Resurrection 2 – Phoenix Rising from the Ashes
(copyright RA Rose)
Written by
rosera
(Set roughly 12 months after Resurrection 1)
The Background:
Detective Chief Inspector Michael Jardine was murdered two years ago.
DCI Michael Jardine was murdered. Murdered by Liam Kennedy. Hit
from behind and dumped in the Clyde river. His body fetching up on
the mud flats downstream sometime later (Death Trap).
On a trip to Sydney, Australia, to extradite a drug dealer known and wanted
by the Glasgow police, DI Ross and DS Reid discovered that Jardine is not
dead (Resurrection 1). He is deep undercover as a middle level member
of a worldwide drug syndicate, married to Shelley an Australian intelligence
officer planted undercover sometime before Jardine’s “death”. Living
every day walking the knife-edge of potential discovery from both sides of
the law.
Their safety and very lives are threatened by discovery from within the syndicate,
from bent cops on both sides of the world and, a possible leak from a level
as high as a government minister in the UK.
London
The ministerial adviser to the Home Secretary closed the confidential file
on his desk. Another file, which had arrived by his special
courier last night, had brought to his attention a matter that he thought
finished with 12 months ago. He deeply regretted the death of his contact
in Australia, the man had been useful in providing very viable information
about undercover agents and police officers that could be bought both here
and in Australia. But the man had been careless, someone had seen him
killing a cop. The Australian Federal Police drug task force had followed
the man’s record back to the UK and with the help of the Met Special Task
Force, had come close to discovering the man’s controller, only one level
below him. For some time he had shut down the network and it had cost
him dearly in control and money. He had no choice, he could not afford
to jeopardize his position when there was still so much to do, still someone
he had to protect.
The man was supposed to have been digging out undercover cops and had struck
a lead with a couple, purportedly antique importers. Their stories
had minute holes, holes that he had been able to crack open a little wider
here in the UK. His man had been ordered to “arrange” their exposure,
preferably a murder charge for killing a cop, something that would go world
wide and expose them as undercover cops when they were “rescued” from their
fate, throwing the whole undercover operation wide open to public exposure.
But the stupid idiot had killed the cops himself and before he could plant
sufficient evidence he had been seen. So he died. Dead men tell
no tales.
The file had brought confirmation that at least one of the undercover agents
that his man had been tracking in Australia was still alive and back in the
UK. His original information had said that both agents had been killed
by a rival syndicate in an “accident”, but it had now been confirmed that
one agent, known as Mikey Stevenson, was in fact DCI Michael Jardine from
Strathclyde Police in Glasgow, and he had survived and was being held “incommunicado”
by the Met Special Task Force.
He pondered who he would have to apply pressure to, to flush out this hiding
place. He didn’t know if Jardine knew anything about his network but
he could not afford to wait and find out. All loose ends had to be
eliminated, regardless of their innocence or not.
Glasgow
DI Jackie Reid breathed a huge sigh of relief. The guilty verdict handed
down today had seen the successful culmination of six months of hard work.
Another serial killer was off the streets of Glasgow for the rest of his
natural life.
Glancing round the office she noticed that almost everyone else had called
it a day and headed for the pub. Only Stuart still toiled on, tidying
up the paperwork and making sure that everything was filed away properly.
Good old Stuart, always reliable, always understanding that being at the
bottom of the pecking order meant that the dirty jobs fell to him.
She really needed to speak to Robbie and Burke about Stuart, it was about
time he was made DS. He’d earned his stripes many times over, particularly
when she and Rob had been in Australia last year. He’d handled himself
really well on the murder case that had arisen while they were away.
Burke had been very complimentary, even acknowledging that his training under
Michael had obviously stood him in good stead.
Jackie and Rob had got a good laugh out of that one. Michael would
be pleased for Stuart, if only they could let him know, but any contact was
too risky. Even thinking like this was risky, Jackie reminded herself.
She and Rob still visited the gravesite on a regular basis, they knew that
any change in their routine on their return from Sydney may be marked.
Michael had inferred that they too might be subject to surveillance checks
occasionally and that any change might be picked up and may start questions
being asked in the wrong place. Putting both Michael and Shelley at
risk.
Stuart looked up from his filing,
‘Jackie, can I ask a question?’
‘Sure, what’s on your mind?’
‘Do you think there is an afterlife, I mean ….do you think maybe that Michael
is watching over us or something?’
‘Why do you ask that Stuart?’ Jackie’s face became wary.
‘I don’t really know…except that last year when you and Ross were away in
Australia and I was stuck in the middle of that murder case, I sort of felt
like someone was there behind me, helping me the way Michael used to push
us along to follow the clues and draw the conclusions. Does that make
sense?’ Stuart said, eyebrow raised in query. Jackie nodded,
‘Aye, it does to me. I know what you’re saying Stuart, but whether
it’s Michael helping out from the afterlife, or just you using that as a
basis for acknowledging your own talent for this game, does it matter?
What matters is that you’re good at what you do.’ Jackie smiled at
him, receiving a wide smile in return.
Stuart stood up, ‘Thanks Jackie, I knew you wouldn’t laugh at me. Coming
to the pub?’
‘Aye, I’ll be along soon, just need to finish off this memo. Oh and
Stuart?’ Stuart looked back at her as he shrugged his coat on, ‘I’ll
be speaking to Burke and Ross about your promotion too, we need to push it
along. You should’ve got it long ago.’
Stuart blushed and stammered, ‘Thanks Jackie, I didn’t like to ask, you know.’
‘I know Stuart…and you know that Michael would be proud of you, don’t you?’
Jackie locked eyes with him.
‘Aye…he’d be proud of you too Jackie.’
‘Go on, get out of here before you reduce both of us to tears!’
‘Night’
‘Aye, good night Stuart, sweet dreams.’
The next morning Jackie came into the office late. She had overslept
after lying awake for hours thinking of Stuart and his afterlife comments
and wondering, as usual, how Michael was. If she was honest with herself
she also worried about Shelley. She wasn’t stupid, she realized that
Michael had made his decision and that part of his decision was his commitment
to Shelley, and Michael had always been big on commitment. Often the
reason why many of his relationships failed, the women he fell for were not
the commitment types. But Shelley was different. It was obvious
to even a blind man that she loved Michael and that Michael returned that
love.
