The Twisted Knot
About The Twisted Knot
A marked man. A damaged cop. A town full of secrets.
After her abduction and near death at the hands of a sadistic killer, Constable Samantha Willis is back in the uniform. Despite being on desk duty, rumours reach Sammi that Someone in Angel’s Crossing has been hurting little girls, and before long a mob is gathering to make sure justice is served.
So when a man is found hanging in his shed, the locals assume the pedophile has finally given in to his guilt. That is, until Sammi delves further into the death and uncovers a dark family secret, an unsolved crime and a town desperate for vengeance.
Contents
Cover
About The Twisted Knot
Dedication
Prologue
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-one
Chapter Twenty-two
Chapter Twenty-three
Chapter Twenty-four
Chapter Twenty-five
Chapter Twenty-six
Chapter Twenty-seven
Chapter Twenty-eight
Chapter Twenty-nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-one
Chapter Thirty-two
Chapter Thirty-three
Chapter Thirty-four
Chapter Thirty-five
Chapter Thirty-six
Chapter Thirty-seven
Chapter Thirty-eight
Chapter Thirty-nine
Chapter Forty
Chapter Forty-one
Chapter Forty-two
Chapter Forty-three
Chapter Forty-four
Chapter Forty-five
Chapter Forty-six
Chapter Forty-seven
Chapter Forty-eight
Chapter Forty-nine
Chapter Fifty
Chapter Fifty-one
Chapter Fifty-two
Chapter Fifty-three
Chapter Fifty-four
Chapter Fifty-five
Chapter Fifty-six
Chapter Fifty-seven
Chapter Fifty-eight
Chapter Fifty-nine
Chapter Sixty
Chapter Sixty-one
Chapter Sixty-two
Chapter Sixty-three
Chapter Sixty-four
Chapter Sixty-five
Chapter Sixty-six
Chapter Sixty-seven
Chapter Sixty-eight
Epilogue
Acknowledgements
About J.M. Peace
Also by J.M. Peace
Copyright page
For Mimi and Buddy.
I wouldn’t have written this book if it wasn’t for you.
Admittedly, I could have written it a lot quicker.
But it would have been a different story.
Prologue
She ignored it the first time. Pretending she couldn’t hear it, she continued to play jacks in the dirt. Though it was a warm spring day, she shivered. Goosebumps prickled her arms. She hugged herself briefly trying to keep her focus on the game.
‘Darlin’!’
She froze. He was looking for her already. It felt like they’d only arrived a few minutes ago. She’d been so pleased when he’d given her the jacks and shown her how to play. But now it felt like her tummy had dropped right out of her body.
She looked down at her new T-shirt. It had a picture of a ballerina on it. There were real diamonds stuck into the tiara on the ballerina’s head. Well, maybe not real diamonds, but they sparkled and twinkled anyway.
She hesitated, her heart pounding as she considered what she was about to do. Then she ran like they had learnt in ballet class. Tippy-toe steps with skips in between, her bare feet making only the softest scratching noise on the dirt. The old ute was parked at the back of the shed. She climbed inside and pulled slowly at the door so that it latched without making much noise. She curled up in the footwell with the noisy thump of her heart keeping her company. She wasn’t entirely sure hiding was a good idea. He would be angry when he found her. And she wasn’t sure she could hide until it was time to go home again.
‘Hey! Where are you, monkey? Are you playing hide and seek?’
She held her breath and kept her head ducked. She could hear him moving around the shed, stopping occasionally as he looked under shelves and behind boxes.
She focused her attention on her shirt, tracing the diamantes with her finger and turning her mind in on itself. Her favourite story was about a dancing fairy. She imagined that she was the one who had magical pink ballet shoes. Whenever she put them on, she could dance so quickly and leap so high that no one could catch her. Concentrating on a story helped her at times like this. When he wanted to play secret games.
It had started with tickling and cuddling. That had been okay, even though he smelt funny, like shoes from the op shop. But he had started hurting her too. She was a bit older now, and her teacher and report card said she was smart. And she knew what he did wasn’t right.
She must tell Mum. She would tell Mum. She made a deal with herself. If she could just stay away from him today, she would talk to Mum about it.
‘Sweetheart? Come here . . .’
1
Sammi always felt a sense of relief when she saw Bob’s face in the morning at Angel’s Crossing Police Station. With him as shift supervisor, the station felt like a calmer and safer place. He kept everything running smoothly. He kept the staff in line. And her colleagues kept their manners in place when he was in the room. Mostly.
‘Morning, Sammi,’ Bob called out from the sergeant’s office as she passed by.
‘Morning, Bob.’
‘Do you want a cuppa?’ she called from the locker room as she packed her bag away.
‘Yes, thanks,’ he called back. ‘Are you going to look after the front counter for me again today?’
