Gemma Makes Her Mark Read online




  Dr Ian Marsh has been a university lecturer for many years and has taught, researched and written widely on crime and criminal justice. He is the author of numerous academic books on crime and justice and this is his second fictional book – following on from Murderer: On Your Mark, published by Austin Macauley in December 2015.

  'Ian Marsh has used his experience to create a worthy academic crime novel, featuring a narrator who definitely doesn't put his students first. Murderer on Your Mark is a wicked poison pill of a debut.' Paul Johnston, CWA Dagger Winner

  Ian Marsh

  Gemma Makes Her Mark

  Copyright © Ian Marsh (2017)

  The right of Ian Marsh to be identified as author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with section 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

  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, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publishers.

  Any person who commits any unauthorised act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages.

  A CIP catalogue record for this title is available from the British Library.

  This is a fictional story and therefore any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or particular institutions or actual events is purely coincidental.

  ISBN 9781787105768 (Paperback)

  ISBN 9781787105775 (E-Book)

  www.austinmacauley.com

  First Published (2017)

  Austin Macauley Publishers™ Ltd.

  25 Canada Square

  Canary Wharf

  London

  E14 5LQ

  Acknowledgements

  In trying to capture the feel and detail of the period and places that this story is set in, I am indebted to many people who invariably have answered my calls with such willingness and patience. I would like to thank, in particular, Lena Simic and her Aunt, Branka Franicevic, for sharing with me their knowledge of the people and history of Dubrovnik.

  As ever, the team at Austin Macauley, and particularly Walter Stephenson and Vinh Tran, have helped enormously in turning my script into a finished product.

  Finally and most importantly, thanks to Gaynor for her continued support and flow of ideas.

  Part One: Friday 24 July – SATURDAY 25 JULY 1981

  Mark was starting to get a barbecue going in the back garden of the end terrace cottage he and Gemma had bought a few months previously. She’d be back from a court visit shortly – having tried, no doubt, to make the case for a probation order rather than a prison sentence on behalf of one of her hapless regulars – and he’d promised her they’d make the most of the still light, mid-July summer evenings. Having tried paper and twigs, he was already onto the firelighters but with little luck so far. He pondered that perhaps it represented something of an allegory for his recent life – it had been difficult to get things started since his release on parole the previous winter, after just over six years in prison.

  They had decided on Petworth as a suitable place to start their life together, between Littlehampton, home to the probation office that Gemma was based at, and Farnham, where her mother rattled around in the large mock Tudor house she’d been left with after Gemma’s father died. Mark had used some of the money he had saved from the wreckage of his marriage to Fiona, and which he’d had no need or chance to use while in prison, for the deposit and Gemma had arranged a small mortgage – £25,000 wasn’t a bad price and it was a lovely area and a nice place to live. However in spite of that, and even after just a few months, Mark couldn’t throw off a general and growing feeling of dissatisfaction, or maybe more accurately of boredom, with his situation.

  The market town of Petworth itself was picture-postcard quaint: cobbled streets around the centre, and home to a growing number of antique shops, reflecting its rapidly developing reputation as a centre for the trade. The imposing Petworth House was the major – really, only – tourist attraction; it dominated the town but Mark knew little of its history, apart from the fact that prior to being handed over to the National Trust shortly after the Second World War it had belonged to various aristocratic families. He was more familiar with the little stone cross in the local cemetery commemorating the 32 boys and masters who’d been killed when Petworth Boys Schools was hit, supposedly mistakenly, by German bombs in 1942. Apparently the bombs had been aimed at Petworth House itself, which presumably and according to local gossip was being used at the time for military purposes of some sort.

  Things hadn’t happened for Mark as he’d envisioned when he was counting time and making plans at Ford Open Prison, just down the road from Littlehampton. Completing his sentence there explained his contact with the probation office in Littlehampton and with Gemma in particular. He had tried his hand at this and that, but nothing had taken off. Most recently, and trying to benefit from the growing antique market, he had been buying and selling bits and pieces of antique furniture. He’d immersed himself in recent copies of the renowned Miller’s Guides to Antiques and Collectables and idled away a good few hours, merging into days, following up local ads and pottering around at auction viewings and sales. He fancied he had become something of an amateur expert and had even managed to sell a couple of nursing chairs and a Victorian rosewood wheel barometer at a recent furniture sale, but really that had only just covered the commission he ended up being charged. Nonetheless it had been reasonably pleasant inveigling his way into the local antique scene, and the chance of making a real find and potential profit added some interest and even excitement to the whole endeavour. At the same time as dabbling in the trade he’d made a few acquaintances at sales run by Weller’s, who had recently expanded from running just agricultural and livestock auctions. Their morning sales invariably led to a few of the regular buyers and dealers heading for a liquid lunch at the Angel Inn in the centre of town. Mark was a good deal younger than them, most of whom looked well past fifty; he hadn’t changed his style of dress from pre-prison days and liked to think his Wrangler shirt, Levi’s, brown leather jacket and cowboy-style boots set him apart from the Barbour jackets and check shirts favoured by the professional antique dealers. To be fair, though, they were a relatively interesting bunch and Mark had enjoyed these almost weekly events, even if the tales of bargains and profits became more and more incredible as the afternoons wore on. The thing was, it just wasn’t enough or what he wanted; he knew it was basically a distraction, one which Gemma was becoming increasingly irritated by. Even though Gemma had been understanding up to a point about the difficulties he would inevitably face after a lengthy spell in prison, her snide comments and digs about her bringing in all the money had become gradually more frequent. It was a little unfair; after all, the problems faced by ex-cons was something she was more than familiar with, given her own job. He’d kept on top of the domestic jobs, the shopping and cooking and cleaning, but she always managed to point out something that hadn’t been done in the appropriate time or manner.

