Witness - [37]
They were watching Jeremy Kyle, the people screaming at each other, some lard-arse whinging about his girl’s spending habits, and there was a knock at the door. Midge let the lad in and took delivery of an M &S carrier. Paid him. When the boy had gone, Midge told Zak he was one of Carlton’s runners. ‘You know they put a reward out for Danny Macateer?’
Zak felt a shimmer of unease. Did Midge know something? Had Zak let something slip last night? He’d been pretty wrecked – he hadn’t said anything, had he? Something slithered inside him, a worm in his belly.
‘Twenty grand,’ Midge said.
‘You’d have to be mad,’ Zak said. ‘Even if you did know something.’
Midge agreed. ‘Never live to spend the dosh.’
Twenty grand. Zak’s head swum with pictures. A little flat and him and Bess with all their own stuff. Fridge full of food, the heating on, a power shower. Two bedrooms, one for his mam. He thought of Carlton raising the gun, the lad spinning and falling. Bess barking. Imagined himself turning down a road one day, brought up short, two lads with guns in their hands. Zak putting his own hands up as if palms could stop bullets. The jolts as one then another punched through him. A waterfall of fear and pain and Bess barking, barking as his sight went.
Zak shivered. ‘Suicide,’ he agreed. No one would ever give up Carlton, no matter how high the reward.
That afternoon he set out, went by the Narrow Boat but the grills were heavy duty, a professional job. You’d need power tools to break in there. He walked all round for hours but didn’t see any likely spots. He sat with Bess in the launderette to warm up a bit. The smell was good in there, clean and soapy. He was starving by teatime. He did an hour on the supermarket car park and made a few bob. Bought a double cheeseburger and shared it with Bess. He thought about trying town. They were still building stuff round the canals but the trouble was the security in the new places was really tight. Dogs and nightwatchmen and cameras. A condemned building would be better.
He got the bus over to Longsight, got off on Dickie Road by the street market and walked along Stockport Road to Levenshulme. One or two places did seem derelict but when you looked closer you’d see movement inside, or steamed-up windows, and know better.
Zak’s feet were hurting. He’d got a blister on his little toe. It grew dark and began to rain, soft and fine like a net. He bought some Lambrini and tobacco and Mars bars and food for Bess. Then he found a cardboard box left out for the recycling. Off a new dishwasher. Still pretty dry. He took that and went up to Levenshulme train station. Once the platform was empty, he clambered down on to the tracks and underneath the platform where he could rig up a hidey hole. The cardboard flattened out was their bed. He’d have to get a sleeping bag sorted in the morning.
He slept fitfully. After eleven nothing stopped at the station but the trains ran all night; the vibration singing in his bones before he could even hear the engines, then the rattle and crash and roar and the dust as they came racing through. Freight trains. He couldn’t tell what they were carrying, some had old-fashioned trucks but others were long lines of containers, some with signs he thought might be Chinese.
He’d have to find a place to stay. He’d never make it sleeping rough. The knife in his chest was twisting again and he couldn’t stop shivering, his skin was greasy from the trains, he felt like he’d got diesel in his lungs. He cuddled up to Bess, desperate to get warm. She whined and licked his face. Good dog. He closed his eyes and felt the tickle of her fur on his cheek, breathed in her doggy smell and listened to a police siren whooping through the night.
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
Cheryl
Vinia told Cheryl that she’d heard Carlton and his boys talking about the latest shooting and the chat coming round to Danny. Carlton bragging how that had sent a message plain and clear to the rival gangs.
‘What message?’ Cheryl asked. ‘That they’re stone killers and they don’t care who they hit?’
Vinia cut her eyes at her, pulled her hand away. Cheryl had manicured Vinia’s nails, was now doing the base layer. ‘You want me to tell you or you just gonna keep interrupting all the time?’ Vinia snapped.
‘Don’t have a fit,’ Cheryl said.
Vinia huffed.
‘Just tell me.’
‘He said Danny wasn’t a player but he was a blood relation to some of the Nineteen Crew. Taking him out would show them this was war. No rules all’s fair.’
