Trick of the Dark
Prologue
What's your earliest memory? I don't mean something
you've been told so many times it feels like a memory. I'm
talking about the first thing you remember through your
child's eyes. A knee-high memory, a don't-understand-thewords
memory, an honest-to-god slice of emotion that can
still fell you like a tree.The recalled moment that is the key
to what shapes you for ever.
Mine has narrow wooden bars running vertically through
it. A cot or a playpen, at a guess. I can't picture what I'm
standing on. I can see my hands clutching the bars tightly,
small fingers still chubby like toddlers' are supposed to be.
My nails are crusted with dirt and there's a very particular
smell. Over the years, I've worked out that it's a mixture of
stale urine, marijuana, alcohol and unwashed bodies. Even
now,when I walk among the homeless who inhabit the invisible
hinterland of the world's great cities, I feel comforted
by the smell that repels most people. The homeless smell
like home to me.
I'm stalling. Can you tell I'm stalling? Because the heart
of the memory still makes me shiver to my soul.
In front of me is a movie cut into slices by the bars. My
mother is wearing a bright tangerine blouse and the man
has the front of it bunched in his fist. He's shaking my
mother like one of the dogs would shake a rat or a rabbit.
He's shouting at her too. I don't know what he's shouting,
it's just a jagged cascade of violent sound. She's sobbing,
my mother. Every time she tries to speak, he slaps her hard
with his other hand. Her head jerks like it's on a spring.
There's a thread of blood trickling from one nostril. Her
hands try to push him away, but he doesn't even notice, he's
so much stronger than her.
Then one of her hands slips down and presses against the
front of his trousers, stroking him through the stiff dirty
denim. She lets herself fall against him, close so it's harder
for him to hit her. He stops shouting but he doesn't let go of
her shirt. He pulls up her skirt and pushes her down on the
floor and carries on making her cry. Only in a different way.
That's my first memory. I wish it was the worst one.
Part One
Tuesday
Under normal circumstances, Charlie Flint would have consumed
all the media coverage of the trial of Philip Carling's
killers. It wasn't quite the sort of murder that was right up her
street, but there were good reasons why this particular case
would have interested her. But nothing was normal right now.
Her professional life was in shreds. The destruction of reputation,
the prohibition against doing the one thing she'd ever
been any good at and the continued threat of legal sanction
alone would have been enough to distract Charlie from the
news stories. But there was more.
The headline news in Charlie Flint's world was that she was
in love and hating every minute of it. And that was the real
reason she was oblivious to all sorts of things that normally
would have fascinated her.
The needles of the power shower on her shoulders and back
felt like deserved punishment. She tried to change the subject,
but neither mind nor heart would play along. This morning,
like every morning for the past six weeks, Lisa Kent was the
only item on Charlie's mental bulletin. As the day wore on,
Charlie could generally drag her attention back to the things
that actually mattered. But first thing, before she'd hammered
her defences into shape again, top of the dial was Lisa bloody
Kent. And here are the bullet points, she thought bitterly. Bad
timing, nothing in common, wrong bloody woman.
Seven years she'd been with Maria. Now, as if it wasn't
enough to be wracked by guilt, Charlie had the additional
mortification of living a cliché. The seven-year itch. She hadn't
even known it needed scratching until Lisa had glided into her
life. But this had gone far beyond an itch. It was a ferocious
irritation, an obsessional derangement that had invaded her
life indiscriminately. No apparently innocuous event or
remark was immune from a sudden takeover by the image of
Lisa's assessing eyes or the echo of her languid laughter.
'Fuck it,' Charlie said, savagely pushing her silver and black
hair back from her face. She jerked the shower switch to the
'off' position and stepped out of the cubicle.
Maria caught her eye in the mirror of the bathroom cabinet. The sound of the shower had masked her entrance. 'Bad day
ahead?' she asked sympathetically, pausing in the act of applying
mascara to emphasise eyes the colour of horse chestnuts.
'Probably,' Charlie said, trying to hide her dismay. 'I can't
remember the last time I had a good one.' What had she actually
said out loud in the shower? How long had Maria been
standing there?
Maria's mouth twisted in wry sympathy as she worked
moulding paste through her wavy brown hair, a critical look
on her face. 'I need a haircut,' she said absently before returning
her focus to her partner. 'I'm sorry, Charlie. I wish there
was something I could do.'
'So do I.' A churlish response, but it was all Charlie could
manage. She forced herself to deal with reality as she rubbed
the towel over her hair. The trouble with falling in love – no,
one of the many troubles with falling in love when you were
already in a loving relationship you didn't actually want to
end – was that it turned you into a drama queen. It had to be
all about you. But the truth was Maria had heard nothing
more than the complaint of a disgraced forensic psychiatrist
staring an uncertain future in the face. A talented professional
who'd been shunted into a dead-end siding for all the wrong
reasons. Maria suspected nothing.
