Control give us
two flat numbers. Apparently the caller is a third party in another city who doesn’t
remember whether it’s 230 or 232. It’s after midnight. We feel bad ringing two
numbers when we know one of them is wrong. But as it turns out, neither gets a
response. Just as I pull out my radio to report back to Control, someone calls
out to us from across the street.
‘Do you need to
get in?’ says a guy, striding over. ‘You look like paramedics to me. And if
you’re not, that’s a helluva lot of trouble you’ve gone to with the kit and the
ambulance and everything, so fair play to you.’
He opens the door
and then hurries on ahead, staggering slightly.
Up to the tenth
floor, and the lift slides open to reveal a long, empty corridor, discretely
lit by LED spots, humming with newness.
I knock on 230.
After a pause,
someone speaks from behind the door.
Who is it?
‘Ambulance
service.’
A pause – just exactly
the amount of time it takes to press an eye against a spyhole – and then the cautious
turning of a key.
A young Korean
guy stands blinking in the doorway.
‘Can I help you?’
‘We had a call to
this flat. A twenty-year-old female. Would that be here?’
‘No. No, no. It’s
jut me. I think you have wrong number. I got go work tomorrow quite early, so I
er.. so gu-bye.’ He shuts the door. Locks it.
We walk further down
the corridor, to number 232. This time Rae knocks.
Sounds of someone
coming to the door – a pause – and then a young woman standing there.
‘Yes?’ she says.
‘Hello. Sorry to
trouble you. We had a call to a twenty-year old female at this address. Would
that be you?’
‘No. Why? What’s
happened?’
‘We can’t really
say any more than that. But we had a call from a friend of hers who said she
needed medical attention. He couldn’t remember exactly which flat number. We
tried the other one and that definitely wasn’t it. So that leaves yours. But
you say you don’t know what this is about?’
‘It’s not me,’
she says. ‘It might be my flat mate, but she’s out.’
‘Can I ask what
your flatmate’s name is?’
‘Am I obliged to
give it?’
‘Not to us, I don’t
think. But it’d really help us out. And if you don’t, we’ll have to report it
to the police, and then they’ll probably come round, and so it goes on.’
‘Okay. Her name’s
Sandra Highsmith.’
‘Yep. That’s the
name we’ve got. And she’s not here, you say?’
‘No. She went out
some time ago.’
‘Any idea where?’
‘No. She didn’t
say.’
‘Fine. Can I just
take your name so we can report back to Control and let them know.’
‘Yes. It’s Jayne –
with a Y – McDonald, with a small c, big d.’
‘Great. Well –
thanks for your help, and sorry to have disturbed you.’
‘You’re welcome.’
She doesn’t close
the door immediately, but stands watching as make our way back down the
corridor to the lift.
Back outside in
the truck, we wait for Control to get back to us with further instructions, or
a stand down.
Nothing happens
for some time.
The road ahead is
utterly deserted. It’s as if when they designed this new quarter they spent so much
on glass and chrome and ornamental granite features they had nothing left for people.
The radio buzzes.
‘The caller says
she’s definitely there. Are you sure that wasn’t her you were talking to?’
‘Do you want us
to go back and ask for ID?’
‘If you don’t
mind...’
We get out of the
cab again.
The girl in flat
232 doesn’t answer the intercom, so we have the same problem getting in. But
luckily a young couple turn up. They don’t say a word as we tailgate them inside.
We ride up to the
tenth floor.
As we walk back
along the corridor I imagine the Korean guy pressing his eye to the security
lens and wondering if he does, what he’ll make of it all.
Outside flat 232.
This time the
woman comes to the door more quickly.
‘Yes?’ she says.
Rae comes
straight out with it.
‘Are you Sandra Highsmith?’
The woman holds on to
the door for a moment, flicking her eyes from Rae to me and then back again.
Finally she says: Yes, relaxes her
grip, and quietly leads us inside.
7 comments:
So, Jayne-Sandra, what's in store for her now?
A trip up the hospital to treat the OD... :/
Whenever you mention Control,I always think of George Smiley.There was a touch of the le Carre's about that trip Spence.
Why on earth did she lie? That's bizarre.
Jack - I know what you mean. Funnily enough, Control is located in an anonymous office block...
BT - I'm not sure. Because when she told her friend on the phone about the OD, she must have realised they'd call 999. But I suppose in that situation you might not behave entirely rationally.
My name's Petrolhead. Big p small h!
Yes...well...er hem... I'll have to see some ID
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