Sammi paused before she shut her locker door. Her utility belt lay curled up at the bottom, like a black snake in hibernation. It had been a year and a half since she had buckled it on and kitted up for a shift on the road. Each day, she looked at it. And each day she shut the locker door on it again.
‘Yep,’ she called back to Bob.
She grabbed her lunch and went into the kitchen. She put her sandwich in the fridge and filled up the kettle. One cup of tea for her, one coffee for the sergeant. Milky with two sugars, she didn’t need to ask. With these small everyday details, she settled herself into the rhythm of the day.
Bob looked up from his computer and smiled at her as she placed his coffee on the desk.
‘What would I do without you, Sammi?’
A lot of the younger staff didn’t like Sergeant Simpson. Discipline had been a lot stricter when he had come through the ranks. You did what your supervisor told you and didn’t backchat. Although attitudes had relaxed, he still expected this standard of behaviour from his junior staff. So the lazy or ineffectual officers at the st
ation didn’t think much of him. But Sammi listened when he gave her advice and, in return, he always helped her out if she asked.
Sammi grabbed her correspondence out of her pigeonhole and spread herself across the desk closest to the front counter as Mel Harris came in, right on the dot of eight o’clock.
‘Hey Sammi. You on the counter?’ Mel asked.
‘Yep,’ Sammi replied. After all this time, it was nice that Mel didn’t assume Sammi would be working at the counter. She was one of the colleagues Sammi also counted as a friend.
As the administration officer, Mel assisted the people coming to the station’s front counter with general enquiries, but there were many things which needed to be attended to by a police officer. That’s where Sammi stepped in. Some days being the ‘counter bitch’ was shit. An endless line of whingers and petty complaints. On a good day, it was quiet and you could help people with things that made a big difference to them. On a bad day, you would end up with more paperwork than you started the shift with.
‘Hey, did you hear the latest?’ Mel asked, perching herself on the edge of Sammi’s desk. ‘You know Tony from the servo?’ She continued without waiting for a reply. Everyone at the station knew Tony from the servo. ‘He’s left his wife for Kelly, the girl who works weekends there.’
‘Kelly with the purple streak in her hair? She looks like she’s about fifteen!’ Sammi shook her head in disbelief.
‘Well, she’s actually twenty-two. But Tony turned forty last year.’
‘Bit early for a midlife crisis, isn’t it?’ Sammi laughed.
Mel had grown up in town, and seemed to have some sort of direct connection to most of the other long-term locals. She always had the latest gossip. And she liked to share it. Her phone made a pinging noise when she received a message and some days it sounded like a pinball machine. Although Sammi often enjoyed the salacious details about the local population, she couldn’t help wondering how often she herself became a subject of the messages pinging back and forth. That was the downside of living in a small town – everyone seemed to know everyone else’s business. She’d sounded Mel out about it once. ‘Work stuff is out of bounds,’ she’d replied, and said something vague about the Privacy Act.
‘So Sharlene’s kicked Tony out and refuses to work at the servo anymore, so Tony’s doing double shifts. Or maybe Kelly’s moved into Sharlene’s shifts as well as into her bed.’ Mel giggled. She grabbed her phone and swiped the screen as if she had the answer already pinging into her message box.
The front door opened and the phone slid seamlessly back in Mel’s pocket as she walked around to the front counter. Sammi concentrated on doing some checks on information she had received in relation to a possible drug dealer.
Mel appeared at her desk soon enough. She rolled her eyes. ‘It’s going to be one of those days today by the looks of things.’
‘What have you got?’
‘One of the Hunter brothers from out past the dam. Reckons he got a ticket he didn’t deserve.’
‘Of course. No one deserves their tickets,’ Sammi said, rising out of her seat. Mel handed her the yellow slip, which showed Edward Hunter had been issued with a fine for driving with a limb protruding from the vehicle.
Sammi groaned. ‘Why do coppers issue these shitty tickets?’ she said in a low voice to Mel. She looked at the issuing officer: Sparky, the Crossing’s self-appointed traffic branch. He was trying to get a transfer to any traffic branch within cooee of the coast and issued as many tickets as was humanly possible to improve his resumé. She walked out to the front counter, the ticket in her hand.
‘Hello,’ she said cheerily. ‘How can I help you?’
The man at the counter was agitated but spoke in measured tones. ‘I was driving along, within the speed limit, minding my own business,’ he said. ‘There’s not another car on the road. And the next thing I know, there’s a cop . . . sorry, a police vehicle behind me with its lights on. Then the bugger – sorry, the constable – gives me this ticket for $113.’ The man ran a hand through his thinning grey hair, as if to settle himself.
‘Okay. So the ticket is for travelling in a motor vehicle with part of the body outside the window or door. Maybe you had your arm out of the window?’ Sammi queried. She laid the ticket on the front counter between them.
‘Yep. Yep. That I did.’
‘So that’s an offence.’
‘But there were no other cars on the road.’
