Valentina: A Hauntingly Intelligent Psychological Thriller (28 page)

BOOK: Valentina: A Hauntingly Intelligent Psychological Thriller
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So Mikey’s name had been cleared before he even knew it had been muddied. But even so, the next few days waiting for him to come home were among the worst I’d known since the move. I had started this journey alone in this cottage and now here I was, more alone than I had ever been. In essence, there was no change. Except there had been a change. I had found a friend and I had loved her. I wanted to still, but no longer felt safe enough to love her as I had. I believed everything she had told me but still the ground beneath me had cracked, as if after an earthquake. I needed to move forward but I knew, or sensed, that I should tread with caution. In the café, Valentina had confessed

more than that

she had volunteered her confession before I had asked for it. She had told me the truth, something she could only do by admitting to her lie. That had taken courage. And I believed her. She wouldn’t admit to lying only to replace the lie with a half-truth, would she? I wanted to call her and talk it through once more

if only to stop myself endlessly revolving the subject in my own head

but I didn’t call her, I called Jeanie. Jeanie, who picked up on the first ring, who listened to all I had to say.


It’s all perfectly feasible,” she said. “The problem is, when someone you’re close with lies to your face, it’s hard to believe what they say even when they do tell the truth. It’s the old cry wolf thing, isn’t it?”


It’s possible isn’t it,” I replied, “that she was protecting me? It was her after all who said she’d lied, not me. She came right out with it.”


Aye,” she said. “I suppose. Is she still friends with this woman?”


She says not. And Mikey doesn’t know anything about Georgia’s friendship with Val because Val was lying to him too, effectively.” In the background, I could hear phones ringing, tapping

Jeanie’s fingers on the keys, possibly. I wished I was back there, with my colleagues, trying to write the truth about the big stuff, not here trying to find out the little truths of my tiny, insignificant life.


Contact me if there’s any more weirdness, OK?” Jeanie was saying. “In the meantime, I’ll see if I can find anything else on this Georgia psycho bitch.”

I laughed

for the first time in ages. “Thanks Jeanie. You’re a pal.”

 

 

TWENTY

 

By the time Mikey got back, I was in knots. When he called to say his helicopter was delayed due to poor visibility and there was a chance he would not make it home till the next day, I had to bite the back of my hand to suppress a wail. But he got off, thank God. The taxi finally came, its diesel engine rattling. I ran to the window, saw the diffused yellow halos of headlights coming up the lane.

I waved from the window, ran to the door.

Kitbag in hand, he crunched over the gravel, through the patches of greying ice slush.


Hi,” I said, stepping aside, pulling back the door.


Hey.” He grinned, bowled in. He was so male, I thought, compared to Valentina. So dark, so other. “What are you doing standing in the shadows?” he said. “Come here and give me a kiss right now. I demand it.” Without warning, he lunged for me and picked me up, kissed me hard on the mouth. He smelled of coffee, of vanilla

the cab air freshener, maybe. He planted me back on the floor and hugged me to his chest, bent to my ear so he could mutter into it. “God, I’ve missed you. Can we sneak upstairs?”


Isla’s watching TV,” I wriggled out of his arms, backed away. “Isla,” I called. “Daddy’s here.”


No,” she shouted. “No Dada.”

I smiled at Mikey. “That’s what we call ‘the terrible twos’ come early.”


She’s not even one yet.” He reached for my hand, let his fingers trail through mine.


She will be,” I said. “The week after next. You’ll be away.”

Blink. Here. Blink. Gone.

It took me until Isla had gone to bed to ask about Georgia Smyth-Banks. And even after two days of careful planning as to how I would broach the subject, I still made a complete mess of it. We had eaten together. We were in the kitchen. I had put on some soft music and I was loading up the dishwasher with our dirty plates. Maybe the job, having something to do, somewhere else to look, helped me to find the words. Pity I didn’t say them calmly

like Valentina doubtless would have done. Pity that, as soon as I opened my mouth to speak, emotion sent my voice wavering out like the strained tones of an old lady trying to sing the high notes of a particularly challenging hymn.