Ah well, at least she could console herself with the knowledge that he wasn’t
alone anymore. She firmly pushed the thought out of her mind that although
he wasn’t alone, he certainly wasn’t out of danger. She knew that a
part of her mind would never rest until she knew he was safe.
Burke stuck his head out of his office door and waved her over.
‘Jackie, I’ve just received advice about the Forensic Psychology course that
you’ve been wanting to do for a while?’
At her look of enquiry he continued, ‘Aye well there’s been a late
cancellation on the one starting in two days, so you’re on it okay?’
‘Yes Sir, …thank you Sir. Where?’
‘Some place about an hour out of London, some country house that’s been turned
into a police training venue or something. The details are coming through
by email direct to you later today. You’ll have to drive, no money
for airfares.’
‘That’s fine Sir, I’ll take my own car so you’ll not be left short.’
Jackie walked back to her desk, bemused at the sudden turn of events, she
could do with a break, that last case had been tough going.
‘So, you’re off to play with the psych boys eh?’ Robbie asked.
‘Aye, seems like. Five days if I remember properly. Should be
good, been wanting to do it for sometime, but always something else got in
the way.’
‘Work you mean? Has a habit of gettin’ in the way of the good things
in life although, I wouldn’t exactly call Forensic Psychology the good things
in life. So when’s the off?’ Robbie asked.
‘I might head down tomorrow, course starts the next day, so gives me time
to drive down, find the place and settle in.’
‘Have fun, don’t do anythin’ I wouldn’t do.’ Robbie smirked at her.
‘Which of course leaves the field wide open really, doesn’t it?’ She
smiled sweetly in return.
Outside London
Jackie finally found her way off the motorway and onto the right exit.
She’s nearly missed it, diving across lanes at the last minute, not exactly
responsible police behaviour! Still five days away from the office
had lightened her mood and she was looking forward to some interesting times.
Suddenly she laughed. How dull must her life be if five days talking
about Forensic Psychology was something to look forward too.
She followed the signs, referring to her copy of the email with the directions.
Funny about that email, she was sure she hadn’t trashed it after printing
it, but she couldn’t find it again. Oh well at least she had the printed
copy. She would have to phone the office and give them the contact
number when she got there. Whoever had sent the email had forgotten
to include it.
She spotted the sign with the name of the house pointing off the main road,
down a rutted laneway. Seemed a bit shoddy for the Met, still maybe
they didn’t want too many people to know what was here, locals sometimes
got a bit funny about having too many coppers around.
She parked her car in the driveway, noticing that there were no other cars
parked yet, she must be the first. Good, give her time to have a look
around. She went to the front door, placing her hand on the door handle,
which turned abruptly on her and suddenly the door was swung open.
‘DI Reid? Welcome. I’m DCI Spencer, I’m looking after things
here. Come this way please.’
Jackie stepped into the foyer of the house looking around with interest,
‘I’m first am I Sir?’ She queried.
‘Yes, you could say that.’ Spencer replied not meeting her eyes. ‘Please
come this way through to the office, there is someone who needs to speak
to you first.’
Jackie followed Spencer, her face a mixture of curiosity and wariness, this
wasn’t exactly what she had been expecting.
Spencer led her to a room at the back of the house that had been done up
as an office, computer, fax, phones etc. He indicated that she should
take a seat then left the room. She waited for maybe two minutes when
the door opened to admit a tall distinguished looking man in his fifties,
three piece suit, old school tie, the lot.
‘DI Reid? Hello, my name is Chief Superintendent Graham Wallace, I’m
head of a special task force in the Met.’ He smiled deprecatingly.
‘May I call you Jackie, DI Reid seems so formal.’
‘To be honest Sir, you can call me whatever you like as long as you explain
what’s going on.’
‘Ah, refreshingly frank I see, no nonsense about you is there Jackie.
Well, I will come straight to the point. We’ve brought you here today
to help us with a problem we’re having with a mutual friend. Michael
Jardine.’
Jackie had dreaded this day, a day when she might have to decide whether
someone was friend or foe. Was this man really Michael’s friend or
simply one of the bent ones trying to break his cover.
‘Sir? Michael Jardine is dead. He’s been dead for two years now.’
She replied with no emotion in her voice.
‘Well done Jackie, exactly the right answer from a true and loyal friend.
But I’m going to say two words that I hope will reassure you that I’m on
yours, and I might add, his side, though you wouldn’t credit it the way he
has been treating me lately.’
He paused, focusing on Jackie’s eyes with a slight smile twisting his mouth,
‘Thanks, Sunshine.’
Jackie froze, now she would have to decide, friend or foe. Her brain
seethed with choices, she prayed that her face wasn’t betraying her inner
dilemma.
‘Jackie?’ She looked up at him, ‘Michael’s here, he needs you help.’
Here? Oh god, so close, but was it a trap?
‘Jackie?’ Again he drew her gaze, ‘Shelley’s dead.’ She blinked, too
shocked to react in any other way.
‘He needs help, help we think you can supply. Will you?’
She drew a shuddering breath, not releasing his look but trying to tell from
his eyes if he was telling the truth. Decide, come on, decide for god’s
sake her mind screamed.
‘Okay.’
‘Just okay Jackie…nothing else?…no questions? You show such trust and
faith for him. I hope he understands how much you care for him, how
much you are prepared to give for him. Yes, I know a lot about him
Jackie, and a lot about you.’ Here Wallace stood up, indicating that
Jackie should follow him.
‘Shall we go to him?’
They walked along the hall and went up the main stairs to the first level.
Wallace talked as they walked along the hallway with rooms feeding off both
sides.
‘He’s changed Jackie, changed both physically and mentally. He survived
something pretty horrific before we could get him out and it has changed
him as a person. The doctors of course, call it Post Traumatic Stress
Disorder, but you and I both know that something pretty bad must have happened
to cause this level of trauma. Sorry, getting a little a head of myself
here. I must leave you to judge for yourself.’
Wallace stopped in front of a double door that obviously led through to what
was a suite of rooms. Wallace opened one door,
‘Michael? You have a visitor.’
Wallace then let Jackie in, leaving her alone in the room with Michael.
The room was quite dim, little light coming through the large windows as
the day was drawing to a close outside.
‘Michael?’
Silence, then, ‘So, they’ve brought in the cavalry have they?’ Jackie saw
a figure slumped in a large armchair facing the windows.
‘It’s okay Jackie, you’re not seeing a ghost, just someone who wishes they
were.’
