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  Praise for The Wicked Girls:

  ‘Genuinely disturbing and emotionally unsettling, The Wicked Girls is irresistible’ Val McDermid

  ‘The Wicked Girls is utterly compelling. It’s psychologically rich, complex and masterfully plotted. I couldn’t put it down, even when I sensed it was taking me somewhere very dark indeed. I can’t wait to see what Alex Marwood comes up with next’ Jojo Moyes

  ‘Dark, twisty and full of good surprises and insights. Marwood has delivered a compelling debut crime novel’ Daily Mail

  ‘This incredible story will play on your mind. Two weeks after I read it, I can’t stop thinking about it. The book of the year’ Sun

  ‘Having read it and devoured every page, I really wish I’d written it! It was cleverly plotted and pacy, with all the storylines thundering towards a final, gripping conclusion. I loved it’ Elizabeth Haynes

  ‘I devoured The Wicked Girls over one weekend and loved it. I held my breath during the last few chapters’ Erin Kelly

  ‘Taut, gritty and utterly compelling’ Lisa Jewell

  ‘Brilliantly taut psychological thriller. One of the best debuts of 2012’ Bella

  ‘If you like dark, twisted stories, I recommend this… A thumping good read’ Jenny Eclair

  Alex Marwood is the pseudonym of a journalist who has worked extensively across the British press. Alex lives in South London.

  Also by Alex Marwood

  The Wicked Girls

  COPYRIGHT

  Published by Sphere

  978-1-4055-2120-8

  All characters and events in this publication, other than those clearly in the public domain, are fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

  Copyright © Alex Marwood 2013

  The moral right of the author has been asserted.

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the prior permission in writing of the publisher.

  The publisher is not responsible for websites (or their content) that are not owned by the publisher.

  SPHERE

  Little, Brown Book Group

  100 Victoria Embankment

  London, EC4Y 0DY

  www.littlebrown.co.uk

  www.hachette.co.uk

  The Killer Next Door

  Table of Contents

  Praise for The Wicked Girls:

  About the Author

  Also by Alex Marwood

  COPYRIGHT

  Dedication

  Acknowledgements

  Epigraph

  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

  Epilogue

  Postscript

  For Cathy Fleming

  A wonderful sister and a brilliant friend

  Acknowledgements

  All writers have many, many people to thank by the time a book finally reaches the world. I’m always terrified that, in the rush to thank, I will forget someone crucial. If this is so, please forgive me.

  Laetitia Rutherford and her colleagues at Mulcahy Associates for their inspiring, supportive and generally above-and-beyond agenting. I feel immensely lucky to have stumbled into their offices.

  The hugely talented team at Sphere: particularly Catherine Burke, my editor, Thalia Proctor, Kirsteen Astor and Emma Williams. It’s such a pleasure to work with such professional, imaginative and thorough people.

  Hannah Wood, whose cover designs make me almost dizzy with joy.

  Dad and Patricia, Mum and Bunny, Will, Cathy, Ali and David. And Elinor and Tora and Archie and Geordie, who make me very happy about the future of the world.

  The Board, for over a decade of support, friendship and back-room cackling.

  Those enabling bitches, the FLs, who not only make me laugh daily but are usually awake when the Brits are asleep, which is damn useful for an insomniac. Prostitution whores, the lot of you.

  Off the top of my head: John Lyttle, Chris Manby, Charlie Standing, Brian Donaghey, Helen Smith, Lauren Henderson, Jane Meakin, Angela Collings, Dawn Hamblett, Claire Gervat, Bottomley, Paul Burston, Antonia Willis, India Knight, James O’Brien, Lucy McDonald, Diana Pepper, Merri Cheyne, Stella Duffy, Shelley Silas, Jenny Colgan, Lisa Jewell, Jojo Moyes… oh, Lord, if I haven’t mentioned you here it doesn’t mean I don’t love and value you.

  All the brilliant people who lurk on Facebook and Twitter, who make every day a party. Without your help I’d have written at least one more book by now.

  And finally, my Sweet Felice, who protected me for many years and whose last book this was, and Bad Baloo, whose first book it is. If it’s good enough for Sam Johnson, it’s good enough for me.

  As is your mind

  So is your sort of search; you’ll find

  What you desire

  ROBERT BROWNING

  Prologue

  He checks his watch and downs the last of his coffee. ‘Okay. Miss Cheryl should be done with her fag break. Let’s take you down to her.’

  She follows him down to the interview rooms and he surreptitiously checks his reflection in the wired glass of a door as he passes it. DI Cheyne’s a bit older than he usually goes for, but she’s a good-looking woman. Slightly hard-faced, but a life in the Met doesn’t make for a lot of childlike innocence. Doesn’t hurt to keep your options open, anyway. Women who understand your unorthodox working hours are few and far between; attractive ones even fewer.

