Martin virtually broke through the door. He’d left Elena behind on his dash out of Hell’s Kitchen, and had raced through the staff area and up the six flights of stairs from deck A to the fifth passenger floor of this ocean giant.
He’d barged into women, leaped over children, knocked a tray carrying room service from a waiter’s hand and compelled him to hand over his skeleton key. And still he came too late.
Or that’s what he thought when he saw Lisa lunge with a screwdriver at her mother, who for some reason was naked, or at best very scantily clad. But then Lisa tripped, catching the laces of her combat boots around a leg of the bed. This gave Julia time to retreat to the balcony that her daughter was also steaming towards.
‘Hey, Lisa,’ Martin shouted with the last of his breath. Lisa hadn’t heard the door crash open, but she responded to her name. She slowly turned around to him.
The telephone on the bedside table was ringing; nobody paid it any attention.
‘Who are you?’ Lisa said, keeping one eye on her mother. The wind was blowing her hair forwards like a hood.
Noting her glassy look Martin understood the situation at a glance. Lisa Stiller was in a sort of alpha mode, a state in which she would only react to the most powerful external stimuli. The voice of reason had been switched off, as had her ability to distinguish between right and wrong.
She was probably suffering from a dissociative disorder. If Diesel was right and the teacher had sexually exploited and abused the girl, this negative experience would have touched her sensitive emotional nexus like a burning match and set the whole thing alight.
She seemed to be blaming her mother for the mental torture she must have been suffering. Over weeks, months perhaps, she’d built Julia up as a bogeyman figure. Martin knew that he wouldn’t be able to deter her quickly from her actions with sound argument. And certainly not with the truth. So he lied to her and said, ‘I’m a friend of Querky’s.’
Bingo!
He’d remembered the name Shahla had used when contacting potential clients on Easyexit. Elena’s suspicion proved well founded. There was a connection between Lisa and Shahla too. And by pretending to be Querky’s accomplice he’d gained Lisa’s attention. But also that of her mother, who stared at him wide-eyed and was just about to open her mouth when she read – correctly – from the brief glance he shot at her that this was not the time to butt in.
‘Querky doesn’t have any friends,’ Lisa said, somewhat bewildered.
‘Oh, yes, she does. I’m her assistant.’
‘You’re lying.’
‘No I’m not. She sent me here to tell you to stop.’
‘Bullshit.’
‘No, honest. The plan has been put on hold.’
‘Oh, really? So why didn’t she come to tell me herself?’
‘Because she…’ Martin’s first instinct was to tell the truth. Because she’s dead. But that might provoke the worst reaction possible. Searching for the appropriate response he began, ‘Because at the moment she’s…’
‘Here. Here I am.’
Martin swivelled around in shock. Elena was standing in the cabin doorway, as out of breath as he was.
‘You?’ Martin heard Lisa say behind him. He turned back to the girl. ‘You’re Querky?’
‘Yes,’ Elena said. ‘We met on Easyexit.’
‘You, you sound completely different.’
‘Because I had an accident,’ Elena said, pointing to her disfigured face. ‘It’s going to take a while before I get my old voice back.’ She pushed past Martin. ‘I’ve got a message for you from Tom.’
‘From my boyfriend?’ Lisa’s face lit up.
‘He says he wants to get back together with you.’
‘Really?’
‘Yes. On the condition that you don’t hurt your mother.’
Mistrust flickered in Lisa’s eyes. Elena had overdone it.
‘You’re not Querky.’
‘Hey, Lisa, think about it. How else would I know about Tom and the video if you hadn’t emailed it to me?’
‘No, you’re lying. I bet you don’t know my nickname.’
‘Your…’ Elena’s voice started to wobble. She swallowed. It wasn’t only Martin who saw the visible signs of her uncertainty.
‘Tell me the nickname I’m registered on Easyexit with.’
‘You are…’ Elena turned to Martin in desperation. ‘Your nickname is…’ Red patches spread on the undamaged side of her face.
‘Forget it,’ Lisa said scornfully. ‘You’re not Querky. And Tom doesn’t want to have anything to do with me any more. You haven’t got any message from him.’
Her hand gripped the screwdriver more tightly.
‘Drop it!’ Martin said, now just a couple of paces away.
She looked at him, incensed. ‘You don’t reckon I stand a a chance against you, do you?’
‘If you try to attack your mother…’ Martin shook his head.
One minute earlier she could have hurt Julia badly, so badly perhaps that she’d have been able to throw her mother overboard.
But now the most she could do was give her mother a scratch before Martin snatched the screwdriver from her hand.
‘Well, the plan has failed then,’ Lisa said with a shrug.
She turned to her sobbing mother.
‘I hope you’re happy with Tom,’ she said, tossing the tool overboard.
Then she leaned against the railings and, together with the parapet she’d loosened with the screwdriver in the hours she’d waited for her mother, she fell into the depths like a guillotine.