With that he rose slowly from the chair and, bracing himself on the walking
stick held tight against his left leg, he turned with some difficulty.
Jackie somehow suppressed the gasp of dismay that nearly burst from her at
the shock of seeing Michael’s face and thin, obviously pain racked body.
A raw jagged scar ran down the right side of his face from almost the hairline
to his jaw. His right arm hung limply at his side, his left leg obviously
had difficulty bearing his weight, weight considerably less than when she
had last seen him in Sydney, looking the picture of health from his life
in the warmer Australian climate. His skin showed the grayish pallor
of a prolonged battle with the pain of severe injuries and a long recuperation
away from prying eyes.
His eyes were the worst. The blueness faded to gray, no response, no
life in them, dead eyes that seemed not to see the world outside, eyes that
focused inwards on some inner torment.
‘Pretty isn’t it?’
Michael lifted his right hand slowly, and with effort, to indicate the scar
on his face.
‘A bit of steel reinforcing rod protruding from a slab of concrete did it.
I never saw it coming but I see the result everyday now.’ His voice
was devoid of emotion except for a tinge of bitterness at this daily reminder
of the unspoken trauma.
‘The plastic surgeon assures me that it will fade with time, not that it
matters anymore.’
Michael lifted his right hand and indicated a chair adjacent to his,
‘Come in, sit down, take a load off as they say.’ With that he swung
around and lowered himself into the chair again.
‘Sorry, still can’t stand for too long, leg starts shaking and I fall over.
Now that’s a sight, the cripple lying on the floor, no strength in his arms
or legs to get up again. Still, gives these bloody nursemaids I’m surrounded
with something to do with their time.’
His gaze returned to the world outside, or so it seemed. Jackie walked
forward to stand in front of him, what little light coming through the window
showing up his ravaged face. Once again the eyes were focused inwards,
not even seeing her.
‘Michael, I don’t know… …...’
‘Don’t know what? Why I’m here…why I’m all smashed up like Humpty Dumpty…why
I told them not to bother bringing you here? Is that what you want
to know?’
‘Yes, I want to know everything. Everything you can tell me.’
‘There’s nothing to tell. Shelley’s dead, I’m alive, just, end of story.
Okay?’
‘No, not okay. How, why, when. Don’t freeze me out Michael, this
is me Jackie, not the zoo keepers outside.’
‘Why should I tell you anything, you’re nothing to me, a work colleague,
a friend from the past. Sorry, I forgot, I have no past.’
‘Michael….wallowing in self pity is not like you. You should….’ She
got no further.
For a man with his injuries he still managed to move with incredible speed,
anger the motivation. He surged to his feet, grabbing her around the
throat and forced her back against the windows, holding her there with the
weight of his body, pain wracked as it was, it was still strong enough to
hold her still.
Aware that his body was starting to tremble with the strain of standing unaided
she braced herself to support him if he started to fall. Staring into
her eyes with a look that froze her completely he snarled,
‘I should what Jackie? What should I do? Just snap out of it. Get over
it like a man? ….How do you know what I’m like, you don’t know me anymore,
no-one does. You know nothing about what I’ve lived through, you know
nothing about anything that’s happened so don’t pass judgment on how I should
feel, understand?’
With that he let go of her throat and turning, collapsed back into the chair,
returning to that dead eyed stare out the window.
‘Get out, get out now before I say or do something else you might live to
regret.’
As Jackie left the room, the horror of that confrontation still showing in
her eyes, she almost collided with DCI Spencer who had obviously been waiting
in the hall.
‘So, not too successful I assume?’ Spencer guessed by the look on Jackie’s
face.
‘Sir? What happened to him? He …he wont talk about it.’
‘Not surprising really, the little that we have been able to piece together
is bad enough but we know that there is much he simply will not speak of.
That’s one of the reasons you were brought here. We had hoped that
seeing you might break through the wall he’s built around himself and hopefully,
get him talking. The psych boys tell us that until he talks about it,
the nightmares, the fits of manic depression and the physical harm he inflicts
on himself won’t ease off.’
‘Physical harm? Christ! what does that mean?’
‘He won’t allow the doctors to treat his injuries anymore. In his physically
weakened state he deliberately places himself in danger of further injury,
tries to go downstairs knowing he will fall, cuts himself with his razor
and does nothing to stop the bleeding.’
Here Spencer paused as if considering his next words.
‘Actually he seems fascinated by blood. The first few weeks here he
was always cutting himself, sometimes deliberately, sometimes by accident
but he never did anything to stop the bleeding. He would simply sit
and watch himself bleed. We had to watch him like a hawk, even got
to taking away his cutlery, his razor, anything he could cut himself on.
Fortunately that little quirk seems to have eased off.’
Spencer glanced at Reid to see how she was responding to this side of Michael’s
character, a side she had obviously never seen before. Jackie simply
stood there, not able to think or move. Spencer touched her arm, bringing
her back from that dark place.
‘He will mend physically, we managed to repair all the major injuries.
Of course he would heal faster if he would let us help, more food, exercise,
physiotherapy and so on. But for now he simply does enough to continue
existing that’s all. It’s his mental state that is our major concern.
That’s the reason you’re here. Not a very auspicious start mind.’
Spencer led the way down the hall to another bedroom.
‘This is yours, I hope you will be comfortable enough.’
Jackie noted that her case had been brought up for her from the car.
She might as well unpack what little clothes she had brought.
Spencer touched her arm, again breaking in on her thoughts.
‘Dinner is at seven. Do you want to eat with Michael or join us downstairs?’
‘With Michael please, maybe I can try and make him eat a little more.’
‘I’ll let downstairs know. Feel free to roam the grounds, just don’t
go outside the perimeter fence please. I’ll leave you to unpack.
The phone is an intercom, just press 1.’
‘I need to call the station, let them know I’m here and okay.’
‘Sorry, no can do, no calls outside. I’ll arrange an email to your
boss, that should cover everything.’
‘Thank you.’
‘No problem. Look Jackie, if this is too much, say so now and you can
go home, no one would blame you.’
‘Except me. I couldn’t leave him like this without trying to help.’
Spencer nodded, accepting her decision. He left her to her unpacking.
