Jonas swayed on his haunches. Somewhere a long way off, he could hear a plaintive cow. He looked at Steven’s mouth as if to check that the boy had indeed spoken and this was not all in his head, along with his guilty heartbeat.
He hadn’t killed Lucy. That was the truth.
He was
He remembered the knife. He remembered the blood. Those things were confusing. There were some things he couldn’t remember, and other things he didn’t
Steven leaned against the fence and asked coldly, ‘Didn’t you love her any more?’
‘I
‘But you hit her! You wouldn’t hit her if you loved her.’
‘That’s a lie,’ said Jonas. ‘That’s a lie.’
‘I saw it with my own eyes,’ said Steven.
Steven realized he was trembling at his own daring. Jonas stared at him. No, not
‘You said Lucy gave you money the night she died.’
‘So what?’
‘Why would she do that?’ Jonas spoke haltingly and with a little frown on his face – as if he was working things out as he was going along.
‘I don’t know,’ said Steven warily. ‘She never did before.’
‘Maybe,’ said Jonas, ‘maybe … she
Steven said nothing, but something in Jonas’s words – or the
But it didn’t.
‘Who knows they’re going to be murdered, Steven?’ said Jonas, with a soft break in his voice. ‘Did
Gooseflesh rippled across Steven’s warm skin.
He hadn’t known Arnold Avery was going to kill him. If he’d known he wasn’t coming back, he would have prepared better – he would have given Davey the fiver he’d kept hidden in the shed, told his mother he loved her.
Lucy Holly had given him £500.
She had hugged him in a fierce goodbye.
Those things meant she could not have been murdered.
Steven’s mind tumbled and spun. Could
Now he searched Jonas’s face, but saw only pain there. No deception, no anger. No threat.
Not like that night outside Rose Cottage.
Where was
Then Jonas’s eyes had been holes in his head. Dead black wells, like the old mines up at Brendon Hills. You felt a give in the turf and looked behind to see you’d stepped over a hole that would have killed you – dropped you into blackness so deep and narrow that by the time you hit the bottom you’d be skinned as well as dead. You shivered and then laughed too loudly to show you weren’t scared.
And small, dark places invaded your dreams.
Today Jonas Holly’s eyes were brown. That was all. Brown with a sheen that looked disturbingly like tears.
Steven thought about someone hurting Em and found wild fury in his chest – there as if by dark magic – and knew that he would rather kill himself than watch her in pain. If Jonas Holly had loved his wife that same way, then he could
With a horrible jag of remorse, Steven started to wonder whether he’d also imagined the danger he’d felt coming off Jonas Holly that night outside Rose Cottage.
The little vertical line between his eyes deepened.
That was impossible. He hadn’t imagined it.
Had he?
What else might his brain have invented? The slap that had knocked Lucy Holly to her knees? The money falling from a black-and-white sky? The hedge at his back with nowhere to run.
She was too good for him, wasn’t she? Too good to be true. Her heart ticking under his hand, her Super-Sour sweetness. Had he imagined that? Had he imagined
Steven blinked and shuddered. How much was real? All of a sudden, he wasn’t sure any more. The heat and the stink of the kennels was his only truth now. How long had he been here? A month? A year? He no longer knew. Jess and Charlie and Maisie and Kylie and Pete were all real. He knew
Steven felt as if he were teetering on the edge of a deep, dark precipice, rock crumbling below him and spinning into the abyss.
He’d been through a lot.
He’d been through a