Devil You Know Read online




  For Robert, Ross, Daniel, Rebekah,

  Jessica and Isla Rose

  My name is Logan,

  Logan Massie, and this is my story.

  Contents

  Title Page

  Dedication

  One

  Two

  Three

  Four

  Five

  Six

  Seven

  Eight

  Nine

  Ten

  Eleven

  Twelve

  Thirteen

  Fourteen

  Fifteen

  Sixteen

  Seventeen

  Eighteen

  Nineteen

  Twenty

  Twenty-One

  Twenty-Two

  Twenty-Three

  Twenty-Four

  Twenty-Five

  Twenty-Six

  Twenty-Seven

  Twenty-Eight

  Twenty-Nine

  Thirty

  Thirty-One

  Thirty-Two

  Thirty-Three

  Thirty-Four

  Thirty-Five

  Thirty-Six

  Thirty-Seven

  Thirty-Eight

  Thirty-Nine

  Forty

  Forty-One

  Forty-Two

  Forty-Three

  Forty-Four

  Forty-Five

  Forty-Six

  Forty-Seven

  Forty-Eight

  Forty-Nine

  Fifty

  Fifty-One

  Fifty-Two

  Fifty-Three

  Fifty-Four

  Fifty-Five

  Fifty-Six

  Fifty-Seven

  Fifty-Eight

  Fifty-Nine

  Sixty

  Sixty-One

  About the Author

  Copyright

  One

  I’m telling it from the time it seemed to begin, for me anyway. A warm night in August. I stormed out of our flat in Glasgow, angry, frustrated after yet another argument with my mum.

  Baz was waiting for me when I left the house. He was leaning on his elbows over the walkway, all dressed in black. His joggy trousers, his hoodie, even his trainers were black. He always dressed in black. I would joke with him that in the dark he would be invisible until he smiled. His teeth gleamed white against his tanned skin.

  “I think you spend half your time under a sun lamp,” I would say to him.

  And he would laugh. “Spanish blood, my friend. My grandfather was a Catalan.”

  I never knew if that was true. He was always making stuff up, seeing whether I’d believe it or not. I usually did.

  I think I was the only one who was ever allowed to joke with him that way. He would never have taken it from anyone else.

  Why were we friends? I often wondered – I always thought he was so cool, and cool was something no one would call me. We just seemed to click from the first time we met when I came here from Aberdeen.

  He turned when he heard my feet pounding along the walkway. “You had another fight.” He nodded towards my flat. Had he heard my mum yelling at me, and me yelling back? Probably.

  I nodded. “Sick of it,” I said. “All we ever seem to do nowadays is argue.”

  “Lucky you’ve got a mum,” he said. “Mine dumped me. Took one look at my backside, thought it was my face and did a runner.” He always made a joke of it. But I don’t think he really felt it was funny at all.

  Some old aunt and uncle had taken him in – his ‘Auntie Dorothy’, he called her. His uncle was always just his ‘Unc’. They seemed fond of him, he never had a bad word to say about them, but they didn’t give him any rules. He was able to go where he pleased, and could stay out as long as he wanted.

  “Come on,” he said, pulling me on.

  “Where are we going?”

  “See what’s happening.”

  It felt good running through the streets of the estate with Baz. He was the same age as me, but a lot taller. He already had a reputation as a bit of a hard case, tough, scared of nothing, a bit dangerous. Some people even said he had something missing ‘up here’ and they would tap their heads. I’d seen them do it. Of course they only did that behind his back. They would never have said it to his face – or they would never have said it twice.

  But Baz had only been a good friend to me since I came here to Glasgow. I hadn’t wanted to come. I liked where we lived in Aberdeen. My life had always been there. I had friends there. It was my mum and her new boyfriend, Vince, that decided we should move, and to here of all places, to a three-storey block of flats in a sprawling, run-down estate. I’m not good at mixing anyway, but here I’d felt alone, out of place, like an alien in a strange new world, a small-town boy in the big city. I was called names because of my ginger hair, and my accent.

