To Amy’s surprise, she discovered on her return to work that she’d hardly been missed. The merger with Bishopstoke was the talk of the office. No one spoke of anything else, as they speculated on what it meant for them: would they have an extra three days’ annual leave like Bishopstoke staff, where would the merged company’s offices be, and would the Veritable marketing team have jobs at all? All new products were on hold, and consequently so were the marketing campaigns. Parveen, with very little work to do, concentrated on honing her CV and encouraging her team to do the same. She took Amy to one side.
“I hope you’ll come with me once I’ve secured a marketing position elsewhere in the City,” Parveen said, her brown eyes earnest.
“Does that mean you rate my work?” Amy asked.
“Of course,” Parveen replied. “I will admit my behaviour hasn’t been perfect. You were foisted on me by David Saxton, and I resented that. But you’ve proved you can hold your own in a busy team.”
“Thank you,” Amy said, flattered. She considered whether to admit she didn’t want to work for Parveen again, and decided honesty was the best policy. “I hope you don’t mind, but I’m looking for a job outside financial services.” She’d posted her CV on job boards, but Marty’s offer was all she’d had so far. “Will you give me a reference?”
“An excellent one,” Parveen assured her.
Within days, Parveen began to leave her desk for several hours at a time. Her absences were never explained. It was an open secret that she was having job interviews. She had just returned from one, and settled to filing her nails, when Amy said she was having lunch with her father and it might take some time.
They met at Rustica, taking a table outside so Charles could smoke. “Bottle of house white?” Charles ventured.
“Absolutely,” Amy replied. She scanned the menu, looking for cheaper options. While Deirdre might have deep pockets, Charles had made it clear enough that he didn’t.
“I’ve got news,” Charles said, when the food was ordered and wine had been poured for them. “I’m moving to pastures new – in every sense.”
“Splitting up with Deirdre?” Amy asked eagerly.
“That’s part of it,” Charles admitted. “I’m buying a flat so I can have my own space. In fact, it has two double bedrooms. You could live there too, if you like. I mean, it’s got to be better than the broom cupboard you’re renting right now.”
As Amy was wondering what to say about Ross and her uneasy presence in his flat, Charles dashed any lingering hopes he’d return to Rachel. He added, “I love Deirdre and we’re still a couple, but I shouldn’t have moved in. If I don’t put some distance between us, she’ll be talking about marriage and babies. She’s still young enough.”
“Really?” Amy’s jaw dropped.
“Oh yes,” Charles said. “Dee’s in her early forties, so it’s possible. But I’ve been there, done that, already. I’m not the marrying kind.” He drew on his cigarette.
Amy had a disturbing vision of Charles behind the wheel of his babe magnet Porsche, prowling the streets of London for women. She shuddered. If anything, she would prefer him to settle for married bliss and a new family with Deirdre. “Any more news?”
“I’m keeping the car if that’s what you mean,” he said, confirming her fears. “Actually, I’m changing jobs as well. Davey Saxton is establishing a new company and he’s asked me to work for him. On extremely attractive terms, actually. It’s all official now. I resigned from the bank this morning.”
He must have seen he’d surprised her from the look on her face, for he added hastily, “That’s confidential, of course. Only a few people know Davey Saxton’s leaving Veritable after the merger. I just thought you might be one of them.”
“Me?” Why should she be privy to sensitive information like that? “No, I had no idea. But Parveen’s trying to swing redundancy packages for us.”
“You wouldn’t be entitled to one after just a year with Veritable, surely?” Charles said. “Also, you gave me the impression Parveen had horns and a tail.”
Amy had reconsidered her opinion of Parveen somewhat. “She’s okay, actually. Veritable put her under too much pressure before, that’s all. She didn’t have a big enough team or budget to meet their demands. And yes, she explained I wouldn’t get statutory redundancy pay, but she’d do her best to squeeze an ex gratia sum out of HR. Apparently the City analysts ignore reorganisation costs when they look at our accounts, so Veritable can afford to be generous.”
“They’re certainly being generous to Davey.”
