wicked held aloft, lest anyone should start to see this as no more than a sordid tale of small-town ambition and sexual games gone catastrophically wrong.
She was still holding Melanie’s angel like a talisman, apprehensive. He might know what he was doing, but was he the right person to be doing it? Oh yes, they’d been in the wrong place, Huw had known that from the beginning.
Huw scenting the enemy.
Lol walked beside Merrily. She sensed a calm around him, which meant the concert had either been a big success or a monumental failure. He’d whispered that Moira was taking care of Jane. Moira? Jane and
A police car slid past towards the church. Cody and Connor-Crewe had already been taken to Hereford in separate cars. Bliss had not arrested either of them, simply asking, with a certain savage courtesy, if they’d care to discuss it in more depth.
What would the charges be? Accessories to the concealment of a murder? Cody said he and Piers had taken the body through the fields in the early hours, on a trailer pulled by a quad bike. Maybe they could simply have shopped Lynsey, Cody said, and still saved their business lives – all they’d done was participate in what would be known as ‘sex orgies’. No big deal, these days, even out here in the sticks.
Merrily suspected that Lynsey had had more on them than they would ever disclose.
Bliss had seen them into the cars. Then he’d made a short call and cut the connection and waited. Within three minutes the phone had buzzed. Bliss had listened with a foxy little smile, and then said, ‘No real need for you to turn out at this hour, boss.’ Then, cutting the connection again, he’d said ruefully, ‘Fleming’ll be here in just over an hour.’
Gomer had stayed behind with Bliss, to show the Durex suits where to dig.
As she walked towards the crossroads, with the old duffel coat over her alb, Merrily was still hearing:
Fred West, several years dead, who liked to watch. It was all that Huw had needed.
They were passing the school now. Fergus Young held up his long head, his hair high in the wind, and didn’t give it a single sideways glance.
How much had
At the bottom of the hill, past the steel-shuttered Post Office and Stores and the Head Office unisex hair salon, Cherry Lodge waited for Merrily and whispered, ‘We won’t come with you, if that’s all right.’
‘Nobody could expect you to.’
‘I feel somehow empty inside now,’ Cherry said. ‘Do you know what I mean? These were the very people who came to our door, asking us to see some sense, not damage the community.’
Merrily squeezed Cherry’s arm. ‘At least you know now why they were so keen to prevent Roddy going into that grave.’
It didn’t take much to spark a protest, not with people like Richard, the newsagent, around – a word here, a word there, a suggestion that the value of your property might be damaged.
‘And if you want to arrange something at Hereford Crematorium, soon as you like, I’d be happy to do it properly.’
‘Thank you,’ Cherry said. ‘We might sleep tonight. Eventually.’
Merrily raised a hand as the Lodges walked away, following their lamp up the narrow lane to their bleak farm on the hill above the place that was, or wasn’t, Ariconium.
What would happen to all that now: the plans, the reconstructions, the suspect artefacts and the audio- visuals?
Underhowle… where nothing succeeded for long.
By the grimy gleam of the last street lamp, she saw the face of Ingrid Sollars and wondered about all the things Ingrid must have chosen not to see for the sake of progress. And yet, in this light, you might have thought Ingrid’s expression was actually one of relief.
But then, Ingrid couldn’t know what Huw had in mind, as he brought out a stubby torch to lead the rest of them past the darkened community hall and out of the village towards Roddy Lodge’s garage and the track to the old Baptist chapel.
No wonder he didn’t want to talk to anyone.
Jane saw Jenny Box as soon as they came into the square at Ledwardine.
It was just on closing time at the Black Swan, and some people were leaving, urged into their vehicles by an irritable wind.
Jane saw James Bull-Davies and Alison Kinnersley, who she was sure she’d spotted at the Courtyard – could have got a lift with
And then, between the rainy haloes around the fake gaslamps, she saw Jenny moving across the square – not from the pub, but from the other side, from the direction of her home, Chapel House. Jenny Box, with her scarf over her head like the Virgin Mary and that flickering, flinching blur passing across her face, as she paused on the edge of the cobbles as if looking for a light in the vicarage, before turning back.
‘Moira, stop!’
Moira braked. ‘What’s wrong?’
‘It’s her. Jenny Driscoll.’
‘Where?’
‘Just going… the woman with the white scarf over her head.’
‘Uh huh,’ Moira said.
‘She doesn’t know this car. Did you see?’
‘What?’
‘The look on her face. That look she has – as if her expression’s out of synch with her feelings.’
Moira pulled up on the edge of the square, where you weren’t supposed to park. In the last fifteen minutes, Jane had just kept talking, without thinking, like someone did when they were drunk: talking about Jenny Box and the angel, which seemed to have brought everything to a crisis. Telling Moira Cairns what she’d never told anyone – about the night she’d drunk wine with Gareth Box and fallen under his spell and the spell of the house: autumn wine and firelight, the sheer intoxication of it, the first time in weeks that she’d found any
And then about last night, walking these streets with Jenny – how weird that had been – discovering that she actually
Not daring, while she was saying all this, even to look at Moira Cairns, who had been, after all, the other significant hate-figure in her recent life.
‘Jane.’ Moira cut the headlights. ‘Seriously. What do you think is happening here?’
‘I reckon Gareth Box is in her house, and she’s afraid to go back there. She said he’d defiled her chapel.’
‘How?’
‘I don’t know, it was only a message on the machine. She’s obviously looking for Mum, but there’s nobody in at the vicarage. She doesn’t know about this funeral, you see. She thought it was on Friday. She’s confused, messed up. You could see that.’
‘OK,’ Moira said. ‘Why don’t we just make sure first that your Mum really isnae back yet?’
Jane salvaged a smile. ‘Before you stick your head out of the trench?’
‘That your house?’
‘Just behind those trees.’
‘All right. I’ll find somewhere safer to park and I’ll wait for you here.’
‘And then what?’
‘Might be a wee bit premature to call the police. We’ll go knock on this woman’s door.’