Page 13 of Dark Tide


  The next morning I went to the Aunty Jean to see Malcolm and Josie, but the boat was empty and the hatch shut and locked. Liam was on the deck of the Painted Lady, tinkering with something. He waved at me, and I went across the dock.

  “Morning,” he said.

  “How are you doing?”

  He pointed, with the screwdriver he was holding, toward the office. The ladder was resting against the wall. “That light’s out again. Maureen’s just been out there having a go at Cam.”

  “Out again? What do you mean?”

  “Someone’s cut the cable. Maureen said Cam should put electronic gates on the parking lot and keep them locked at night. She’s trying to get a residents’ meeting together for tonight. Hasn’t she been by to see you yet?”

  I shook my head. “I saw her yesterday; she was going on about it then, too. Liam, have you seen Malcolm and Josie?”

  “They went to the supermarket, ’bout half an hour ago.”

  “Oh. Thanks.”

  I still had no idea what to say to them about Oswald. I’d tucked him inside a cotton tote bag, wrapped in Carling’s towel, and put him in the wheelhouse so he wouldn’t get wet if it rained. He would need to be buried—maybe at the playground? It all seemed so unspeakably horrible.

  I couldn’t get Carling out of my head. He knew where Caddy worked. Which meant it was only a matter of time before he found out that I’d been a dancer there, too, that we were friends. I needed Dylan, needed him so badly. Why wasn’t he answering his phone? And then Carling—lying on my bed next to me. This morning the memory of last night just felt awkward.

  “What did Cam say about the gates?” I asked.

  Liam laughed. “You know Maureen. Maybe she just asked in the wrong way.”

  I went back to the boat and spread my plans and notes out on the dinette table. If I was going to do the bathroom, I would need to lose the storage space at the bow. I would need to start with the deck garden and the sliding roof—in theory a straightforward project; in practice quite difficult.

  I called a local glass company and tried to describe what I wanted. I’d done this before, with other companies, and had received a mixed response, including one telling me to my face that I didn’t know what I was doing and I would be better off leaving the boat alone and getting myself a nice house.

  The local independent glazing company was much better. I spoke to a guy called Kev who promised to stop by and have a look.

  At some point I was going to need to get the MIG welder and the saws out again and cut a hole in the cabin roof. I’d done it before with the skylights, and each time it had made me nervous. But when Kev turned up an hour later, he was more helpful than I’d expected, and he offered to help fit the sliding roof as well as supply it. His father owned a boat and he’d helped out on it. Nothing this dramatic, mind you, but he looked at my plans and at the article I’d clipped out of Waterways World magazine that had a boat with a similar sliding roof, and he agreed that it could be done. He even had tracks in stock that we could use to make the mechanism for the slide.

  I started to get excited about it again. “How long would it be before we can do it, if I order everything now?”

  “Six weeks, maybe less,” Kev said. “When they’re ready, we could pick some good-weather days, and I’ll help you out with the roof.”

  I felt much better with a plan. I wrote a check for the deposit, and when I waved Kev off in his van, the sun came out.

  Malcolm and Josie were back.

  I went to board the Scarisbrick Jean, knocking on the hatch. A shout came from below; it might have been “come aboard,” or it might just have been “piss off.” Either way, I opened the door and climbed down the three steps into the cabin.

  Josie was packing shopping away in the galley.

  “I’ve got some bad news,” I said.

  Her face fell and she stared at me. “Is it Oswald?”

  I nodded, and went forward to hug her as she started to sob.

  “I knew it, I knew something had happened to him. I told Malcolm, I said—”

  At that moment Malcolm came in from the bedroom. “What’s going on?”

  I looked at him over Josie’s shoulder. “I found Oswald.”

  “Aw, shit. He’s dead? I knew it; he always comes home. Run over, was he? Bastards on that road, they speed up and down.”

  I didn’t say anything else. I should have told them what had happened, but I was afraid they would blame me. I’d done this: I’d brought this to the marina, this nightmare.