“Anything they give me is a drop in the ocean then. A teaspoon of plonk compared with a crate of champagne. Anyway, why did you think I’d know?”
“I thought Ross might have told you.”
She understood at last. “Is Ross going to work with you?”
“Yes, he is,” Charles said. “He’s a very clever young man. Davey holds him in the highest regard. I’m sure I will too.”
Charles’ opinion would change should he discover Ross merely considered her a friend with benefits. Of course, Charles still believed Ross was her boyfriend. He would hardly be persuaded otherwise once he knew she was living in Ross’ flat. It was time to explain. “Do you want the good news or the bad news?” she asked.
“Oh, the good news, I should think.” Charles looked expectant.
“I’ve moved into Ross’ flat.”
Charles was clearly delighted. “Congratulations. I take it you’ll invite me round for supper soon?”
“Maybe.” That would be an interesting evening. Ross could hardly turn away his new colleague. “However,” Amy said, sorry to bring Charles back to earth, “Ross isn’t my boyfriend. In fact, he’s going out with Kat, and she lives there too.”
Charles looked stunned. “Kat? I thought her boyfriend was a gangster.”
“It turned out Jeb wasn’t her boyfriend, but he was a gangster. In fact, he tried to kill her.”
“What’s been going on?”
Amy took a deep breath. “It’s a long story.”
She was, thankfully, interrupted by the arrival of their food; several small plates of titbits and a half-baguette sliced and arranged on a square of slate.
“That doesn’t look like enough,” Charles observed. “Shall I order the same again?”
Amy giggled. “Yes, as you’re getting a massive pay rise. Wasn’t David Saxton annoyed when you dumped Deirdre?”
“I haven’t dumped her, as you charmingly put it. In fact, Davey seems to think I’ll move back in. Maybe I will. Anyway, you’re not changing the subject that easily, young lady. Spill the beans.”
“Kat disappeared,” she began, “and Ross and I went to Birmingham to look for her.”
“Why?”
“Well, it turns out that I’m the marrying kind,” she said drily. “Kat stole my identity to wed an illegal immigrant for money.” She told him nearly everything. It would have been too hurtful to describe her dalliance with Ross.
Even so, Charles was appalled. “You’ve packed as much into a week as I have in a lifetime,” he said. “You shouldn’t live with Ross and Kat after the way they’ve behaved towards you. It’s a strange ménage à trois, and not in a good way.”
Amy shrugged. “Kat’s my friend. Ross has a beautiful flat, and his spare room is enormous.” It was almost as swish as the Malmaison. Unlike the tiny converted cupboards in the basement, Ross’ penthouse was spacious. He favoured cream throughout his flat, the only splodges of colour coming from canvases by up and coming artists already selling for three times what he’d paid. Amy had a double bed, a walk-in wardrobe and a balcony. In practice, she had sole use of the bathroom too, as the master bedroom boasted an ensuite. Ross hadn’t mentioned charging rent, and she wasn’t planning to suggest it.
“Move into my spare room,” Charles said. “It’s close to the City, in Shoreditch. I’ll ask my lawyers to hurry up with the purchase.”
“No thanks,” Amy said. Charles had said he wanted his own space. The last thing he needed was Amy playing gooseberry as he decided whether to return to Rachel, Deirdre, or anyone else. Of course it was preferable to Ross’ luxurious flat, watching Ross and Kat canoodle, then dealing with the aftermath of the inevitable split. It was only a matter of time before Kat grasped how obnoxious Ross was.
“Actually,” she said, “I could move to Birmingham.”
Charles was puzzled. “Why would you do that? It’s an even longer commute than Brockenhurst.”
“Marty and Erik have offered me a job, as the marketing manager for their anti-cancer drug. It’s good money, and interesting, but it’s in the Midlands.” She sighed. “I have until tomorrow to make up my mind. Marty phoned me today. I kept putting off the decision, and he’s losing patience. He needs someone at once.”
“Amy, you can’t trust Kat as far as you can throw her. How can you even think about working for her brother?” Charles looked worried.