  ‘You should probably know,’ he tells her, ‘she’s pretty tired and upset, and we’ve still got a lot to get through, so if you could keep it shortish, that would be good.’

  ‘Sure,’ she says. ‘I don’t suppose it’ll take that long, anyway. How is she? Cooperative?’

  ‘Pissed off,’ he says. ‘In the custody of social services, so you can’t blame her. She’s a bit sulky. And she’s not the sharpest tool in the shop. No point asking her to read anything, for a start.’

  ‘That’s okay. Think she can look at a photo?’

  ‘Oh. I should think so. We’ll give it a go, anyway.’

  Cheryl Farrell is ba
ck in the interview room after her cigarette break, right elbow on the table and tear-streaked face resting wearily on her bandaged hand. She’s pale and, DI Cheyne guesses from the dampness of her forehead, still in some degree of pain. The orthopaedic pink of the shoulder brace that holds her collarbone in place does nothing for her complexion. Could be pretty, thinks DI Cheyne, if it wasn’t for the generally sulky demeanour. Golden-brown skin, curly African hair that she’s bleached until it’s a coppery shade of bronze, over-plucked eyebrows, almond-shaped brown eyes that she rolls at the newcomer.

  The lawyer looks as if he hasn’t shifted from his seat in a decade. He’s scribbling furiously. The social worker sits, sensible hair and sensible shoes and an air of New Labour sanctimony pouring off her, in the chair next to the girl. ‘All done!’ she says brightly. ‘She’s had her cancer stick.’

  ‘Oh, fuck off, you.’ The girl gives her a look that would melt ice.

  Merri Cheyne is longing for a smoke herself. Those nicotine tabs give her terrible indigestion. She ignores the social worker – best thing to do in most circumstances if you can manage it, she’s found – and takes a seat on the other side of the table, next to Chris Burke. Cheryl turns back to DC Barnard and looks at him sullenly.

  ‘So what were you on about?’ Her strong Scouse accent is surprising in one who’s been in the south so long.

  ‘The television,’ says DC Barnard.

  ‘Oh, yeah.’

  There’s a silence. The girl looks like she would be slumping, if the brace would let her. Truly, thinks DI Cheyne, not the sharpest tool in the shop. He did warn me.

  DC Barnard clears his throat. ‘So tell us about the television, Cheryl? How did it come to be in your possession?’

  ‘You what?’

  ‘How did you get it, Cheryl? Where did it come from?’

  ‘Oh.’ The girl sniffs heavily and wipes her nose with the back of her hand. ‘He said it was spare,’ she says. ‘Said he’d bought a new one and did I want it?’

  ‘And you didn’t wonder why he was offering you televisions?’

  ‘I knew exactly why he was offering it,’ she says, with a glare of defiance.

  ‘And you accepted it?’

  ‘If you’re asking if I shagged him to get a second-hand telly, no I didn’t. But there’s no law against letting a fella give you a present because he thinks it might get you to, is there?’

  ‘Fair point.’

  ‘Anyway, I needed a telly. D’you know how bloody boring it is if you’ve got no money and no telly? I wasn’t going to give him a…’ she sneaks a look at the social worker to see if she’s going to get a rise, ‘… blow job, but I wasn’t going to tell him to fuck off either, was I?’

  ‘Well, I can see that there might have been some chance that things could get a bit unpleasant when he realised —’

  ‘Whatever,’ Cheryl interrupts. Most of your lot —’ she narrows her eyes at her minder again ‘— think they can get a feel for a bag of crisps and a Fanta. At least I wanted a telly.’

  The social worker stiffens beside her, offended. Amazing, thinks DI Cheyne. Even after a deluge of scandals, they’re still blanking suggestions that their own might not be perfect.

  ‘And when was this…?’

  ‘Don’t know. Two, three weeks? Ages before the weather broke. It was still boiling bloody hot and he kept looking at my tits cause I was wearing a vest. I just thought he was another dirty old bloke. C’mon. Nobody else thought he was up to anything, either. D’you think I’d’ve stayed in that house, if I did?’

  ‘So you don’t think any of your neighbours had any suspicions, either?’

  ‘No! I’ve told you! Place smelled like shit, but it’s not exactly the first time I’ve been somewhere that smelled like shit. Anyway, they all had their own stuff to worry about, I should think. We hardly talked to each other, until it happened. It wasn’t a flatshare or anything. We weren’t friends.’

