Hiding From the Light (54 page)

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Authors: Barbara Erskine

Tags: #General, #Fiction

BOOK: Hiding From the Light
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115

 
 

Bill had managed to climb the hill behind the village. The mist was thick up here, now the rain had stopped, the smell of evil very strong, swirling up from the sea.

Not many people knew about this place. Once it had been sacred. Bronze Age men had buried their dead here. In the Iron Age there had been a temple. Then came the gods from the northern lands across the seas. Not necessarily evil. Not then. But powerful, knowing how to release the energies of the land; knowing how to draw in that mist from the sea.

It was hard to summon the Ward. He wasn’t sure he could do it. Traditionally they assembled at sundown in every town and village; the spirits, the ghosts, the elves, the fairies of the land, and then they would spread out along the spirit paths to weave the circle of protection which kept the area and its people safe. In most places now, the Ward was long gone, the old ways forgotten, the spiritual, psychic centres of the towns exposed, helpless before the onslaught of so much evil. There were people who still understood. Young Lyndsey had told him that. Fountain people, they called themselves, some of them. But as far as he knew there weren’t any round here. Here there were very few any more to understand or care.

Maybe the Ward would consider it ill-mannered for him to invoke them? Maybe they had disappeared from here, too. But when he had visited Spindles and St Mary’s churchyard he had sensed them there standing back, watching. And in the gardens at Liza’s. And they used to watch over Barker’s shop. But nowadays they were wary; shy; unwilling to come forward.

Shivering in his old tweed coat and woollen muffler, he tried to steady his breath, calm his thundering pulse, exhausted after the steep climb. Slowly he raised his hands. ‘Help us,’ he whispered. He could feel his father’s talisman snug against his chest beneath his vest and shirt and heavy sweater, the secret sigils reassuring. Strong. ‘Help us. Come forth. Drive out this vile mist …’

His voice was weak. They couldn’t hear him. With a shiver he looked round. On his own he wasn’t strong enough. He needed Mike. From the very start he had sensed that. This wasn’t cunning versus Christian. This wasn’t the Elder faith against the new. This was good against evil. This was dark against light.

He didn’t know the words any more. Perhaps he never did. All he had was an honest heart and the desire to save his town. Perhaps it would be enough? If they were still there. If they were listening. If he could convince them.

116

 
 

‘Emma, wait!’ Mike had run after her up the road, where she turned away from the rectory and passed the next two houses. There the streetlights stopped and the road turned into a country lane. It was very dark and she was hard to see in the distance. ‘Emma!’ he called again, panting. ‘Wait. We have to talk.’ She was splashing through puddles, dodging overgrown branches in the hedge, drawing steadily ahead of him until the lane curved away towards the east and he lost sight of her.

He couldn’t afford to lose her now. Forcing himself on, he tore up the lane, slipping on the mud where a tractor had gone up the centre of the tarmac leaving a trail of debris behind it. ‘Emma!’

He turned the corner and there she was, waiting for him. In the dark he could barely see her face, but she was smiling.

He skidded to a stop, warily. ‘Emma, is that you?’ He was panting heavily.

She laughed. She was scarcely out of breath. ‘Emma has gone. I told you.’ She paused, her head a little to one side. ‘So, you couldn’t resist coming after me, Matthew. You fancied me, didn’t you! You wanted me in your bed. And so here you are, to see if you can persuade me to spare you. But you see, it won’t work. Not this time. Not ever again.’

Mike was watching her carefully. ‘So, Sarah. How do you intend to kill me?’ He kept his voice light; unthreatening. ‘Tell me, have you a knife? A gun? Or are you going to do it with a spell?’

To his relief he saw the uncertainty in her eyes. She was frowning.

‘No spell is strong enough, Sarah. Not now,’ he went on, pushing his advantage home. ‘He has gone. Gone forever! Do you hear me? I am not Matthew Hopkins. He tried to possess me but I fought him. I will fight him again, if I have to! Leave it, Sarah. God will deal with Matthew. And he has comforted Liza.’