“Erik’s not like Kat at all,” Amy said. “He was prepared to die for her – and for me and Ross.” Only luck, in the shape of a passing librarian, had saved Erik’s life; indirectly, possibly Amy’s too. Would the police have turned up in the tunnels otherwise? She would never know.
“It’s a new venture,” Charles pointed out reasonably. “How will you market a cure that isn’t licensed yet? And they may call you a manager, but I doubt you’ll have a soul working for you.”
“It will be a marketing department of one,” Amy admitted. “Initially, I’ll be generating interest in the drug before it’s released. It’s sure to be a blockbuster. Don’t you see? This could really build my career.”
“Let me ask Davey if he can find you a role with us.”
“I really don’t want to work with Ross again,” Amy said. “Don’t forget, you just told me to move out of his penthouse.”
Charles laughed. “You’re right; I’m being dense. Where would you live if you moved to Birmingham? I don’t know the city at all.”
“I hardly know it myself,” Amy admitted. “Erik lives in the Jewellery Quarter, and that’s lovely, rather like Hatton Garden in London. Marty said I could take one of Erik’s rooms rent-free, but I declined.”
“Quite right,” Charles agreed. “You’d both bring your work home then. There’d be no balance in your life any more.”
She nodded, unwilling to remind him yet again about the unsocial hours she’d already worked at Veritable. In truth, she’d baulked because she didn’t know if Marty was right about Erik. She suspected, in fact, that she liked Erik rather too much. After her foolish fling with Ross, Amy had resolved to let her next relationship develop slowly. “Marty’s got another old workshop I can have, anyway. He assured me there were no cellars or secret tunnels.” It was hardly stylish, he’d said, but he’d send one of his brood round to apply a lick of paint.
“You’ve convinced yourself, haven’t you?” Charles said.
“I suppose I have,” Amy said. If anything, Charles’ scepticism had been a catalyst, crystallising her certainty. “At Veritable, I feel like a small cog in a big wheel running in a random direction. I’m excited to work with people I like and a product I believe in, where I can really make a difference.”
Charles patted her hand. “That’s exactly how I feel about working with Davey. Good luck, Amy. I guess you’d better let Marty know.”
“I’ll ring Erik too.”
“I tell you what,” Charles said, a glint in his eye, “Better still, why don’t you just go to Birmingham to tell them, right now? I’d rather like to take the afternoon off. My boss can’t stop me. I’ll drive you there.”
Amy grinned. “You just want a fast run on the motorway, don’t you, Dad?”
“Dead right,” Charles replied. “I’ll take it to the ton. Well, what are we waiting for? My car’s round the corner.”
He wanted to meet Marty and Erik himself, she realised, as she followed Charles to his car. Her father was determined to make sure they were suitable employers. Would they mind? She thought not. Knowing Marty, he’d use Charles for some free IT advice.
Charles was bound to like her new bosses. Marty’s cheeky charm was the ideal foil for Erik’s honest intensity. With her marketing skills, they’d be a great team.
More than that, Amy knew she and Erik had faith in each other. One day, the trust between them might even become something more.
****
TWO BONUS SHORT STORIES - BASED AROUND CHARACTERS IN THE BRIDE’S TRAIL.
THE GAP
It was ten o’clock on a Friday evening. Jeb had dragged himself away reluctantly from the White Horse, but business was business. He parked his BMW around the corner from Green Park tube station, fishing in his pocket for coins. Fifteen minutes, that should do it. He tutted at the extortionate cost. Still, he was getting a premium for his wares, as he well knew.
Barry, the doorman at the casino, looked him up and down with disapproval. “It’s jacket and tie only, mate,” he muttered, standing solid and immovable in front of the entrance. Like Jeb, he was tall and broad-chested. In stature, they might have been twins. There couldn’t have been more of a contrast, however, between Jeb’s dark good looks and Barry’s pale, rough-hewn visage.
Jeb bristled. He always wore a leather jacket, jeans and box-fresh trainers; Barry knew that. “I’m just delivering,” he said frostily. “Let me inside the door. It’s too public to hand it over in the street. And,” he grimaced, “you need to find a spot without cameras, obviously.”