Swamped by a fresh wave of guilt, Charlie leaned forward
and kissed the nape of Maria's neck, obscurely glad of the
shiver she could see running through her lover. 'Pay no attention
to me,' she said. 'You know how much I love invigilating
exams.'
'I know. I'm sorry. You're worth better than that.
'
Charlie thought she heard a trace of pity in Maria's voice
and hated it. Whether it was real or her paranoia, it didn't
much matter. She hated being in a place where pity was possible.
'What's worst about it is that it's so undemanding. It
leaves too many brain cells free to fret about all the things
I would rather – no, damn it, should – be doing.' She finished
drying herself and neatly folded her towel over the rail. 'See
you downstairs.'
Five minutes later, dressed in crisp white cotton shirt and
black jeans, she sat down at the breakfast table she'd laid earlier
while Maria was showering, their morning routine still
a reassuringly fixed point in Charlie's emotional chaos. Even
on the days when she didn't have work, she still made herself
get up at the regular time and go through the rituals of
the employed life. As usual, Maria was spreading Marmite
on granary toast. She gestured with her knife towards a
large padded envelope by the bowl where Charlie's two
Weetabix sat. 'Postman's been. Still don't know why you
gave up cornflakes for those,' she added, pointing at the
cereal bars with her knife. 'They look like panty shields for
masochists.'
Charlie snorted with surprised laughter. Then guilt kicked
in. If Maria could still make her laugh like that, how could
she be in love with Lisa? She picked up the envelope. The computer-printed address label revealed nothing, but the Oxford
postmark made her stomach lurch. Surely Lisa wouldn't . . .?
She was a therapist, for God's sake, she wouldn't drop a grenade
on the breakfast table. Would she? How well did Charlie really
know her? Panicked, she froze momentarily.
'Anything interesting?' Maria asked, breaking the spell.
'I'm not expecting anything.'
'Better open it, then. Given you don't have X-ray vision.'
'Yeah. My Supergirl days are long behind me.' Charlie contrived
to free the flap of the envelope without giving Maria
any chance to see the contents. Puzzled, she stared down at a
bundle of photocopied sheets. She inched them carefully out
of the envelope. They appeared to offer no threat, only bewilderment.
'How bizarre,' Charlie said.
'What is it?'
Charlie thumbed through the pile of papers and frowned.
'Press cuttings. A murder at the Old Bailey.'
'An old case?'
'Still going on, I think. I vaguely noticed a couple of reports
already. Those two city slickers who murdered their business
partner on his wedding day. At St Scholastika's. That's the only
reason it stuck in my mind.'
'You mentioned it. I remember. They drowned him down
by the punts or something, didn't they?'
'That's right. Not the done thing in my day.' Charlie spoke
absently, her attention on the clippings.
'So who's sent you this? What's it all about?'
Charlie shrugged, her interest pricked. 'Don't know. Not a
clue.' She fanned through the papers to see if there was anything
to identify the sender.
'Is there no covering letter?'
Charlie checked inside the envelope again. 'Nope. Just the
photocopies.' If this was Lisa, it was completely incomprehensible.
It didn't fit any notion of therapy or love token that
Charlie understood.
'A mystery, then,' Maria said, finishing her toast and standing
up to put her dirty crockery in the dishwasher. 'Not exactly
worthy of you, but a chance at least to put your investigative
skills into practice.'
Charlie made a small dismissive sound. 'Something to mull
over while I'm invigilating, anyway.'
Maria leaned over and kissed the top of Charlie's head. 'I'll
give it some thought while I'm torturing the patients.'
Charlie winced. 'Don't say that. Not if you ever want to
treat me again.'
'What? "Torturing the patients"?'
'No, suggesting that your mind is on something other than
drilling teeth. It's too terrifying to contemplate.'
Maria grinned, revealing an appropriately perfect smile. 'Big
girl's blouse,' she teased, wiggling her fingers and waggling her
hips in farewell as she headed out of the kitchen. Charlie
stared bleakly after her until she heard the front door close.
Then, with a deep sigh, she put the two Weetabix back in the
packet and her bowl into the dishwasher.
'Fuck you, Lisa,' she muttered as she scooped the papers
back into the envelope and stalked out of the room.