She shook her head. ‘Liza wouldn’t want to be comforted by God. She worshipped Satan.’ Her accent thickened again. ‘As I do. And he is more than a match for your God, parson.’

‘I don’t think so, Sarah.’ Mike smiled. ‘I believe that love and light can win against hate and darkness every time.’ His breathing was steadying now and he was feeling more confident as she continued to stand there talking to him. She had no weapons. There was nothing she could do.

‘Emma, I want you to be strong,’ he murmured quietly. ‘I know you can hear me. We can push this woman out. God is with us here. We can do it. I am going to command her spirit to leave you. Are you ready?’ He took a step forward.

She didn’t move.

He raised his right hand to make the sign of the cross. ‘In the name of God the Father; in the name of God the Son, and in the name of God the Holy Spirit, I command you, Sarah Paxman, to leave this place now. I command you to leave Emma alone and never return.’ He managed to make his voice ring out powerfully against the muffling thickness of the mist.

He paused. Somehow he had expected some sign. Some great struggle. But Emma made no sound at all. She continued to stand there staring at him.

The silence lengthened. Then suddenly she laughed. The sound made his skin crawl. ‘So, priest! What do you do now? I’m still here!’ Her eyes sparkled, almost coquettishly as she tossed her head and turned, striding away from him into the darkness. A little further on, the lane debouched out onto the hillside where the short rabbit-cropped grass was studded with wet furze, and she moved ahead of him out onto the hill at the very edge of his vision, fading in and out of sight as the wisps of mist trailed around her, caressing, drawing her on. Mike stumbled into a rabbit hole and swore quietly under his breath. He mustn’t lose sight of her now.

‘Emma! Emma, wait!’

Her only reply was another peal of laughter.

Somewhere to the left of him, higher up on the hillside he could see a patch of light. A bonfire? A powerful torch? Emma had turned the other way, instinctively seeking the darkness.

‘Emma!’

It was then that he saw the stooped figure, wrapped in coat and muffler, emerge out of the mist.

‘Bill? What are you doing here?’

‘I am trying to summon the Ward.’ Bill straightened his shoulders. ‘Where were you, Rector? We needed you at Hollantide! The evil flooded us from every side. Every Devil and demon was there and you chose to go away!’

‘I didn’t choose to, Bill.’ Mike stared round anxiously. He could no longer see Emma. ‘I had no choice. But I was praying for you.’

‘Aye, well. I need you to pray now, too. You and I need to stand shoulder to shoulder, Rector. Do you have your holy water?’

Mike shook his head.

‘Then bless this.’ The old man held out the wet branch which he had pulled from a tree in the hedge at the bottom of the field. ‘And flick it into the mist. With your blessing it will be holy. By tradition it is sacred. It will do the trick. You and I together can summon the Ward, Rector. We can drive out the evil and rescue that young woman’s soul while we’re about it.’

‘Where is she?’ Mike was staring into the mist.

‘Not far. She’s hiding from the light on the hillside there.’

‘What is it?’ Mike frowned, feeling the beads of moisture condensing on his eyelashes.

‘Fairy fire.’ Bill chuckled. ‘Make no mind, Rector. It’s not Christian, but it’s strong and it’s good. We’re on the same side, Rector, remember? It seems to me you don’t think you’re strong enough for all this, but you are. You can do this.’

Mike glanced at him. He was right. He could do this. His faith was strong enough. He raised his right hand over the branch of rowan in his left and made the sign of the cross.

‘Help us, friends!’ Bill was calling into the darkness. ‘Bless this place. Bless that young woman. Bring the light back to this land!’

Mike could see her now. She was standing still, staring back towards them. In a few quick strides he was at her side. ‘Sarah Paxman, I command you to go. In the name of God, of Jesus Christ and of the Light, I command you to go!’ He lifted the rowan and flicked it across Emma’s shoulders, showering her in ice-cold droplets of water.

