Ruth Galloway (8 page)

Read Ruth Galloway Online

Authors: Elly Griffiths

31st October 1998

Dear Detective Inspector Nelson,
Now is the time when the dead walk. Graves have yawned and yielded up their dead. Beware the living and the dead. Beware the living dead. We who were living are now dying.
You have disappointed me, Detective Inspector. I have shared my wisdom with you and still you are no nearer to me or to Lucy. You are, after all, a man bound to the earth and to The Mundane. I had hoped for better things of you.
Tomorrow is the Feast of All Saints. Will you find St Lucy there in all the holy pantheon? Or is she, too, bound to the earth?
In sadness.

25th November 1998

Dear Detective Inspector Nelson,
It is now a year since Lucy Downey vanished. The world has turned full circle and what have you to show for it? Truly you have feet of clay.
A curse on the man who puts his trust in man, who relies on the things of flesh, whose heart turns from the
Lord. He is like dry scrub in the wastelands, if good comes, he has no eyes for it.
In sadness.

December 1998

Dear Detective Inspector Nelson,
I nearly did not write to wish you compliments of the season but then I thought that you would miss me. But, in truth, I am deeply disappointed in you.
A girl, a young girl, an innocent soul, vanishes but you do not read the signs. A seer, a shaman, offers you the hand of friendship and you decline it. Look into your own heart, Detective Inspector. Truly it must be a dark place, full of bitterness and regret.
Yet Lucy is in light. That I promise you.
In sadness.

The last letter is dated January 2007:

Dear Detective Inspector Nelson,
Had you forgotten me? But with each New Year I think of you. Are you any nearer to the right path? Or have your feet strayed into the way of despair and lamentation?
I saw your picture in the paper last week. What sadness and loneliness is etched in those lines! Even though you have betrayed me, still I ache with pity for you.
You have daughters. Do you watch them? Do you keep them close at all times?
I hope so for the night is full of voices and my ways are
very dark. Perhaps I will call to you again one day? In peace.

What did Nelson think, wonders Ruth, when he read that open threat to his own children? Her own hair is standing on end and she is nervously checking the curtains for signs of lurking bodies. How did Nelson feel about receiving these letters, over months and years, with their implication that he and the writer are in some way bound together, accomplices, even friends?

Ruth looks at the date on the last letter. Ten months later Scarlet Henderson vanishes. Is this man responsible? Is he even responsible for Lucy Downey? There is nothing concrete in these letters, only a web of allusion, quotation and superstition. She shakes her head, trying to clear it.

She recognises the Bible and Shakespeare, of course, but she wishes she had Shona for some of the other references. She is sure there is some T.S. Eliot in there somewhere. What interests her more are the Norse allusions: Odin, the Tree of all Knowledge, the water spirits. And, even more than that, the signs of some archaeological knowledge. No layman, surely, would use the word ‘cursuses'. She lies in bed, rereading, wondering …

It is a long time before she sleeps that night, and, when she does she dreams of drowned girls, of the water spirits and of the ghost lights leading to the bodies of the dead.

CHAPTER 6

‘So what do you think? Is he a nutter?'

Ruth is once again sitting in Nelson's shabby office, drinking coffee. Only this time she brought the coffee herself, from Starbucks.

‘Starbucks eh?' Nelson had said suspiciously.

‘Yes. It's the closest. I don't normally go to Starbucks but …'

‘Why not?'

‘Oh, you know,' she shrugged, ‘too global, too American.'

‘I'm all for America myself,' said Nelson, still looking doubtfully at the froth on his cappuccino. ‘We went to Disneyland Florida a few years ago. It was champion.'

Ruth, for whom the idea of Disney World is sheer unexpurgated hell, says nothing.

Now Nelson puts down his Styrofoam cup and asks again, ‘Is he a nutter?'

‘I don't know,' says Ruth slowly. ‘I'm not a psychologist.'

Nelson grunts. ‘We had one of those. Talked complete bollocks. Homoerotic this, suppressed that. Complete crap.'

Ruth who had, in fact, thought she noticed a homoerotic subtext to the letters (assuming, of course, that the writer is male), again says nothing. Instead she gets the letters out of her bag.

‘I've categorised the references in the letters,' she says. ‘I thought it was the best way of starting.'

