Выбрать главу

Najma got out of the Nissan and stood by it, looking nervously around and back towards the slip road, checking her watch.

A feeling of dread coursed through Sabera as she observed her sister. Why was she waiting there? They had arranged to meet in the cafe.

Less than five minutes later a battered Transit van trundled off the motorway and drew into a vacant parking space near to Najma’s car. Now Sabera’s heart plummeted and caught up with her dread as her husband stepped down from the passenger seat and stretched himself like an overweight lion. Two of his brothers also got out.

The idea that Najma had betrayed her made Sabera want to be sick.

She sank even lower as she watched the four people. Najma and Sabera’s husband were having a discussion. He laid his hands on her shoulders and seemed to be speaking soothingly to her whilst she nodded in response to his words.

Sabera sat there stunned as all four of them then entered the services, her husband’s hand at the small of Najma’s back.

She wanted to believe that Najma was acting under duress, but from what she had witnessed, that was not the case. She gave them a minute, then, eyes blurred with tears, drove off, heading south, lesson learned.

Trust no one.

Since that day Sabera had never spoken to her sister. It wasn’t that she totally blamed her, but it meant that any face-to-face contact with any of her family was fraught with danger.

At 2 a.m., Sabera lay awake in Sanjay’s flat — in Sanjay’s bed — thinking about the incident at the motorway services and how she had felt, whilst fingering the wonderful necklace Sanjay had presented her with earlier that night, a total, incredible surprise. It had been devastating to be let down by Najma and to never speak to her again had been horrible but necessary, even though Sabera desperately wanted to ask her why.

A period of great self-doubt and depression had followed, but Sabera had stuck to her guns because she knew that despite the massive personal cost to herself and her family, she could never return nor let them discover her whereabouts.

And now here she was, having made probably the next biggest step in her life … to allow a man back into it.

She sighed and turned her head slowly, brushing her hair out of her face, and looked at Sanjay asleep beside her, his face illuminated by the low-wattage bedside lamp.

It had been more wonderful than she could have imagined — and to be honest, she had feared the worst, a rerun of her husband. But it had been nothing like. She had never experienced anything remotely close to it. That was how it should be all the time. Tender. Loving. Slow-fast-slow, sometimes almost out of control from both sides, but always — always — with love, passion and respect.

And, when he urged her to straddle him, she had done so shyly at first, but finished writhing in ecstasy, her head thrown back whilst they both came together, and she knew it would be all right.

So that’s what an orgasm is, she’d thought, smiling to herself as she sank down, exhausted, on to Sanjay’s chest. I want more.

She rolled over to face him and laid a warm hand on his chest, touching his nipples with her fingertips. He mumbled something and stirred. She ran her hand across his flat stomach and touched him timidly, feeling him grow. Something else she had never done in her life — taken hold of a man in such a way. With her husband it would have been unseemly and sluttish, even in the early days of her marriage.

From that moment, as Sanjay awoke fully, their lovemaking clicked up a gear to frantic — and fantastic — but this time with Sanjay on top, Sabera’s hands stretched above her head whilst he gently held her wrists and moved and wriggled inside her in a way she had never thought possible, touching nerve endings she never thought she had. She rose, once more, to an amazing climax, Sanjay following shortly after, then, spent, his weight crushed down on her.

They lay in each other’s arms, sweating, panting, hearts beating, hands touching, caressing, until everything subsided and they fell asleep.

It is estimated that the time of least resistance of the human being is around four in the morning, the time when the metabolism is at its slowest. Which is the exact time that the door to Sanjay’s flat was smashed from its hinges by two men bearing sledgehammers. Shattered by the first few blows, the flimsy door virtually disintegrated into splinters and a third man rushed through the newly created opening. It was only a tiny, one-bedroomed flat, and this man entered that room within seconds.

Both occupants, Sabera and Sanjay, woken from their deep sleep, were confused, stunned and frightened, unable to offer any form of resistance.

The lead intruder lunged at Sabera, grabbed a fistful of her hair and hauled her naked out of the bed and threw her face down on the floor. With speed and skill he twisted her arms behind her, knelt down on her spine between her shoulder blades and bound her tiny wrists with parcel tape, which he tore with his teeth. He flicked her over and ran tape right around her face, covering her mouth, preventing any noise.

At the same time, the two others manhandled a dopey and submissive Sanjay, dragged him across the room, and threw him into a wicker rocking chair, to which he was fastened and gagged by more parcel tape.

To secure and gag both of them took less than a minute.

A large, curved knife appeared in the hand of one of the men standing by Sanjay.

He moved behind the wicker chair, yanked back Sanjay’s head and held the knife at his throat.

The other men removed the quilt from its cover, then laid the empty cover on the floor and lifted up the now struggling, squirming Sabera and dropped her on to it, rolling her easily in it and binding it with more tape.

Her terrified lover watched in wide-eyed horror from his ringside seat. His eyes rose and looked into those of the man behind him with a knife resting across his exposed throat.

The two men easily lifted the bundle that was Sabera and carried her out of the bedroom between them as though she was a roll of carpet.

The third man stayed with his knife at Sanjay’s throat, saying nothing. The incredibly sharp blade began to cut Sanjay’s tender skin. Then the two other men returned, accompanied by another who stood directly in front of Sanjay. At first Sanjay could not look at him, jerking his head away, but the man touched his chin and rotated Sanjay’s face back.

Instinctively Sanjay knew he was looking into the eyes of Sabera’s husband.

Sabera lay bound and gagged, trussed up in the duvet cover. She remained unmoving, trying now to stay calm and concentrate on her breathing, which was proving extremely difficult through the parcel tape wrapped tightly around her face. Her mouth was clamped shut by it and she could just about inhale through one nostril. Even that was not easy as the duvet cover prevented a free flow of air.

Then she started to cry when she thought about Sanjay and what might have happened to him. If he had been harmed, and she was sure he would have been — because it was the way things were — then it was all her fault for recklessly involving him in her stupid, ill-conceived life.

Sobs wracked her body, but it was as difficult to cry as it was to breathe.

And now here she was tied up in the boot of a car, travelling quickly on straight roads — motorways. Had to be. M1 out of London, then on to the M6, heading to the northwest.