Authors: Elly Griffiths
âThat Detective Nelson sounds a real hard bastard.'
Briefly Ruth thinks of Nelson. Sees, as if projected in technicolour onto the wall opposite, his face above hers. Feels his stubble against her cheek.
âI really don't know him that well,' she says. âLook Shona, I've got a favour to ask you. Can I stay with you for a few days? You see, the press have got wind that I was involved. I think they might come round to my house and I'd just like to get away for a bit.'
âOf course,' says Shona at once. âYou're more than welcome. Tell you what, we'll have a takeaway and a few bottles tonight. Have a real girls' night in. Forget about everything and just unwind. What do you think?'
*
She doesn't quite know why but Ruth doesn't enjoy her girls' night in as much as she expected. For a start she is exhausted and after a few glasses of Pinot Grigio she feels her eyelids begin to droop. Then, for perhaps the first time in her adult life, she just isn't that hungry. Usually she loves takeaways: the flimsy silver cartons, the gloriously greasy food, the mystery dish that you're never sure whether you ordered. Usually, she loves it all. But, tonight, after a few mouthfuls of crispy aromatic duck, she pushes away her plate. The smell of soy sauce is starting to make her feel sick.
âWhat's up?' asks Shona, her mouth full. âDig in. There's loads.'
âI'm sorry,' says Ruth, âI'm not very hungry.'
âYou have to eat,' intones Shona, as if Ruth were an anorexic schoolgirl rather than an overweight woman in her late thirties. âAt least have another drink.' She sloshes more wine into Ruth's glass. âCome on, chill out.'
Shona lives in a terraced house on the outskirts of King's Lynn. It is near the centre of town, all very urban, the perfect antidote to the Saltmarsh. And at first Ruth had just stood in the tiny front garden listening to the traffic and breathing in the pungent aroma of garlic and cumin from the nearby Indian takeaway. âCome in,' Shona said. âStay outside too long and you'll get clamped. Christ, the parking round here.'
Ruth had come in and installed herself in Shona's spare room (polished floor, pine bed, Egyptian cotton sheets, prints of Paris and New York). Now I can relax, she told herself. No-one knows where I am. I can calm down, have a nice meal and a few glasses of wine. I'll be a new person tomorrow.
But it hasn't quite worked out like that. She feels twitchy, ill-at-ease. She keeps checking her phone though she isn't expecting anyone to call. She worries that David will forget to feed Flint. She misses her cottage and the desolate, doomed view over the Saltmarsh. She feels almost sick with tiredness but she knows she won't be able to sleep tonight. As soon as she shuts her eyes the whole thing will play again, like some X-rated movie on a continuous loop: the early-morning trek over the mudflats, the discovery of Scarlet's body, the little arm hanging down, Nelson at her door, red-eyed and unshaven, Nelson's body moving against hers â¦
Everything reminds her. Shona's ambient music playing softly in the background reminds her of the rain and the voices of the birds, suddenly stilled. The soft candlelight makes her think of the will o'the wisps with their treacherous flickering lights, leading unwary travellers to their deaths. When she looks at Shona's bookshelves and sees T.S. Eliot nestling next to Shakespeare she thinks of the Lucy Downey letters.
We who were living are now dying
.
âSo do you think he will?' asks Shona, pouring more wine into Ruth's glass.
âWhat?' Ruth has completely lost track of the conversation.
âLeave Anne. Do you think Liam will leave Anne?'
Not in a million years, thinks Ruth. Just as Nelson will never leave Michelle.
âMaybe. I don't know. Are you sure you want him to?'
âI don't know. If you'd asked me six months ago I would have said yes, but now? I think I would be terrified, to be honest. There's something safe about going out with a married man.'
âIs there?'
âYes, you always think, if it wasn't for his wife, he'd be with me. You don't have to face up to anything else that might be wrong with the relationship. And it stays exciting. You don't have a chance to get bored.'
âHave you done this before then?' As far as Ruth knows, Liam is Shona's first married lover but she is talking like a veteran of extra-marital affairs. Like Nelson, she thinks cynically.
