Jenelle slammed down her laptop. Her nemesis, Sarah Wilson, was working on the same story. There was no way that bitch was going to get the scoop. Jenelle needed to go to print first.
She was investigating a series of young female journalists who had committed suicide over the past two years. All the victims had used different methods to kill themselves, and the coroner had ruled all the cases as suicides. Nobody was connecting the cases. The women were not all based in London, some had a history of mental illness and some didn’t. The only thing which connected the women was that they were all in the same career. Jenelle had not raised her suspicions to anyone, as she wanted to get the scoop herself, before her more experienced colleagues. Now it looked like her rival could beat her, as Sarah’s email was clear that she knew Jenelle was working on the story. Their rivalry stretched back to the days when they were co-editors of the school newspaper. It had not ended well.
The additional evidence Jenelle had, which she hadn’t shared with anyone, was that all the victims had used the same dating website. Jenelle had been using it for three weeks to see if this could be how the killer had lured their victims. It was full of the usual dross – just men wanting to get laid, and some women who weren’t shy about coming forward. There was one profile which had caught her attention – JournoGuy25. She recognised his pictures and a quick image search verified that they were catfished from Instagram. This looked promising. Jenelle had been chatting with him for a few days before he suggested they meet for some fun. She wasn’t stupid, so asked if they could meet in a public place. Surprisingly, he agreed, which implied that he was probably not who she was looking for. Still, she could do a side story piece on catfishing, so she arranged to meet him outside London Bridge Station the following evening.
The next evening, she realised he had played her when she was still waiting after half an hour. A quick check on the dating site showed that he had deleted his profile. Another waste of time. She needed a drink, so headed into a nearby bar. It wasn’t too busy, so she ordered herself a large glass of wine.
“Jenelle?”
She turned round. It was Sarah.
“What are you doing here?”
“I work down the road,” replied Sarah, not appearing perturbed by Jenelle’s bluntness. “This is a bit off the beaten track for you, isn’t it?”
“I was just passing and fancied a drink before heading home.” Jenelle was hoping she would get the hint and piss off back to whichever human had chosen to socialise with her.
“I wanted to talk to you. Can I get you a drink?”
“Aren’t you with anybody?”
“They just left.”
“Well, I’ve already ordered a glass of wine.”
“Oh great, well if I get one as well, we get the rest of the bottle free. My treat.”
Jenelle wanted to tell her to piss off, but that would be rude and un-British. Besides, she was curious about what she wanted.
Over an hour later, they were on their second bottle of wine, laughing and joking – how had that happened? It had started from then reminiscing about their fellow students who had all left the school paper because they couldn’t handle the pressure of two ambitious young women. The headmistress had also been threatened by them, which is why she’d fired them. Well, that was their take on it. The conversation eventually turned to Sarah’s email.
“Do you think there’s more to these suicides then?” asked Sarah.
Jenelle was not that drunk, or stupid, but it would be good to find out what Sarah knew, so she played along.
“Look, I’ve got nothing to connect any of them, other than them all being young female journalists. It could all just be a coincidence.”
“Have you taken the story to your editor?”
“No, it’s just a hunch. How about you?”
“Yeah, he told me to leave it. Said I was forcing myself to see something that wasn’t there. If there was anything, the police would have investigated it.”
“So, why did you email me?”
“When I spoke to the families, they asked if we were working together, so I knew you were looking into it as well. I thought you might have some more evidence, so thought I’d try to provoke you to reveal what else you know.”
“I don’t know anything else. If I did, I would have gone to my editor.”
Sarah seemed reassured by that response. There was no way Jenelle was going to share everything she had, and she suspected Sarah was doing the same. You couldn’t wipe away ten years of rivalry with a couple of bottles of wine. Jenelle looked at her watch. They’d been chatting for a couple of hours and it was already dark outside. She excused herself to go to the toilet and would use her return as an opportunity to call it a night. It had been different having a civilised conversation with Sarah, but they weren’t suddenly going to become besties. There was too much history there.
When Jenelle returned, Sarah had poured the remains of the second bottle into each of their glasses. Jenelle picked up her coat and then downed her glass of wine – she wasn’t about to waste excellent wine.
“I better be off,” she said, putting on her coat.
“How are you getting home?”
“Tube to Liverpool Street and then the train.”
“I live in Shoreditch. I’m going to get a cab so I can drop you and then carry on. I’ll order us an Uber now.”
She had her phone out, before Jenelle could say anything.
It was only a few minutes before their cab had arrived. Once they were outside the cold air hit them and Jenelle felt unsteady on her feet. Perhaps downing that last glass of wine had been a bad idea. She’d treat herself to some stodgy food at the station.
Once in the cab, Jenelle felt the tiredness sweep over her and was glad she had opted for a cab over the tube. She couldn’t wait to get to bed.
“You okay?” asked Sarah.
“Yeah, just tired.” It was more than that. She was struggling to keep her eyes open.
“Well, it’s good to have a few drinks, especially after being stood up.”
“What did you say?”
Sarah was smiling at her in a way that looked a bit sinister, but Jenelle couldn’t be sure as her vision was blurring. She was doing her best not to fall asleep, so wasn’t sure if she had misheard what Sarah had said. She glanced at the cab driver, who she hadn’t noticed when she first got in the cab. He looked familiar, but she couldn’t place him.
She looked at Sarah, who was still smiling. Realisation and panic hit her.
“Have you met our driver, Jenelle? You may know him as JournoGuy25!”