Barry shook his head. “The customer wants to see you personally.”
Was Barry scared of a sting? Jeb considered walking away. Greed overcame him. He had a grand’s worth of gear with him, and he’d been offered half as much again for it. “Okay,” he said. “I’ll meet him in the gents. But I’m not going home to get changed.”
“I suppose I can lend you clothes,” Barry grumbled. “The management keep a set just in case one of the high rollers turns up in Hawaiian shorts. It’s not for the likes of you, but...”
“That would be ‘not for the likes of us’, Barry,” Jeb pointed out. “You’re pond life to the big spenders, the same as me.”
Barry scowled. “I was about to say, you’ll have to take off that jewellery too.”
“All right,” Jeb acquiesced. He removed the gold pins from his nose and left ear.
The spare suit Barry retrieved from a cubbyhole next to the door wasn’t a bad fit. Jeb still detested it, swearing as he changed his clothes in the spartan staff toilets to which Barry directed him. He roughly knotted the cheap, boring grey tie he’d been given.
Barry looked relieved. “I’ll take you up to Mr Al-Shakah.”
“Is he a rap star?” Jeb asked, tongue in cheek.
Barry ignored him. “You can manage on your own for five minutes, can’t you?” he asked the monosyllabic Romanian who shared door security duties with him. The man grunted his assent.
They took a lift to the second floor, where the gaming tables were located: a dozen of them, variously shaped like lozenges or horseshoes. The huge room, red-painted and low-lit, was buzzing with conversation, concentration, sighs as punters lost and cheers as they won. “Impressed?” Barry asked.
“Not bad for a betting shop,” Jeb admitted. His eyes flicked between the young, sexy casino staff and the punters clustered at each table, confidently throwing down gaily coloured chips. He felt himself drawn into the excitement, the chance to win a fortune.
Barry nodded to the nearest table. “That’s him.”
Al-Shakah was playing roulette with hundred pound chips, bright red circles with the denomination written on them. His skin, like Jeb’s, was light brown, and he too was probably in his early thirties, but the similarity ended there. He clearly wasn’t a Londoner of mixed race. The gambler had a slight frame and an Arabic appearance. His gaze was fixed on the young blonde croupier, who was smiling and congratulating him as she handed him a pile of chips. Jeb’s eyes widened. With one bet, Al-Shakah had won two thousand pounds.
Barry coughed discreetly, caught the gambler’s eye and nodded to Jeb. Al-Shakah spoke briefly to the croupier before heading to the toilets.
Jeb followed. Entering a cubicle adjacent to the Arab’s, he hissed, “Give me the money.”
A bundle of notes appeared from the gap below the partition between the two cubicles. Jeb counted them carefully: exactly fifteen hundred pounds. He passed back a couple of sealed clear plastic bags containing white powder. Listening for the other man to leave, he heard nothing apart from a few sniffs and some heavy breathing. Finally, a strongly accented voice said, “Barry says you can get me a girl.”
“That could be arranged,” Jeb said, adding, “And Viagra.” He knew they were alone. On entering the room, he’d scanned it. It was second nature to him. Sensing another sale, he slipped a packet with a couple of blue pills under the partition.
“I want that one. Kat.”
“Sorry?”
“I’ll show you.”
Jeb unlocked his cubicle, hearing a click as the gambler did the same. Nervously, Jeb followed Al-Shakar to the gaming tables. A couple of metres away from the roulette, Al-Shakar jerked a thumb at the blonde croupier. “Her.”
Jeb couldn’t fault his taste. She was pretty, her face a perfect oval with creamy skin, green eyes and a wide smile. He guessed she would be in her early twenties, perhaps ten years younger than him. It was too risky though. He’d never met her before. He couldn’t simply waltz up to her and ask her if she did foreigners. “I’ll get you another girl,” he said. “A stunner, even better. It’ll cost a grand.”
