The bell rang again, this time followed by loud knocking. Whoever it was didn’t seem about to go away.
Slowly, Napoleon at her side, she made her way back through the house. The banging had not ceased. Naomi decided she wasn’t keen on opening the door.
‘Hello, who is it?’
The banging stopped.
‘Hi, who’s there?’ Naomi asked again.
There was a pause, then: ‘I want to talk to the new owner.’
‘About what?’
‘Look, just open the door and let me in. I told you, I want to talk to the bloke Rupert left this place to.’
Naomi had decided she was definitely not going to let this man in but she felt stupid and childish talking through the door. She fumbled for the chain and fastened it in place before cracking it open just a little. ‘I’m afraid he isn’t available at the moment. If you’d like to leave a message …’
‘What are you? His bloody answering service?’
Naomi didn’t reply. She had, as Alec had instructed, slipped her mobile phone into the pocket of her sweatpants and she debated now if she should use it. Alec’s number was on speed dial, but how soon could he get back?
‘If you take that tone,’ Naomi said, ‘then you can damned well stay outside. If you have a message to give tell me now then clear off.’
He pushed the door. Naomi, taken by surprise was shoved off balance. Angry now she pushed back only to find something was blocking the door’s return. Damn the man, he’d put his foot in the way. She swung her full weight against it and pushed harder. ‘What the hell do you want?’
The man leaned in close. He seemed unconcerned about the pain she must be causing to his trapped toes. She could feel his breath on her face and smell his aftershave. It smelt expensive, she noted almost absently, and didn’t gel with the rest of her experience of him. She tried to keep her voice steady. ‘I asked you what you wanted.’
‘Rupert Friedman owed me money,’ the man snarled. ‘As I see it that means the bloke he left it all to owes me on his behalf. Now let me inside.’
‘No way,’ Naomi told him. She released her pressure on the door just for an instant and then rammed it back against the intruding foot. The man pushed back. Her hand pressed hard against the edge of the door, but Naomi was startled to feel his fingers curl around hers. He tugged her grip free and started to pull on her hand.
Naomi felt panicked, then angry. Just before he dragged her hand through the gap in the door, she leaned in and bit him. His skin felt rough against her tongue. She bit harder. He swore and let go. She slammed again against his foot. This time that too moved away.
‘Little bitch. I’ll have you!’
She slammed and locked the door. Pressing her ear against the heavy wood she could still hear him swearing and cursing as he stamped upon the gravel. Then a sound that chilled her to the bone. He’s coming over the gate.
She knew the way easily now. With her hand against the wall as a guide she almost ran back through the house and slammed the French doors closed, locking them with the old key. Footsteps on the terrace told her that he was round the back and a moment later he was banging his hands against the French doors. Naomi knew they wouldn’t hold for long. Not if he was determined to get inside.
She heard a crash as he smashed the breakfast tray from the table on the terrace. Naomi turned and headed back through the house. She had not expected this, not this level of violence. Most people took time to ramp up. This man obviously had a very short and very dangerous fuse.
The safest place to be? Where would be the safest place?
Calling Napoleon she began to climb the stairs. Rupert’s study was next to the guest bedroom she and Alec occupied. It had a heavy, solid door and a decent lock. Below in the dining room, wood splintered. What the hell was wrong with this man? It had dawned on her that he might have been watching the house and seen Alec leave. It had also occurred that there might be two of them. The footsteps on the terrace had sounded different, now she thought about it. Lighter, faster. She had gained the impression from the man at the front door that he was heavily built.
Stumbling on the top step, Naomi reached out to find the wall, searching for the wood panel and the dado rail that separated the panelling from the paper above. She hauled herself up and then moved towards the study door, relieved to feel the solidity and reassuring weight as she swung it open and then slammed it closed. Alec had left the key in the door as, he’d told her, Rupert had always done. She turned it now, then stepped back from the door and stood, listening to the sounds coming from below – crashing and splintering and breaking glass.
She fumbled in her pocket for the mobile phone and dialled the three nines.
‘I need the police,’ she told the controller, horrified to hear the shake and sound of barely controlled terror in her own voice. ‘Someone’s broken into my house and I’m alone. Yes, they’re still here. I’ve locked myself into a room upstairs and it sounds like they’re wrecking the place.’
She listened to the calm voice of the controller on the other end and a surge of impatience, driven by pure fear sharpened her tone as the panic rose. ‘Look, I need someone now. Please.’ And then she broke her own unwritten rule. ‘Look,’ she said. ‘I’m blind. I can’t see.’
The controller stayed on the line, her calm voice meant to reassure. She was playing a role that Naomi had played many times in her days as a police officer, before the blindness had taken her career and transformed her life beyond recognition. She spoke gently and firmly, telling Naomi that help was on its way, keeping her on the line and asking for reports of any sounds she could hear, any movement through the house.
‘He’s coming up the stairs,’ Naomi whispered. ‘I can hear him on the stairs.’
‘You’ve locked the door?’ the woman on the line confirmed.
‘Yes, I’ve locked it and it’s a heavy door but …’ She could hear him now, standing at the top of the stairs, then two steps to the study door, rattling the knob.
‘I’ve called the police,’ Naomi yelled at him. ‘I’ve called the police and they’re on their way.’
She backed away from the door and bumped into the desk. The controller was still talking to her but Naomi could no longer hear. Napoleon whimpered, sensing her anxiety. He nuzzled at her hand and Naomi slid down beside the desk and gathered the big black dog close to her.
‘Naomi, are you listening to me?’
Naomi lifted the phone to her ear. ‘He’s outside the door.’ She tried to stay calm. She took long controlling breaths. Damn it, she told herself, she’d been in tight spots before and not panicked like this. She’d been trapped in a burning building, taken hostage in a bank siege, almost been thrown off the roof of a building, but she had never felt like this.
The difference, she decided, was that at those other times there had been other people to think about. Other concerns. In the fire, Patrick had been with her and she had been more worried about getting him out than she had been scared for herself. In the siege too, she had taken control then, fallen back on her training and pushed her own fears aside in order to calm other people.
This time, apart from Napoleon, she was truly alone.
‘I’ve called the police,’ she shouted once more, then strained to listen. The door knob creaked again and weight thudded against the wood, then a muffled shout from down below.
So, he wasn’t alone.
She heard the footsteps again, but this time they turned back to the landing, becoming muffled on the carpeted stairs.
‘I think they’re going away,’ she whispered into the phone. ‘I think they’re going away.’
‘Officers will be with you in just a few more minutes,’ the controller informed her. ‘Stay where you are.’
Naomi had no intention of leaving the illusory safety of this room.
She strained her ears, praying that the men had really left but angry that they might now get away. ‘Tell them to hurry. Please.’