Read A Line in the Sand Online
Authors: Gerald Seymour
to come forward."
"That's mighty high talk."
"I'm talking about cowards who know what is right, and stay silent."
"Do you want to know?"
"Do I want to hear a string of snivelled excuses? Not particularly."
ot proud of what happened."
"I am n
rank and Meryl Perry need someone from among you bastards to hold
"F
out
d of friendship."
the han
know your name. You're another of the strangers who has
"I don't
invaded our little place. Till you came, we were just ordinary
people
370
living hidden and un achieving lives, we were like everybody else, y
everybod
anywhere. We were not challenged... I don't know your name
but, stranger, I am homosexual. Queer, got it? I live with my
friend
and I love him. But, I am discreet.. . I do not cause offence, I do
not draw attention to myself. If I did then in this little place
I
would be labelled a pervert. I buy tolerance with my work as the
storian.
village hi
I can tell you where the old shore-line was, and
the old churches, and the old shipyard, all that stuff, but at least I
take this place seriously. If I were blatant I would be
ostracized...
Yes, I should have spoken up for Frank and Meryl. I like them, but I'm
a coward. Yes, I'm ashamed.
, yes, I go with the tide.
So
But, it's
ke the sea and the history here.
li
It makes for a sense of futility.
Little gestures against the strength of the sea, over many centuries, d the worthlessness of man's efforts.
have prove
We bow before the
force of the inevitable."
rkham stared out over the marshland, and the peace that settled
Ma
on
it.
here when this is over, stranger. We'll be left to
"You won't be
pick
es, and you'll have moved your caravan on where you can
up the piec
make
ts on other ordinary people. Is it satisfying work? You
judgemen
sneer
at me because I didn't, publicly, offer my hand in friendship to the Perrys.
me tell you no, listen to me.
Let
Twice, in the night when
I
wouldn't be seen, I've put my coat on and determined to walk to Frank yl's door, and each time I failed to find the courage.
and Mer
Will
you
m that I'm ashamed of my cowardice?"
tell the
Markham said icily.
"No,"
himself for his cruelty.
He cursed
The man was gone, stumbling away.
the challenge had faced him.
He wondered how he would have been if
The
warm sun was on his face. Geoff Markham watched the flight of the 371
bird
and he had no sense of what was remarkable, what was a miracle.
"Do you know what, Barney?"
"What, Harry?"
"I think it's an away goal."
"Come again."
"I think the Yank's scored away from home."
Harry Fenton and Barnaby Cox stood at their adjacent office doors.
Duane Littelbaum, flushed, yawning, had his feet up on the central table, scanning a newspaper.
"What's that mean?"
"Got his leg over with Miss Prim Parker."
"You sure?"
Cathy was at her place at the console. Her eyes were on her screen.
She never looked up, didn't glance at the soles of his shoes.
"Look at her. You ever seen her so feminine? God, next she'll be wearing lipstick, mascara and eau-de-toilette. Ever seen her so
gly coy, even shy? You noticed Geoff Markham's door, the
becomin
number
y on it? Just before you came in, she scratched out one
of the da
day
and wrote DAY SIX, and underneath she's put, "The worm has turned,"
and
I haven't decrypted that cypher, but she and the Yank sniggered like kids. As an expe~enced, senior, dedicated intelligence officer, I'd say the evidence points to last night's naughtiness."
"Not many been there before."
chap, so he said, who tried to get his arm up her skirt, that
"Last
Adonis from D Branch, said she damn near broke it off at the elbow.
claims he was there, admits she was so stressed out that
Brennard
she
didn't know who he was. Well done, the Yank."
372
"He's been useful, but I wouldn't want Mr. Littelbaum, or his people,
to believe we are overly dependent on them... if you're with me. I wouldn't wish them to believe we're in their pocket, or not competent in our own theatre."
A wolfish grin played at the sides of Harry Fenton's mouth.
"Our show, done quietly, yes?"
"You are, Harry, managing this matter?"
The grin vanished.
"Time will tell I live in hope."
Davies brought him a mug of coffee.
Perry had lifted his plans out of the chest's bottom drawer in the sitting room and carried them into the dining room. He had asked
Davies if he minded the intrusion and the detective had shaken his head. It was only a small job, a problem with the air filtration
on
the production line of an assembly plant in Ipswich. Davies had
moved
his machine-gun and the spare magazines across the blanket over the table to make room for him, then headed for the kitchen.
It was the first time that Frank Perry had taken out some work in
a
week. Only a small job, which wouldn't pay more than a thousand
pounds, but it was his little gesture of defiance. He had noticed that
Davies didn't ask before going to the kitchen to make coffee, and
he
thought the detective was at home now, comfortable, in their house.
Perry thanked him for bringing the coffee. Meryl was upstairs,
packing.
She had slept alone.
Poring over the workshop plans, tracing the course of the filtration pipes, Perry reckoned out where the new motor should be placed, and what power it must have to create the necessary airflow down the pipes to the unit. There were two more consultancy jobs in the drawer,
373
one
larger than this and one smaller, and after that there was nothing.
He
was tapping out calculations and jotting the numbers while she
packed.
