Craft it was the ability to become still, part of the landscape like an oak tree. Prosser stayed put because maybe he
But after about five seconds, the farmer looked up when a woman’s voice called out, ‘Gareth! Who was that?’
Prosser didn’t reply, and she came round the side of one of the sheds onto the half-frozen rutted track.
‘Oh,’ she said.
‘Hi there,’ Robin said.
The woman was a little younger than Gareth, maybe fifty, and a good deal better preserved. She wore tight jeans and boots and a canvas bomber jacket. She had a strong, lean face and clear blue eyes and short hair with, possibly, highlights.
‘Good morning,’ the woman said distinctly. ‘I’m Councillor Prosser’s wife.’
‘Hi. Robin Thorogood. From, uh, next door.’
‘Judith Prosser.’
They shook hands. She had a firm grip. She even looked directly into his eyes.
‘I’ve got some coffee on,’ she said.
‘That would be wonderful.’
‘I’ll be in now,’ Gareth said.
Robin had learned, from Betty, that when they said ‘now’ they meant ‘in a short while’. So he smiled and nodded at Gareth Prosser and gratefully followed Judith up the track toward the farmhouse complex. In the middle distance, their two teenage sons were wheeling their dirt bikes out to the hill. There was a sound like a chainsaw starting up and one of the boys splattered off.
‘Be an international next year, our Richard,’ Judith Prosser said proudly. ‘Had his first bike when he was four. All Wales Schoolboy Scrambling champion at eleven. Perfect country for it, see.’
‘Doesn’t it mess up the fields?’
‘Messes up the footpaths a bit.’ Mrs Prosser smiled ruefully. ‘We gets complaints from some of the rambling groups from Off. But not from the local people.’
Robin nodded.
‘Councillor Prosser’s boys, see,’ Mrs Prosser said, like it was perfectly reasonable that being a councillor should automatically exclude you from certain stifling social impositions. Robin didn’t detect any irony, but maybe it was there.
‘I see,’ he said.
Betty thought she sounded like a woman who would at least give you a straight answer – if not until Monday.
Bugger. She cleared away the breakfast things, ran some water for washing-up. Whatever Robin learned about the Reverend Penney from the Prossers, she didn’t trust him not to put some pagan-friendly spin on it, and it was important to her now to find out the truth. What had Penney done to cause ‘weeping and wailing’ in the village? Why had the local people hushed it up? Did the priest, Ellis, know the full story and did this explain why he was so determined to subject the site to some kind of exorcism? She’d never settle here until she knew.
The phone rang, had her reaching for a towel before the answering machine could grab the call.
‘Oh, my dear, I’m sure it’s working already!’
‘Mrs Wilshire?’
‘I have had what, without doubt, was the best night’s sleep I’ve had in months!’
‘That’s, er, wonderful,’ Betty said hesitantly, because the likelihood of her arthritis remedy kicking in overnight was remote, to say the least.
‘I can bend my fingers further than... Oh, I must show you. Will you be in this area today?’
‘Well, I suppose...’
‘Marvellous. I shall be at home all day.’
‘Er... you didn’t stop taking your cortisone tablets, did you? Because steroids do need to be wound down slowly.’
‘Oh, I wouldn’t take any chances.’
‘No.’
It was psychological, of course, and Betty felt a little wary. Mrs Wilshire was a woman who could very easily become dependent on people. If Betty wasn’t careful, she’d wind up having to call in to see her every other day. Still, if it hadn’t been for Mrs Wilshire they would never have got onto the Penney affair.
‘OK, I’ll drop in later this morning if that’s all right. Er, Mrs Wilshire, the papers you kindly let me take – about the church? There was one from a Mrs Pottinger, relating to the Reverend Penney. Do you know anything about that?’
‘Oh, there was a lot of trouble about him, my dear. Everyone was very glad when he left, so I’m told.’
‘Even though the church was decommissioned and sold soon afterwards?’
‘That was a pity, although I believe it was always rather a draughty old place.’
‘Er, do you remember, when you bought the house – and the church – did the Reverend Ellis come to visit you there?’
‘Oh, I don’t know. I was hardly ever there. It was Bryan’s project. Bryan’s house, until it was finished. Which I confess I really rather hoped it never would be.’
‘So you don’t know if the Reverend Ellis went to see Bryan there?’
‘I’m afraid I don’t. Though I’m sure he would have mentioned it. He never mentioned Mr Ellis in connection with that house. I don’t
‘No suggestion of Mr Ellis wanting to conduct a service in the church?’
‘A church service?’
‘Er... yes.’
‘Oh no, my dear. I’m sure I would have remembered that.’
The first thing Mrs Judith Prosser asked him was if they would be keeping stock on their land. Robin replied that farmers seemed to be having a hard enough time right now without amateurs creeping in under the fence. Which led her to ask what he did for a living and him to tell her he was an artist.
‘That’s interesting,’ Mrs Prosser said, though Robin couldn’t basically see how she could find it so; there wasn’t a painting on any wall of the parlour – just photographs, mainly of men. Some of the photos were so old that the men had wing collars and watch chains.
As well as chairman’s chains. Robin wondered if ‘Councillor’ was some kind of inherited title in the Prosser family – like, even if you had all the personality of a bag of fertilizer, they still elected you, on account of the Prossers knew the way to County Hall in Llandrindod.
Mrs Prosser went through to the kitchen, leaving the door open. There was a black suit on a hanger behind the door.
‘We have a funeral this afternoon,’ she explained.
‘I guess councillors have a lot of funerals to attend.’
She looked at him. ‘In this case, it’s for a friend.’
‘I’m sorry.’
‘We all are. Sit down, Mr Thorogood.’
The furniture was dark and heavy and highly polished. The leather chair he sat in had arms that came almost up to his shoulders. When you put your hands on them, you felt like a dog begging.
Funerals. Was this an opening?