‘A list,' says Nelson approvingly. ‘I like lists.'

‘So do I.' She gets out a neatly typed sheet of paper and passes it to Nelson.

Religious
Ecclesiastes
Isaac
Christmas
Christ dying on cross/Easter
St Lucy
St Lucy's Day (21 December)
St John's Day (24 June)
All Saints' Day (1 November)
Jeremiah

Literary
Shakespeare:
King Lear
: ‘A man may see how the world goes with no eyes.'
Henry V
: ‘A little touch of Harry …'
Julius Caesar
: ‘Graves have yawned and yielded up their dead.'
T.S. Eliot,
Ash Wednesday
: ‘There, where trees flower, and springs flow, for there is nothing again.'
The Waste Land
: ‘We, who were living are now dying.'

Norse legend
Odin
The Tree of All Knowledge (the World Tree, Yggdrasil)

Pagan
Summer solstice
Winter solstice
Litha (Anglo-Saxon word for the solstice)
Wicker Man
Sun God
Shamanism
Will o'the wisps
Mistletoe

Greek legend
Argus

Archaeological
Cursuses
Causeways

Nelson reads intently, his brows knitted together. ‘It's good, seeing it all spread out like this,' he says at last, ‘otherwise you can't tell which is a quote and which is just mumbo jumbo. “We who were living are now dying,” for example. I thought that was just more spooky stuff. I never realised it was an actual quote.'

Ruth, who has spent hours trawling through Eliot's
Collected Poems
, feels gratified.

Nelson turns back to the list. ‘Lots of biblical stuff,' he says, ‘we spotted that straight off. Psychologist thought he might even be a lay preacher or an ex-priest.'

‘Or maybe he just had a religious upbringing,' says Ruth. ‘My parents are Born Again Christians. They're always reading the Bible aloud, just for kicks.'

Nelson grunts. ‘I was brought up a Catholic,' he says, ‘but my parents weren't really into the Bible. It was more the saints, praying to this one or that one, saying Hail Marys. Jesus – a decade of the rosary every bloody day! It seemed to take hours.'

‘Are you still a Catholic?' asks Ruth.

‘I had the girls baptised Catholic, more to please my mum than anything else, but Michelle's not a Catholic and we never go to church. Don't know if I'd say I was a Catholic or not. A lapsed one maybe.'

‘They never let you get away, do they? Even if you don't believe in God, you're still “lapsed”. As if you might go back one day.'

‘Maybe I will. On my death bed.'

‘I won't,' says Ruth fiercely, ‘I'm an atheist. After you die, there's nothing.'

‘Shame,' says Nelson with a grin, ‘you never get to say I told you so.'

Ruth laughs, rather surprised. Perhaps Nelson regrets this foray into levity because he turns back, frowning, to the list.

‘This guy,' he says, ‘what does
he
believe?'

‘Well,' says Ruth, ‘there's a strong theme of death and rebirth, the seasons, the cycle of nature. I would say his beliefs were more pagan, though. There's the mention of mistletoe, for instance. The druids considered that mistletoe was sacred. That's where the tradition of kissing under the mistletoe comes from.' She pauses. ‘Actually, our Iron Age girl. She had traces of mistletoe in her stomach.'

‘In her stomach?'

‘Yes, maybe she was forced to eat it before they killed her. As I said, ritual sacrifice was quite common in the Iron Age. You find bodies that have been stabbed, strangled, clubbed to death. One body found in Ireland had its nipples sliced through.'

Nelson winces. ‘So does our guy know about all this Iron Age stuff?'

‘It's possible. Take this stuff about sacrifice, the wicker man. Some people think that Iron Age man made human sacrifices every autumn to ensure that spring came again the next year. They put the victim in a wicker cage and burnt it.'

‘I saw the film,' says Nelson, ‘Christopher Lee. Great stuff.'

‘Well, yes. It was sensationalised, of course, but there's a theme of sacrifice that runs through all religions. Odin was hung on the World Tree to gain all the knowledge of the world. Christ was hung on the cross. Abraham was prepared to sacrifice his son Isaac.'

‘What did that mean, “Like Isaac, like Jesus, she carries the wood for her own crucifixion.”'

