Authors: Susan Hill
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective, #Crime
‘You should have thought of that.’
‘I’ve paid my way.’
‘Yeah, with dirty money. No thanks.’
‘Where am I supposed to go?’
‘You should have thought of that an’ all.’
‘Look …’
‘No. You look, And. I want me house back and Matt wants his room back and I ent arguing with you.’
She stood, pasty face with the look under her eyes that said she was pregnant. She had spots on her chin and her roots were growing out, dark brown in an earthy furrow across the corn blonde.
He drank his tea. Ate
his toast. Pete piled egg yolk, sausages and beans on to his fork and stuffed it sideways into his mouth. A lump of yolk dropped on to his vest.
‘Gerroff,’ Michelle said and threw a cloth in his direction.
Andy looked round. Quite suddenly, he’d had enough. He couldn’t have stayed another night. He got up. ‘Right,’ he said.
He’d little to pack and he left some bits behind. He got it all into
the holdall easily enough. Twenty minutes later he was walking out of the door without saying another word to either of them. It was sunny. There were daffodils out round the edges of the blocks of flats and in the front gardens. It was mild. The air had a smell of spring in it.
‘It’s good,’ he said to himself. ‘Good.’
He wondered how the kitchen garden was coming along at the prison.
It felt
like coming out all over again, just at first. It was partly the spring, partly that he would never have to crumple up his limbs in the camp bed in Matt’s fetid bedroom again or watch his brother-in-law eating egg. But there was more, a strange feeling that he was renewed, emerging from a tunnel which he had thought was at an end months ago but which had had an extra, sideways section.
He walked
to the edge of the town whistling and then he turned on to the road that ran round the Hill. There were some people walking dogs, and a pair of mothers with toddlers, straining up the
grassy banks to the top, laughing into the mild wind.
Andy climbed slowly, and when he reached the Wern Stones, he sat down, and leaned against one. He still felt crock from the impact of that van. The sun brushed
his face. He looked down over Lafferton. King. That was how they played it when they were kids. King of the Wern Stones.
He’d heard the stories about last year’s murders that had happened on the Hill but he couldn’t connect with any of that; he had been inside and this had been another world.
He stayed there for half an hour, until the sun moved behind some clouds and his back hurt, pressed
against the ancient stone. The mothers and toddlers had gone.
Andy got up. He should go. But go where? He supposed he would have to walk into town and try and see his probation officer. Didn’t she have to get him somewhere to sleep? He thought about Lee Carter. He’d a house full of places to sleep.
He went to Dino’s instead. The café was full of morning shoppers and the espresso machine was
working overtime. Andy found a table near the counter. From behind it, Alfredo waved, tea towel over his arm, face perspiring. Seconds later, he pushed a cup of tea and two slices of toast across and shouted Andy’s name.
People piled in, and after a while the door just opened for them to see there were no seats, and
closed on them again. It was warm and it was noisy. When someone left a newspaper,
Andy reached across and grabbed it. He opened it on the soccer page and sipped his tea to make it last.
He was back for a sandwich at half past one, after mooching round the streets, failing to see his probation officer and sitting on a bench for half an hour. This is what it’ll be, he thought, benches, doorways. I’m a dosser. It’s what happens.
He went back to Dino’s at ten past four. The place
was quiet at last, just a couple of schoolkids squabbling over nothing and one woman eating her slow way through a toasted scone.
‘OK, Andy, what’s up?’
‘How do you mean?’
‘You been in here three, four times, hanging about – like we used to hang about.’ Fredo pointed to the boys, who picked up their bags, and left, shoving each other on to the pavement. ‘Your Michelle had enough of you?’
‘Yeah, right.’
‘Well?’
‘I said yes, OK?’
‘Right. You wan’ tea, coffee, milk shake, Coke …’
‘Tell you what … what was it we had? Coke float. That’ll remind me.’
‘You want reminding? … You really want a Coke float?’
‘Tea then.’
‘You don’t wanna Coke float, but maybe you want a job?’
Andy took the tea and stood at the counter with it. Alfredo went on wiping down the glass shelves of the pastry
stand.
