Read A Line in the Sand Online
Authors: Gerald Seymour
wind
and the drive of the rain, was one of the policemen from the unmarked car. He cradled his gun close to his body, as if to protect himself against the onslaught of the gathering storm, now and in the future.
What Davies, drenched wet and frozen, had been told was that the
killer
would come soon, but he didn't say it.
leven.
Geoff Markham didn't like to drink in the middle of the day and had sipped a fruit juice. The American had washed down the pork pie with 244
a
dark pint from a wooden barrel and there had been salad with the pie.
In the car, the onion was still on Littelbaum's breath.
Markham hesitated before turning at the signpost to the village. A cattle-carrier lorry swerved past him and gave him a long blast on the
horn. It was all as he remembered it. Ahead of him was the high
water
tower, the dominating feature, and the American gazed at it with a sort
of awe but didn't speak. Beside him, flanking the road, was a small car-park and a sign "Toby's Walks: Picnic Area'. Away to the right was
re wide, flat fields covered with half-moon
Northmarsh, to the left we
g shelters.
pi
He swung the car on to the minor road. Of course it
was
the same. How could it be any different?
The American smiled apologetically and murmured that he needed, and badly, to relieve himself.
t was
Markham drove into the car-park of the picnic area and saw wha
ere
different. Th
were two men in an unmarked car, uniformed, wearing
vlar vests and silly little baseball caps.
ke
But, there was nothing
silly about the barrel of the Heckler & Koch aimed at him through the
open side window. He braked.
id that he couldn't have lasted much longer, and dived
Littelbaum sa
for
en to see
the bushes. Markham held up his ID card for the policem
d
an
sauntered towards them.
He introduced himself and said the American had bladder problems.
He
asked them how it was. The aim of the gun was no longer on his chest.
ld that they had the registration and the make of a car to
He was to
look for, and it was all right in daylight.
mean?"
"What's that
an grimaced.
The policem
a sod of a place after dark. So quiet. Last night, before
"It's
245
the
changeover but after it got dark, we saw this shape in the bushes.
Bloody near crapped myself. Seemed to be watching us. I got the
gun
on it, then two dogs came out. It was a woman walking her dogs, in the
dark, like a bloody ghost, proper turn it gave me. It's Toby's Walks here. She asked, all straight-faced, had we seen Toby? She was
serious had we seen Toby? We asked the old biddy, who was Toby? You know what? He was Black Toby, Tobias Gill no lie, it's what she said and he was a black drummer in the dragoons who got pissed up, went looking for a bit of fanny and brought her up here. He was found, Black Toby was, the next morning, drunk and incapable, and she was beside him, raped and strangled. They took him to the assizes and then
carted him back here to hang him in chains. It was two hundred and fifty years ago, and the old biddy said he liked to walk round here, rattling his bloody chains. It's that sort of place. After what
she'd
told us, we heard every bloody bush move last night, every bloody
creak
of every bloody tree... She meant it. She was really surprised we hadn't seen him."
The American came out of the bushes and was pulling up his zip. Markham didn't laugh at the story. Out there a shadowy figure was moving
in
darkness among cover, silent, without the rattling of chains, towards a
target and a place of death. He felt the cold wind coming off the sea
and shuddered.
They climbed back into the car and he drove on.
Of course it was different, and for some it would never again be the same.
Markham asked the American what he wanted to see and Littelbaum's
jutted towards the church tower.
finger
The rain had come on heavily
while they'd stopped for lunch, but now had eased into a fine,
drizzle. He could see the first houses of the village
persistent
and
the church tower looming above them. He was unsettled. It wasn't only
the policeman's story of the ghost of the black drummer, it was also 246
what Littelbaum had told him of Alamut, a place of death, and a bus ride out of Bandar Abbas, a place of carnage. And he remembered what Cathy Parker had said and asked. It would be decided down here, at the
village, body to body, as it always was, at close quarters, and was he
tough enough?
He felt inadequate. It was no longer about people like himself,
rated
as intelligent, educated and thoughtful. It was about guns and
nerve:
this was a power play. Littelbaum pinched his arm and pointed to
the
parking lay-by at the side of the church.
At the near end was a fine squat tower, perhaps seventy-five feet
in
height, with wide walls of flint facing. Behind it were the nave
and
the high chancel windows and between them were stout yellowed stone buttresses. Beyond the church was a ruin, once finer and larger than its neighbour but now roofless and with the rain coming through the clerestory windows. Markham asked the American what he wanted to
do,
and was told he wished to go inside. He had a fascination for
churches
and a total respect for the quality of the architects and craftsmen who
had built them, but the ruin disturbed him death so close to life.
He
pushed open the church door. There were a few lights in the dull
dim
interior, as there had been in the weekend corridors at Thames House that morning.
faced, older man.
A clergyman came towards him, a gaunt, fleshless-
Markham thought Littelbaum was following him. He offered his hand in
friendship and lied, said that he often diverted on a journey to see a
hile church.
worthw
He heard the aged squeak of the hinges of a small
door to the side.
ame
A smile lit the clergyman's face, as if few c
to
see his church. The flowers were already in place for Sunday's
he only brightness stretching towards the altar and the
service, t
247
ained glass of the arched window behind it.
st
On the walls were the
carved plaques remembering the dead.