Dinner was not very successful. Michael simply ignored her. He
ate a little from his plate then returned to the contemplation of the darkness
outside the window. Jackie tried several times to get him to speak,
talking over old times, sharing memories of Jim Taggart, bringing him up
to date on things at Mary Hill but to no avail. It was if she spoke
to an empty room. After finishing her dinner she sat in the chair beside
him and simply looked at him, following the new lines carved in his face
by the pain and the trauma. Her hands twitched with longing to run
her fingers through his hair, to brush back that errant lock that always
fell forward when he needed a hair cut.
After what seemed like hours of silence Michael suddenly spoke,
‘Go to bed Jackie.’
It came out as an order, voice completely devoid of emotion. Jackie
rose from her chair, admitting to herself that she might as well go to bed
as sit here staring at his motionless figure. As she walked past his
chair she leaned down to brush her lips on his hair to say goodnight.
He jerked away from her, as if burned by her touch. Tears threatening
Jackie left the room, stumbling blindly down the hall into her room and falling
on the bed with the tears flowing freely now, soaking the pillow.
At some stage she must have fallen asleep, exhaustion, physical and emotional,
taking its toll. Suddenly she was jerked from sleep by the heart-rending
sound of a human scream of agony. Jumping up from the bed she ran out
into the hall, the scream was repeated, weaker, more heart-rending.
It came from Michael’s room. Jackie raced down the hall, quickly entering,
searching for the cause of the scream. Her first thought had been he
was being attacked, but there was no-one else in the room.
Michael lay curled in the foetal position in the centre of the bed.
Tearing sobs racked his body, as he fought with internal demons in his dreams.
Jackie quickly moved to the bed, gently lowering herself onto the bed beside
him. She reached out cautiously to touch his arm, the sobbing stopped,
his body seemed frozen with fright.
‘Michael, its Jackie…Michael?’
He didn’t move. He barely seemed to be breathing. Slowly she
put her arm around his shoulders, stroking his hair as you would when calming
a child waking from a nightmare. Still he seemed frozen in place.
Then suddenly he flung himself over, grabbing her with both arms and wrapped
himself around her as if by holding on as tight as possible to her, he could
drive the demons away.
‘Michael, its okay, its Jackie, I’m here.’
She continued stroking his hair, his face, running her fingers gently down
the scar, and back up to gently grasp his neck and hug him to her breast.
He started trembling, reaction to the nightmare. She simply held him,
murmuring soft words of endearment to try and calm him. After a few
minutes the trembling slowed, then stopped.
‘Jackie?’ he whispered.
‘Yes Michael?’
‘Stay?’
‘Yes Michael…..always.’ All the years of love, heartache and longing pouring
out into that final word.
Silence, then the whispered reply.
‘Thank you.’
Slowly she felt him relax against her but when she tried to move slightly
to get more comfortable his gripped tightened again,
‘Its okay Michael, I’m not going anywhere.’
Sometime later, when she was sure he was asleep she moved further onto the
bed, adjusted her hold on him to allow him to relax in his sleep but still
maintained a light hold on him in case he woke again.
She slowly came awake, still in that half dozing half waking state, to the
feel of light, sensuous kisses being mouthed on her neck. She lay there
enjoying that glorious feeling of waking to the weight and smell of a man
draped across her body obviously in the first stages of arousal.
Suddenly memory returned, and she came fully awake when those kisses were
accompanied by feather light caresses that moved from her stomach, up to
her breasts and then trailed down to her thigh.
‘Michael?’
‘Mmmm’ was the murmured reply,
‘Michael, its me Jackie.’ Then more urgently, ‘Michael, its Jackie,
wake up.’
All movement stopped on the bed. Jackie eased herself a little away
so she could see his face. His eyes were open and staring at her, the
pain in them tearing at her heart. He had thought she was Shelley,
that was obvious. In an attempt to ease his pain she reached up to
stroke his face but the look he fixed on her stopped her hand mid way.
‘Michael, I’m sorry, you had a nightmare, I came in to help you settle back
to sleep. I must have fallen asleep myself.’
‘Convenient for you. Or should I say convenient for me perhaps.
Was this part of the master plan? Get me to sleep with you so I would
forget Shelley eh? Is that what the shrinks think will help?
Well I’m sorry, but I’m not interested in trying out their theories, so get
out of my bed.’ He snarled.
‘Michael, don’t be so stupid. Do you really think that I would be a
party to that type of deception, I thought you knew me better that that.’
She threw at him scornfully.
He continued to look at her, his eyes narrowed in speculation and with a
hint of madness lurking in the background. Jackie returned his look
unsure where to go from here, not really trusting him in this mood.
Suddenly Michael rolled completely on top of her, letting his full weight
pin her to the bed, holding himself up on his elbows so he could continue
to watch her face, her reactions.
‘So if you’re not playing their tricks Jackie, whose tricks are you playing?’
He asked casually, bringing his hand up to gently stroke the side of her
face, letting his fingers trail down her jaw and throat to the hollow where
her pulse beat rapidly. Jackie tried not to react, tried not to let
him see that she was responding to his touch.
Michael continued to stare at her in a calculating manner, a slightly feral
smile slowly spreading across his face as his eyes followed the path of his
fingers to the pulse in her throat. He slowly lowered his head and
placed a soft kiss on that pulse, laughing quietly as the pulse responded
to the kiss even if her face still showed no reaction. He shifted slightly
so he could use his hands more freely, slowly undoing the buttons of her
top and folding the sides back to reveal an expanse of bare skin, cut in
half by her bra.
‘Michael, don’t do this…it’s not me you’ll hurt, but yourself.’ Jackie told
him quietly, desperately trying to control her heartbeat and reactions so
as not to push him any further.
‘Hurt? How can what’s dead be hurt? You know, dead, gone, empty,
devoid of anything worth living for. So how can I be hurt Jackie, tell
me that.’
‘Maybe not now, but when you’re well again and you look back on this it will
hurt you. You can’t consciously inflict hurt on others Michael, I know
enough about you to know that that part of you is still intact.’
‘Do you think so? Maybe, maybe not…shall we find out?’ He asked
rhetorically.
And with that he lent down and kissed her roughly, bruising her lips with
the pressure from his mouth, invading her mouth with his tongue. Jackie
lay quiescent, her brain screaming at her to push him away, to stop him.
But from the depths a small voice echoed through her mind, let him do it,
just this once, it may help him, but then her mind immediately acknowledged
that this was rubbish, she would let him do it because she wanted him, had
always wanted him.