‘You seen me here today? Gone mental. And it’s just me.’
‘Why? Thought you had a million family.’
‘Not so much now and Lina’s had to go home, her sister’s in hospital, she had bad baby trouble.’
‘So there’s a job?’
‘There’s a job.’
‘What doing?’
‘Everything … anything … behind here, in the back.’
‘How long for?’
‘No idea. A week, a month, ten years.’
‘Only trouble is, I’d have
to be clean, look respectable.’
‘You’re all right, Andy.’
‘Not after a couple nights on a bench I won’t be.’
Fredo stopped wiping the shelves. ‘She really has thrown you out.’
‘Not that I care. Blood ent always thicker than water.’
‘Sure it is.’ He turned to the sink and put the cloth under the hot tap.
The woman finished her scone and went out.
‘There’s a couple of rooms upstairs. Full
of junk, nobody’s lived up there for years … no furniture, kitchen’s in a state. Nothing’s turned on.’
‘You mean it’d go with the job.’
Alfredo looked at him steadily. ‘Not exactly. You
could have full pay and sleep on the bench or half pay and have the rooms. I’d get it sorted quick enough, there’s always furniture somewhere.’
‘There is?’
‘No bath. Sink.’
‘That’s OK. You’re forgetting where
I’ve been, Fredo.’
‘And no Carter. No trouble.’
‘No.’
There was another pause. Alfredo was silent, still looking at him speculatively. Then, he leaned across the counter and put out his hand. Andy took it.
‘Tonight, you better come home with me.’
‘Thanks, Fredo,’ Andy said. It seemed to be enough.
Once, they had let her take the dog for a walk, just down the avenue and back. A couple of times she had gone into the garden and played with it, throwing a ball. When she had got back home she had asked for a dog. ‘One like that. It’s a Labrador. I love it.’
‘We’re busy people, we both work, it wouldn’t be fair to keep a dog, especially not a dog like that and you’d soon lose interest
in taking it for walks.’
‘Try a hamster,’ her father had said. ‘Maybe a cat one day? I’ll think about it.’
‘Cats make me wheeze,’ David had said.
So there had been no dog, no cat and the hamster had been forgotten.
She had called in a few times and asked to see the dog and they had let her. Its name was Archie and it slept not in the house but in a big workshop at the bottom of the garden.
The woman, whose name was Mrs Price, had taken her down there when she went to fetch Archie for his walk. She’d liked the workshop. It had shelves, woodwork tools, a bench and stool, and a ladder up into a roof space where
there was a window, and a couch covered in an old quilt. It belonged to the Prices’ son, who used it when he came home, which he rarely did now. He was in the air force serving
overseas, flying Tornado jets, his mother had said. ‘I can’t think about it.’
The walls of the workshop had posters of planes, and others of
The Simpsons
. In the roof space there was a radio and a pile of aircraft magazines. It was a boy’s den. But she liked it because of Archie and because the idea of having a whole place to yourself, with a roof space, delighted her. She thought she might mention
it when she got home, but in the end did not. She thought of asking for one like it, for Christmas, but that was how it stayed – a thought, and she got rid of it fast.
All that had been Before. She had not been to the Prices’ house since. She had not been anywhere. But then, standing at the door in the dark, looking towards the end of the drive and the gateposts, she had tried to think of something
good, and had.
After that, everything was easy.
‘What’s happening, Chris … what is this? Why has the world gone mad … why is this going on?’
Cat had heard the news at ten o’clock. Chris was on call, she was alone with her three sleeping children and suddenly, she had been overcome by both panic and despair. Lucy Angus was missing. Cat sat nursing a mug of coffee, wishing that Mephisto were beside her, another warm living body, but
Mephisto was out, prowling the night fields looking for smaller creatures to slaughter.
She thought of the cloud ‘no bigger than a man’s hand’ but which was growing and darkening by the day. They were under it and the sunlight could not break through or any warmth and brightness reassure them.