  DI Burke opens the cardboard folder that DI Cheyne gave him earlier. On the top, an A4 photo of a woman: short, caramel-streaked blonde hair, low-cut white minidress, white slingbacks, white handbag, Versace jacket, oversized sunglasses perched on the top of her head. As unmistakeably Essex as Stansted crotch crystals. She’s looking away from the camera, holding a half-drunk glass of champagne. It looks like a picture taken at a public event of some sort, the races, perhaps. He studies it for a few seconds. Wonders if this will be the picture the papers go with. Clears his throat pointedly, and DC Barnard stops and turns.

  ‘Sorry, Bob,’ he says. ‘Cheryl, this is DI Cheyne. She’s from Scotland Yard.’

  The same bovine unresponsiveness. Cheryl pouts and rolls her eyes again.

  ‘The Metropolitan Police Headquarters?’

  ‘Organised Crime Squad,’ interjects DI Cheyne. ‘You can call me Merri, if you like.’

  Usually, announcing this will produce some signs of interest, but the girl just gives a don’t-care shrug of her good shoulder.

  ‘DI Cheyne’s not working on this case,’ he says, ‘but we think there might be a connection with something else she’s working on.’

  ‘Right,’ says Cheryl, suspiciously.

  DI Cheyne smiles at him and takes the folder. Lays it on the table in front of the girl. ‘Cheryl,’ she asks, ‘does the name Lisa Dunne mean anything to you?’

  Cheryl shakes her head, her face a mask. Cheyne opens the folder and slides the picture across the table so she can see it. ‘Well, can I ask you, Cheryl? Do you recognise this woman?’

  The girl slides the photo towards her, mouth turned down. Looks up, her spidery eyebrows arched. ‘That’s Collette!’ she says. ‘I thought you said Lisa something.’

  DI Cheyne and DI Burke exchange a look. Damn, it says. It really was her, then. ‘Collette?’

  ‘She lived in number two. Didn’t look like this when she was there, but it’s her. Where did you get this?’

  ‘Collette?’

  ‘Collette. She moved in in, ooh, early June. After Nikki went…’ she suddenly looks sick again, and her eyes fill with tears, ‘… went missing.’

  ‘And have you seen her lately?’

  ‘No.’

  ‘What sort of no? Can you be a bit more specific?’

  The girl looks blank. DI Cheyne simplifies. ‘Can you remember when you last saw her?’

  ‘Not for a few days,’ says Cheryl. ‘But I didn’t really think about it. She was never going to be here long, though. I think she only took the flat for a bit, while she did some… business or something. Something to do with her mum. I don’t know, really. She wasn’t friendly, exactly. Sort of person who wouldn’t recognise you if you passed her in the street, if you see what I mean. We said hello on the stairs a few times, that sort of thing. Why?’

  Chris Burke puts his prepare-yourself face on. ‘Cheryl, I’m afraid that there were some body parts in the flat that didn’t match up with the known victims. The ones in the flat, I mean. There was more in the surrounding area. Down on the railway embankment. In the old bonfire at the end of the garden.’

  Cheryl looks as if she’s been socked in the face. Grips the table as though she’s about to faint.

  ‘Are you okay, Cheryl?’ asks the social worker. ‘We can take another break, if you need.’

  ‘Are you saying there were more?’

  ‘Um… We’ve not established it as fact. But yes. Things are pointing that way, I’m afraid.’

  ‘Oh, God,’ she says.

  ‘And there were… among the remains… you know he was keeping stuff in the freezer compartment of his fridge, right? Well, there were a couple of fingers in there. So we took prints, and ran them, and, well, they matched up with this woman. Lisa Dunne. She’s been missing for a while. Three years, as a matter of fact. We’ve been looking for her.’

  ‘Why? What’s she done?’

  ‘Doesn’t matter, now. She was a witness to something – you don’t need to know the details. But… well, we just need to confirm if this is
her.’

  ‘Oh, God,’ she says again. She’s visibly shaken, her brown skin gone grey and her eyes as big as soup plates. ‘Oh, no. He can’t have. She was in Nikki’s room. It’s like he was…’

  The police wait while the news sinks in. Well, thinks DI Cheyne. That’s one avenue shut off, and we were days off tracking her down. All that work, and Tony Stott’s still scot-free.

  ‘I’m sorry,’ she says. ‘I know it’s a shock. But we need you to tell us what you remember about her.’

  ‘What do you want to know? Oh, God. I can’t take this in.’

  ‘I’m sure,’ says DI Cheyne gently. ‘It must be a terrible shock. But we need you to concentrate, Cheryl. For Lisa’s sake.’

  Cher Farrell swipes an arm across her eyes and clears her nose. Glares at the police, the lawyer, the social worker. ‘Collette,’ she insists. ‘Her name was Collette.’