Michael raised his mouth from hers, looking into her eyes for an answer,
she simply looked back at him with every ounce of love for him on show, honest,
unstinting and unselfish love. He snarled and looked away as if not
liking what he saw. His mouth then ravaged her throat, the rise and
fall of her breasts and trailed on down to where his hands fumbled at the
waistband of her trousers.
‘Michael, stop…stop now, if not for your own sake, then for mine.’
Returning sanity made her try and stop him before it was too late.
He didn’t seem to hear her plea. He had her trousers undone and had
dragged them down past her knees. He looked up at her face then, not
smiling, simply gauging her reaction as he forced his leg between hers pushing
her knees apart.
Realising this was the pivotal moment she simply refused to respond to his
goading, never breaking eye contact, never flinching. She was back
in control now, the choice must be his, she must not push him either way.
She saw hesitation in his eyes, a moment of fleeting sanity, but still he
continued to try and stimulate a reaction from her, running the tips of his
fingers down her stomach, tracing a feather light touch down the inside of
her thigh and into her groin. Instinctively she shivered, a simple
physical reaction but it broke his hold. Something seemed to snap,
his whole body went rigid. He closed his eyes slowly then, opening
them, he glanced around as if only now really aware of his surroundings.
He looked down at her half naked body, looked into her eyes, saw love, tenderness
and god forgive him, an element of fear. His own expression changed
to one of self-loathing and horror. Turning his head away from the
look of pity he saw filling her eyes he made a noise like a groan, tainted
with despair, and rolled off onto the other side of the bed. He curled
into the foetal position again,
‘Go away Jackie, go as far away from me as possible…please?’
‘No Michael, I told you last night that I wouldn’t leave you, and I meant
it. This hasn’t change anything. I don’t desert the people I
love Michael.’
Michael flinched as if struck. But he didn’t answer. Jackie straightened
her clothes and slid off the bed. She moved a chair closer to the bed
and simply sat there waiting for him to make the next move. After about
ten minutes she realised that he had drifted off to sleep, exhaustion taking
its toll. But somehow this sleep seemed different to last night, it
seemed somehow more natural, more relaxed. So, maybe this confrontation
had helped, maybe it had broken through some of the barricades around his
mind. But at what cost she wondered, to him and, she had to admit to
herself. To deny him what he had wanted, and she confessed, what she
had wanted too, might have broken some barriers but it might also have erected
others between. She could only wait.
He woke slowly about an hour later. His eyes, once they were able to
focus, rested on the figure waiting patiently in the chair by the bed, he
quickly looked away, not able to meet her eyes.
‘Michael, I’m going to have a shower and get changed, okay? Then we
can have some breakfast.’ Jackie told him, her voice even, as if she
addressed a child that needed the reassurance of normality to steady his
nerves.
‘You’ll come back?’ Was the whispered question. So there was
a change, a break in the barricades.
‘Aye, always…you know that.’ Jackie stood up, stretched to ease muscles
cramped from sitting too long in one position. She noticed that Michael’s
eyes followed her every movement.
‘Okay?’ she queried. He didn’t answer but the expression on his face
relaxed, she took this for a yes.
She quickly left the room, walking down the hallway to her room. As
she approached the door, another door across the way opened and Spencer stepped
out, closing it quietly behind him.
‘Rough night?’ Spencer casually asked.
‘Aye, you could say that.’ She replied ruefully.
‘Jackie?’ She looked around at him, ‘You need to know that you were
safe at all times.’
‘Sorry? What do you mean?’ She stared at him.
Spencer shrugged his shoulders, ‘Ah, well…his room is bugged. We heard
everything. We would have intervened if you had been in real danger.’
Spencer had the grace to look a little embarrassed.
‘And you don’t think that rape constituted real danger? I see, well
it seems that you and I have a different opinion on that subject.’
‘But he didn’t go ahead with it, did he?’ He looked at her, trying
to reassure her,
‘Aye, no thanks to you lot.’ She snapped.
‘Look if you want me to try to get him to talk, and believe me I’m only doing
it for his sake, not for you bastards who put him here in the first place.
You get those bugs out of his room, and leave him in peace. Aye, and
for that matter you can take any bugs out of my room, I assume it’s bugged
too?’ She stared at him fixedly.
Spencer nodded. ‘I’ll have to get approval from Wallace, we really
need to know what Michael knows.’
‘Well you’re getting nowhere, maybe I am, but I leave now unless those bugs
are removed, Superintendent or no Superintendent. Got it?’ She glared
at him.
Spencer held up his hands in submission and walked away down the hall and
downstairs.
Jackie showered and changed as quickly as possible, speeding back to Michael’s
room, loath to leave him alone for too long now that she felt some breakthrough
had been made. He hadn’t moved, he remained curled up on the side of
the bed seemingly asleep. She crossed the room to the phone, picked
it up and dialed 1. Someone answered and she quietly asked for breakfast
to be brought up to the room as soon as possible. Hanging up the phone
she turned around to find his eyes watching her. She smiled and received
a glimmer of an answering smile.
‘Room service? Must be some posh hotel.’ He said.
‘Aye but the service could be better.’ She replied, ‘Are you going
to get out of that bed today or do I have to come over and drag you out?’
She asked him casually.
He looked away then, as if the mention of the word bed and her in one sentence
brought back the memories of their early morning confrontation. Kicking
herself for her lack of subtlety she moved around the room tidying up a few
things, straightening curtains, adjusting chairs trying to give him time
to recover his equilibrium. She heard the rustling of bedclothes and
glancing over saw him trying to rise without the aid of his walking stick.
She spotted it by his chair and quickly grabbed it and brought it over to
him. He took it, curtly nodding his thanks. Once he was steady
on his feet she backed off, not wanting to press him too much.
‘It’s okay, I promise not to bite.’ Michael grimaced, realising his
gaffe as he glanced quickly at her face seeing the pale bruising starting
to show on her lips and throat.
He closed his eyes, took a steadying breath, ‘Jackie?’
‘Yes Michael?’
‘I am sorry, you know that don’t you?’
Jackie looked at him, she smiled, ‘Sorry for what? Nothing happened
Michael, nothing that isn’t okay between friends.’
‘Friends?’
‘Friends, first and always. Go have a shower, you’ll feel better for
it you know. By the time you’re done, breakfast should be here.’
‘Okay.’ He nodded briefly then set off across the room to the bathroom.