  ***

  Mark was only thirty-three: just over ten years ago his life had seemed to be mapped out, and in retrospect in a far from unpleasant manner. He’d got a lecturing position in the Sociology Department at Sussex University after completing his Masters’ degree at Kent and within a year or so was beginning to be seen as something of a rising star in the discipline. He’d published a few papers in respected, subject-specialist journals and even been paid a reasonable publisher’s advance for editing a collection of classic social theory extracts deemed suitable for undergraduate students. He had been well liked in the department and popular with the students too; he’d alw
ays had a sort of naturally outgoing streak which enabled him to mix with the older members of the Sociology department as well as the more trendy, newer staff and post-graduates. Looking back he couldn’t believe how he’d let Justine, one of his first post-graduate students, have such an effect on him and his future. Sure enough, she was gorgeous, but he wasn’t too bad either and had always managed to do pretty well for himself; and Fiona, his ex and only wife, had her good points too. He had taken his eye off things. In what eventually had become a rather desperate attempt to impress Justine, he’d given up on his marriage and then tried to get his hands on Fiona’s family’s money by removing his in-laws.

  Even though he had certainly had plenty of time to think and plan while serving his prison sentence, Mark had tried to avoid any detailed over-analysis or examination of just what had happened. The truth of the matter was that it certainly didn’t reflect well on him and he’d never been one for too much self-criticism. It undermined his sense of who he was to imagine that he must have been obsessed with Justine, and that he had let his paranoia that she would want something more take over his life for those few years. Perhaps the most depressing aspect of it was that when he had tried to work through it in his head, it was evident that she couldn’t have really meant that much to him. In the end, however much he tried to rationalise things, there was no getting away from the fact that a mixture of egotism and greed had been a pretty key motivation.

  He had never really managed to work out just why he’d been so greedy or whether that was merely masking something else. Why hadn’t he been satisfied with what he had, like his now ex-colleagues at the university, who were all no doubt living very comfortably in expensive, gentrified properties in his favourite town, Brighton? He had always felt that he had more about him than most of them, so why had he wanted more? It was painful for Mark to accept that it must have been down to his self-centredness, mixed with arrogance and greed – perhaps not surprisingly he had found it easier to put the ‘might-have-beens’ aside.

  Nevertheless, and for whatever reasons, at the time he had allowed his concerns and distrust about Justine and his best friend, Tom, to cloud everything. While in retrospect those concerns might have proved justified, that hadn’t warranted his risking and then losing everything he had worked for, even though that had come quite easily. Irrespective of any explanations for what might have been going on in his head, he had devised and carried through the murdering of two people whom he had, in point of fact, grown reasonably fond of. In terms of any conventional attempt at a label, he had become some kind of psychopath; he had, albeit unwittingly, taken on the persona and career of a serial poisoner, and in a cock-eyed way with some degree of success. And it had all been for nothing. That bitch, Justine, hadn’t understood or supported him. When it came to it she had abandoned him like a shot and played the part of the innocent dupe, and Tom, supposedly his best friend, even blood brother, had taken advantage of the fall-out. Mark still reckoned that if it hadn’t been for Justine’s lack of imagination and nerve everything would have worked out fine. It was all water under the bridge now, though.