  “Where is he?” Josie whispered. Malcolm was hugging her now, stroking her back with his huge, bony hands.

  “I’ve got him in my wheelhouse,” I said. “I’ve wrapped him up a bit.”

  Malcolm nodded. “I’ll come and get him.”

  I said to Josie, “Do you want me to stay with you?”

  She shook her head. “I just need a minute,” she said, her shoulders shaking. “I just need to be on my own for a minute. You—you go with Malc.”

  We got to the wheelhouse and I showed him the tote bag, neatly wrapped. Malcolm said to me, “Is there anything you want to tell me?”

  The sun shone fiercely on the back of my neck. Just for a moment, it was warm. “He wasn’t run over,” I said. “I’m so sorry.”

  “Right,” he said. “We won’t say anything to Josie.”

  “No.”

  “What happened?”

  “Last night,” I said, “I heard a noise. Like a thump. When I went outside to have a look, Oswald was lying on the dock.”

  “You didn’t see anyone?”

  I shook my head. “Did you know someone’s cut the cable to the light again? Liam told me that Cam was up there trying to fix it again this morning.”

  “Yeah. Maureen was bending my ear about electronic gates when I went shopping earlier. Like that’s going to solve anything.”

  He picked up the bundle, cradling it gently as though Oswald were still alive. “I’d better take him back,” he said.

  “Can I help? With—you know. Digging a hole.”

  He smiled. “No. I’ll do it later. I’ll be fine.”

  He left me alone on the deck, taking Oswald with him. I felt so bad for them both, and Malcolm was so kind. Even though it was all my fault.

  I earned nearly five thousand pounds for one night’s effort at Fitz’s party. I did work for it, in truth—I lost count of the songs I danced to on the pole, and then lap dances for each of them. Worth it for the tips.

  By three, most of Fitz’s guests had gone. One guy was left—hand-stitched suit, silk shirt, open at the neck. Bling on his wrist. Serious money. I’d been talking to him for a while, pouring him drinks and laughing at his stupid attempts at humor. His name was Kenny. I had an appalling memory, but I’d trained myself at the day job by repeating people’s names back to them constantly until they stuck. It felt clumsy to me, but I’d never met a man who’d commented on it. They all seemed to love the sound of their own names.

  The flirting ramped up a notch. The same lines, variations of which I heard most weekends at the club.

  “Seriously, you’re the best dancer I’ve ever seen. And I’ve seen a few. What’s your name?”

  “You know—it’s Viva.”

  “No, your real name. What is it?”

  “Ah, if I told you that it would spoil the magic, Kenny. You’ll just have to trust me.”

  “You have an incredible body, Viva.”

  “Thank you, Kenny.”

  “No, seriously. You deserve better than this. Why don’t you come out with me? Go on, say yes. I can give you the best time ever.”

  “I’m sure you could,” I said, smiling.

  “Will you? Let me take you away somewhere. I’ve got a place in Spain—come with me for a weekend . . .” He was slurring his words. He wouldn’t have been able to stand up without assistance. I topped up his glass.

  Behind him, in the darkened room, Dylan looked at me and then at his watch.
>
  “Ah, I can’t. I’d love to, but I’ve got to work . . .”

  “I can pay you,” he said. “You just tell me how much it is you need and I’ll take care of it.”

  “It’s not the money,” I fibbed. “I love my job. I get to meet gorgeous guys like you, Kenny.”

  He sighed heavily, as though admitting defeat. Dylan took a step forward.

  “What about one last dance?” Kenny said, leaning forward unsteadily. “One last dance, just you and me. You know.”

  Dylan appeared at his side. “It’s getting late,” was all he said.

  The man said, “Where’s Fitz?”

  I took advantage of the distraction and excused myself, and went to the bathroom to get changed. A few moments later Fitz opened the door, without knocking. I was folding up clothes and packing them away into my bag.

  “Viva,” he said. “I need to ask you a favor.”

  I stopped what I was doing and gave him a look. It had been a long night.