Cheryl looked at Vinia. ‘By that reckoning, makes you fair game an’ all. Relation of Carlton.’
‘I ain’t agreeing with it,’ Vinia protested, ‘just saying, that’s all.’
Cheryl hated Carlton for what he’d done, probably hated him more because they were all so weak and helpless around him, no one to raise a voice. Except Nana and even she wouldn’t be so stupid as to do it in the man’s hearing. How come Nana was so brave? Had she been born brave or did she get braver as she grew older?
‘You seeing Jeri soon?’ Vinia held her other hand out. Cheryl checked the nails were dry and began applying the next coat. Vinia wanted sunsets on each nail:
Blue Murder: Make BelieveThe third Blue Murder novel written by the creator of the hit ITV police drama starring Caroline Quentin as DCI Janine Lewis.For nine days the people of Manchester have been looking for missing three-year-old Sammy Wray then DCI Janine Lewis is called to a residential street where a child's body has been found. It's a harrowing investigation and Janine's personal problems make leading the inquiry even tougher. Is this the case that will break her?Praise for the Blue Murder books'Complex and satisfying in its handling of Lewis's agonised attempts to be both a good cop and a good mother.'The Sunday Times'Uncluttered and finely detailed prose.'Birmingham Post'Beautifully realised little snapshots of the different characters' lives… Compelling stuff.'Sherlock Magazine'A swift, satisfying read.'City Life'Precise and detailed delineation of contemporary family relationships.'Tangled Web'Lewis seems set to become another very popular string to Staincliffe's bow as one of the leading English murder writers.'Manchester Metro'Pace and plenty of human interest.'Publishing News'Blending the warmth of family life with the demands of a police investigation.'Manchester Evening News'Juggling work and family is a challenge of modern life and encountering realistically portrayed women with family responsibilities is a pleasure.
When private eye Sal Kilkenny is asked to discover the whereabouts of Jennifer Pickering, disinherited by her family twenty years ago, it seems that Jennifer does not want to be found. Despite her initial reservations, as the events of the past gradually unfold, single-mum Sal finds that she is becoming engrossed in the case. There are dark secrets waiting to be uncovered but can Sal break the conspiracy of silence that surrounds this mystery? As she spends her days tracing Jennifer, Sal's nights become shattered by an emotional and often dangerous assignment with the Neighbour Nuisance Unit on one of Manchester's toughest housing estates.
She's a single parent. A private eye. And liking it. Until, that is, Mrs Hobbs turns up asking Sal Kilkenny to find her missing son. Sal's search takes her through the Manchester underworld, a world of deprivation and petty theft, of well-heeled organised crime and ultimately, murder. Would she have taken the job on if she had known what she was getting into? Probably, because Sal is fired with the desire to see justice done, to avenge the death of a young lad whose only crime was knowing too much.The first Sal Kilkenny Mystery, short-listed for the Crime Writers' Association best first novel award and serialised on BBC Radio 4, Woman's Hour.
From the author of LOOKING FOR TROUBLE, a further crime novel featuring private investigator Sal Kilkenny. When a man is distraught at his wife's apparent infidelity, he enlists the help of Sal to confirm his suspicions, only to find himself a widower soon afterwards. From there Sal's other case also begins to take a disturbing and violent turn.
A daughter's deathA teenage girl is found brutally murdered in her squalid flat.A mother's loveHer mother is devastated. She gave her child up to the care system, only to lose her again, and is convinced that the low-life boyfriend is to blame.Two ordinary women, one extraordinary jobDC Rachel Bailey has dragged herself up from a deprived childhood and joined the Manchester Police. Rachel's boss thinks her new recruit has bags of raw talent but straight-laced DC Janet Scott, her reluctant partner, has her doubts.Together Scott and Bailey must hunt a killer, but a life fighting crime can be no life at all…
The fourth Blue Murder novel written by the creator of the hit ITV police drama starring Caroline Quentin as DCI Janine Lewis.A well-respected family GP is found shot dead outside his surgery; who could possibly want to kill him? As DCI Janine Lewis and her team investigate they uncover stories of loyalty, love, deception, betrayal and revenge.Praise for the Blue Murder books'Complex and satisfying in its handling of Lewis's agonised attempts to be both a good cop and a good mother.' The Sunday Times'Uncluttered and finely detailed prose.' Birmingham Post'Beautifully realised little snapshots of the different characters' lives… Compelling stuff.' Sherlock Magazine'A swift, satisfying read.' City Life'Precise and detailed delineation of contemporary family relationships.' Tangled Web'Lewis seems set to become another very popular string to Staincliffe's bow as one of the leading English murder writers.' Manchester Metro'Pace and plenty of human interest.' Publishing News'Blending the warmth of family life with the demands of a police investigation.'Manchester Evening News'Juggling work and family is a challenge of modern life and encountering realistically portrayed women with family responsibilities is a pleasure.