Chris was on call, at an emergency birth ten miles away. A woman had insisted on having her first child
at home, in a water bath, with only a private midwife attending her, but the labour had started early and urgently, the midwife was on holiday, and Chris had managed to tell Cat enough about what was happening for her to worry about that too. The
baby was a breech and the labour fast. He was on his own until the paramedics arrived with a hospital midwife. What they all needed, and soon, was a
holiday, Cat thought, a week or ten days abroad together, far away from Lafferton and the evil that seemed to be stalking it, away from the sadness of Martha’s death and the worries about the practice and the sudden encounter with Diana Mason. She and Chris needed one another and their children, sunshine and some warm water, good food and drink and laughter, and nothing and no one else.
The phone
rang again. She had it on the sofa beside her.
‘How are things?’
‘Paramedics are here. I’ve come outside for a breath. Bloody stupid woman. There, I’ve said it, I feel better.’
‘Is she all right?’
‘Just. The baby needs to be got to special care urgently … Mother haemorrhaged … God.’
‘Well done.’
‘Why do we do this, Cat?’
‘You know why. Come home.’
‘Just got to see them into the ambulance.
Be twenty minutes. Love you.’
It rarely happened like that now. Mothers gave birth in hospital. Occasionally a baby arrived in a hurry before the woman made it to Bevham General, but GPs were no longer the on-call, hands-on obstetricians they used to be. By the time Cat and Chris had trained, those days had gone. It made it
more frightening, and a greater risk on the rare occasions those skills
were called upon. But Chris had a cool head and he had done two years in obs and gynae.
She went into the den and turned on the television. Politicians jawing. Men propelling home-made robots around a track by remote control. A pair of eagles fighting in mid-air. A man stabbing another in the stomach.
She was flicking through the channels in search of something soothing when Chris came in.
‘You look shot to pieces.’
‘Feel it. I thought I was going to lose them both. The ambulance met a road accident, boy knocked off his bike and killed … they had to stop and call out another …’
He slumped down beside her and leaned his head against her arm.
‘It was one of those New Age nutters from Starly … babies should be born under bushes, or under water, no painkillers, no doctors, everything
natural. God knows who this private midwife is – I’ve never heard of her. Glad she wasn’t there. I had enough to cope with … didn’t need white witches burning leaves. The girl hadn’t had any antenatal, no idea the baby was a breech … it’s all come as a very nasty shock.’
‘They going to be all right?’
‘Yes. I stopped the bleeding, got the baby out and breathing … the cord was wrapped round his
neck of course.’
‘Of course. Poor you.’
‘Poor her … she was terrified.’
The television news beamed up. They sat together, watching through the wars and politicians.
Then the familiar picture of David Angus flashed on to the screen. After a couple of seconds, another, of Lucy, appeared beside it.
‘I feel sick,’ Cat said.
Sorrel Drive was cordoned off and police vehicles were parked on both
sides. They had brought in floodlights.
It was after eleven o’clock. Simon had been into the house but Marilyn had not been able to speak to him coherently. The DC with him had pieced together something from her few hysterical sentences. Lucy had been to school as usual, come home as usual, gone up to her bedroom to do her homework and, as also seemed quite usual, not come out of it again. But
when her mother had gone up to say goodnight to her, she had not been there, nor anywhere else in the house. The side door leading to the utility room had been found unbolted.
Within ten minutes of her call to the station, the avenue had been full of police.
‘But how long?’ Simon said, standing under a street lamp near to the house. ‘We need to know exactly. She came home at twenty minutes to
five. Her mother found her gone at ten to nine. What
happened between? We don’t know. Has she been missing for twenty minutes or four hours? It’s light until after seven now … someone would have seen her.’
DCS Chapman had been walking slowly up one side of Sorrel Drive and down the other, looking carefully around him. Now he came up to Simon again.
‘Anything strike you?’
‘This is different.’
‘From the boy? I think so too.’
‘She’s gone off. Of her own accord.’
‘Yes, no one has been into the house, gone upstairs, found her, dragged her down.’
‘We’ll comb the area but I want to check out the homes of all her friends. Though if she’d been with them openly they’d have rung in by now.’
‘School?’
‘The caretaker reports everything as usual.’
‘What’s your plan?’
Simon looked round.
It was like the film set for a police drama. Nathan Coates came scooting towards them on his bike.