Chapter One
(October 2001, Lancashire)
Walking down the usual, everyday street Heather caught sight of her reflection in the usual, everyday shop window. And modesty aside, she was impressed. Tall, raven-haired and needing no makeup at all she cut an impressive figure. Even in her student togs she was a sight to be seen; self-supporting, not needing a bra, athletic yet shapely and graced with good looks, she felt like a million dollars.
Or, if that was over-valuing herself, at least she was well worth buying a drink or three.
Smiling internally, she went into Mr Khan's Emporium. Just anywhere else it would have been called a corner shop but, by any standards, this was a big one. And it sold everything. Think "Open All Hours" but with a guy in a turban behind the counter instead of Arkwright.
Heather had recently started her second year at university. She had been using Mr Khan's Emporium for as long as she'd been there, buying chocolate and energy drinks to see her through the academic day. In her opinion calling it a "corner shop" would be a grave understatement. It was more like a mini hypermarket, geared up to give the customer whatever she or he wanted. In fact it was a community service, worlds away from what the local council hypocritically considered to be social support.
Ask for an upside-down coat-hanger and Mr Khan would retreat into the back and return with one in a matter of moments. Ask for something a bit trickier (an authenticated copy of the Mona Lisa, say,) and it might take him as long as a minute.
Mr Khan was cool. Heather liked him immensely. Over time they had become friends. These days he even shared his feelings about his wife with her.
'I'm descended from warriors,' he'd say. 'My ancestors fought for the British Empire during the Indian Mutiny and both world wars. But Chini walks all over me. I should have married a nice young English girl like you . . . A nice girl who would cut me a bit of slack every so often.'
They always laughed at that. In reality hen-pecked Mr Khan loved his wife and they both knew it. He was also in his late forties, which was too way old, even for Heather.
Plus she was supposed to be "off men" . . .
Again!
You didn't have to sleep with a guy to be friends, though, did you? And Heather classed Mr Khan as a friend without any question of a doubt.
Consequently she noticed when a gigantic, tattoo-faced thug burst into the shop. Ignoring the queue of customers waiting to pay the new arrival approached the counter with blatantly evil intent.
'Cunting motherfucking bastard,' he began, waving a knife under Mr Khan's nose. 'Give me the notes out of that fucking till. Give them me now.'
He said other, horrendously racist things too, spitting them out among more "fuckings" and "cuntings" than Heather had heard in all her life.
And that knife was enormous. To her it looked like the one Crocodile Dundee had . . . the one he used to frighten off New York muggers, not to mention a fair few saltwater reptiles.
Good grief, she thought, it's more like a sword!
Bravely defending his livelihood, Mr Khan said no.
Cowardly, the thug lashed out and slashed Mr Khan's arm. Suddenly his bright white shirt sleeve was crimson and he was gasping in agony.
'Next time I'm taking your fucking throat out,' the thug snarled. 'Now give me the cunting notes.'
By then Heather had seen far too much. The rational part of her brain told her to be like everyone else and keep well out of it. But "rational" did not apply in circumstances like that. Without considering the pros and cons she crossed the shop floor and brought her right hand down in a mighty karate chop on the thug's wrist.
Heather had been practicing mixed martial arts for a little over seven years: mostly at her posh private school, more recently at a uni that bred Olympic hopefuls. And all that training had worked. Whenever she hit someone the other person knew about it.
That tattooed thug was no exception. The side of her hand slammed down, bashing his arm onto the counter, and hard. The knife escaped his grasp and skittered away, grounding over on Mr Khan's side of the divide.
'Put your foot on it,' said Heather, 'but don't touch it with your fingers. We need his prints, not yours.'
Bleeding as he was, Mr Khan put his foot on the blade. 'Watch it,' he warned Heather, 'he's out of his skull.'
Accurate assessment or what! She could smell the alcohol on the thug but it wasn't booze she saw in his eyes, it was something else altogether. They were spinning and spiralling like that snake's eyes in "The Jungle Book".
The handful of other customers had gathered together at the back of the store, too afraid to even try to pass the raving would-be robber. Their silence wasn't only awesome, it spoke volumes.
'You fucking cunt,' the thug spat at Heather. 'I'm gonna kill you for that.'
Part of Heather wanted to reply in kind. Part of her realized she was up against a drug-crazed nut and warned her to stay alert. Holding her peace, she waited for the inevitable attack.
Like a buffoon, the thug charged at her.
Like Bruce Lee, she sidestepped, ducked and grabbed his arm, throwing in her shoulder, lifting him off the ground, using his own momentum to propel him over a rack of newspapers and magazines.
Stupidly, his eyes still spinning and spiralling, he got back up.
'You should leave now,' she said, relatively calmly, belying her rapidly beating heart. 'If you don't go at once I will make a citizen's arrest.'
The thug didn't seem to take anything into consideration. Not even the unavoidable fact she'd already hurt and humiliated him.
'Fucking black cunt,' he growled.
That did it for Heather. Officially she was a WASP but, being a seventh generation farm lass, her skin had always tended to being brown as a nut. And a recent month in Majorca with Mary Rose had only added to the effect.
But appearances weren't the point. Not only had the racist so-and-so insulted poor old Mr Khan, now he'd mistaken her holiday tan and was using it against her. And, to make matters worse, he looked to be mixed-race himself. Ignorant bastard probably hated everybody of every shade and hue.
Hell, he probably had a thing against green and blue aliens, the shallow-minded git.
This time Heather didn't sidestep or duck when he charged. This time she feigned with her right hand and then threw a palm strike with her left, catching him square on the jaw.
Palm strikes can be more powerful than punches and Heather gave that one all she had. And, maybe by switching to southpaw, maybe because the thug was as thick as pig shit, she clocked him dead on.
Yet again the thug's momentum worked against him, doubling the impact. His mouth snapped shut in an instant and with tooth-shattering force. His head jerked backwards and the craziness left his eyes.
Pole-axed medieval soldiers couldn't have gone down as fast as he did, or as hard. Sixteen stones of sheer, dumb muscle and bone smashed onto the shop floor.
Heather laughed.
'I did give you chance to leave quietly,' she said reasonably.
As if the thug was going to be hearing anything anytime soon.
Chapter Two
Still surprised by her overall calm, Heather took charge of the aftermath. The young couple ahead of her in the queue were fellow-students. She didn't know their names or what courses they were on, but she had seen them around and about, usually hand-in-hand.
'I'm Heather Hunter,' she said to them. 'Have either of you got a mobile?'