«Многие знания – многие печали»Лидия… Художник Кирилл Баринов давно забыл о ней, ведь их короткий роман закончился, когда они были студентами. Но странные пугающие события заставили его вспомнить о временах своей юности: Баринов случайно узнал, что все его институтские друзья не так давно умерли… Опасаясь за свою жизнь, Кирилл обратился к экстрасенсу Алексею Данилову. Выслушав сбивчивый рассказ клиента, Данилов сразу догадался: потусторонние силы тут ни при чем. Есть человек, который не просто пожелал зла старым товарищам Баринова – он убил их, пусть и не своими руками.
«…На мгновение показывалась, например, отдельно стоящая дымящаяся сосна и тут же пропадала из поля зрения… Изредка встречались островки зелени, по краям окаймленные поблескивающим сквозь дым пламенем… какая-то извилистая лента, чуть более светлая по окраске, тянулась сквозь черное пространство на земле, делая плавные повороты то в одну, то в другую сторону. Я не сразу догадалась, что это лесная река, по берегам которой сгорели только верхушки деревьев, а нижняя часть кроны, расположенная близко к воде, осталась зеленой, только сильно подсохла, словно глубокой осенью.Несколько черных прямоугольников, беспорядочно разбросанных на берегу этой обгоревшей лесной реки, не могли быть не чем иным, как небольшой деревушкой, выгоревшей дотла, сквозь дым можно было различить поблескивающий огонь на догорающих бревнах.Под нами был мертвый лес…».
Как-то сразу не заладился у Ольги Бойковой, главного редактора газеты «Свидетель» отдых на Черном море. Не успела она толком освоиться в гостинице, как там произошло убийство ее владельца – бизнесмена Сочникова. Милиции, прибывшей на место преступления, все предельно ясно: мужчину убила его жена Сабина. И все улики, казалось бы, действительно против нее – Сабину видели возле трупа с окровавленным кинжалом в руке. Да и мотив налицо: почему бы молодой красотке не избавиться от пожилого скуповатого супруга и не стать самой хозяйкой гостиницы, приносящей неплохой доход? Но Ольга Бойкова, насмотревшись на ход расследования, не согласна с официальной версией и уверена, что убийца не Сабина.
Основано на реальных событиях.Текст составлен по записям дневников автора.Подвергнут сюжетной корректировке.Фамилии, имена, названия изменены.В «Корпоративных тайнах» читатель приоткрывает для себя реальные механизмы решения крупным региональным холдингом своих повседневных проблем через субъективное восприятие ситуации главным героем.
Автомобильная авария, на первый взгляд выглядевшая обычным несчастным случаем, превращается в целую цепь запутанных событий и судеб…
Проклятая икона, принадлежавшая, согласно легенде, самому Емельяну Пугачеву.Икона, некогда принадлежавшая предкам Ольги, — но давно утраченная.Теперь след этой потерянной реликвии, похоже, отыскался… И путь к иконе ведет в прошлое Ольги, во времена ее детства, проведенного в тихом южном городе.Однако чем ближе Ольга и ее муж, смелый и умный журналист, подбираются к иконе, тем яснее им становится — вокруг бесценной реликвии по-прежнему льется кровь.Проклятие, довлеющее над «Спасом», перестанет действовать, только когда он вернется к законным владельцам.Но до возвращения еще очень далеко!..