  It didn’t take me long to find out – the hard way – that words can mean different things in different places. The first time I called a boy a ‘loon’, he was ready to floor me. But that’s what we call boys up there in Aberdeen. A boy is a loon, and a girl is a quine. This boy was not prepared to listen to that explanation. He was sure I had insulted him. He had me by the throat, ready to do me serious damage. And then, Baz stepped in. The first time I’d met him. He told the boy to back off, and the boy did. He looked really scared of Baz, moving back at once as if he could see this was someone to be wary of. I realised then, this was the kind of boy I wanted as a friend. Everyone listened to him, seemed a bit afraid of him too. And since I had met Baz, no one had ever called me names.

  Two

  I think Baz was as much of an outsider as I was. But at least he had a few friends. And his friends became mine. They were there waiting for us at the shopping precinct, sitting on a wall just outside the Turkish takeaway. Claude was there, and Gary, and Mickey. Mickey had his dog with him. He usually did have his dog with him. ‘Ricky’, he called it. That made me laugh the first time he told me.

  “Your name is Mickey, and you called your dog Ricky? What were you thinking about?”

  “I was only three when I got him! What did I know?” But he laughed too when he said it, used to people making fun of their names. How he loved that scabby dog of his – it looked like a cross between a mangy werewolf and a ferret, but you would have thought it was a Royal Corgi the way Mickey treated it.

  The boys stood up when they saw us coming. They weren’t too sure about Baz, afraid of him maybe. At least that’s what I always thought. Yet I think, like me, in spite of that fear, they wanted him as their friend.

  “What’s happening?” I asked.

  “Nothing much,” Claude answered. Claude Handley was overweight, that’s what we said to his face. Behind his back we admitted he was just fat. ‘He’d give a tub of lard a bad name,’ Baz would say.

  Claude couldn’t talk without swearing. I suppose we all swore. Thought it was cool. But with Claude, every second word was a swear word. He even broke up words so he could swear, like, ‘Nobody better call me over-$!!%in’-weight!’

  So what he actually answered was, “Nothing $!!%in much,” if you know what I mean.

  I’m not using the swear words here, because I’ve been asked to write this down. I don’t know who is going to read it. But when I’m writing down what Claude says, even sometimes what the rest of us say, you can remember to put in your own swear words.

  “Anybody got any money?” Baz asked.

  They all hesitated. I think they were worried Baz was going to ask them for some. We all knew he wasn’t good at parting with his own money.

  “Don’t worry,” I said, pulling out my pockets. “I’m skint as well.”

  Claude kicked the ground. “Always skint. Sick of that.” (Remember, put in your own swearing.)
>
  “Maybe we should get a job,” Mickey suggested.

  “A wee paper round,” I said. “Something easy.”

  “Yeah, delivering papers up to a twenty-storey flat… with the lift broke,” then Baz laughed and began to wheeze as if he was out of breath. “Haaa… been there… haaa… done that.”

  “We could wash cars,” Claude said. “Charge a fiver each car. Wash, dry and polish.”

  “Boy scouts do it for nothing,” Gary reminded us. “For charity.”

  Gary Balfour was definitely the good-looking one. A lock of brown hair always hung over his huge brown eyes, and when he flicked it back, girls swooned. We were always telling him he should audition for a boy band. He would walk it.

  “But I can’t sing,” he would say.

  “Neither can they,” Baz had told him, and we all laughed.

  Girls were always checking Gary out. I saw a couple of them right then, coming out of the takeaway, glancing over at him and giggling. Gary ignored them, and that seemed to make them like him all the more. Girls are funny that way. He held out a tenner to us. “Well boys, Gary to the rescue. My old man gave me this. And this.” He plucked at the collar of the leather jacket he was wearing. Gary was always in designer gear.

