The Babysitter(93)
‘Lisa?’ he said, his apprehension growing tenfold.
Cummings got to his feet. He didn’t speak, didn’t utter a word, simply moved to stand by Lisa’s side.
Lisa glanced at Cummings, back to Mark, and then looked embarrassedly away.
‘Sir.’ One of the officers urged him on, taking hold of his arm.
‘I know what I’d do with paedo pervs in our own ranks,’ someone muttered, as Mark walked on. ‘Castrate the bastards and make an example.’
‘What the fuck is going on?’ Mark demanded, as Edwards swung his door open.
‘Sit down,’ Edwards said shortly, banging the door shut and marching past him to his desk.
Mark stayed put. ‘Look, I have no idea what the hell this is all about, but—’
‘That’s an order, DI Cain. Sit!’ Edwards eyed him furiously. ‘Now!’
Mark tried to temper his own fury. ‘My daughter’s missing,’ he said, walking reluctantly across to the chair. ‘Whatever this is, can’t it wait?’
‘No, Cain, it can’t wait,’ Edwards assured him, glaring at him until he sat.
Edwards stayed standing, still staring unnervingly at him. ‘Now then,’ he said, finally, ‘would you like to tell me what the hell this shit is all about?’
Mark’s first reaction was revulsion as Edwards twirled the laptop on his desk to face him.
His second, overwhelming panic as he realised the laptop was his.
Seventy-One
JADE
Melissa was taking longer to succumb than Jade had anticipated. She eyed her suspiciously as she blundered up the stairs ahead of her, having dutifully taken her regular meds washed down with a cup of strong, extremely sweet tea. Had she thrown up again when she’d gone to the loo? She really was an irritating cow. Mark was welcome to her. Except, he wouldn’t have her ever again, apart from in his pathetic little fantasies.
‘I need to go to Poppy,’ Melissa said, making her way clumsily along the landing. ‘I need to talk to her.’
Talk to her? Jade rolled her eyes sky high. The woman was barely coherent.
‘Whoops.’ Her mouth curving into a smile, Jade caught Melissa as she appeared to lose the use of her legs and reeled sideways into the wall. ‘I’ve got you,’ she said, easing her up and steering her in the direction of her bedroom.
‘Poppy,’ the woman mumbled, dragging her feet, to Jade’s immense annoyance.
‘You’ve had a terrible shock, Mel,’ she said caringly. ‘You really should lie down. Come on. Let’s get you on the bed and I’ll fetch Poppy. She can snuggle up with you while I make you both something to eat. How does that sound?’
Mel nodded, pressing her hand to her forehead as she stumbled onwards, her brow furrowed and her expression pained, as if her perfect little world had disintegrated. She was probably contemplating how to end it all. As if she need worry her pretty little rusty-haired head about that with her babysitter here, ready to take care of everything.
Jade was debating whether to bring Poppy in or lock her away when Melissa babbled something about tiny toes and plaster casts, and weaved towards her bed.
Jade watched her go, perplexed. Bonkers, she thought, shaking her head. Complete basket case. She really had no idea what Mark had ever seen in her.
The hair was quite pretty, she supposed, looking closely at it as she helped needy Melissa lie back on the pillow. Wavy and lustrous, the copper suited her better. Why she’d ever sought to emulate her by dyeing it blonde, Jade couldn’t fathom.
Still, she couldn’t blame her for trying.
Turning to the door, having decided to fetch the brat, Jade fluffed up her own hair in the mirror, pouted her full lips and admired her breasts. Mark Cain had missed out big time. She’d have taken him to heights of ecstasy he couldn’t imagine in his wildest fantasies.
His loss.
His very great loss indeed.
She was halfway along the landing to Poppy’s room when her phone rang. Dylan, again. Jade tutted tetchily, accepted the call, and answered in her sweetest tones.
‘It’s on the news,’ Dylan squeaked in her ear.
Jade stifled her agitation. ‘It doesn’t matter, Dylan,’ she said patiently. ‘He’ll be in custody by now.’ Reviled by his colleagues. Spat on, probably. Jade got immense satisfaction from that. ‘They won’t believe another word he says.’
‘But they’re looking for her.’ Dylan sounded panicked.
‘Not for long,’ Jade said, less patiently.
‘But what if they believe him? He’s a policeman, ain’t he? One of their own.’ Dylan was talking fast, thinking in clichés. ‘And he is their father. What if they come—’
‘They won’t!’ Jade snapped, gritting her teeth hard. God, she was so sick of mollycoddling him. She should have fed him to Inky and bloody Oinky. Though it would probably take them a month to chomp through the useless great wimp.
‘They won’t, Dylan,’ she said, more kindly, when she realised he’d gone quiet. ‘The CCTV footage and speeding fine you clocked up will see to that.’ Emphasising the ‘you’, Jade thought it better to leave out the one or two other sordid activities the disgraced detective inspector would be charged with.