She screamed.

‘No!’ Her hands went to her face, clawing at her eyes. ‘No! I can’t see. I’m blind!’

‘Emma, fight. Drive her out.’ He stepped towards her. Groping for the chain around his neck, he unfastened it. It took only seconds to hang the little silver cross around her neck. She shrank back, sobbing. Bill joined him. ‘Here. Give her this as well.’ He dragged the pendant from his own neck and put it over her head to hang next to the cross. Emma subsided onto her knees in the mud, sobbing. ‘I can’t …’ She was finding it hard to breathe. ‘I can’t see.’

‘You’ll be all right, girl.’ Bill put his hand on her shoulder. The two men held their breath, watching Emma carefully, then Bill gave a long contented sigh. ‘Rector, look.’ He nodded behind them up the hill. A woman was walking away from them into the mist. A woman in a long gown.

Mike’s mouth fell open. ‘Sarah?’ he whispered.

Bill nodded. ‘She’s gone. Your woman here will be all right now. The Ward will deal with that other one.’

‘So it worked? They came?’ Mike looked down at the rowan branch in his hand.

‘It worked. They came.’ Bill chuckled again. ‘I reckon tomorrow we’ll find the mist has gone. The sun will come out again.’

Mike sighed. He turned back to Emma and held out a gentle hand. ‘Emma?’ he said cautiously. ‘Can you hear me? Do you remember the little prayer I taught you? I want you to say it. Christ be with me, Christ within me. Say it, Emma.’

She smiled wearily. ‘Mike?’

‘Say it, Emma. Christ be with me.’

‘Christ be with me.’ She repeated it faintly. ‘Mike, what has happened? Why am I here?’ She was looking round in confusion. She put her hands up to her face and pushed the wet hair off her forehead. ‘Have I been sleep-walking?’

Mike nodded. He smiled with relief. ‘That is exactly what you’ve been doing, Emma. Come.’ He held out his hand. ‘I want you to come back down out of the mist.’

She went to him hesitantly, still confused. ‘I don’t understand – ’

‘You don’t have to.’ He put his hand round her shoulders. ‘Are you coming, Bill?’

Bill shook his head. ‘I reckon I’ll stay out here for a bit, Rector. I’ve got some thank yous to say. I’ll follow you down in a minute.’

Mike nodded. Turning back towards the lane, he guided her back over the grass through the mud and onto the road. From there they made their way slowly down towards the church. Somehow it felt right that they should go there.

She followed him without protest as he led her into the porch and through the door. Stepping into the nave, she stopped and stared round, and he saw her frowning.

‘It’s all right.’ He took her hand gently and led her up towards the chancel. ‘Do you remember being here before?’

She stopped again. ‘I was here with Lyndsey?’

He nodded.

‘Where is she?’

‘I don’t know.’ He bent to pick up the candlestick lying on the floor where it had fallen after he had wrestled it from her hand. Setting it on the altar, he replaced its candle and reached for his matches. ‘There. That’s better. I like candlelight.’ He was watching her carefully. Soaked to the skin, her hair straggling round her face, she looked desperately tired and her eyes were full of unhappiness. But they were Emma’s eyes. The wild, vicious gaze of Sarah Paxman had gone. She pushed her hands deep into her pockets, shivering, and as though she could stand no longer she suddenly sat down on the kneeler which ran along the altar rails. Mike sat down beside her and after a moment’s hesitation he put his arm round her shoulders. Her hair smelled of rain and incense and whatever scent it was she wore – something musky and mysterious. Without thinking he dropped a kiss on the top of her head and she leaned back a little into his arms. ‘It’s peaceful in here,’ she murmured. ‘I’m so tired, Mike. I’d like to stay here forever.’ She sighed. ‘This is a safe place. Sarah doesn’t like it here.’

