Stephen Booth - The Corpse Bridge
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- Название:The Corpse Bridge
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- Издательство:Little, Brown Book Group
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- Год:2014
- ISBN:нет данных
- Рейтинг книги:3 / 5. Голосов: 1
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Ben smiled. It had felt so good to have that back again, just for a few minutes. At least some things stayed re- assuringly the same in this world. And his brother was one of them.
20
With a heave, Diane Fry dragged her overnight bag off the back seat of her car and slammed the door. The Audi was streaked with mud and its windscreen was filthy. Its black paintwork always showed the dirt at the best of times. But right now the wheel arches seemed to have accumulated half the topsoil of the Peak District. If she had that mud analysed, no doubt she would find a high percentage of sheep muck too.
She sighed and turned towards the lit-up entrance. The A38 Aston Expressway was only a hundred yards away and the buzz of evening traffic was loud and continuous. It was a noise she had grown up with, but which she rarely heard in Derbyshire. Its presence was like the return of the cuckoo in spring. Tuneless, but reassuring.
Fry checked in and found her room. It was like any other budget hotel, anonymous and without character. There were few staff to be seen and her fellow guests took no notice of her as she passed, some of them even turning their heads away as if they didn’t want to be recognised. It suited her down to the ground.
In her room the first thing she did was turn off the TV. She hung her clothes in the tiny wardrobe, though she was only staying overnight. She checked her phone, saw the text she’d been expecting. Just enough time to shower and get changed.
They’d arranged to meet in a pub near Aston University. Fry set off to walk along the canal towpath from the back of the hotel, passing under Dartmouth Middleway, with its set of lock gates beneath a grim concrete bridge. From the edge of the Corporation Street dual carriageway, she turned down Holt Street towards the campus.
It was an old pub with leaded windows and wooden floors, and pictures on the walls depicting the history of Birmingham. Naturally, it was full of students, but they seemed to be drinking rather than eating. Fry crossed the bar to a far corner and found her sister already there.
‘Hi, sis,’ she said.
Angie stood up to give her an uncomfortable hug. ‘Di. How are you doing?’
‘I’m fine.’
Diane sat down and looked at her older sister. Every time she saw her it was like meeting a new person. Angie had run away from their foster home in the Black Country when they were both teenagers. They didn’t see each other until one memorable day in the Peak District, when the two of them had been brought together by Ben Cooper, of all people.
That day Angie had seemed like a complete stranger. But Diane had been setting eyes on her for the first time since she was fourteen. Her teenage illusions were easily shattered.
They’d spent a lot of time together since then and Angie had even stayed with her for a while in her flat in Edendale. Yet it was odd to look at her now and notice that she was starting to look middle-aged. Her eyes were tired and the lines around her temples, formed by years of pain, seemed more deeply etched.
And surely Angie had put on weight too? It was something Diane herself had never been able to do. Food just didn’t hold the same attraction for her that it did for other people. It was necessary fuel, but not a subject for lengthy conversation, let alone something to write stacks of books or produce endless TV shows about. So she eyed Angie’s outline with interest and examined her arms, no longer so thin that they looked as though they would snap. Her sister had always been slim. Since Diane had tried to emulate her in every way when they were teenagers, it seemed wrong that Angie could now so easily abandon her function as a role model.
They ordered straight away, because Angie was keen to eat. Diane chose a pasta pomodoro, a penne pasta with tomato sauce, sun-dried tomatoes and basil.
‘I suppose that’s the lowest calorie dish on the menu,’ said Angie.
‘It might be,’ said Diane, though she knew perfectly well it was.
Angie laughed. She seemed much more relaxed than her sister had ever seen her before. It was odd and she didn’t quite know what to make of it.
Their food came quickly. Diane watched her sister eating skewered chicken breast pieces with peppers and barbecue sauce.
‘Things are going well, then?’ she said.
‘Great.’ Angie looked up from her chicken skewers. ‘I told you I’ve got a new bloke, didn’t I?’
‘I believe you mentioned it in your texts. Several times.’
‘We’ve been an item for a few months now.’
‘I’m happy for you.’
Angie smiled. It was a curiously smug expression, more like a smirk. Diane immediately became suspicious.
‘What’s going on?’ she said.
‘What do you mean?’
‘Come off it. I know you too well.’
But Angie shrugged. ‘Stop being a copper.’
‘Mmm.’
They ate silently for a moment, allowing the background noise of the students to wash over them.
‘Speaking of which,’ said Angie, ‘how’s the lovely Ben?’
‘What?’
‘Don’t pretend you don’t know who I mean.’
‘Ben Cooper?’
‘Of course.’
‘He’s all right, I suppose.’
Angie nodded. ‘He’s got over all that business with the fire and his fiancée being killed? I mean, it’s a while ago now, isn’t it? People do get over these things and move on with their lives.’
‘Obviously.’
Diane didn’t like the way the conversation was going. Angie had always shown an inexplicable interest in Ben Cooper. But she had her own bloke now. They’d been an item for months and it sounded serious. Why was she still talking about Cooper?
‘So,’ said Angie, ‘he’s, you know … available again.’
‘Well, I guess so. But I thought you were happy with your new bloke.’
Angie gaped at her and dropped her fork on to her plate with a clatter. She threw her head back and laughed. She had a peculiar, hiccuping laugh that always made heads turn in astonishment. Diane cringed with embarrassment and tried to turn away from the gawping faces in the bar.
‘Diane, you idiot,’ said Angie, when she’d taken a drink to stop herself choking.
‘What on earth is the matter with you?’ said Diane.
‘Never mind. How’s the pasta?’
‘Fine.’
When they’d finished their meal, they sat for a long time over their drinks. Finally, Angie put down her glass with a decisive air.
‘So,’ she said.
‘What?’
‘I have something to tell you.’
Diane’s heart sank. She’d only ever heard bad news from her sister. Or so it seemed when she looked back over the years.
‘What is it, sis?’
‘You know I was saying about this bloke? His name’s Craig, by the way.’
‘I think I remember.’
‘No, you don’t.’
‘Well…’
‘It doesn’t matter. Anyway, what I’m trying to tell you is this. We’ve been together for a while and we decided that … well, the fact is, Di — I’m pregnant.’
Ben Cooper had decided not to go straight back to his car after he left the shop, but headed away from the market square. Though it was right in the centre of Edendale, this stretch of the River Eden was a peaceful spot, particularly at night. It was only a few yards from the shopping centre, but it always felt to Cooper as though he’d stepped out of the town into a different world once he turned the corner and stepped down on to the riverbank.
In the darkness he could see only a few flickers of light off the water as it foamed over the weir. But he could hear the sounds. The soothing whisper and murmur of the river was enough to calm him down and let him think quietly to himself.
He was aware of the mallard ducks who lived on the river here. They were floating out there somewhere on the water near the weir, apparently asleep, with their beaks tucked under their wings. But he knew their feet must still be paddling like mad below the surface to keep them in position, or they would be swept downstream by the current.
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