  ***

  Mark opened a can of Foster’s lager. It had been over eight months since his release, after serving just under six years of his life sentence for murder. On the face of it that had been quite a result. He was fortunate that there had been a general shift towards emphasising the rehabilitation of prisoners in the early 1970s and he had made sure that he played the part of the model prisoner – not overly sycophantic but not too arrogant or difficult to manage either. He had succeeded in convincing everyone, including most critically the Parole Board, that he was a reformed character and certainly no danger to the wider public. It hadn’t taken him long to realise that the key indicators needed to get an early parole date were to demonstrate genuine remorse and to satisfy the experts that the crimes themselves were clearly out of character, driven by a kind of temporary loss of control, and therefore would never be repeated. Although his crimes had certainly attracted a good deal of publicity at the time they had faded from the general consciousness since then. Even Mark found it somewhat difficult to believe that he had convinced Jean, his mother-in-law, that he actually found her attractive, while at the same time slowly filling her with a mixture of illegal drugs and natural poisons. And after she had passed away without any suspicion resting on him, a similar strategy had worked on his father-in-law, Gordon. That might not have involved part-way seducing him, as he had done with Jean, but the fact that his father-in-law had pretty much given up on things, including his health, after Jean’s death made it that much easier. Nonetheless, Mark hadn’t been able to help the same thought coming back to him time and again during his prison sentence: if it hadn’t been for Justine’s bloody self-righteous indignation, if she’d supported him, then he – in fact, they – would have got away with it.

  Of course, the parole requirements meant that he would be on ‘licence’, as they put it, for the rest of his sentence, and subject to recall should he offend again, but he had no intention of that – or no intention of ever being caught and recalled, at least. Initially Gemma had been his probation contact and support during the final stages of his sentence and the pre-parole period. She had accompanied the senior probation officer and her boss, David, on his initial visits to supervise Mark after he’d been transferred to Ford Open Prison, and then taken him on herself after David’s surprise early retirement. Gemma was young, twenty-three, when he first encountered her, and just a few months into her first job since graduating, typically (and a little ironically) with a degree in Sociology. He liked the way she wore close fitting clothes that highlighted her figure, the pencil skirts and tight designer jeans in particular. To begin with, he hadn’t been able to work out whether she was really posh or just radiated it. He had soon realised there was no pretence.

  After years of celibacy and without any recent practice, Mark had enjoyed charming and intriguing her and she had seemed to like the attention too. Sure enough, soon after his release they had become an item and then moved in together. They had played it by the book and had come clean about their relationship; and so as to avoid any conflict of interest, the official supervision of his rehabilitation had been passed on to one of Gemma’s colleagues, Mathew. A somewhat more typical example of the probation officer role than Gemma, or to put it more accurately an absolute stereotype of it, Mathew was a slightly earnest, bearded ex-hippy type who enjoyed the opportunity to have an articulate client with whom he could discuss music, film and any other examples of cultural coolness that he could engineer into their conversations. Mark found Mathew’s snobbish take on any and all of those topics profoundly irritating, but he had always been a good manager of other’s impressions of him and was happy to play along with things. After he had lent Mathew a couple of his Balzac novels there was no looking back. Mathew was convinced they had made some kind of intellectual contact with one another and Mark had no reason to disabuse him; he was well aware of the sense in keeping his parole supervisor on side.

  Thinking back, Mark realised how easy it was to forget unpleasant things; as with most ex-cons he’d vowed never to go back, but by contrast with them, he liked to think he meant it. When Gemma had met him at the prison gates on his release last November, Mark had been convinced that he would just enjoy whatever life threw at him and that anything would be better than the last few years. He wouldn’t care what he had to do or what he had or didn’t have, he would relish just being away from the petty constraints of institutional life. However, and as he was well aware from having come across studies on the recidivism of offenders when teaching the sociology of deviance in his previous existence, the memories receded pretty quickly; really, when he took the time to reflect, his personality hadn’t changed that much after all. Maybe the personality he had used to convince the Parole Board had, but not the real one.

  Post-prison, things had started quite nicely. Gemma had kept her job and he’d settled into the flat ab
ove a florist’s in a small parade of shops just out of the centre of Littlehampton; it was not far from Gemma’s apartment, close to the station and overlooking the river Arun. In fact, going well over and above the usual post-release support offered by the probation service, and presumably without their knowledge, Gemma had found and arranged the renting of the flat for him before his release. Mark had given her access to his share of the divorce settlement, which considering his status as a convicted criminal hadn’t been too bad. Somewhat paradoxically, the murder of her parents had left his ex-wife a very wealthy woman and she hadn’t objected to Mark’s solicitor sorting out a reasonable deal from the sale of the house they’d bought together; no doubt she’d just been glad to see the back of him and to move on with her life.

  The first few months and over the Christmas and New Year had been pretty good. Gemma and he had not been a couple immediately, although Mark assumed that they both thought that was inevitable. From their first meeting at Ford Open Prison, the atmosphere and rapport between them, along with the comments and looks they gave one another, had convinced him they had a future. After his release, it had been Mark’s intention to play it reasonably cool to begin with, and certainly not to appear too desperate. He had made it clear that he wanted to keep in touch with Gemma and was pretty sure she felt the same – after all, she had helped arrange the flat for him and taken the trouble to collect him from Ford on his release date. As well as that, she had persuaded her new boss to let her continue with his supervision immediately after release, fortunately a practice that was being encouraged as offering some kind of continuity of support and aid to rehabilitation for ex-prisoners.