Convenient Prey
By Thom Hardy and AV Iain
()
About this ebook
Memories are better left alone …
Former classmates descend on Goonherth Bay for a twenty-year school reunion:
Old friendships are rekindled.
Fiery passions are raked up anew.
And resentment turns deadly.
Young mother Elena Kardos flees the big city to return home. Goonherth Bay may not be perfect but she has her mother's support and a beautiful view of the sea. The school reunion looms, however, threatening to smash her tranquillity into a thousand pieces.
City big shot Henry Foldes reluctantly returns to Goonherth Bay to attend his dying mother's bedside. For Henry, Goonherth Bay represents more than just his home town. It represents a past self he had hoped to leave behind forever.
Despite her popularity and academic promise at school, Joanne Darkly never left Goonerth Bay. With the school reunion just around the corner Joanne worries the lost opportunities of her youth may come around again. And this time she will be unable to deny them.
Jock Jones grew up to be an enormous success. But the weight of his past still hangs heavy over him. The reunion presents the perfect opportunity to put things right once and for all. This time his tormentors will be the ones to harbour regrets.
Convenient Prey
A novel of mystery, suspense and vengeance
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Convenient Prey - Thom Hardy
Convenient Prey
A Novel
AV Iain
DIB BooksElena
11.31 am, Saturday
Elena Kardos gently cradled her baby’s head against her shoulder and stared at the unlit electric fireplace in her mother’s front room. A tremor passed through her but not because it was cold. On the contrary, it was an unseasonably warm September morning. No, the tremor was the feeling she got whenever she realised she was alone.
She lost herself in her baby’s even respiration, the warmth from his breath seeping through her blouse. It brought goose pimples rising up from her skin. Every day he seemed to grow a little heavier. Every day he became less of a baby, and more of a human being. She slipped a glance at him as he slept, the side of his head resting upon the cloth which draped over her shoulder.
George.
That was his name.
It was difficult to think of him by name. It made it seem like he was more grown up than he actually was. It reminded her that he would one day leave her behind.
Go about his own life.
Somewhere off in the house — her mother’s house — she heard something fall.
She startled.
Her heart beat up in her throat.
And her pulse quickened.
A hot flush settled in over her cheeks.
George stirred in her arms, opening his huge, dark-blue eyes, blinking at his surroundings before, smacking his lips lazily, drifting back to sleep.
Although it was clearly something which had been poorly placed falling of its own free will — of gravity’s will — Elena continued to stare in the direction of the sound for the best part of a minute.
Her mother had gone to the corner shop.
And Elena was all too aware that she was alone in the house.
She suppressed her fear.
It was her problem.
That was the reason why he had left.
Because she had been needy.
Because she had wanted to be close to him all the time.
Because she had wanted him to keep her safe.
But, well … that was the past now.
She and George had been living at her mother’s for the better part of a year. When her best friend would ask her, with an arched eyebrow, how she could possibly stand living under the same roof as her mother — especially now that she had a child — Elena found herself forced to play up to the stereotype; to claim that she was wilting under a barrage of criticism, that she was looking for somewhere else. That this was only a temporary situation. That she would have some space
for herself soon.
But, to tell the truth, she was more than happy here.
Her mother was a pensioner. She hardly left the house. And since Elena hardly left the house either it meant that neither of them was ever alone.
Well, almost never.
When Elena heard the footsteps crunching up the tidy gravel driveway, the scrub of the key in the lock, it was like a weight had lifted off her shoulders.
All at once the hot flush, the hollow feeling left her.
She felt a cooling, calming sensation pass through her bloodstream. From where she stood in the sitting room, she turned her head in the direction of the front hall.
The door opened and shut.
There was an exhalation.
Her mother appeared in the sitting room doorway.
She wore a winter jacket despite the warm weather. Elena had often joked that her mother had an equatorial condition. Her mother clasped the local newspaper — The Goonherth Bay Chronicle — beneath her arm. Elena could just about make out the headline: Indian Summer Boils The Bay
.