‘That’s beside the point, I’m afraid. It’s an offence to drive with your arm hanging out of the window. I’ve heard of traffic accidents where people have had their arm ripped off because it was hanging outside the window. Unfortunately, yes, the fine is $113. There’s no loss of points though.’
‘I shouldn’t have to pay it.’
‘You just told me your arm was outside the window.’
‘Yes, I did.’
Sammi thought she may have heard Mel snort from behind the desk.
‘So on what grounds do you think you shouldn’t have to pay?’ Sammi’s patience was wearing thin with this pointless conversation. Her forced cheeriness had completely evaporated.
‘Well, I’ve seen you do it in the police car.’
‘With all due respect, sir,’ she emphasised the title. ‘You did not see me driving in a police car with my arm hanging out. Firstly, because I haven’t been out in a police car for some time. And secondly, because I simply don’t drive with a limb outside the vehicle. Because I know it’s an offence.’
It was the man’s turn to look at her with irritation. ‘Of course I don’t mean you, personally,’ he huffed. ‘I know who you are. You’re that girl who got chased around the bush by the serial killer.’ Sammi hated that everyone knew of her and generally made assumptions from that point.
‘That’s got nothing –’ Sammi began but the man cut her off.
‘I saw an officer from this station driving with his arm out just now, as I was headed to the shops. I thought, why should I have to pay this ticket when it’s okay for you guys to do it? I can describe him to you. Then you can let me off this ticket. Or he can get a ticket too.’
Sammi quickly turned this all over in her mind. She agreed with Mr Hunter, even if he was becoming a pain in the arse. It was hypocritical for police to break laws and then expect to enforce them. But police stuck together; it was an unspoken rule. She did not have the power to revoke the ticket – that would have to be her boss, the senior sergeant at the station, and she didn’t want to pass a minor matter like this upwards. This was a counter job. The boss shouldn’t be bothered with trivial shit. But whoever had stuck their arm out of the police car needed a talking to.
‘So what did the police officer look like?’ Sammi asked.
‘He was mid-twenties, with dark hair in a crew cut. And I’m pretty sure he had a tattoo on the arm that was hanging out of the window.’
Aiden. Definitely Aiden. Sammi would be quite happy to see him get into trouble. President of the unofficial boys’ club, he treated Sammi with condescension or hostility depending on his mood. If she got him into trouble would things get any worse? If she got him out of trouble would that make things any better? She couldn’t help herself. The loyalty to the uniform won out.
‘About what time did this happen?’ Sammi asked. She grabbed a piece of paper and started taking notes. The simple act of writing things down usually made people feel they were being taken more seriously.
‘What time is it now? I was so cross when I saw it that I came straight here. It was up in Macall Street. So about ten minutes maybe.’
‘And did you want him to be disciplined?’
‘No. I want my ticket to be waived.’
‘I’ll tell you right now, that’s not going to happen. You’ve admitted that you committed the offence. So that ticket is going to stand.’
‘Then I want him to
get the same ticket.’
‘Okay, in order for that to happen, I need to take a statement from you. Because it’s in relation to a police officer, your statement will be reviewed by the senior sergeant. Then if the ticket is issued, you will need to be prepared to go to court and give evidence, should the officer elect to contest the ticket.’ It was all true. And Sammi made it sound every inch the rigmarole it could be.
‘I don’t want him to go to court, I want him to get a ticket,’ the man said, grabbing the ticket and waving it back and forth. Sammi held her nerve.
‘Well,’ Sammi took the ticket and pointed at a box on the back. ‘Anyone can tick that box and choose to have their ticket heard in court. So if we write a ticket for this officer purely on the basis of what you’re telling us, and he chooses to go to court, then you will have to give sworn evidence for the magistrate to evaluate. Otherwise there’s no point in going ahead with it.’
‘I don’t want to go to friggin’ court. My time is worth more than some shitty $113 fine.” He abruptly reached under the pane of safety glass and slapped his hand on the counter. Sammi jumped back despite herself. She drew a deliberate breath and stepped forward again. It was a ticket. He was cross. That was all.
‘Look, sir, I’m explaining the process to you. We can’t write tickets willy-nilly when someone comes in and complains. If we started doing that, the floodgates would be thrown open.’
He was getting cross, but it was looking less likely that he would follow through with an official complaint.
‘Tell your boss to keep his staff in line.’ The man waved his hand in the direction of Sammi’s shoulder and Sammi realised Bob was standing two steps behind her. She couldn’t be sure how long he had been observing from there.
‘You’re the police, you should bloody well keep the law.’ With that, the man screwed up the ticket and smacked the door with an open palm so he could stalk through it.
Mel’s head popped around the side of Bob.
‘Aiden?’ she asked.
‘I’d say so,’ Sammi confirmed. She turned to Bob. ‘How much of that did you hear? I didn’t even see you come out.’
‘Enough of it,’ Bob said. ‘You were handling it, so I stayed quiet.’