About 30 minutes later he came out, clean shaven, clean clothes, and damp
hair. He looked younger but still so fragile. During the time
he was in the shower, three men had come into the room and stripped it of
all the bugs. Jackie watched their every move, asking to check their
readout machine before they left to make sure they hadn’t missed any.
Satisfied that they all were gone she shooed them out just as Michael opened
the bathroom door.
Surprising her he asked, ‘How’d you manage that?’
At her look he said, ‘Getting them to remove the bugs. I asked but
they ignored me. Seems like a DS has more clout down here than I thought.
Dead DCIs obviously carry no weight.’
To get over her surprise at him knowing about the bugs she said,
‘It’s DI now, I got promotion last month.’ She said and smiled to see the
startled reaction in his face to this news,
‘Speaking of weight, time for you to eat, put some flesh on that frame of
yours. Christ Michael, what have you been living on, bird food or something.’
‘Living? No not living, existing. Food…doesn’t really hold much
interest for me.’ He said.
As if to refute this he moved slowly across to the table she had set up and
sat down, taking some toast and munching on it abstractedly. She sat
down at the table with him, not talking but eating her own breakfast and
subtlety sliding more food on to his plate little by little. He took
it and ate it without seeming to realise.
‘Enough Jackie, you can stop mothering me now.’
He glanced sideways at her, letting her know he had been awake to her tricks.
‘Well it worked, you ate more this morning than I think you’ve eaten in days,
am I right?’ She asked.
‘To be honest, I couldn’t tell you. I don’t remember eating at all
before this.’
‘Aye and it looks like it too, impersonating a stick insect an all.’
She smiled at him to soften the severity of her words.
They sat for hours that day either in silence or in desultory conversation
about nothing in particular. He asked some brief questions about Mary
Hill, smiled briefly at her description of her martyrdom under Burke, congratulated
her on her recent promotion, but they talked of nothing of any significance.
At lunch he barely ate at all, no matter how hard she pressed or cajoled
him. After lunch she moved across to a stereo set up in a corner and
turning it on found some classical music, thinking this might distract him,
he had always loved classical music, particularly choral music, a hangover
from his days in the Festival Choir.
‘Turn it off.’ He snapped.
‘But Michael I…’ she started to reply,
‘Turn it off now.’ His voice was rising in volume. ‘No music you understand,
I want no music.’
‘Okay Michael, keep your shirt on.’ She snapped back, not understanding
why a little music should provoke such a violent reaction. As silence
once again filled the room,
‘No music…Shelley loved music.’ He whispered.
Suddenly Jackie understood. He wanted nothing to remind him of Shelley,
so no music. Though how the hell he thought he could live the rest
of his life without music was beyond her. Then the thought followed,
of course he didn’t want to live the rest of his life, he wanted to die.
She had lost him once, so she was damned if she was going to lose him again,
he might want to die but she wasn’t going to let him.
‘What about books, are we allowed books Sir?’ She queried, trying to
break his mood.
He looked at her, his face twisted with bitter memories, then, as if switching
off a light inside, his eyes glazed, ‘What ever you want, just no music.’
She passed the rest of the day between reading a book she had found on the
shelves in her room and just sitting in silence with him. Towards the
dinner hour she stood up and said,
‘I need some fresh air Michael, I’m going for a wee walk in the gardens,
do you want to come?’ She asked.
He glanced at her, registering her presence for the first time in a couple
of hours. ‘No…no.’
He seemed to pause between the no’s as if momentarily considering it, but
then his face shut down again. She left him to it, needing to get out
and clear her head, to let go of façade she was holding in place for
his sake.
She grabbed a light jacket from her room and set out to stroll around the
extensive gardens, first advising Spencer of her progress, or lack of it.
He nodded,
‘We need to talk to him briefly Jackie and to be honest, you can’t be there
when we do, so we’ll do it now.’
‘Go easy on him.’ She warned, scared that they would shatter what little
strength he had gained.
‘We will, its nothing really, just housekeeping things.’ Spencer advised.
On entering the house again through a side door she heard some shouting coming
from upstairs, quickly throwing off her jacket and sprinting up the stairs
she pinpointed the noise as coming from Michael’s room. Not his voice
though she noticed, but Spencer shouting orders to someone else. Quickly
pushing through the door she came on a scene from some nightmare. Michael
lying prone on the floor, rigid with spasms that seemed to rack his whole
body, Spencer poised over him with a syringe, preparing to inject something
into Michael’s arm, another man standing ready with another syringe.
Jackie flew to Michael’s side, throwing herself on the floor beside his body,
grabbing Spencer’s arm before he could inject the syringe. They locked
eyes. Spencer drew breath,
‘It’s not what you think, he’s had a seizure, a result of his head injury.
This is Dilantin to stop the seizure, the other is Diazapam to sedate him
for a while to help him recover.’ Spencer stared straight into her eyes.
‘Believe me Jackie, I have no wish to harm him, I’m simply trying to help.’
Jackie held Spencer’s arm for a moment longer, then Michael’s body spasmed
again,
‘If I don’t get this into him soon he may re-injure himself. Please
Jackie….let me help him.’ Spencer pleaded. Jackie released his arm
slowly.
Spencer found the muscle on Michael’s arm, injected the Dilantin slowly,
threw the syringe across the floor and grabbed the other one from the waiting
man, pausing briefly to make sure the first injection was taking effect,
then injecting the second one.
Almost immediately Michael’s body began to relax from the rigid spasms.
Jackie lifted his head gently and placed it in her lap, stroking the hair
away from his eyes and wiping the blood and spittle from his mouth, he had
split his lip with his teeth during the seizure.
‘He will be disoriented for a few minutes when he comes around. Just
speak calmly and softly until he realises who you are.’ Spencer instructed
her. ‘He’ll be okay now, physically, so we’ll leave you in peace, he’ll
be better if we’re not around.’
Jackie looked up at him, reading the sympathy in his face, she nodded.
Jackie shifted slightly, dragging a chair behind her to support her back,
moving Michael into a slightly more comfortable position, his head pillowed
in her lap, lying on his side as if in sleep. She waited patiently
for signs of returning consciousness.
Michael groaned, made as if to roll over but then stopped and drew his knees
up into the foetal position.
‘Michael love, its Jackie, you’re okay. Michael?’ She stroked
his forehead, caressing his face.
His eyes fluttered open, unfocussed and pain racked.
‘Jackie? Oh god, not again.’ He groaned.