Some people thought it was depressing to end up living in the same place where you grew up. When she’d been at school others had often spoken about getting away
or escaping Goonie
.
Everyone wanted to leave.
Everyone wanted to stride out into the Big Bad World.
To see what it was all really about.
What they were really all about.
Well, Elena had been out into the Big Bad World and it had chewed her up, spat her out, left her here, where she had started.
At thirty-six now, in the year she had been home, Elena had got to wondering if she wasn’t where she was supposed to be all along.
Feels like it’s all about to break out there,
her mother said, speaking in her native Hungarian. She glanced to George, snoring away on Elena’s shoulder, and then she padded toward the kitchen. A storm later this evening, believe me.
When Elena replied, she spoke in English. She had never really got into the habit of speaking Hungarian back to her mother, knowing that she understood English just as well. I’ll put George down,
she said. Make us a cup of tea.
Her mother made no response.
As usual, her mother seemed to be off in a world of her own. She muttered to herself as she rustled about with the plastic bags in the kitchen, putting things into their place. Her mother had always taken great pride in keeping things organised — in making sure that her home wasn’t only spotless but tidy too.
Elena had never been good at that sort of thing. She just tended to spread everything out. Allow piles to accumulate. To only deal with things when it became obvious that there was nothing else to be done. That everything would fall down about her ears if she neglected to do something right at that moment.
Elena trudged up the narrow staircase, taking care with where she put her feet. It was a recurring nightmare of hers that she would lose her footing and tumble, falling at the foot of the steps, crushing George beneath her. Of course she knew this to be a somewhat wild fantasy given that she was hardly the heaviest of women. Indeed, she weighed only a shade over fifty kilos; something the doctor had tut-tutted about at her last appointment. And then there was the fact that she simply took so much care with George — that because her every waking thought was devoted to him — it was extremely unlikely that he would come to harm while in her care.
She laid George down in her bedroom, in the travel cot by the window.
It was bizarre to still think of it as her
bedroom. It seemed that the day she’d left home her mother had taken a bin liner to every last thing Elena had left behind.
Gone were all the stuffed toys of her youth.
Posters too.
Neither was there any trace of the small, elegantly crafted guitar which her father had given her for her sixth or seventh birthday … shortly before he had been lost at sea
, as her mother euphemistically put it.
Her
bedroom was really now nothing more than a guest room, what with its neutral, cream-coloured linen, and the lack of anything other than the bedside table and lamp, the opened suitcase in the corner, the cot standing by the window.
Elena no longer bore a grudge. Maybe when she’d been younger.
In her twenties.
But not now.
When she had left her mother’s house behind, fifteen or so years ago, she hadn’t looked back. And she had hardly returned to visit.
It wasn’t as if her mother inhabited a mansion either. It was a simple, two-bedroom, semi-detached with a boxy back garden. The only thing the house really had going for it was the sea view.
The view down on Goonherth Bay.
Elena lost herself in the sparkle coming off the water. It was hard to believe that winter was on its way. That in a month or so she would have to wear a jumper indoors and out. Her mother would dig out her thermal underwear from the attic. Perhaps she would throw another coat on top too.
It was strange to think that this was, perhaps, the best Elena had felt in months. And yet, even a year before, it would’ve escaped her to believe that right now she might be standing in her former bedroom, looking out the window, nearing the middle of a lazy Saturday morning.
But this was where life had left her.
She glanced down to George, taking in his doll-like face another time. She was about to leave the room behind when something out of the window caught her eye.
A battered estate car. Hardly a remarkable sight. Dozens of them trundled down the cobblestones of Pwelbock Street, headed for the beach, every day.
Apart from the driver, the car was unoccupied.
No children in the back seat.
No wife sat up front.
And, the final detail, no dog in the boot.
Elena stared. Had she matured into one of those curtain twitchers
she had sworn in her teenage years she’d never become? She blinked a couple of times, hoping to break her concentration. To get shot of her auto-hypnosis.
Then her pragmatic mind kicked in.
Three, four times a year there was a suicide in the Bay.
