‘Jesus,’ says Leonard, going in to his charge. ‘Not again.’
I am standing in a red phonebox somewhere in the dark on the way back into Leeds -
I say: ‘Would it be possible to meet?’
‘Of course.’
‘About seven? In the Griffin?’
‘Fine.’
‘Thank you,’ I say and hang up.
I knock on the door of her hotel room.
Helen Marshall opens the door, hair matted and eyes red again, the top button of her blouse undone.
‘Sorry,’ I say. ‘Where’s everyone else?’
‘They called it a day.’
‘Are you busy? You doing anything now?’
‘No.’
‘I want you to meet someone. Do you mind?’
‘No,’ she smiles. ‘I don’t mind.’
From the high-backed chair, the Reverend Martin Laws rises.
‘Reverend Laws, this is Detective Sergeant Helen Marshall.’
They shake hands.
‘DS Marshall is part of my team,’ I say. ‘And, to be honest, I’d prefer our conversations from now on to be conducted in the presence of DS Marshall or another member of my team.’
Laws is nodding, smiling: ‘I’m not under arrest, am I?’
‘No,’ I say, without a smile.
We all sit down.
The lounge is empty but for an old woman and a child reading a comic.
‘Reverend Laws,’ I say. ‘Do you mind telling us how you came to meet Mrs Hall and when that would have been?’
‘About two years ago. She’d heard of my work.’
‘Your work?’
The man leans forward in his chair, his hat on his lap, his bag between his boots, and he says: ‘I stop suffering.’
‘How had she heard of you?’
‘The word gets around, Mr Hunter.’
‘So she just rang you up out of the blue?’
‘I wouldn’t say it was the blue, Mr Hunter. But yes, she just rang me up.’
‘And what did she want?’
‘What everyone wants.’
‘Which is?’
‘For the suffering to stop.’
‘And that’s what you did?’
‘I can see you’re not a believer Mr Hunter, but that’s what I try and do.’
‘Stop suffering?’
‘Yes.’
‘How?’ asks Helen Marshall, suddenly.
Martin Laws turns his head slightly and stares at Helen Marshall, silent, just staring -
‘How?’ she says again, looking down at her own hands.
‘I make it go away,’ he smiles.
‘But how?’
‘Magick,’ he laughs.
Tired, I say: ‘Mr Laws, would you mind calling Mrs Hall and asking when it might be convenient to see her?’
‘You wouldn’t prefer to do it yourself?’
‘I’d like us all to be there.’
Mr Laws stands up and walks over to the telephone on the front desk.
‘Are you OK?’ I ask DS Marshall.
‘I’m sorry, I think I’m just tired.’
‘Do you want to go up?’
‘No, I’ll be OK.’
‘Are you sure?’
‘Yes,’ she snaps.
Mr Laws comes back over.
‘Do you want to take my car?’
‘We’ll follow,’ I say.
In the car, the drive to Denholme -
In the dark, Helen Marshall beside me.
‘You know what happened to her?’
‘I hate this place,’ she nods, staring out at the black Yorkshire night.
In the car, the drive to Denholme -
In the dark.
We pull up behind the old green Viva in front of a lonely house, its back to the endless night of a golf course.
‘You’d think she would have moved,’ says Helen Marshall.
We walk up the drive, towards Mrs Hall and the Reverend Martin Laws.
She’s pulling at the skin around her neck.
‘Evening, Mrs Hall,’ I say.
‘Good evening, Mr Hunter.’
‘This is Detective Sergeant Marshall. I hope you don’t mind her coming along?’
‘Not at all,’ says Mrs Hall, shaking her head. ‘Please come in.’
Here in the front room, in front of the TV, we sit down on the big golden sofa, displays of coins and medals in ornate cases.
Mrs Hall is in the kitchen, making tea, the Reverend Laws watching the road through the bay windows.
She comes back with a pot of tea and four cups on a tray.
We drink the milky weak brew in silence.
I put down my cup and say: ‘Did Eric have a study or anything?’
She stands up: ‘It’s this way.’
Leaving Helen Marshall with Laws, I follow Mrs Hall out of the front room and into the back of the house.