Dead Silent

Read Online Dead Silent by Neil White - Free Book Online

Book: Dead Silent by Neil White Read Free Book Online
Authors: Neil White
Tags: Fiction, General, Suspense, Thrillers, Mystery & Detective
Ads: Link
again,’ she whispered. ‘You’ll just care less about it. Next time, just keep running and hit him as hard as you can with your baton, but remember that you may struggle to get a second shot in.’
    Thomas nodded, and then turned back the way they had just come. ‘Let’s go back to the shop, see if they’ve got it on video.’
    Laura nodded and smiled. ‘Okay, we’ll do that,’ she said, and decided that she liked Thomas.
    Frankie ducked behind the gatepost, just to check that the road was clear, and then he crept out. He wasn’t dressed properly, in jogging bottoms and a crumpled old T-shirt, hisslippers making slapping noises on the tarmac as he shuffled across the road. He had to slow down as he reached the driveway of the rest home, the gravel hurting his feet through the soft soles.
    The doors to the rest home opened automatically, so he went inside and looked around anxiously, worried about who he would see, wanting to avoid the big boss. Then he saw someone he recognised wandering through one of the rooms. ‘Mrs Kydd?’ he shouted. He shuffled towards her. ‘Mrs Kydd?’
    She stopped and then turned slowly towards him. He noticed her uniform looked tight, stretched across her chest so that it pushed her breasts into a tired-looking cleavage.
    ‘Hello, Frankie,’ she said. ‘What do you want?’
    ‘Was he a reporter?’ Frankie asked.
    ‘Were you watching again?’
    ‘I heard the car, that’s all, and so I watched him,’ he said. ‘What’s the big deal? Why can’t you tell me?’
    She put her hands on her hips.
    ‘I saw him taking pictures,’ Frankie persisted. ‘What did he want? Was it about Claude Gilbert? What did he say?’
    ‘Slow down, Frankie,’ she said, her voice raised. ‘Yes, he was a reporter, okay, and he’s writing a story about Nancy.’
    ‘Does he think Claude killed her?’
    ‘He didn’t tell me what he thought,’ she said. ‘He just wanted to see where she died.’
    Frankie looked at her chest again until she folded her arms, aware of his gaze.
    ‘He needs to speak to me,’ he said. ‘Did you tell him about me?’
    She shook her head. ‘No, I didn’t. Please go, Frankie.’
    ‘If he calls again, tell him to come to my house,’ he said, but then he flinched when he felt her hand on his arm.
    ‘Are you all right, Frankie?’ she asked. ‘Are you eating okay? You look poorly again.’
    ‘I’m fine,’ he said.
    ‘You need to look after yourself, Frankie. If your mother could see you now, she would be worried about you.’
    Frankie looked away.
    ‘Hey, I’m sorry,’ she said. ‘I didn’t mean to upset you. He said he was called Jack Garrett. He sounded local. If you think he might want your help, call him. He might be interested in what you’ve got to say.’
    Frankie didn’t respond.
    ‘You’ve got to look after yourself though, before you go chasing him,’ she said. ‘Eat properly. Get some sleep.’
    ‘I’m fine,’ he said, and he turned and walked out of the rest home, shuffling quickly along the drive, ignoring the pain in his feet from the sharp stones. He could sense Mrs Kydd watching him, even after the automatic doors had swished shut.

Chapter Eleven
    I checked my notepad and looked at the scribbles I had made after Susie had gone. I had written down Maybury and Sharpe as Susie’s old law firm. If Bill Hunter was right, that Claude Gilbert had ended up as fish food in the English Channel, the story would end up being about Susie and another Claude Gilbert hoax.
    The firm’s name was well known to me. I had devoured the court reports in the local paper when I was a child, those short paragraphs of shame the only part I found interesting, and the names of the defending solicitors always stayed with me: Harry Parsons, Jon Halpern, Danny Platt—crafty lawyers who managed to find new ways to repackage remorse and excuses for their clients. Maybury and Sharpe had been one of the main players, but Susie Bingham had been talking of a time

Similar Books

The Narrows

Ronald Malfi

The Dragon in the Sword

Michael Moorcock

Terminal Value

Thomas Waite

Alchemist

Peter James

Fall of Thanes

Brian Ruckley