He nodded. ‘Safe and quiet. Just us and God.’

She didn’t reply and he remained quiet. Was it going to happen to him again? Was his faith going to chase her away before he had even found her?

‘She won’t come back, will she?’ she said quietly.

‘Lyndsey?’

‘Sarah.’

He shook his head. ‘If she does, we’ll be ready for her. I don’t think she’ll come back. I saw her go. Besides, it was Hopkins she was after, not me.’

‘Aren’t you afraid of me?’ She turned and looked up at him.

‘No.’ He took a deep breath. ‘Not any more. I believe in the power of prayer, Emma. In the strength God gives me. I’m actually a bit of a wimp on my own.’ He grinned. ‘But with those sort of guns behind me, I realise now that I can do anything.’

She gave a small laugh. ‘I wish I could believe you.’

‘Why not give it a try?’

She didn’t reply for a moment but he saw her hand go to the little cross he had hung around her neck. He wondered if she was going to pull it off, but she left it there. ‘Can one be unanointed?’ she asked thoughtfully. ‘I am an anointed witch, and a hereditary witch in my own right, even without Sarah on board.’ She wasn’t smiling any more.

Mike took a deep breath. ‘We can deal with that.’

‘I was christened,’ she went on, almost absent-mindedly. ‘Like all good little middle-class babies, in spite of my witchy blood.’

‘Then you’re in with a head start.’ Mike tightened his arms round her a little. ‘Just say the word, and I’ll get to work on you.’

‘With bell, book and candle?’

‘If that is what it takes.’

They both looked up as the latch on the door at the end of the aisle lifted with a sharp click. Mike sighed. He wished those moments with the two of them alone could have gone on forever.

The door opened and a figure appeared in the distance. It was Mark.

Mike stood up and helped Emma to her feet as Mark made his way cautiously up the aisle. ‘Is everything all right?’ He glanced at Emma.

She nodded. ‘Mike escaped my clutches.’ She smiled shakily.

‘I am glad.’ Mark grinned. Then he glanced at Mike, his face serious again. ‘I’ve come from the rectory, Mike. Colin is waiting there with Paula West. Bad news, I’m afraid.’ He glanced at Emma. ‘Her husband is dead.’

‘What?’ Mike stared at him.

Emma closed her eyes. She gave a little gasp of misery. ‘I was there, wasn’t I. I was at the churchyard when he died. I was Sarah. I couldn’t help him.’ She sank down onto the step again and put her head in her hands. ‘Oh, Mike, what have I done?’

‘You haven’t done anything.’

Mark glanced at her and then at Mike. ‘I’m afraid it gets worse. Mrs West and a group of her friends dragged Lyndsey away. In her confused state she decided that Lyndsey should be swum as a witch. Lyndsey was tied up and thrown into the lake.’

Emma looked up blindly, tears pouring down her face. ‘She’s not dead!’

‘I don’t know.’ Mark shook his head. ‘I don’t think so. She’s been taken to hospital. We haven’t heard how she is.’

‘Paula wasn’t alone, you say?’ Mike put in, appalled. ‘There were other women there too?’

Mark nodded. ‘They ran away when they saw what Paula intended. Common sense kicked in at the last minute. It was Paula alone who pushed her in. Jane Good is going to take Paula back to her house. She has left her children with a babysitter there. I’m afraid one way or another there is going to be police involvement in this. Luckily Lyndsey confessed to killing Alex West in front of several people, so that will exonerate you, Emma.’ He sighed. ‘Poor Lyndsey. She seems to have been a very disturbed young woman. And Paula must bear the grief of losing her husband as well as facing whatever charge the police bring.’

‘But surely they will understand?’ Emma climbed unsteadily to her feet. ‘If Lyn killed Alex, Paula can’t be held responsible for what she did. And Lyn will be all right. She will, won’t she?’ She stared from one to the other.

Mark shrugged. ‘We must hope so,’ he said quietly.

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