‘So what do you think I should do?’ he asked.
She caressed his chest, lightly scratching his skin as she done so and snuggled herself closer into his body.
She said the job was just a job. He could have guessed she was going to say that, but then she mentioned that his mortgage was paid off, and that this was the greatest expense the majority of people had to worry about, that as long as he had a little saved to get by for the time being, for food and the smaller bills, financially he didn’t really have anything to worry about.
She was right. He knew it. He smiled.
‘And as for your girlfriend…’ she said.
Eve had not once used Natalie’s name, this gave Ben the feeling that Eve liked him the way in which he liked her. Did she see Natalie as the enemy? He thought so. She tried, but didn’t succeed, to remain impartial when talking about Ben’s relationship with ‘the woman who he had just been betrayed by’.
She compared her betrayal to Ben and Eve sleeping with each other since last night; were they in the wrong also? Would this have happened if she hadn’t cheated on Ben? He knew that if he had not caught Natalie and Dave together the day before, he would be back at home, back in his rut of depression, back to asking himself what he was meant to be doing with his life.
He also wouldn’t have murdered two innocent teenagers. Ben drifted off into deep thought again, Eve’s voice falling further from his mind. And if he didn’t kill those two kids yesterday, when would it have happened?
The man in the mirror had been there for a while now, appearing more frequently as the days had passed. His messages were clearer every time he had something to say. There was a bad man inside Ben, and no matter how good he felt when passing the time with his new friend, Eve, no matter how fair and just her advice for him was, he realised that things had gone too far already.
‘…so I think you need to start by talking to her, and being honest. Then just see if you can believe a word she says,’ concluded Eve.
Ben smiled and kissed her on the forehead. She kissed him back and ran her hand up the inside of his thigh, cupping his balls, and massaging them gently.
Ben’s phone began to vibrate, reluctantly, he picked it up and they both saw Natalie’s name appear on the screen; the moment for more sex had passed.
‘You’d better get that,’ said Eve, as she got up from the bed and entered the bathroom, closing the door behind her and turning on the shower.
‘I haven’t got anything to say to you, Nat,’ he said as he held the phone to his ear. ‘I just need a bit of time to get my head around things.’
‘But Ben, I love you. We need to talk, this is important. Please, just come home…’ Natalie pleaded.
He ended the call with Natalie mid-sentence and tossed the phone beside him. Mentally drained, he put his head to the pillow and tried to shut out the noise from all the thoughts in his head.
24
Mrs Green stood in the near-bare room that had been rather haphazardly painted ‘Devil Red’.
She peeled off her all-in-one painting overall and screwed it up, then placed it in a plastic bag and looked around the room and smiled, proud of her accomplishment. She had painted the room in just a couple of hours, that’s a good pace of work for anybody, although the quality of her work was sloppy, very poor even.
Red paint had dripped and ran onto the carpet from the roller, and from when too much had been applied to the surfaces in one go. The white coving had been painted, where she hadn’t missed bits, and the white ceiling had been rolled red as well, which had clearly proven difficult, as the quality of finish could have been better from a blind person with shaky hands.
She had obviously been frustrated at one point, as the paint covered computer equipment had been pushed from the desk and was now smashed and broken on the floor. But still, at that very moment, she was happy.
Mrs Green took the bag with the overalls and dumped them beside the kitchen bin. She hadn’t finished all she had planned for the day in her ‘red room’ but had some time before the paint would dry so decided to have another glass of wine.
The open bottle sat on the table, but she couldn’t see her glass, she’d forgotten that she threw it out into the garden earlier on, that unfair act of violence towards an animal just doing as it was genetically programmed to do, exploring the outdoors and marking its territory.
She didn’t see the correlation between the cat being a cat, and the advice she had recently given to her son.
‘This is who you are, Ben, it is in your blood.’
There were no clean glasses in the cupboard. She looked in the dishwasher and found them all there, the big and the small, all dirty, so grabbed one out at random, slammed the door shut and started the machine without adding any cleaning product.
She sat at the table, placed her filthy glass down and poured, filled it to the top with her preferred red wine, then gulped it down.
Mrs Green leant across the table and flicked on the radio, it was tuned in as always to the local news channel. As with all smaller radio stations, it relied on advertising for funding, and at the time was going through its usual five minutes of advertisements. Annoyed, she cursed under her breath at this unfortunate timing, ‘fucking adverts.’
Also on the table was a cardboard box, filled with newspaper cut-outs and photo frames, some of which she’d salvaged from the clearing out of Mr Green’s office. She carefully lifted them out of the box, one by one, and gently placed them to the side. If she had taken this much care with the painting, the end result would have been entirely different in the red room. After the last of the frames were resting on the table, she lifted out the newspaper clippings. She sifted through the pictures and stories, all of which were relevant to The Phantom killings.
Mrs Green’s ears pricked up and a smile ever so slightly crept onto her face as finally, the advertisements finished and the radio presenter said they were cutting to a statement being made by a Detective Inspector Summers, the latest officer in charge of The Phantom case.
The press were going quite hard on Summers, who had just announced that the police believed the killings of teenagers Ricky Robinson and Alexia White were down to The Phantom.
A few members of the press were quick to state that, if this was The Phantom, this was the first time he had killed two victims at the same time, and also that the frequency of the murders was increasing. What was her planned course of action? What were the police going to do in order to protect the public?
For all her brightness, Summers didn’t have the answers they wanted to hear.
She wished it was Watts fielding the questions; although she knew he’d never put himself in the line of fire. Or even Kite, if he could transfer his interviewing skills into the media room, then he could give the press a run for their money. She made a mental note of this for next time.
A cocky journalist stood, working for a national tabloid, and asked a question that Summers knew would arise at some point, and had even practised a cool, calm response to.
‘Can you honestly say, after the tragedy of The Phantom murdering your father, that you are the best person to lead this investigation?’ asked the reporter. ‘Can you remain professional, when this case has an obvious personal involvement for you?’ he continued.
In her practised response, Summers had coolly played down her personal involvement in the case. Her father’s death was a tragedy, a good man lost at the hands of pure evil. That she was going to put this criminal behind bars, not just for him, but for the families and friends of all the victims, and also to protect the innocent public from further atrocities.