  “Did it fall off the back of a lorry?” Baz asked. Most of the things Gary’s dad got did fall off the back of a lorry. His dad was well known in the area as the man who could get you anything you wanted, cut price.

  Gary stared at the ground for a moment. I think he would have snapped something back, if he hadn’t remembered Baz, crazy Baz. Instead, his face broke into a grin. “Must have fell off the back of a Merc. My dad only gets the best.”

  They all laughed. So did I. I was glad to be friends with them. But I was sure they were only friends with me because of Baz. He’d been there first, a kind of leader, though they would never admit to that. Not to having a leader. We were a crowd of boys who were friends. Not a gang that needed a leader. Though there were plenty of gangs around here like that. I’d heard about them. But Baz was our leader, no doubt in my mind about that. I’d seen it. How Baz could make the boys do things, manipulate them. Make them think it was their idea in the first place. He was clever that way. What Baz wanted he usually got. Yet, they liked him, just as I did. When Baz was good, he was great. Funny, and always full of ideas for things to do.

  Not that night though. After Gary had bought us all chips with his tenner, we had no money to go anywhere and we spent a boring couple of hours just hanging about the shopping precinct, throwing chips for Mickey’s dog. Not that he ate them of course. He’d drop them at our feet and wait for us to throw another one. According to Mickey, Ricky was very fussy about what he ate.

  “He’s used to chops and steak mince,” he told us. “He’s better fed than me.”

  That night, Ricky was our entertainment.

  “Nothing ever happens in this dump,” Claude complained when we were all ready to go home.

  And I always look back and think that was the last time we could really say, ‘Nothing ever happens’. What happened the next night sent a line of dominos crashing down that toppled into a nightmare.

  Three

  Mum didn’t like me hanging around with the boys, even though she’d never met any of them. Next night while we were having our tea she started harping on about them again. “I don’t like the thought of you with a gang,” she said.

  When we’d first come here she’d been told about the gangs who roamed this estate. She was always warning me to keep away from them.

  “We’re not a gang,” I told her. “Just a bunch of boys looking for something to do at night.”

  “It’s what you might be doing that worries me.”

  “They’re a good bunch of guys,” I said.

  “Why don’t you bring them here some night?”

  She was always asking me to bring my friends to the house. She wanted to meet them she said. I knew what she really wanted. She wanted to check them out, make sure they were suitable, thinking of the not-so-suitable friends I had made in Aberdeen. But just imagine me saying, ‘Oh let’s meet up at my house. My mum wants to meet you.’ Like a bunch of girls having a sleepover. We weren’t those kind of friends.

  “What do you think we are: the Famous Five? ‘Why don’t you all come to my house for tea and lashings of ginger beer?’” Once, I’d been able to make her laugh when I said things like that in a fake posh voice. I used to read all the time, and the Famous Five were some of the first books I remember. And her favourites when she was a young girl, she had told me. But she didn’t see the funny side of it any more.

  I was trying to remember the time Mum and I’d been good together, when we used to laugh together, before Dad had… before he had… No, I still couldn’t even say the word. He was gone. Forever. I had to face up to that, but it still hurt so much to know he would never come back. We used to be a family, me and Mum and Dad, we once all got on so well. She’d been a fun mum, till we’d lost Dad. Now, she was no fun at all.

  No use thinking of that now. I snapped my mind back to the present.

  “We’re not doing anything bad. Why do you always think the worst of me?” I sounded angrier than I felt. I know I did. It seemed we never could have a conversation any more. Just arguments.

  Her boyfriend, Vince, him of the army crew cut and the tattoos (honest, I’ve never seen a man with so many tattoos), came in from the kitchen then. He’d heard my raised voice. He looked from her to me. “Hope it stays that way, Logan. Once you get caught up in these things it’s hard getting out. I know, Logan. I was in a gang when I was a boy.”

  Yeah, I thought, probably the leader. I was waiting for him to say it, boasting as usual.