Someone leaping off the cliffs and into the thrashing waves of the Atlantic below.
Everyone along the coastal roads recognised the red flags.
Solitary males aged between eighteen and forty.
She got a brief glimpse of the face through the tinted glass of the windscreen:
Curly blond hair.
Cherubic cheeks.
Rich hazel eyes.
She blinked.
The fog of memory lifted.
She recognised the face.
She knew who it was.
And although recognition flickered through her mind, she couldn’t quite bring herself to recall the name right away. A mental block … until there was nothing but the name:
Henry.
Harry.
Harry Foldes.
The car turned the corner, heading off along a narrow side passage which skirted the coast and which led to The Crosses … the Foldes’ family home. When the car had slipped completely from view, Elena continued to stare into the space left behind.
The warbling grey-green sea a blurry backdrop.
In all the time since she had been back she hadn’t seen him once.
Like everyone else he had moved away … or so she’d heard.
Was he back to visit?
Her mother called from downstairs.
Elena stared out of the window for another few seconds and then turned.
With a final glance at George — snoring away lightly in his travel cot — she slipped from the room. As she made her way down the stairs, Harry Foldes’s face remained emblazoned upon her mind’s eye.
She had thought it was all done with.
… Well, it was … but of course Goonherth Bay was his home too.
His family was here.
Why should she have thought anything else?
When she reached the bottom of the staircase, she noticed she was trembling. It took her another few seconds — three, four deep breaths — to regain her composure.
She would be fine.
That was what she told herself.
She would be fine.
She was safe … wasn’t she?
Back downstairs, in the kitchen, Elena was in shock.
On her way down the stairs, she had slipped twice.
There had been a heart-stopping moment when she had dangled on the very edge of one of the steps, believed that her hold on the banister would give way, and that she would tumble down. Land sprawled in the front hall.
Break her neck.
But she’d held her balance.
Somehow defied physics.
She breathed in the thick steam as it plumed from the large metal saucepan on the stove. Her mother was making hortobágyi palacsinta, a crêpe stuffed with veal. She breathed in the thick scent of the frying onions mingled with spices. A bowl of chopped parsley sat on the kitchen counter ready to sprinkle on top when the dish was served. It was almost lunchtime and hortobágyi palacsinta was one of Elena’s all-time favourite dishes. So why wasn’t she more excited?
Why didn’t she feel any hunger?
Still dressed in her thick winter’s coat, her mother turned to her. She gave Elena one of those wizened looks which suggested she could read her mind. Her mother always claimed she had gypsy blood. You need your strength,
she said, and then, shaking her head as she turned back to languidly stir the pot, You need to eat more. Nothing but skin and bones. You need strong milk. For your baby. For Georgie.
Elena felt herself blush. It wasn’t because of what her mother had said. Or that she might somehow be malnourishing George with her deficient breast milk. It was because Henry Foldes annoyingly still lingered on her mind.
Henry Fucking Foldes.
Glancing to the table, seeing that the cutlery had not yet been placed, Elena busied herself gathering up knives and forks and spoons. She noticed there were no paper napkins left in the packet and so slipped into what they fancifully referred to as the pantry
.
The pantry
wasn’t much more expansive than a broom cupboard.
The plastic packet of napkins was on the top shelf.
Elena kicked the wooden footstool into place and clambered on top, steadying herself against the shelves. Even on the stool, she could only just brush the packet of napkins with her fingertips. It was a wonder her mother had managed to place them so far out of reach. Elena was a good inch or so taller. With a final swipe, Elena knocked the packet off the shelf and onto the floor. While she stooped to recover the napkins, however, she noticed two cans of tinned tomatoes also lying there. She supposed that was what she had heard falling while her mother had been out.
There was something else too.
Something beneath them.
A letter.
Elena pictured the scene in her mind. That the letter had been slotted between the cans before they had taken a tumble. She imagined the cans balancing precariously on the edge of the shelf until — one day, today — the rumble of a passing lorry had been enough to send them falling.
She picked the letter up.