Why didn’t you tell me your ex-girlfriend lived in Aberdeen?”


What?” He was still at the table. I had topped up his wine, told him to stay put after the meal. I had wanted him to rest after his exhausting fortnight in the North Sea.


Georgia Smyth-Banks.” I rinsed the cutlery, dumped it into the holder with a crash. “Ring any bells?”

I had done precisely what I promised myself I would not do: let the poison of suspicion leak into my words, asked a question designed only to trap him. I barely recognised myself. Neither, it appeared, did he. His eyebrows knitted together in confusion as if to say: who are you?


Where is this coming from?”

I pressed my back to the countertop, and made myself look at him. “Mikey, Georgia lives here. She works for the same company as you. Don’t tell me you didn’t know. Were you ever going to tell me? I only know because of the letter.”


What letter?” His eyebrows moved even closer together, his lips pursed.


Valentina had a letter addressed to Georgia in her bag. That’s how I found out. Valentina used to teach her. She lives in Fittie.”


Fittie?” he said. “As in Footdee? Who lives there? I thought you said Valentina lived in Union Grove?”

I slid the tray into the dishwasher, pulled up the door and turned to face him once more. “No. Georgia. Georgia lives in Fittie. You must know that.”


Shona, stop.” He jumped up, strode the two paces it took to reach me and grabbed my wrist.


Let go.” I had not meant to shout. But I had. I saw the hurt in his eyes.

He let go, as if he, not me, had been burnt, and held up his hands. “OK. Sorry. Look. Sit down. Let’s sit down. Let’s talk about this properly. You’ve gone flying off God knows where. Sit down, come on. I bet you’ve been thinking about nothing else, haven’t you?”

I nodded, blinking back tears. Damn tears. Why couldn’t I punch a hole in the wall like a man? Shout, slam a door, knock back a whisky and throw the glass to the floor? He was so right

I had thought of nothing else

and for some reason I found that humiliating. Stuck out here, no friends, no job, no one I could trust to talk to, yes, I had nothing else to think about. But now I wanted the truth

not any old truth, but one from his lips, one I could believe enough to stand on, no more shaky ground.

Mikey was pouring more red wine into my glass. He was ushering me into my chair.


Come on. Sit with me,” he said, his voice unchanged. “Let’s talk about this.”


I’ve got to finish cleaning up. There’s a laundry load I still haven’t ...”


Shona, sit. We’ll do that after. Together. Or I’ll do it. Sit down.”

I lowered myself into the chair.


Right.” He sat down opposite me, laid his hands flat on the table. His nails had grown while he had been offshore, I noticed; they were long and rounded, like a guitarist’s. “So Valentina had a letter

which we’ll get to in a minute.”


Why in a minute? Why not now?”

He threw up his hands. “OK. Now. Whatever you want.”

I shook my head. “No. I’ve spoken to her. Georgia used to do yoga with her, that’s all.”


So how come Valentina had a letter addressed to her then?”


It was a bill. For some classes she didn’t pay for.”


She told you that?”

I nodded. I didn’t say that she’d lied at first, told me it was a postal mistake. I didn’t say Valentina had befriended me under false pretences. Mikey already had such a low opinion of her. Nor did I add that I’d driven over to Georgia’s house, like a raving lunatic, that I’d peeped through her windows, fainted on her front step. And I certainly didn’t tell him she kept a photo of him on her fireplace. I don’t know why I kept these things to myself

perhaps I was trying to keep some shred of dignity.


So Valentina tells you that she knows Georgia, she used to teach her? And she lives here in Aberdeen,” he said, slowly, as if he was working it out for himself. Then Jeanie phones you and tells you Georgia’s my ex. My God, I can see how ... two plus two, eh? What the hell did you think?”


I don’t know. You left out the bit about you and Georgia working together.”


And that, of course.” He smiled. “Let me guess. You thought that, because my ex-girlfriend is in the same city, even though you know she’s a geologist and that Aberdeen is probably the only place she could get a job in the UK, the fact she lives here and works for Maple automatically means she and I are having some sort of affair? Is that the gist?”


