The Good Neighbor Read online




  The Good Neighbor

  R. J. Parker

  One More Chapter

  a division of HarperCollinsPublishers Ltd

  1 London Bridge Street

  London SE1 9GF

  www.harpercollins.co.uk

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  First published in Great Britain by HarperCollinsPublishers 2021

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  Copyright © R. J. Parker 2021

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  Cover design by Lucy Bennett © HarperCollinsPublishers Ltd 2021

  Cover images © Shutterstock.com

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  R. J. Parker asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work

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  A catalogue record of this book is available from the British Library

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  This novel is entirely a work of fiction. The names, characters and incidents portrayed in it are the work of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or localities is entirely coincidental.

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  All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins.

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  Source ISBN: 9780008447960

  Ebook Edition © March 2021 ISBN: 9780008467753

  Version: 2020-12-16

  Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Chapter 45

  Chapter 46

  Chapter 47

  Chapter 48

  Chapter 49

  Chapter 50

  Chapter 51

  Chapter 52

  Chapter 53

  Chapter 54

  Chapter 55

  Chapter 56

  Chapter 57

  Chapter 58

  Chapter 59

  Chapter 60

  Chapter 61

  Chapter 62

  Chapter 63

  Chapter 64

  Chapter 65

  Chapter 66

  Acknowledgments

  Thank you for reading…

  You will also love…

  About the Author

  Also by R. J. Parker

  One More Chapter...

  About the Publisher

  To Norma and Kayleigh Farrelly – the best neighbours anyone could wish for.

  Chapter One

  Leah knew exactly where the speed camera was. Even though it was dark, she’d driven home down the country road so many times she was familiar with its gradual curve but never got complacent. She could trust herself but not other drivers. There were no streetlights along Plough Lane but she knew at which overhanging branch to start her slow-down.

  There it was – the length of fir illuminated and dipping to the road just after the gated entrance to the old pig farm. She eased the pressure on the accelerator of her mint Fiat 500 and focused on the bend ahead. Traffic came bombing around there, even at this time of night, so she watched for headlights on the curved wall.

  Nothing. Looked like it was just her on the road. She passed the beamed cottage where there was one light on upstairs. She’d soon be home and tucked up in bed. Leah wondered if Elliot would be there yet. She glanced at the clock on the dash. At 11.45 she doubted it. He always tried to stay out later than her now. Like it was a competition. As if he was daring Leah to ask him where he’d been.

  She knew she’d passed the camera on her left now but didn’t pick up speed. Gave it a little longer to make sure. She eventually put her foot on the pedal for a few moments to get her to the bend then took it off as she reached it.

  She wouldn’t wait up for him, even though she wouldn’t sleep until she heard his key in the lock. If he looked in on her she’d close her eyes. Pretend she was asleep. But he probably wouldn’t open her door and would go right along the landing to his room as noisily as possible. Leah tried to recall how long ago it had been since she’d waited for him to get undressed before she entered his room. They’d had sex, that’s all it had been, fulfilling a need before she’d counted the minutes and left him in his single bed. He hadn’t asked her to stay.

  She had turned thirty in the summer and didn’t know how much longer she was going to allow herself to hang on for something that might already be over. Elliot wasn’t in denial of that but Leah felt an almost physical blow to her stomach when she imagined saying goodbye to him. And it wasn’t just because she was afraid of leaving the security of the life and home they’d created together. After eight years, she still loved him but how much longer could she when he’d become so distant?

  Leah went rigid as the curved wall in front of her was suddenly lit up. A motorcyclist shot around the bend quickly after and her fingers tightened on the steering wheel. The bike was in the middle of the road, its rider probably assuming it would be deserted.

  She decelerated, tried to anticipate his reaction. He was still coming straight at her. Leah steered sharply left and hoped the motorcyclist didn’t do the same.

  He cut to her right, but Leah had almost reached him. She was going to catch his back wheel. Leah’s headlights revealed his battered red biker’s jacket and glinted off the visor of his black helmet.

  She clenched herself in readiness for the impact and heard an incoherent exclamation from herself and an aggressive one from him as he swung his bike away from her and buzzed close by her window.

