officers guarded the main gate, but the site was huge and the chain-link fence had not been well maintained—they obviously didn’t get too many timber thieves round here. It was a matter of a few seconds to haul up the bottom of the fence and roll underneath.

Dusting himself down, he surveyed the scene, pausing for a moment to breathe in the strong aroma of carbonized wood that rose from the ashes of this once-vibrant business. Moving out of sight, he began filming. A slow panorama at first, taking in the full devastation of the scene, then a series of zoomed-in close-ups. The devil is in the detail at fire sites—the small remnants of the conflagration, the things that survived, tell the story best. A successful family business that had taken years to build—destroyed in less than an hour. Such was the power of fire.

The sound of a voice nearby made him look up from his recording. He had been so wrapped up in his work that he’d failed to notice Deborah Parks leaving the warehouse to make a phone call. Berating himself for his carelessness, he ducked behind the remnants of a timber stack and scuttled along the perimeter fence away from danger.

Finding a new place of safety toward the back of the site, he rested for a minute—to catch his breath and reassure himself that he hadn’t been spotted—putting his camera back in his rucksack. Now he got on with the real business. Crawling on his hands and knees, his eyes darting this way and that, searching, searching, searching. You never knew what you were going to find in these situations—sometimes it took ages to find anything decent—but today fate was smiling on him. Near the fence edge was a fire-damaged sign. As soon as he picked it up and turned it over, he broke into a broad smile.TRAVELL’S TIMBER YARD, it proudly announced, but this boastful sign was now smeared with soot and violated by fire. It was ideal. The perfect souvenir of a memorable night.

It was too big to fit in his rucksack, but if he held it to him with the writing facing inward, he would be okay. He didn’t have far to go. Lifting the fence, he slipped it under, then followed himself. Picking it up, he got to his feet and, having checked that there were no police officers about, hurried off down the street.

As he went, he chuckled to himself. It had been a very satisfactory day’s work.

24

When would he ever escape this place?

Luke Simms had only been in the hospital for a day, but already it felt like a lifetime. When you cannot move, when there’s nothing you can do for yourself, time passes very slowly. Luke had hardly slept—kept awake by the pain in his shoulder and legs and the dull ache of his loss. But at least at night he had been left alone.

During visiting hours today, he had been besieged—inundated with teary visitors who lavished him with affection or urged him to “stay strong.” They left flowers, chocolates, books, DVDs—already his room was a riot of color. It was like an Aladdin’s cave and, though he was grateful for their kindness and concern, he hated it all. Some people he was glad to see, of course, but his misfortune now seemed to be a magnet for anyone who’d ever known him. So in addition to family and close friends, he’d been visited by football mates and their parents, ex-girlfriends, godparents, guys from school, cousins several times removed. Some ofthem barely knew him, some of them he thought actively disliked him, but suddenly they all wanted a piece of him. Wanted to tell him how brave he was. Wanted to offer their sympathy to him and, worse than that, their praise.

It was all so inappropriate. What had he actually done? He had jumped from a building and broken his legs. In a stroke his home, his life, his future had been shattered—so what exactly was there to be happy or hopeful about? He was always polite, but when they tried to buoy him by telling him how quick-thinking he’d been, how courageous, he wanted to tell them all to go to hell. He hadn’t jumped because he was courageous. He had jumped because he was scared.

Had he been a proper son and brother, he would have braved the flames. He would have charged through them to find his mother and sister. He could have got them out of the house ten, twenty minutes earlier perhaps, but he didn’t. Because he was scared by the awful chorus of smoke alarms and the flames devouring the stairs, he had turned and fled, climbing out of his window and jumping to safety.

Because of that his mother had died. His mother who had given up work to raise him. Who had taken him to football practice three times a week. Who had always called him her “special one.” He’d abandoned her—as he had abandoned his little sister—to her fate. And for that he would never forgive himself.

Which was why all the bouquets and cards with messages of goodwill and praise seemed completely obscene. If he had his way, they would all have been thrown straight in the bin.

25

Sanderson punched the button, and the wheels spun in front of her. She wasn’t a gambler—didn’t play fruit machines and wasn’t sure what tactics you were supposed to employ—but it passed the time and gave her something to do. Were some of the regulars laughing at her amateur efforts, wasting pound after pound on ill-judged spins? She thought so, but as long as they put her lack of prowess down to her stupidity or her sex, then that was okay. She was happy to live with their casual sexism if it meant they didn’t question her presence here.

Another two hours had passed. She had drained a couple of pints, faked a few phone calls, even smoked a couple of cigarettes in the freezing yard out back. She hated cigarettes and had only managed to get halfway through both of them, taking very intermittent puffs. But she needed to do something and there were no freesheets left to read and no more phone calls she could legitimately fake. Which was whyshe now found herself at the fruit machine, cherries and bananas spinning in front of her in some strange, surreal dance.

“All right, Gary, what can I get you?”

Sanderson froze, her finger hovering over the Play button. A voice answered the barman’s jovial welcome—the accent was local and rough—and the conversation carried on in a pleasant enough vein. But there was something in the barman’s tone that intrigued Sanderson. It sounded very much like fear.

She continued playing the machine, trying to get a sight of “Gary” in the reflection on the machine’s glass front. But there was a post in the way and she couldn’t make out the face. Whoever it was, he was now talking in low tones to his fellow drinkers, wry, humorless chuckles occasionally punctuating the conversation. Why had he dropped his voice? Was this normal or had he already clocked the tall woman by the fruit machine whom no one could vouch for?

Perhaps he was watching her right now. If she turned, would she find him staring right at her? Sanderson knew from experience that a quick, darted look over the shoulder was the most suspicious move you could make and that in situations like this it paid to be up front and bold. So abandoning the fruit machine, she picked up her half-drunk pint and marched over to the bar.

“This lager tastes like cat’s piss. Got anything better?”