The ceiling beams and floor planks of the old house creaked under
her
ove him. She was in Stephen's room. He didn't know how
weight ab
much
nded to take, everything or the bare minimum.
she inte
If she took
everything, cleared the child's room of clothes and toys, then she was
going for ever.
ut, and he'd come reluctantly
She had called Stephen in from the h
his
days were now split between the television and the hut. He'd noticed that, just as he had noticed that Davies was now more comfortable
in
the house. He had not asked how much she intended to take because he
had not dared to hear the answer. The footfall moved above him.
She would be in the gloom of their bedroom. She had left the child on
pack his toys.
his own to
Perry heard the thud as she pulled down the biggest of the cases from the top of the wardrobe, and then another.
own, doggedly,
He stared d
at the plans for the new filtration unit.
all right, sir?"
"Are you
n't I be?"
"Why should
"Where's she going?"
"Haven't the faintest idea."
"She has to go somewhere."
"Her mother and father died in a coach crash, and she's never spoken of
any relatives. She's no friends where she came from... We only have different."
each other. We thought it was
374
"Shall I book a hotel?"
st."
"That would be be
"Where should the hotel be?"
"How the hell should I know?"
Davies slipped away, left him. Perry swore. He had made a bloody e, had missed a bloody decimal point.
mistak
He ripped up the sheet
of
ich he'd written his calculations, threw the pieces to
paper on wh
the
started again .. . She'd be packing the blouse he'd bought
carpet and
for her last birthday, and the diamond cluster ring with a central ire that he'd given her last Christmas, and the underwear she'd
sapph
ng
shown him when she came home from Norwich three weeks ago; everythi er, and to him, would be going into the suitcases.
that mattered to h
He
corrected the positioning of the decimal point. It was the principle tered.
that mat
He would not surrender. Why did no one understand
at
th
he had to hold on to the principle?
Davies came back in. Perry saw the smudge of lipstick on his collar, mp patch around it, and knew the detective had comforted her.
the da
"How much is she taking?"
"Not too much, not too little."
"How long is she going for?"
"Not for me to say, sir."
"Where is she going?"
"An hotel in London I've said I'll book it."
Davies asked him if he'd like a refill of coffee, and Perry nodded.
He
s wondering, when she was in a hotel in London and the detective
wa
was
rom the duty, when a new man
relieved f
had come to replace him down
here, whether Davies would see her, seek her out.
375
His fingers smacked clumsily against the keys of the calculator.
idea.
It had been her
Simon Blackmore held tight to Luisa's hand.
He had had the same idea but it was she who had articulated it.
They walked through the village with purpose.
Either they did it or they left. They both knew that and did not
have
to speak it. If they had not started out on their walk through the house on the green, both of them would have gone to
village to the
the
he cottage and brought out the empty packing boxes
garage beside t
and
ed to fill them.
start
They would already have rung for the van and
telephoned the estate agent, and they would have gone.
Separately, when they had first seen the cottage, they'd each thought ge was a small corner of heaven, a place of perfection for
the villa
them. But, as Luisa Blackmore had said, pulling on her coat before the
start of their walk, a place in heaven had to be earned.
It was a fine morning. The sunshine played on the tiredness of her face, and on his, and on the brick walls of other cottages where the le and the climbing roses were already budding.
honeysuck
The light
shimmered off the neatness of lawns cut for the first time that year.
went past the pub, not yet open, and the empty car-park, and
They
saw
runting as he manoeuvred beer kegs from the outbuilding
the landlord g
the main door.
to
The caretaker's bicycle was leaning against the
wall
of the hall. A young woman sat on the bench and read a book. The shop
s open.
wa
The builder went by in his van, the man who had told them
about their damp problem, and they had seen him the night before,
and
he waved to them as if nothing had happened in the darkness. They went
on to the green, towards the house.
All the
they
time
walked, on the road and on the green, Simon Blackmore
376
held his wife's hand on which there were no fingernails. Her coat ffs hid her wrists and the old marks of razor slashes.
cu
Under her
coat, across her breast, was a thick scarf, and under the scarf and her
blouse were the burn scars. He supported her.
o
It was necessary t
y from long back.
give her support because of the knee injur
They came to the front gate. They were watched, eyes strip-searching the policemen in the car at the front. They were within
them, by
the
sion of the camera on the wall above the front door. Simon
vi
Blackmore
hard on his wife's hand and rang the bell.
squeezed
d. The camera's image would be watched. The policemen
They waite
in
e car would be reporting. He was middle-aged and frail. She
th
limped,
d her face showed harmless exhaustion. Nothing about them was
an
threatening.
The lock turned.
The policeman wore a bullet-proof vest over his shirt and his hand ed near to the pistol in his waist holster. Two bulging
hover
suitcases
re in the hall behind him.
we
His expression, cutting his eyes and
mouth, was of contemptuous hostility.
and, looking up at the policeman, Simon Blackmore
Holding his wife's h
ew a deep breath. He said, "We heard him speak last night. We dr
were
the crowd but not of it... We haven't met him, we're newcomers,
in
so
won't know us. He said his wife would leave but that she had
he
nowhere to go, and that she would need to find an hotel. We live
at
the far end of the village, near to the church, at Rose Cottage. It's only our third day here. We have come to offer the lady, and her