The clergyman said, "There was an older church, of course, but that's ed by the sea first time round then washed away. The
gone, flood
origin
the building here is fifteenth century, and a magnificent building of
it would have been.
e died.
But the villag
There were four altars
re, now there's just the one. Once we had a bell that weighed
he
three-quarters of a ton, but the community sold it off,
ecause they were dying from deprivation and hunger.
in 1585, b
It's
so
good to meet someone who's interested my name's Hackett."
Markham looked around him, past the old carved-stone font, and could Littelbaum.
not see
If he had been alone in the church he would have
te prayer for those who'd been in the bus.
said a short priva
The clergyman droned on, "Disease, poverty, fires, all decimated the of
population
the village I sometimes say that this is a place without
a present, only a past. That's how it feels here sometimes."
He was in the bath. Meryl had made them undress at the back door, had
insisted on it. Davies thought by now that Perry would have told
her
of the disaster in the pub, would have come up with an explanation as
to why they had come back sodden, with sand caking their shoes.
She came into the bathroom.
itched his wristwatch to the cold tap, and was allowing
Davies had h
himself five minutes' defrost time. The holster and the Glock were the floor, with the radio.
within reach on
She had brought two of
to the back door.
Perry's dressing-gowns
There was no knock, and no hesitation or apology. He sat upright
and
nched forward to obscure his waist, hips and groin from her.
hu
Meryl
carried a heap of folded clothes. Her face was expressionless, like f the nurses had been while he couldn't wash himself, sponging
those o
his privates after he'd broken his ankle falling from a ladder when et through a back window to plant a bug.
trying to g
There was a towel
on top of the clothes. They could have been left outside the door, 248
and
she could have shouted to him that they were there.
She
id
la
the towel and the clothes on the chair beside his head. Davies
stared straight ahead, and wondered how close she was to the edge
of
her sanity. It wasn't his job to prop up the morale of his principal, at of his principal's wife.
let alone th
He felt himself to be the
s
crutch on which she leaned. It was nothing to do with hi
personality,
h or his wit.
his warmt
It was because he had a Glock 9mm pistol in
a
ying on the bright pink fluffy mat beside the bath. She
holster l
came
he bathroom, where he was naked, for comfort from him and from
into t
his gun.
The wristwatch showed that his time was up. He had not the heart
to
tell her that he could not be her friend. He reached for the towel, f clumsily, stood up in the bath and began to dry himself.
hid himsel
ed her for bringing him the clothes. She went out of the
He thank
bathroom and closed the door after her. She had not said a single word.
e Littelbaum paused, took his handkerchief and mopped the sweat
Duan
off
head.
his fore
He swayed, clung to the rail, and climbed again. He
had
r of heights, but beyond the horror was a cruel sense of
a horro
obligation. He had to climb the tower. He went up the narrow, worn, steps; if he had slipped he would have plunged.
spiralled
The door
at
bolted and the bolt rusted. He couldn't move it. He
the top was
balanced on a smooth, worn step, then heaved his shoulder into the door. It gave, pitching him forward, through the doorway, on to the small square floor of the tower's top.
The wind snatched at him. His coat was lifted and his tie was torn istcoat. The drizzle made his eyes smart.
from his wa
around him and clung, with both hands, to the low,
He looked
crenellated wall.
From the vantage-point, he gazed down over the village.
249
His hair was ripped to a tangle. He could see the road that was the one point of entry into the village and the lanes off it, the clusters of homes, and the patchwork shape of the green. He saw the house, and
the roof of the small wood hut behind it. He saw the endless,
disappearing seascape.
The house, its position, was of small interest to Duane Littelbaum.
He
sank to his hands and knees and crabbed around the square floor space, never dared to look vertically down.
There were the marshlands.
Dull, yellowed, reeds and dark-water channels between them, the
marshlands were to the south of the village behind the sea wall, and to
the north-west. Reached by the one road, the village was an island surrounded by the old reeds, the dark water and the sea. He estimated that each of the great marshes was a full three thousand metres long and a minimum of a thousand wide. He saw the thick cover of trees around the fringes of the marshlands, the tracks between the
marshlands
and the village.
In spite of his fear, without thinking, he straightened his back,
lifted his head and his nostrils flared. He snorted the air into
them.
He was satisfied.
He had posed the questions and had answered them.
He crawled back towards the flapping door. He took a last look at the
marshes and saw the gulls, white specks, meandering above them. He eps with
wedged the door shut after him, and came down the spiral st
his
eyes closed.
He heard the clergyman's voice.
"Everything went, the bells, the lead, the best-cut stones. Sad, but
inevitable. They have a history, the native people of this
250
community,
of great suffering. It makes for a cruelty and a self-sufficiency.
The
original church was lost because survival took precedence over
principle."
Littelbaum walked out into the rain and the wind. Markham came after him.
"What do you want to do now?"
"Go back to London."
"You don't want to see the house, at least drive past it?"
"No."
"You don't want to meet the protection officer?"
"Thank you, he'd be a busy man- well, he should be, he wouldn't want
"tourists". No."
"Actually, you hitched a lift with me. I had a day planned down here.