  He came over to me and stroked the back of his hand over my bare arm. “See?” he said. “Touching’s not so bad, is it?”

  “That’s not the part he wants to touch, is it?”

  “Viva. This guy—he’s going to be very helpful to me. I need to keep him sweet. He really likes you; he’s never been interested in any of the girls before . . .”

  “I’ll dance as many times as you want, Fitz. That was what we agreed. You promised me that there would be nothing like this. You want to change the deal, you have to pay for it.”

  “How much?”

  I told him I would do it for a grand, I would choose my own music, and there was an extra condition: that Dylan was waiting at the door. Fitz was torn, as though I was screwing him over, and at the same time as though he’d just been given the keys to the candy store.

  “Seriously, a grand? Who do you think you are?”

  He was quite drunk, unsteady. I waited patiently.

  He looked at me for several moments, then said, “All right. A grand. You’re pushing your luck, you know that, don’t you?”

  A thousand pounds. I’d better make it worth his money.

  The music had already started when I went into the room. Donna Summer’s “Love to Love You Baby”—the extended version, all sixteen minutes of it, complete with Summer’s orgasmic moans and cries. Not the three-minute track I’d chosen. Should I make a fuss? I wondered. But it seemed easier to just get it over with.

  He was waiting in the chair, reclining. He looked half-conscious; he would wake up pretty damn soon. I came up behind him, stroked my hand across his shoulders, down his arms. One last look behind me. Dylan was standing at the open door, his face in shadow.

  I didn’t make him wait too long for the dress to come off. The song made me hot anyway. He’d paid, or rather Fitz probably had, for just about everything he wanted. Even though I knew he wanted me to be close, I was going to start on the pole, since it was what made my dances special. So I spun and swirled and kicked, vaguely aware of Dylan at the back of the room. If he’d been watching a soccer match he would probably have shown more emotion.

  As I had more skin to play with, I was adventurous with my dance and experimented with some new moves. I tried some back flips and twists that I hadn’t done since my gymnastic days, although doing it in heels was a different story. When the music slowed and pulsed, I came off the pole and went over to Kenny, and I danced for him. I let him have my best moves, up close. At first he didn’t touch, then a hand on my ass. I pushed backward encouragingly. After that, there was no stopping him. When his fingers got too insistent, I backed off, smiling as though I was enjoying it, as though he was turning me on. And when I was astride his lap, rubbing the side of my knee against the bulge in his expensive dress pants, I glanced up to the shadows. Dylan was still there. Unmoving.

  There was a lot of touching. Some of it clumsy, uncomfortable. I had a moment where I thought, Why am I doing this? This can’t be right. I don’t give a fuck about this guy, I don’t even like him, and he’s got his hand on me and the other in his open fly and I’m pretending I’m enjoying it. Is it worth the money? Is it really worth a grand?

  The song came to an end, like all things, both good and bad.

  Dylan came forward with a large, soft towel and held it out for me as though I’d just swum the channel.

  “Goodnight,” I said to Kenny. “Thank you, that was fun.”

  He tipped me an extra two hundred quid, and asked again for my number. I smiled at him and said he should come and see me next weekend in the club. It was a compromise, potentially lucrative—although if I never saw him again I would be secretly relieved. I kissed his cheek and he made a clumsy grab at my breast. I took his hand off me and kissed it. I wondered where his money came from.

  Dylan waited for me to get dressed, then he drove me home in silence. I had the feeling he was somehow pissed off at me. He kept his eyes on the road ahead.

  “You must be tired,” I said at last, fed up with looking out of the window into the bleak grayness of the early morning.

  “Not really,” he said.

  “Got far to go home?”

  He just shrugged.

  “Have I done something to upset you, Dylan?”

  Even then, he didn’t look in the rearview mirror. He was made of stone. “No.”

  “Thanks for getting me that towel, it was kind of you.”

  Silence.

  When we got back to my flat, I half-expected him to come out and open the door for me, but instead he stayed where he was, the engine running, staring straight ahead.