He seemed to understand what had happened to him, a good sign Jackie thought.
‘You’re okay Michael, you’re safe.’
‘Seizure?’ he muttered,
‘Aye but you’re okay now.’ Jackie felt moisture on her hands, thinking
that he might be bleeding worse than she thought she turned his head slightly
and saw the tears silently running down his cheeks.
‘Michael? It’s okay, I’m here, you’re safe.’ She repeated.
‘She’s dead Jackie, they’re both dead.’ He whispered.
‘Both? Who Michael?’ Leaning down, straining to catch his words,
‘Shelley….and our baby. Their both dead and I couldn’t save them, couldn’t
get to them, my fault, both dead.’ Came the anguished whisper.
Jackie was stunned to silence. Shelley? Pregnant with Michael’s
child. Oh god, no wonder he had withdrawn completely, no wonder he
wanted to die. Michael had always yearned for a child, marriage and
a child, children of his own. Now both had been torn from him.
Jackie found her own tears were streaming down her cheeks, dropping unnoticed
onto Michael’s face, mingling with his tears. He gave a shudder, curled
tighter and drew a deep breath as if preparing for some assault on his body.
Jackie realised that now was the time to press him for details, now while
the drugs controlled his mind and he felt safe.
‘Michael? Tell me about it.’ She calmly asked the loaded question,
waiting for his denial, his withdrawal.
The story spilled out of him, as if a wellspring had been tapped and was
too strong to cap. She listened in growing horror.
Their actual exposure had been accidental. A drug war between syndicates
had seen hits on targets on both sides. They had got caught up in it
because a new shipment had arrived and been earmarked by the rival syndicate
for ‘lifting’. One day they had gone to their shop front as usual to
take delivery of the shipment. To be met be armed youths who tied them
up and bundled them into a van, driving for sometime before dragging them
out and into a multi-storied warehouse marked for demolition. The fact
that they were allowed to see their attackers, who didn’t wear masks, was
not a good sign.
After a beating, administered with some pleasure by two of the gang members,
Michael had ‘caved in’ knowing that their lives were more important than
any drugs or undercover operation. Shelley had taken a few hits but
was otherwise okay. The youths had then received a call on a mobile.
They tied both Michael and Shelley up to separate girders some three metres
apart so they couldn’t reach each other, couldn’t help each other get free.
As the youths left, their leader had leaned down into Michael’s face and
had said,
‘Nighty Night, sleep tight, no time for the bed bugs to bite. This
place should make a good tomb. Lots of concrete and steel. Once
it blows there won’t be enough of you left to bury properly anyway.’
With that he had taped their mouths shut, checked their bindings and
run laughing out of the building.
Here Michael stopped, as if he couldn’t go on. Jackie simply continued
stroking his head and face, her other arm draped around his shoulders offering
physical comfort. He drew a shuddering breath again and went on.
They had sat there for three or four hours, struggling with their bonds but
unable to break free or remove the tape on their mouths. Then the silence
had been broken by voices below, movement of several people. Michael
had struggled harder, trying to make a noise to attract their attention,
to no avail. But what he had overheard from the conversion made his
mind freeze. Workmen were setting explosives around the base of the
building, and intended to cave the building in on itself to help with the
demolition.
Their struggles had become frantic as the demolition team moved around downstairs
laying their explosives. Then suddenly all had gone quiet. Michael
had looked across at Shelley, their gazes locked knowing now that it was
too late, that this was the end of the line for them both, for the baby.
The baby who should never had happened but when discovered had caused them
both so much joy that the wrongness of it had been forgotten.
A warning siren had sounded nearby. Michael prayed that it would be
quick, that Shelley (and the baby) would not suffer. The muffled puff
of explosives had heralded the major explosion, and then all hell had broken
loose.
What seemed like hours later Michael had regained consciousness to find himself
wedged between two layers of concrete, protected by the girder he had been
tied to. He was covered in blood from the wound on his face, his legs
had little feeling, one of his arms had also been trapped. In the silence
he had thought he could discern breathing. He called out for Shelley,
trying to distinguish any signs of life around him. She had been trapped
several metres away from him, still breathing but not conscious. He
had desperately called out to her, trying to wake her. As the hours
passed he realised that her breathing was getting weaker. He had discovered
what he thought was a trickle of water dripping down onto his chest, but
reaching down had found it was blood. Shelley’s blood, dripping on
his heart slowly draining away her life. He had screamed himself hoarse,
cried until no more tears would come, cursed at a world that had let him
find a woman he could love and cherish, one who loved him back and who had
gifted him with the child he had secretly so long desired.
Twenty-seven hours he had lain there, wandering in and out of consciousness,
begging Shelley to answer him until in the early hours of the next morning
her ragged breathing had finally ceased. He had then ceased to care
if he lived, prayed that he too would die there, with her.
The workmen coming to start clearing the site the next day had found his
unconscious body and that of Shelley, dead for many hours. He had been
whisked off to hospital, briefly regaining consciousness long enough to ask
for the one man in Australia he could contact in just such an emergency who
had then simply organised everything. Including his removal from
the hospital, deletion of all records referring to his admission and the
disposal of Shelley’s body, no fuss, no questions.
He had spent weeks in critical care in a very private clinic outside Sydney,
before weeks more in physical rehabilitation before being flown to London
and brought here where the shrinks had started in. That’s when he had
shut down, shut them out, not wanting to deal with any of it no matter how
important to them. Everything that had been important to him had been
stripped from him in one night. Let them wait, maybe forever.
He was in no mind to talk to them.
‘And that’s when they brought you in. I guess they thought you could
turn it around for them.’ He finished. Jackie was simply unable
to speak, her mind shattered by what he had recited. What he had lived
through. Knowing that she had to break this silence somehow, she struggled
for the words to help ease his pain and lessen her horror.
‘Oh Michael, I’m so sorry.’ Such inane words, useless, but what else
could she say?
‘Jackie...thank you.’
‘For what? Making you go through all that again, Jesus Michael, I never
meant to hurt you by doing this.’ She shook her head, still trying to cope
with what he had told her.
He reached up, touching her face, finding tears there.
‘Don’t cry, I’ve cried enough for both of us. It’s over now, no more
eh?’ He forced a wry twisted smile to his face.
She bowed her head, but as he struggled to sit up she grabbed his arms and
helped him upright. Standing, both of them were trembling, him from
the effort of standing, she from the storm of emotions she had unleashed.