It’s not as defined as that.” I hated my voice. It was still warbling all over the place, frail-sounding, weak. “It’s bad enough that Valentina knew this woman and never told me, then I find out that you knew her too ... more than knew her ... and you didn’t tell me she was here. I guess it’s about realising that there’s something your husband isn’t telling you. It’s

it’s ...” What was it? What was it, exactly? Why now, faced with him, didn’t I know what it was? “I mean, it’s not devastating, I’m not saying that. More like I’m trying to stand up but I feel like I’m going to fall down.”

He rubbed his hand over his chin and frowned. “I can see that.” His fingers splayed across his mouth. He looked down at his lap, seemed to see some speck of dirt there, brushed it off. “And meanwhile you’ve had days and days on your own with it all going around in your mind. It must’ve driven you mad. It’s enough to drive anyone mad.” His voice was unaltered, compassionate. I was glad

I guess because I took his flat calm to be a sign of a man with nothing to hide. There was no politician’s rhetoric here

he had spoken almost as if he saw the whole thing from my point of view.

The tears came thickly then. Along with the shaky voice, out they rolled, regardless. Before Isla, this would never have happened. Never. I’d been as strong as steel. You could have made a ship out of me. Now I was little more than a leaking bucket.


Don’t cry, baby.” He leant forward, brushed my tears away with his thumbs.


I’m not.” I sniffed. “I’m tired.”

The music faded and stopped. Outside, black silence pressed against the windows. The silence out here is like nowhere else.


She was here before we moved up, I think,” he said, after a moment. “But I didn’t know she was at Maple when I took the job. We weren’t in touch.”

I waited for him to look at me, which he did, with a cool, level gaze.


Are you in touch with her now?” I asked. “Do you see her?”


Where would I see her?” He scratched with his thumbnail at the leg of his jeans. “I spend half my life offshore.”


But you do go into the office?”


The office is massive, Shone. There are hundreds of people working there, it’s not as if she’s in my team. I’ve never seen that guy we met at the pub that time, remember the one with the snobby wife? Never seen him and I don’t see her. And even if I did, I’d keep away.” He puffed out air and shook his head. “She’s a bit nuts.”

I knew this to be true and my heart seized upon it. I had seen the photo on the mantelpiece. Valentina had said she was crazy, obsessive. I had said neither thing to him and I suppose that means I still at that point held the smallest residue of doubt, enough to test him.


In what way?” I asked instead.

He shrugged. “Oh, you know. She did sort of stalk me for a bit. After we split up.”


She’s only human.” I smiled

not at him but at the fact I knew he wasn’t lying.


This is it.” He smiled too. “What woman wouldn’t go mad for me, eh?” He lunged for me, tickled my belly.

I shrieked, pushed him away. We both laughed. And sighed. The silence leaked back into the cottage.


Actually, I had to tell her to sling it in the end,” he said. “It got a bit nasty. She couldn’t cope with me moving on. I actually ended up telling her I’d call the police.” He reached out and squeezed my knee. “Hey. Are you OK?”

I knew all this to be true.


I think so.” I took a deep breath, stretched my neck, tried to ease the stiffness in my body.


I didn’t tell you because I didn’t want to upset you,” he said. “And then she stopped bothering me and then I

I forgot. I forgot because she means nothing to me, Shone. You and Isla. You’re everything. You’re my family, my home. You’re absolutely everything.” He grinned. “Besides, when would I have the time for anyone else, let alone the energy? Half the time I’m on a piece of Meccano in the middle of the bollock-freezing ocean.” He laughed again, took my hand, kissed the back of it. “Bloody hell, Shona. The last thing I need is another bloody woman to keep up with.”

 

Later, we sat top to tail on the sofa listening to
King Creosote
, talking sometimes, sometimes not, lost to the peace, the pulsing fire, our home. Later still, I followed him upstairs, changed into my nightshirt and climbed into bed next to his warm body. I bent my knees into the backs of his and wrapped my arm around his solid man’s torso. His hand came back to find me, running over my hip, sliding down my leg.

BOOK: Valentina: A Hauntingly Intelligent Psychological Thriller
11.58Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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