  “Thank you,” I said.

  He waited for me to get to the door of the flat, and then the car sped off into the dawn.

  Chapter Eighteen

  I’d almost forgotten that Carling said he was going to call me until the phone rang on the table in the cabin.

  I’d been trying to call Dylan again, but his phone was still off. It was easy to become obsessive about it, to call every few minutes in the hope that he would have turned the phone on by pure chance since I’d last called.

  My phone rang at just past nine. I was doing dishes at the sink in the galley, wondering if it was too early to go to bed and whether I would be able to sleep if I did.

  “Hello?”

  “Genevieve? It’s Jim Carling.”

  I should really program his number into the phone so I would know it was him, instead of answering it with such trepidation, I thought.

  “Hi, Jim,” I said, my face coloring even though nobody was here to see it. Last night he’d kissed me and pushed his body against mine. He’d lain next to me on my bed and held my hand until I slept, and yet this morning once again the only person I could think about was Dylan.

  “I’m sorry it’s so late,” he said. “I meant to call you earlier, but it got busy. This is the first chance I’ve had.”

  “That’s okay,” I said. “Thanks again for coming over last night,” as though he’d come over to fix a leaking tap or hang a picture. “It was really kind of you.”

  “How did it go with Malcolm and Josie?” he asked.

  “They were very upset,” I said. “I think Malcolm’s buried the cat somewhere.”

  “Did you tell them what had happened?”

  “I didn’t say much to Josie, she was devastated. Malcolm’s no fool.”

  “No,” he said. “I got that impression when I spoke to him the other day.”

  There was a little pause.

  “Are you still at work?” I asked.

  “Yes. Going to be late finishing tonight.”

  “You poor thing, you must be exhausted.”

  He laughed. “I am a bit. Funny, that. Anyway, I was just calling to check that you’re okay. You know where I am if you need me, right? Or you can always call the main number. They’ll send someone out quickly.”

  “Thanks,” I said. Was that it?

  “I’ll see you soon,” he said. “Sleep well.”

  I
finished the pots and got ready for bed, brushing my teeth in the bathroom. I left all the lights on in the cabin, and I’d left the radio on since the afternoon, too, the noise from it blocking out the silence. It was the quiet moments that were worst, I’d decided, once the marina had gone to sleep, darkness had fallen over the Medway, and the only sounds were those of the wind and the water lapping at the sides of the hull as the tide rose and floated the Revenge of the Tide away from the muddy riverbed. I never wanted to hear that bumping noise again. If I had to leave the radio on every night, I would do it.

  I turned off all the lights and crawled into bed. I left the radio on the timer, with it set to turn off at one in the morning. There was no way I would still be awake by then, I thought. I would drift off to sleep to the peaceful sounds of Classic FM, and I would wake up to bright daylight. Nothing to worry about. No stupid gulls marching up and down the roof of the cabin above my head. No footsteps outside on the dock. Nothing bumping against the side of the hull.

  I slept, and I think I was dreaming about Dylan. He was there, in any case, on my boat the way he’d never been in real life. He was saying, “You did a good job with all that money, Genevieve.” I thought then that maybe he wasn’t paid as much as me by Fitz. It was a sudden realization that the time he’d driven me home from Fitz’s private party he was probably pissed off because of all the money I’d earned for not doing very much at all. Whereas he’d done so much that evening, watching out for me and ferrying me around, and stopping me from going upstairs and seeing all the other things that were going on at the party without me having a clue—and he’d likely earned less than I’d taken home in cash.

  It was dirty money, I realized that now. But it was all just cash, to me. It was beautiful cash that I could put toward my boat. And I’d been wrong about Dylan, of course. I’d been wrong about just about everything, back then.

  The Sunday morning after my appearance at Fitz’s private party, I slept late.

  When I woke up, it was to banging on the door. Half-asleep, I answered it—a delivery of a hand-tied bouquet of roses and lilies, so big that I could hardly see the delivery person behind them.