‘He’s been assaulted,’ said the female PC, watching Gracie like she feared she was about to faint away or something. ‘I’m sorry, Miss Doyle, it looks very serious. His mother –
She tried to take it in, but she couldn’t get a handle on her own feelings about it. Was she sorry? Was she concerned? Did she – after all this time – really give a shit? She didn’t know. The last time she’d seen George, she’d been sixteen and he was twelve; still a child. He was a stranger to her now, and really, after all this time, did she want it any other way? She had her life, George had his.
‘Have they got who did it?’ she asked.
‘No,’ said the policeman.
‘And it’s bad? Really bad?’
‘I’m afraid so, Miss.’
Chapter 2
19 December
When Gracie got home to her flat, it was just after midnight. The casino didn’t close until six a.m., but Brynn was covering the graveyard shift this week. Pre-Christmas, the place was full of Eastern bloc playboys, footballers and high rollers, so, even in these recessionary times, they had to work late and hard, pampering their clients exhaustively with lim ousines from their luxury hotels to the door of the casino, complimentary gourmet food, Cristal champagne and Cohiba cigars – anything to keep them at the tables and happy while they handed over their cash.
And it didn’t end there.
The day
And now it was.
And now
She kicked off her heels, locked the door behind her, and breathed out a deep sigh of relief. She loved being here at home in her duplex penthouse, with its private terrace and canal views. She’d
Ignoring the post on the mat, she was padding barefoot into the bedroom when the phone started ringing.
‘Shit,’ said Gracie succinctly, startled. Who the hell could be calling now?
‘Oh damn, it’s the machine again,’ said a shaky girl’s voice. Then: ‘I don’t even know if I’ve got the right number. I’m trying to reach Grace Doyle. About her brother.’
Gracie stopped walking. She stood there, staring at the phone like it might bite.
But she didn’t want to. She was tired, it was the middle of the damned night, and she was not in the mood to hear more bad news. She slipped off her coat, tossed it on to the couch. Kept staring at the phone.
‘I knew
Gracie walked over and picked up the phone. ‘Hello,’ she said.
‘Oh! You’re there. Is that Gracie? George’s sister?’
‘Yeah, that’s me. How do you know George?’
‘I’m his fiancee.’
‘Oh.’ She hadn’t known that George had someone in his life. She knew
‘Did the police contact you?’ asked Sandy.
‘They did, yeah,’ said Gracie.
Silence hung between them. A
But now,
‘Well,’ said Sandy lamely, finally breaking the silence, ‘I just thought you should know. That’s all. And Harry’s just vanished, taken off somewhere, no one knows where.’
Gracie’s attention sharpened. ‘What do you mean, Harry’s vanished?’
‘Well . . . he has. He’s just
‘Have you . . . have you got your mum’s phone number . . .? Maybe you’d like to call her?’ asked Sandy when Gracie didn’t speak.
‘I’ll give it to you, just in case,’ said Sandy. ‘You got a pen . . .?’
‘Sure,’ said Gracie, and stared at the wall, not listening, as Sandy gave her the number.
‘I think maybe you ought to call her,’ said Sandy.
Too much dirty water had flowed under the bridge for her to even contemplate getting in touch with her mother again, however dire George’s situation might be. Would George’s condition really be helped by her turning up in London to sit by his bedside? Answer: no.
Her dad had been cool and controlled – like her – but her mother Suze had always been almost laughably hyper-emotional, big on pressing panic buttons and beefing up any bad situation. Gracie knew she could bust a gut, get down there, but then guess what? Everything would be fine. And why should she? They’d never given a
No.
Fuck them.
But even as she