Silencing the Dead Will Harker (free ebooks for android TXT) đ
- Author: Will Harker
Book online «Silencing the Dead Will Harker (free ebooks for android TXT) đ». Author Will Harker
John blinked at me as if coming out of a daze. âNot my fault?â he said through clenched teeth. His body started to shake, tears flicking from the corners of his eyes. âShe was my daughter. It was my job to watch her, always.â
âNo.â I took hold of his arms, steadying him. âIt was your job to care for her and love her, and you did that. Youâre still doing it, both of you. But chasing after Everwood, trying to make him pay for the shitty thing he did, that isnât helping Debbie or yourselves.â
Anne smoothed her husbandâs hair from his brow. âListen to him, love.â
âBut we shouldâve been watching her,â he insisted. âIt was me who told her to go and play outside. She didnât even want to. Said she was enjoying playing tea parties with her teddies in her room. But she was such a demanding girl and weâd hardly any time to ourselves and I onlyââ
âWe were having sex when she was taken,â Anne said. âFor the first time in weeks. Just a moment to ourselves, and then afterwardsâŠâ
I nodded. In their minds, the act that had brought their daughter into the world had then taken her from it. I could easily picture the days and weeks that followed. Iâd seen it a dozen times in similar casesâa maelstrom of unspoken recrimination battering at what they had imagined to be the solid walls of their marriage. When the diversions of police and media interest faded and they found themselves strangers, pottering around in a house full of ghosts, then a frosty word, an icy look could easily insinuate itself into tiny fissures until slowly, slowly those walls began to break apart.
That was, until the mixed blessing of the physic exploded into their empty life. The little candle theyâd passed between each other, sheltering it even as they drifted apartâDarrel Everwood had threatened to blow it out for good. To leave them utterly in the dark. And for a time, heâd succeeded.
Without a word, one morning Anne Chambers had handed over the safe-keeping of that flame to her husband. Sheâd seen him off to work and then, perhaps taking one last look inside her daughterâs bedroom, had gone and drawn herself a hot bath, removing a blade from her husbandâs razor and laying it on the side of the tub. I didnât believe that John had accidentally forgotten his briefcase and returned home just in time. Where the people we love are concerned, weâre all detectives, to a greater or a lesser degree, and sometimes, just sometimes, weâre lucky too. I think John Chambers had noticed something that morning before he left for workâa passing clue that had made him turn back.
âYou told Anne that this was your fight now,â I said. âTo hold Everwood to account, to make sure no one suffered again like you had. It was a project you could work on together, a mission to live for. And a way to unload a little of that awful guilt you carry.â
âAnd Iâm tired of it, John,â Anne told him. âWe have our hope again, donât we? Itâs enough.â
âBut I donât believe it,â he cried. âThat old woman, how could she know anything?â
âYou visited my aunt on the night she was killed,â I said. âDo you remember what time that was?â
âIt was just after eight oâclock,â Anne said. âThat bodyguard of Everwoodâs had thrown us off the fairground earlier but we came back.â
âWhy?â
âBecause Iâd read an interview with Darrel Everwoodâs ex-fiancĂ©e, the one in which she said he was a fraud. She mentioned a book about a celebrity psychic from years ago that had prompted him to get into the racket. That was the word she used, âracket.â She said heâd had no interest in the paranormal until he read about this womanâs life and saw how much money sheâd made from it. He knew he could use the skills heâd learned as a magician to replicate most of the psychicâs tricks.
âAnyway, the interview piqued my interest. It took a while, I had to do a little digging in old newspaper articles, but eventually, I found the name of the woman and the bookâHearing the Dead: The Story of Genevieve Bell. Again, it took some time, but I finally tracked down a copy and saw the name of your aunt mentioned in one of the early chapters. We thought,â she glanced at John, âI thought, if we could consult the medium whoâd inspired the original Genevieve Bell then we might get a real psychicâs opinion on what had happened to Debbie.â
âThe original Genevieve Bell,â I murmured. âDid you try to contact her too?â
Anne shook her head. âWe tried writing but she never answered. By the time we thought of actually just turning up at her house, she was dead.â
âHow did my aunt seem to you during the reading?â
âVery calm. Very kind.â Anne frowned. âBut resigned, in a way. As if sheâd made up her mind to accept something.â
I nodded, recalling Tildaâs words from the night before her death. Whatever happens, itâs nobodyâs fault. I want you to remember that. Had she known what was coming for her? And if she had, might she have accepted her fate as some kind of justice?
âDid you notice anything unusual in the tent or outside it when you left? Anyone hanging around, maybe?â
John shook his head. He seemed more composed. âI donât think so. But then almost everyone except us was in costumeâvampires, werewolves, ghosts, Frankenstein monsters, superheroesâwe wouldâve been the ones who stuck out like a sore thumb. Might even have saved us a few quid on the gate if weâd bothered to dress up.â
âMy dad announced the half-price costume concession that morning,â I said slowly, then turned my attention back to the Chambers. âAnd afterwards, when you heard about the murder?â
âWe were terrified,â Anne said. âAfter Debbieâs disappearance, weâd naturally come under police suspicion. All parents do in such cases, I think. Plus,
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