  “You end up doing things you don’t want to do, but you don’t know how to say no. You stay well away from trouble, Logan.”

  “What are you saying that to me for?” Vince always annoyed me so much. I couldn’t help feeling like that about him. It was because of him that we’d moved down here. He was a Glasgow man, he had told us. So we had left everything behind and followed him here. He had a son, Andy, who was nineteen. He was away now, thank goodness, doing his training to be a soldier, like his dad. My mum was besotted with Vince, ever since she met him. He said ‘Jump’ and she asked ‘How high?’ Always put him first. Why didn’t she ever stick up for me?

  She only put her hand on her boyfriend’s arm. (Boyfriend! Imagine a woman her age having a boyfriend!)

  “Leave it be, Vince,” she said. “Logan’s going to keep out of trouble. Aren’t you, son?”

  She said it as if I was always in trouble. “You have such faith in me, Mum.” I refused to even look at Vince.

  He answered me as if I had. “We do have faith in you.” Vince sighed when he said it, as if he was tired of saying it. He had said it so often before. “But it’s easy to be drawn into things… That’s why your mum would like to meet your friends. That’s all we’re saying.”

  Of course my mum had to back him up. “I have to know you’re not getting in with the wrong crowd again, Logan.”

  The last thing I wanted was my friends meeting my mum. After all, they never asked me to come to their houses to meet their families. How stupid would I look to them?

  “I’m not bringing my friends home for tea!”

  Vince sat across from me. He leaned close, he even managed a smile. “Well, at least tell us who they are.”

  I didn’t even bother to answer that. I was afraid to tell them, afraid Vince would check them out and the boys would find out and then they would never want me as a friend again. And I wouldn’t blame them.

  I’d had enough of my mum and Vince. It would only get worse if I stayed in. Without another word, I slammed my way out of the house. I heard my mum shouting after me, “Logan! Come back.”

  And then Vince saying, “Leave him be, Marie. Let him cool down. He’ll come back.”

  I waited on the walkway for a few minutes, to see if she’d come afte
r me. Waited, hoped, for the door to be hauled open and for her to come running out. She didn’t. She never did.

  Would I have gone back into the house if she had? I don’t know, but I know what happened that night was the beginning of it all.

  Four

  I hammered along the walkway, could hear the anger in my footsteps. I took the wet stairs too quickly, lost my footing and slipped. I went right down with my back bouncing off every step. I let out a yell as I landed at the bottom. My butt ached, my back ached. I felt a hand on my shoulder.

  I looked round quickly, sure it was Vince. He’d come after me to insist I come back home. I was ready for another argument.

  But it wasn’t Vince. It was Lucie.

  Lucie is in my class at school. She lives nearby, in one of the other walk-up apartments. She has blonde hair that always looks as if she’s cut it herself – I don’t think she ever bothers combing it. That night she wore it almost up in a ponytail, but not quite. Half of it hung in spikes on her shoulders. She was another loner. Off the wall. ‘A strange girl,’ I heard some of the teachers say. I thought she was just different, and I kind of liked her for that. She sat down on the stairs beside me, offered me some of the gum she was always chewing.

  “You hurt yourself?” she asked.

  “No, I always come down the stairs on my back.”

  She gave me a punch. “You think you are ‘all that’.” She sketched the inverted commas with her fingers and giggled. “As the girly girls say!” One thing Lucie could never be called: a girly girl. She sniffed. “Had a fight?”

  “As usual,” I said.

  “Bad thing, aggression,” she said, as if she was an expert. “Better being laid back about things.”

  “If you were any more laid back you’d be horizontal,” I laughed. And it was true. She never seemed to get upset about anything. Her mum and dad weren’t really her mum and dad, but she’d been fostered by them since she was ten. They were better than a real mum and dad, she always said. I didn’t know what had happened to her before, and she never talked about it, but I knew it was bad. It was so clear she loved this new family she had, and they loved her.