‘Aren’t the Thorogoods also your parishioners?’
He expelled a mildly exasperated hiss.
‘And if they’re trying to make a point about reclaiming ancient sites, hasn’t it occurred to you that you’re just helping to publicize their cause?’
‘And what’s Bernard Dunmore’s policy on the issue?’ Ellis demanded. ‘Say nothing and hope they won’t be able to maintain their mortgage repayments? Try to forget they’re there? Is that, perhaps, why the Church is no longer a force in this country, while evil thrives unchallenged? Perhaps
‘Oh?’ For the first time, he was thrown off balance.
‘Barbara Buckingham, nee Thomas? Menna’s sister?’
‘I’ve never heard of her. I didn’t even know Menna had a sister.’
Merrily blinked. ‘Didn’t you ever talk to Menna about her background?’
‘Why should I have probed into her background?’
‘Just that when I have kids for confirmation we have long chats about everything. Rebaptism, I mean. I’d have thought that was something much more serious.’
‘Merrily, I don’t have to talk about this to you.’
She followed him into the hall. ‘It’s just I can’t believe you’re one of those priests who simply goes through the motions, Nick.’
‘I do have an appointment. I’m sorry.’
‘Splish, splash, you’re now baptized?’
When he swiftly lifted a hand, she thought, for an incredible moment, that he was going to hit her and she actually cringed. But all he did was twist the small knob on the Yale lock and pull open the front door, but when he noticed that momentary cower, he smiled broadly and his smooth face lit up like a jack-o’-lantern.
She didn’t move. ‘I still don’t fully understand this, Nick.’
‘I know,’ he said. ‘And you must ask yourself why.’
‘I mean I don’t understand why you’re using the enviable influence you’ve developed in this community to put people in fear of their immortal souls. You didn’t have to make that inflammatory statement to the
He looked at her as if trying, for the first time, to bring her into focus and then, finding she was too flimsy to define, turned away. ‘I can’t believe,’ he said, ‘that
She walked past him through the doorway, glanced back and saw a man with nothing much to lose. A man who had stripped himself down to the basics: cheap clothes, a small council house, a village hall for a church, and even that impermanent. There was something distinctly medieval about him. He was like a friar, a mendicant.
‘Of course,’ she said from the step, ‘
‘This is a waste of time,’ Nick Ellis said. ‘I have people to see.’
The door closed quietly in her face.
Merrily stood on the path. She found she was shaking.
She hadn’t felt as ineffectual since the
29
Dark Glamour
AS MERRILY GOT back into the car, Gomer pointed to the mobile on the dash.
‘Bleeped twice. Third time, I figured out how to answer him. Andy Mumford, it was, that copper. Jane gived him your number. He asked could you call back.’
‘He say what about?’
‘Not to me.’
She picked up the phone, entered the Hereford number Gomer had written on a cigarette paper, having to hold the thin paper close to the window because it was beyond merely overcast now – and not yet one p.m. Three fat raindrops blopped on the windscreen. This was, she told herself, going to be positive news.
‘DS Mumford.’
‘It’s Merrily Watkins.’
‘Ah.’
‘Has she turned up?’
‘Afraid not, Mrs Watkins.’
‘Oh.’ She heard Ellis’s front door slam, and saw him coming down the path. He was carrying a medium-sized white suitcase. He walked past her Volvo without a glance and carried on towards the village centre.
‘But I’m afraid her car has,’ Mumford said. ‘You know the Elan Valley? Big area of lakes – reservoirs – about thirty miles west of Kington? They’ve pulled her car out of one of the reservoirs.’
‘Oh God.’
‘Some local farmer saw the top of it shining under the water. Been driven clean through a fence. Dyfed- Powys’ve got divers in there. When I checked, about ten minutes ago, they still hadn’t found anything else. Don’t know what the currents are like in those big reservoirs. I’m sorry to have to tell you this, Reverend, but I thought you’d want to know.’
‘Yes. Thank you.’
‘If I hear anything else, I’ll get back to you. Or, of course, if
‘What, you think she might have faked her own death?’
‘No, I’m a pessimist,’ Mumford said. ‘I tend to think they’ll pull out a body before nightfall.’
It began as a forestry track, then dropped into an open field with an unexpected vista across the valley to the Radnor Forest hills of grey green and bracken brown, most of which Gomer knew by name.
And strange names they were: the Whimble, the Smatcher, the Black Mixen. Evocative English-sounding names, though all the hills were in Wales. Merrily and Gomer sat for a moment in the car and took in the view: not a farm, a cottage or even a barn in sight. There were a few sheep, but lambing would come late in an area as exposed as this: hill farming country, marginal land. She remembered Barbara Buckingham talking about her deprived childhood – the teabags used six times, the chip fat changed only for Christmas. As they left the car at the edge of the field, she paused to say a silent prayer for Barbara.
She caught up with Gomer alongside a new stile which, he said, had been erected by Nev for the archaeologists. This was where the track became a footpath following the line of the Hindwell Brook, which was flowing unexpectedly fast and wide after all the rain. It had stopped raining now, but the sky bulged with more to come. Gomer pointed across the brook, shouting over the rush of the water.
‘Used to be another bridge by yere one time, but now the only way you can get to the ole church by car is through the farm, see.’
‘Where was the excavation?’
‘Back there. See them tumps? Nev’s work.’ He squinted critically at a line of earthmounds, where tons of soil had been replaced. ‘Boy coulder made a better job o’ that. Bit bloody uneven, ennit?’
She went to stand next to him. ‘You’d like to get back on the diggers, wouldn’t you?’
‘Minnie never liked it,’ Gomer said gruffly. ‘Her still wouldn’t like it. ’Sides which, I’m too old.’
‘You don’t think that for one minute.’