‘Well, Isaac carried the wood on which he was to be burnt. There's a clear echo of Christ carrying his cross.'

‘Jesus.' There is a silence. Ruth suspects that Nelson is thinking of Lucy Downey, condemned, perhaps to carry the instruments of her own death. She thinks of her Iron Age body. Was she really staked down and left to die?

‘Actually,' says Ruth, ‘there's one very interesting Bible reference. This one from Jeremiah. “A curse on the man who puts his trust in man.”'

‘I didn't even realise that was from the Bible.'

‘Well, it is. One of the prophets. Anyway, I looked it up and guess how the next bit goes …' She recites it for him:

A curse on the man who puts his trust in man,

who relies on the things of flesh,

whose heart turns from the Lord.

He is like dry scrub in the wastelands,

if good comes, he has no eyes for it,

he settles in the parched places of the wilderness,
a salt

land, uninhabited.

Nelson looks up. ‘A salt land?'

‘Yes.'

‘The Saltmarsh,' says Nelson, almost to himself, ‘I always wondered about that place …'

‘Actually, I think there are a few things that might point to the Saltmarsh,' says Ruth. She reads from one of the letters,
Look to the sky, the stars, the crossing places. Look at what is silhouetted against the sky. You will find her where the earth meets the sky
. Erik – an archaeologist I know – he says that prehistoric man may have built structures on flat landscapes like the fens or the marshes because they would stand out so much, be silhouetted against the sky. He thinks that's one reason why the henge was built on the Saltmarsh.'

‘But other places are flat. Specially in this Godforsaken county.'

‘Yes, but …' How can she explain that she thinks the letter writer shares Erik's views about a ritual landscape, about marshland being the link between life and death. ‘Remember what I said about marshland?' she says at last.
‘We quite often find votive offerings or occasionally bodies buried there. Maybe this man' – she gestures to the letters – ‘maybe he knows that too.'

‘You think he's an archaeologist?'

Ruth hesitates. ‘Not necessarily but there's this word, cursuses.'

‘Never heard of it.'

‘Exactly! It's a very technical word. It means a parallel ditch with banks on the inner sides. They're often found within early ritual landscape but we don't know what they were used for. At the Maxley Cursus, for example, they found shamans' batons.'

‘Shamans' what?'

‘Pieces of decorated deer antler. They would have been used by the shaman, the holy man.'

‘What for?'

‘We don't know, maybe as part of some ritual ceremony. Maybe they were like magic wands.'

‘This guy' – Nelson points to the letters – ‘he talks about a shaman.'

‘Yes, it's quite a popular idea amongst modern New Age thinkers. A holy man who works with natural magic.'

Nelson looks back at the list. ‘What about causeways? Now I've heard
that
word.'

‘Causeways are early pathways, often leading across marsh or water.' She pauses. ‘Actually, I think I've found one at the Saltmarsh, leading to the henge. It's a sort of hidden path marked out by sunken posts. It's very exciting.'

Nelson looks as if he will take her word for that. ‘So our
man may be a pagan, he may be a New Ager, he may be a religious nutter, he may be an archaeologist.'

‘He may be all four, or maybe he just knows a bit about all of them. He strikes me as someone who hoards nuggets of knowledge. The bit about the will o'the wisps, for example.'

‘Yes, what was all that about?'

‘Will o'the wisps are lights, often seen on marshland and often on the night of the summer solstice. They lead travellers onto dangerous ground and so to their deaths.' As she says this, Ruth thinks of the weird phosphorous glow over the marsh on the night that she was lost. Without David, would she have died? ‘There are lots of legends about will o'the wisps. In some stories they're named after a wicked blacksmith who sold his soul to the devil in return for a flame from the fires of hell. He roams below the earth trying to find his way to the surface, lighting his way by the flame. Other stories say that they're the souls of murdered children.'

‘Murdered children,' says Nelson grimly. ‘That's what this is all about.'

*

Ruth arrives home to find the phone ringing. She snatches it up and is rewarded by the voice of her favourite Viking.

‘Ruthie! What news on the causeway?'

She tells him that no-one else knows of her discovery. However, when she visited David to give him a bottle of whisky as a thank-you present, he gave her a map of the Saltmarsh with the posts clearly marked in his own hand.

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