  Leah waited for the scrape of metal but miraculously he passed her without contact. She kept her attention locked on the road ahead. She was about to hit the bend and tugged the wheel hard so she wouldn’t collide with the wall.

  If the car had been travelling any faster she would have hit it but she slowed right down as she reached it and came to a standstill a few feet from the bricks and wondered if there were any other vehicles coming the other way. No sign of any.

  Leah glanced in her mirror. The bike had righted itself and was speeding in the opposite direction. The motorcyclist wasn’t hanging about to find out if she was OK. If he carried on riding like that, he’d be a statistic before long.

  Leah’s heart felt like it was bouncing around her chest. It was just her on the bend, engine puttering. She checked her mirror again and watched the red light of the bike vanish into darkness. It was a still night, ligh
t drizzle suspended in the headlights as if it were holding its breath. Leah could hear the buzz of the motor but was sure he wasn’t coming back.

  She breathed out, dropped her shoulders a little, accelerated forward and picked up speed as she got on the straight road that took her to the traffic lights. Leah briefly closed her eyes.

  She was barely doing forty but when she opened them again there was no time to avoid the shape that darted in front of her. Two eyes glinted silver as the car harshly struck flesh and bone.

  Chapter Two

  Leah gasped as her seat belt cut into her and, momentarily, the impact made her lose hold of the wheel. It felt like the car was spinning and as she clamped both hands back onto the rubber grip, she could see only darkness ahead. Was she about to crash into the wall? Her foot was jammed on the brake, but she was still moving.

  A row of bushes swung into view and Leah’s body jerked sideways as the Fiat abruptly halted. She cried out as her neck snapped still.

  After a few seconds she opened her eyes and her first thought was other traffic. She quickly took in her position on the road. She was half off it, the front part of her vehicle in the briers. She turned and saw the bulk of the animal she’d collided with on the right-hand side. It was a deer. She’d seen it for a split second before the car had struck it, eyes lit up by the headlights and antlers illuminated before she’d hit it full on. Leah could see them now, partially sticking up from the road like a gnarled tree growing out of its body.

  Her head swivelled back the other way and the pain of doing so made her suck in air. No oncoming vehicles but that might not be the case for long. The engine was still running although the sound seemed muted. Leah tried to accelerate forward so the back of her car wasn’t in the road. She rolled about a foot, but a dry rubbing sound emerged from the front of the Fiat before it stopped.

  Even when she put the pedal almost to the floor, Leah couldn’t accelerate or reverse. She quickly undid her seat belt and as its pressure was released, she experienced a shooting pain in her abdomen. She breathed in and out a few times and it didn’t seem to get any worse. She had to move the car. If someone came tearing down the road, they might not see the rear of hers in time.

  She opened the door and got out, staggering sideways on the uneven marshy grass at the side of the road. The mud squelched as her boots sank. It was freezing cold and the smell of soil was in her nostrils. Her soles squeaked on the wet blades as she negotiated the open driver’s door and moved around the front of the mint-green car to examine the damage.

  She slid in the muck and supported herself on the front of the car, but the metallic surface was slick, and she knew what the warmth on her fingers was. Her headlights lit up the dark red covering the palm of her hand, but she fought repulsion and the instinct to wipe it on the grass. The car had to be shifted quickly but as she leaned down to examine the left wheel, she could see the arch was crushed against the tyre.

  Leah tried to prise the green metal away from the rubber. It wouldn’t give and she grunted with the exertion as the edge of the arch cut into her fingers and almost drew some of her own blood.

  She went quickly to the rear of the car and opened the door. The kit for changing the tyre was there and she took out the wheel wrench and trod gingerly back to the front. After three attempts she managed to lever the crushed arch off the wheel, but she still wasn’t sure if it was enough to allow it to turn.

  Leah dropped into the driver’s seat and put her foot on the accelerator. The car went forward half a foot but stopped again. Was the tyre still jammed or was it just slipping in the mud? The back of the car was still on the road. ‘Come on!’ She put the pedal right to the floor. ‘Move!’

  The Fiat suddenly shot forward and before she could lift her foot the front of the vehicle tipped forward. Leah slammed against the steering wheel as the car struck something solid.