It was addressed to her:
Ms Elena Kardos
She saw it had come via her old address. She had had a postal redirect service set up so she would get her post here, at her mother’s house.
She scanned the postmark.
That was strange.
It was dated from two months ago.
Even allowing for the redirect that was a long delay. And then there was the question of just what the letter was doing in the pantry … not on the doormat, where letters traditionally entered the household …
With a dozen questions on her mind, Elena picked her way out of the pantry and back into the kitchen. Mum?
Elena said. What’s this?
Hmm?
her mother said, turning away from the stove.
Her eyes fell upon the envelope.
A look of concern crossed her face. She met Elena’s gaze.
Elena turned her attention back to the letter. Her hands were trembling as she turned it over in her hands. She saw a familiar crest stamped onto the back. She recognised the cursive writing immediately:
Saint Camelgal High School.
Her old school.
She slipped her fingernail beneath the flap and gently tore it open.
She slipped out and unfolded the letter within.
She scanned the first paragraph, the greeting, the well-wishing, shifted to the next few sentences. It was an invitation.
An invitation to a school reunion.
She retraced the words she’d already read through, absorbing them properly for the first time:
A twentieth anniversary.
It struck Elena in the chest, almost like a physical blow.
Had it really been twenty years?
She was thirty-six now … so, well, it made sense.
At least on a logical level.
But why would logic ever be concerned with memory?
She glanced up from the letter, realising her mother was still watching her with extreme expectation. A flash of rage passed through Elena’s veins. Why did you hide this?
she asked, spontaneously breaking into Hungarian.
Her mother, apparently equally taken back by Elena’s Hungarian as the letter she had discovered, retreated a few steps from the large pot. Her arms fell to her sides, the ladle she still held steaming and dripping onto the floor.
Mum?
Elena said, taking a step toward her. Tell me the truth.
Her mother didn’t back away any further. She stood her ground.
And she met Elena’s eyes.
But said nothing more.
Elena looked to the letter again. There was a slip she was supposed to fill out and return … RSVP. Eyes fixed once more on the page, she addressed her mother.
In English this time.
Her voice croaked as she spoke.
Why?
Her mother still didn’t reply.
Was she concerned Elena might become violent?
That she might lose her head?
There was no basis for her mother to believe so. It was a rare occasion when Elena would raise her voice and she had never — in all her life — physically assaulted anyone.
Which was more than George’s father could say …
She held herself still, feeling the anger continuing to drip through her. At the same time, however, a sense of perspective slowly began to dawn. It was obvious. Her mother didn’t need to say anything. She had only wanted to protect her.
Just as Elena protected George.
It was only natural.
Elena calmed herself, continuing to hold the letter.
Finally, her mother spoke. This time in English.
It is not too late,
she said.
Elena absentmindedly examined the letter again.
The reunion would take place tomorrow.
Her mother was correct, of course. She did still have time.
But why would Elena ever want to go?
Her mother had done her a favour in keeping the letter from her.
And then a thought struck.
The reason — the reason why … the reason why Henry Foldes was here.
Why he had come home.
A bolt up her back straightened her spine.
… Fuck.
She needed to warn them.
She needed to warn them all.
Henry
11.50 am, Saturday
Harry Foldes would’ve been the first to admit that his family mansion, The Crosses, was an overwhelming sight. Especially for anyone seeing it for the first time.
Indeed, even now, trundling his way up the sharply slanted gravel driveway, all the car windows rolled down, letting in the unseasonably warm autumnal seaside air, he felt skitters passing through his gut.
An almost paralysing squeeze over his abdomen.
He never enjoyed coming home.
Even at thirty-six he couldn’t get over it.
Couldn’t rationalise it.
Home
, as far as he could push that particular loaded term, was Goonherth Bay:
Good Old Goonie.
One of those hundreds of backwater places hidden away in the south-western reaches of the British Isles. Hours of driving from anywhere of import.
For Harry that meant London:
His City lifestyle.
His Islington penthouse.
His uncomplicated bachelordom.
He had grown so used to waking up with the sun rising on the