‘I think we both better sit down before we fall down, don’t you.’ He
smiled gently, the smile was one from the old Michael, the Michael she knew
and loved so dearly.
They helped each other across to the bed, both collapsing, too exhausted
to worry about anything. They simply lay there, she with her arms around
him, he with his head resting on her breast, listening to her breathing,
neither of them speaking.
Jackie lay there praying that he would drift off to sleep and was rewarded
a little later by the sound of some gentle but persistent snoring.
She eased herself off the bed, draping a blanket gently over him before bending
and lightly dropping a kiss on his brow. He stirred slightly, murmuring in
his sleep.
‘It’s okay Michael, I’m here.’ she whispered. He settled again, curling
up and dropping deeper into sleep.
Jackie went out and found Spencer and Wallace, deep in conversion with a
third man who turned out to be a psychiatrist. She briefly outlined
everything Michael had told her, feeling as if she was betraying his confidence,
but knowing that if he was to get long term help these men needed to know.
They agreed to leave her alone with him until tomorrow, giving him time to
adjust to someone else knowing what had happened. But soon they needed
to talk to him, soon they needed to press him further.
Jackie quickly went back to Michael’s room, hoping he hadn’t woken while
she was gone. He still lay curled on his side, deeply asleep.
She slid onto the bed beside him under the blanket, curling her body around
his for warmth and comfort, not really sure if the comfort was for him or
for her she acknowledged to herself ruefully. Finally sleep claimed
her too.
She woke to the feeling of being watched, turning her head she saw that Michael
too was awake and lying on the pillow beside her, watching her face.
She smiled, happy to see some improvement from a night of restful sleep.
Michael continued to simply look at her, tracing the line of her face with
his eyes, resting on her lips, still bruised from their earlier encounter.
He returned to her eyes, with a question in his, the age-old question between
a man and woman who acknowledged a love for each other.
Jackie smiled in reply, knowing that the answering smile in his eyes was
all she needed to allow herself to give what he so desperately needed, the
physical comfort that only a woman can give a man whose soul has been shattered.
She slid across the bed, into his arms, feeling them close around her as
his mouth sought hers in the lightest of kisses. Opening herself to
him she surrendered to his need, her need. As they lay there kissing
and caressing each other, seeking out the places on each other’s bodies that
would heightened their shared passion, she knew that this time was tinged
with sadness. Sadness for him that she was not the woman he truly loved,
sadness for her that she could only offer her body and her heart to heal
his soul.
Over the next few days Michael made giant steps forward, he was sleeping
better, the nightmares were easing, he was eating and actually looked to
have gained a little weight. Jackie knew that her time here was nearly
over. She had to go back to her world tomorrow. Michael knew it too,
but didn’t seem to want to face it, to face going on without Jackie there
to support him. The shrinks had arrived the day after the seizure.
She had sat in on their sessions often simply holding Michael’s hand, being
there when he was forced to relive it all again, and again. She was
excluded from his meetings with Wallace, Michael minded that but she told
him she didn’t want to know, didn’t want that burden as well. He had
understood and had not pressed again for her to be included.
Their lovemaking had not been repeated. Michael seemed content to simply
sleep in the bed beside her, holding on to her when the nightmares threatened.
She admitted to herself that she was glad in some ways. It was going
to be hard enough to walk away without the physical attachment being stronger
than it already was.
On the morning she was due to leave, she woke early, hoping to slide out
of the bed, shower and dress before Michael woke. He lay beside her,
curled in sleep, but as soon as she moved his hand came out and claimed hers.
‘No, don’t go yet.’ He whispered.
‘Michael, you know I have to go today.’
‘Yes, today, but not yet.’
With that he drew her across the bed and into his arms. She lay there
quietly, simply enjoying the feel of his arms around her. Gazing into
his eyes she imprinted the memory of this moment on her mind, even down to
the healing scar. He leant forward, brushing his lips over hers, trailing
his mouth down her jaw line, to that telltale pulse in her throat.
Here he lightly kissed the bruise, almost healed now, before tracing a line
down her throat to her shoulder.
‘Michael…you…you don’t have to pretend. I understand.’
At that he glanced up at her, ‘No, you don’t understand. Not this time.
I know you’re not Shelley, I don’t want to make love to Shelley. I
want to make love to Jackie, my friend, who…rescued me from hell. The
Jackie that loved me for ten years, the Jackie that I’ve loved for ten years.
Understand?’ He stared into her eyes, reinforcing his words with the
intensity of his gaze.
Jackie returned his look, understanding that this time it was her, Jackie,
he would make love to, not the ghost of Shelley. She drew his face
up to hers, placing her mouth over his she breathed against his lips,
‘Yes, I understand….I love you Michael.’
With that they both abandoned themselves to their shared passion, reaching
a physical and emotional climax that held no sadness, only joy at two souls,
one healing and one healed, joined in love.
Glasgow
Two days later she walked into the office to be met by Robbie and Stuart
buried deep in paperwork. ‘What’s all this then?’ she asked.
‘The boss decided we needed to get up to date on our paperwork, all our paperwork.’
Robbie drawled. ‘How was the course? Interesting?’ he asked.
‘Oh you could say that I think.’ She replied and chuckled to herself.
She would have to tell Robbie some day soon about Michael, but not just yet.
She still needed to savour the time spent with Michael, time she wasn’t ready
to share with anyone, yet.
‘Hey, have you seen the papers today?’ Stuart called over.
‘No, why? Anything unusual?’ Jackie replied.
‘Aye, big case down in London, seems some undercover cop has blown the whistle
big time, it’s gone right to the top of the Home Office, some ministerial
adviser has blown his brains out before the cops could get to him.
Looks like drugs, some big network between here and Australia.’
Stuart read on, ‘Lots of stuff about collaboration between international
police forces pulling down the big guys thanks to this undercover cop.
Wouldn’t want to be in his shoes if they didn’t get the big bosses right?’
‘No…I wouldn’t want to be in his shoes either.’ Jackie whispered.
Robbie struck by her look of frozen dismay looked at her quizzically.
‘Later.’ She mouthed.
Burke came out of his office,
‘Jackie, welcome back…got a job for you. A body’s just been dragged
out of the river. You three better get down there fast.’
‘Yes Sir.’ She replied, and burying her fears, she looked at Robbie and Stuart,
nodded that they better be off, situation normal again.
End