  She’d slid the Fiat down a shallow bank and now the front of the car was resting in the shallow stream of a ditch. She switched off the engine and suddenly it was pitch black. Nothing but the low mutter of the water. As her eyes became accustomed to the weak moonlight, she reached for her handbag that she’d left on the passenger seat. No sign. She scrabbled her hand about in the footwell and was relieved to find it there. Quickly clambering out of the car she shut the door and stumbled back.

  The car was definitely off the road now but as she took out her phone, she confirmed what she already knew. The battery was flat. The screen didn’t even light up. She’d tried to charge it on the train, but the plug point had had chewing gum stuffed in it. She slid it back into her bag and ascended the slope to the roadside.

  As she emerged from the bushes the thorny branches clung to her black woollen sweater. She extricated herself and looked up and down the road. Still no other cars in either direction. Her attention shifted to the dark shape about thirty feet away from her on the other side of the road. Her breath caught. In the darkness she could make out a small silver cloud rising from it. The deer was still alive.

  Walking through the mist of her uneven panting, Leah crossed over and tentatively followed the wall to where the animal lay. This was dangerous. There was no walkway, just the edge of the road and no time to cross if a car shot around the bend. But she couldn’t leave the deer if it was still alive. It would get hit again. And the next car might have an even more serious accident.

  She picked up her pace. Shivered against the cold. She’d left her jacket in the car but didn’t consider going back to get it. Her stomach trembled and ached, but her attention was fixed on the prostrate shape and the sporadic vapour emerging from it into the night air.

  She was about twelve feet away from it when it stopped. She did as well. Waited. And hated herself for hoping that no more emerged.

  Leah held her breath.

  No more came.

  She released hers. But she had to move the animal. Couldn’t leave it there. As she got closer, she could see that the antler sticking up had been snapped and one half of it was hanging down. She squinted into the gloom. It was pointless trying to use the torch on her phone.

  As she reached the deer, she listened for any sound of it breathing but there was nothing. She could smell it now though. A musty aroma with a sour and pungent edge. Through the gloom she could see its head was at an unnatural angle to its body. And another section of its antlers lay in the road behind it.

  The bulk of its body and its rear quarters were against the wall. If she could just move the head off the road, she could be sure it wouldn’t cause any cars to swerve. And she could alert the police of its presence there as soon as she got hold of a phone.

  She trotted by the animal and picked up the piece of antler that was lying there. She held it for a few moments. It felt heavy and smooth. Leah threw it over the wall and felt a pang of guilt. But she had to make sure it wasn’t a hazard to other motorists.

  She returned to the front of the animal, exhaled and then bent down and put her hand on the thick fur of its forehead. It was still warm, and she held it for a moment, waiting to feel any reaction to her touch. The deer didn’t twitch. Leah tensed her stomach and slid the head so it was in line with the rest of the body against the wall. She used the broken antlers to quickly push it into position there.

  Leah stood, blood pounding in her ears. She had to inhale and when she did, took in its aroma again. She felt sick but fought the nausea and turned back towards the car. She wasn’t about to get it out of the ditch, so it looked like she’d have to walk all the way along Plough Lane until she reached the traffic lights at the edge of her village. A cold wind gusted towards Leah as if warning her against taking the route.

  But as the current agitated the trees, she caught the twinkle of a light up ahead and to the right. She knew what it was. There was a house there. She’d never glimpsed the building because it was hidden behind high wooden gates at the front but there was a spherical light outside that lit them up at night.

  Leah started to walk
swiftly in its direction and wondered if there was anybody home.

  Chapter Three

  Leah strode towards the light. She was still very exposed on the road and wanted to get off it as soon as possible. The aroma of the deer was still potent in her nostrils, and her neck and abdomen ached. She knew she was probably in shock but, until she spoke to Elliot, nobody knew where she was.

  Just over a minute later she could see the yellow spherical light on a metal pole. Its glass had a faint green tinge from the overhanging trees, but it sufficiently illuminated the tall wooden gates behind it. Maybe they’d be shut tight. They looked to be the sort that had electric locks.