He’d chosen a ridiculous figure. His girls usually charged a hundred, tops. They were young, fresh-faced and biddable, though. He thought Al-Shakah would like that.
The Arab didn’t bat an eyelid. “In thirty minutes,” he said, and turned to play again.
Jeb shuffled back to the gents to make a phone call. He knew at least one young woman had a shift in a massage parlour at the Elephant. It was close enough for a taxi to bring her to Mayfair in twenty minutes. Arrangements made, he took the lift back to Barry.
The doorman held out his hand. “Two hundred, Jeb.”
“What? That’s double what we agreed.”
Barry raised a bushy eyebrow. “He told me he’d want a girl as well.”
Jeb couldn’t argue. Trixie would be there at any moment, long-haired, short-skirted, made-up like a princess, out of her mind on her own particular brand of addiction. Jeb had learned everybody had an addiction, a gap in their lives they struggled to fill. It was his job to discover it and satisfy it. He sold Trixie what she desired most; she in turn sold herself to the men who craved what she offered. He handed the cash to Barry and went outside for a cigarette. Trixie’s taxi arrived as he flicked the last hot ashes away.
“Tell Mr Al, will you?” Jeb asked Barry.
Barry simply shrugged, indicating that Jeb could speak to the Arab himself. There was the small matter of payment too, of course. Bolder now, Jeb ascended in the lift once more.
Al-Shakar noticed his arrival at once. He motioned to Jeb to join him at the table. “Here,” the Arab pointed to the chips in front of him. “That will cover the price.”
Jeb would admit that arithmetic, or any task that involved more than low cunning or brute force, was not his strong point. However, even he could see there were more than ten of the hundred pound counters laid out in front of him. “Thanks,” he said.
Once the Arab had left, Jeb could have cashed in the chips, he knew. The blonde croupier turned a dazzling smile on him, however. “Want to play?” she asked. “Black or red?”
In his youth, merely a decade or so before, Jeb had bet heavily on the horses. It was a habit that, while he wouldn’t call it an addiction, had led him to take risks with his friends and finances. He’d sought counselling during the resulting spell in prison. Since then, he’d never been near a racetrack or betting shop. Now, he teetered on the brink, torn between common-sense and the lure of the gaming tables.
Hard work had never appealed to Jeb and the temptation of gaining something for nothing was enough to overcome his scruples. “How can I win big?” he asked.
She laughed. “Well, playing black or red, you simply double your money,” she said. “But you can bet on just one number, or two, four, five or six, or a line of them. Then you can win more.”
Jeb tried to digest her instructions while hiding his surprise at her voice. It was well-modulated, a hint at a monied background far removed from the poverty of his childhood in Canning Town. Why was someone like her working here? He smiled, charm oozing from every pore. “How old are you, Kat?” he asked, reading her name from the badge on her prim uniform. “That’s the number I’ll choose, if you come out for a drink with me.”
Kat’s eyes flashed. She grinned. “You don’t ask a lady her age,” she said, “but you could try twenty-three.”
He placed a tower of chips on it. She took bets from other punters and spun the wheel. Jeb watched it, a whirling dervish, the numbers and colours blurring together. His heart stopped as the wheel slowed, finally settling on twenty-five.
“Bad luck,” Kat sympathised.
“Not at all,” Jeb replied smoothly, “Because you’ll let me take you for a drink now, won’t you? How about Tuesday?”
He left with her telephone number. Even the penalty notice he found on his car didn’t dent his good humour. Despite the gambling loss, he’d made money on the evening. Better still, he’d met Kat. Al-Shakar, and many more like him, would pay well over the odds for a night with a girl like her. All Jeb need do was learn all about her, understand her vices and fulfil them.
Kat watched him go. She knew he was Barry’s friend, and she had a shrewd idea, too, of what he bought and sold. The other croupiers indulged in drugs to help them through long and boring shifts. She chose to spend her hard-earned cash, and easy credit, elsewhere. Jeb’s cheek made her laugh, though. She looked forward to a night of cocktails in the West End at his expense.