2
Coming home against the stream of humanity heading for
work reminded Magdalene Newsam of her years as a
junior doctor. That feeling of dislocation, of living at odds with
the rest of the world's timetable, had always buoyed her up at
the end of another grinding stint. She might have been so tired
that her fingers trembled as she put the key in the door, but at
least she was different from the rest of the herd. She'd chosen
a path that set her apart.
Thinking about it now, she felt pity for that former Magda.
To cling to something so trivial as a marker of her individuality
seemed pathetic. But at that point, there had been so many
roads not taken in Magda's life that she'd had to grab at whatever
she could to convince herself she had some shred of
independence.
She couldn't help the smile. Everything was so different now.
The reason she was weaving through the head-down pavement
crowds heading for the Tube couldn't have been further
removed from the old explanation. Not work but delight.
Awake half the night not because of a patient in crisis but
because she and her lover still found each other as irresistible as
they had at the start. Awake half the night and not tired but
exhilarated, body weak from love instead of other people's pain.
The surface of her happiness wobbled slightly when she
turned into Tavistock Square and confronted the imposing
Portland stone façade of the block where she still lived. A
three-bedroomed mansion flat in central London, only minutes
away from work, was beyond the wildest dreams of her
fellow junior registrars. They were resigned either to cramped
inadequate accommodation in the heart of the city or marginally
less cramped housing in the inconvenient suburbs. But
Magda's home was a luxurious haven, a place chosen to provide
a comfortable and comforting escape from whatever the
outside world threw at her.
Philip had insisted on it. Nothing less would do for his
Magda. They could afford it, he'd insisted. 'Well, you can,'
she'd said, barely allowing herself to acknowledge that accepting
this as their home implied that she also accepted her
dependence. And so they'd viewed a selection of flats that had
made Magda feel as if she was playing house. The one they'd
ended up with had felt least like a fantasy to her. Its traditional
features were more of a match for the rambling North Oxford
Victorian house she'd grown up in. The aggressive modernism
of the others had felt too alien. It was impossible to imagine
inhabiting somewhere that looked so like a magazine feature.
Accustoming herself to living here had turned into something
very different from Magda's first imaginings. Philip had
barely had time to learn the darkling route from bed to bathroom
before he'd been killed. The breakfast conversations and
evening entertainments Magda had pictured never had the
chance to become habit. That she occasionally allowed herself
to admit that this was almost a relief provoked shame and guilt
that triggered a dark flush across her cheekbones. Transgression,
it seemed, was not something she could wholeheartedly
embrace yet.
She was trying, though. If she was honest, she liked coming
home to her flat after a night with Jay. There was something a
little sleazy about rolling out of bed and putting on yesterday's
clothes, something sluttish about crossing central London
unwashed on the Tube, knowing she smelled musky and salty.
They'd agreed long before the trial that they couldn't start
living together until that was all done and dusted. Jay had
pointed out that they didn't want anything to muddy the
waters of other people's guilt. There was no suggestion that
they should try to hide their relationship. Just a sensible
acknowledgement that there was no need to trumpet it from
the rooftops just yet.
So in the mornings, Magda came home alone. Dirty clothes
in the laundry basket, dirty body in the power shower. Coffee,
orange juice, crumpets from freezer to toaster then a skim of
peanut butter. Another demure outfit for court. And another
day of missing Jay and wishing she was by her side.
It wasn't that she had to brave the oppressive grandeur of
the Old Bailey alone. Her three siblings had worked out a rota
which meant one of them was with her for at least part of
every day of the trial. Yesterday it had been Patrick, dark and
brooding, clearly away from his City desk out of wearisome
obligation to the big sister who had always taken care of him.
Today it would be Catherine, the baby of the family, abandoning
her graduate anthropological studies to be at Magda's
side. 'At least Wheelie will be pleased to see me,' Magda told
her hazy reflection in the bathroom mirror. And there was no
denying that Catherine's perpetual lightness of spirit would
carry her through the day. Too much isolation made Magda
uneasy. Growing up as the oldest of four children close in age,
then student flats, then hospital life had conditioned her to
company. Among the many reasons she had for being grateful
to Jay, rescuing her from loneliness had been one of the most
powerful.
Magda swept her tawny hair into a neat arrangement, her
movements expert and automatic. She stared at herself
judiciously, bemused that she still looked like the same old
Magda. Same open expression, same direct stare, same
straight line of the lips. Amazing, really.
A stray tendril of hair sprang free from its pins and curled
over her forehead. She remembered a rhyme from childhood,
one that had always made Catherine giggle.
There was a little girl
Who had a little curl
Right in the middle of her forehead.
And when she was good
She was very, very good.
But when she was bad, she was horrid.
For as long as she could remember, Magda Newsam had
been very, very good indeed.
And now she wasn't.