Her shift was nearly over. Kat returned to the staff locker room to remove the pristine, heavy cardboard bags from designer boutiques she’d patronised that morning. There was indeed a deep, aching need within her, a black hole she filled with the thrill of buying dresses, shoes and handbags. She shivered with delight, recalling the silky, sequinned garments inside those bags. Nothing Jeb could give her would ever come close.
****
THE PERFECT MURDER
“Tell me, Dad,” little Ben pleaded. “I want to know about the time you stole from a judge’s house.”
His father, Shaun, smiled. Tall and dark-haired, like a hero in a fairy tale, he was never short of a story for his son. Ruffling the boy’s blond hair, he lifted Ben onto his knee, and began. “It was my first burglary,” he said. “My own dad took me along as a look-out. Now, the judge was in his house, so my dad had to be very careful. Do you know what he did? He spread jam on the kitchen window, and stuck newspaper on it.”
Wide-eyed, Ben looked at the jam sandwich in his hand. He took a bite.
Shaun continued. “Then my dad broke the window, and every piece of glass clung to the paper instead of crashing to the ground. Without a sound, we crept in, and we stole all his jewels, and his judge’s wig as well.” He smiled. “I made my dad proud that day.”
Ben chuckled and snuggled up to Shaun. He wanted to make his father proud one day too.
**
Perhaps that day had come at last. Shaun was older and greyer now, a guest of Her Majesty in a high security prison. Ben was twenty-two. The lad had chosen a different path to his father, but in his heart he knew he was doing this job to make Shaun proud. If anyone asked, of course, Ben simply said his eyes were on the prize of ten thousand pounds.
It would be the perfect murder. Douglas could never be tempted to come alone to a meeting in a shady place. No, Ben was to strike in plain sight, when Douglas was leaving a bar in the middle of the city.
Wearing black, Ben loitered in shadows, sliding behind Douglas and his team as they emerged from the inn. He clapped Douglas on the back, at the same time slipping a needle-sharp rapier between his opponent’s shoulder blades. As Douglas crumpled to his knees, Ben nudged him backwards. No one saw the blood seeping through his clothing as the dead man fell. The weapon, which had been made of ice like a deadly lolly, melted away to become undetectable. Ben joined the concerned bystanders rushing to the dead man’s side as he fell.
Enormous cheering erupted throughout the room as the crowd watched Ben and Douglas’ avatars on the huge screen that covered one of the walls. “Ben Halloran wins the game for North London,” the MC announced.
“Well played,” Douglas said, shaking Ben’s hand as the rising young eSports star mounted the podium to claim his prize.
Ben flicked his floppy blond fringe out of his eyes, conveniently disposing of the tears that lurked. Relieved and exhilarated, waving at his team-mates, he wished most of all that his father could see him now.
****
THANK YOU!
Thank you for reading The Bride’s Trail,, and two bonus short stories - I hope you had fun! If you think your friends or other readers would enjoy The Bride’s Trail, I’d really appreciate it if you’d leave a review on Goodreads. And I’d be delighted if you’d spread the word through Twitter, Facebook or whenever you’re chatting with other book lovers. The Bride’s Trail is also available as a traditional paperback and in a large print, dyslexia-friendly format, which might suit some readers better... Do stay in touch – you can find me on Twitter (@AAAbbottStories) and Facebook.
There are free short stories and details of special offers on my website, at http:/aaabbott.co.uk. You might also like my other books. The Vodka Trail is a sequel to The Bride’s Trail – so why not find out what happened next?
Up In Smoke features Big Tobacco, counterfeit cigarettes and corporate espionage. It’s not (just) smoking that kills!
After The Interview is a thrilling story of big egos, blackmail and murder in IT companies.
Every book is also a tale of two cities, London and Birmingham, and the tensions between them. Have fun reading them – and please let me know what you think!
AA Abbott
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AND A WORD OF THANKS TO MY TEAM...
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Thanks to my team, especially Donna Marie Finn, David Massey, and lovely librarian Jackie Molloy, who volunteered for a cameo role. I couldn’t have done it with you!
A.A. Abbott