Shona's face suddenly takes on a closed, watchful
expression. She fills up her own glass, splashing wine onto the trendy rush-matting rug.
âOh, once or twice,' she says, with what sounds like deliberate casualness. âBefore I met you. Now, for heaven's sake drink up Ruth. You're way behind.'
*
Ruth was right about not being able to sleep. She tries to immerse herself in Rebus but Rebus and Siobhan become, embarrassingly and explicitly, herself and Nelson. She even opens her laptop and starts to work but, although way behind Shona, she has drunk too much to be interested in Mesolithic burial sites. Tombs, burials, bodies, bones, she thinks blurrily, why is archaeology so concerned with death?
She drinks some water, turns over her pillow and determinedly shuts her eyes. A hundred, ninety-nine, ninety-eight, ninety-seven, how many flint mines in Norfolk, hope David remembers Flint, hope Flint doesn't kill any rare marsh birds ⦠Sparky's body in its flimsy cardboard coffin ⦠Scarlet's arm hanging down below the tarpaulin ⦠ninety-six, ninety-five â¦
We who were living are now dying
⦠ninety-four, ninety-three ⦠he'll never leave his wife ⦠why has Peter come back, why can't Shona forget about Liam, does Cathbad still love Delilah, why are the Iron Age bodies in a line, why did the line point to Scarlet ⦠ninety-two, ninety-one â¦
The bleeping of her phone is a welcome relief. She snatches it up gratefully. A text message. The little screen gleams green in the dark. Caller unknown.
I know where you are.
The sky is full of noises. Thumping noises, crackling noises like very large birds hooting and calling. She knows it is daytime because the window is closed. She can't see anything, only hear the noises. She is scared and huddles in the corner of the room, under the blanket.
For a long time He doesn't come and she is hungry and more scared than ever. She finishes her water and looks in the dark for the piece of bread she thinks she dropped a few days ago. She wonders if she will die if he doesn't come to feed her. Maybe he is dead.
He doesn't come for a long time and her mouth is dry and the bucket in the corner starts to smell.
She edges her way around the room, looking for the bread. She can see lights through the sides of the trapdoor and she wants to call out but is afraid to. The stone walls are damp and mossy, smooth when she runs her hands over them. She can reach higher now, almost to the dry bits at the top where the stones are all crumbly like breadcrumbs. Why can she reach higher? Is she getting bigger? He says so. Too big, he says. What does that mean? Too big for what?
She reaches as high as she can and pulls at one of the stones. It comes away in her hands, surprising her, making her fall backwards. She sits on the floor and feels the edge of the stone with her thumb. It is sharp, it cuts her. She
licks the blood; it tastes like the metal cup she drinks from but it's also salty, odd-tasting, strong. She licks until the blood has gone.
She takes the stone to the corner of the room where there is soil, not floor. She digs a hole and, very carefully, she places the stone in the hole and covers it with earth. Then she stamps on the soil until it is all smooth again and no-one but her would know that something is buried there.
It is the first time she has had a secret. It tastes good.
Exhaustion finally sends Ruth to sleep at two a.m. For several hours she had just sat there, listening to her heart pounding and looking at the text message. Those few chilling words. Who could have sent it? Is it Him, the letter writer, the murderer? Who knows where she is? Who has her mobile phone number? Must it â and her stomach contracts as if she is about to be sick â must it be someone she knows?
She knows that she has to ring Nelson, but somehow, she doesn't want to call him in the middle of the night. Yesterday has blurred all the issues. She doesn't want Nelson to think she is hassling him. What is more important, she asks herself sternly, being murdered in your bed or a man getting the wrong idea about you? She wishes her subconscious was more liberated.
She falls asleep and wakes a few hours later, still upright and stiff all over. Her phone has fallen to the floor and, hand trembling, she picks it up. No new messages. Ruth sighs and burrows down inside the bed. Right now, she is so tired that death seems almost an attractive option, to go to sleep and never wake up.
When she wakes again there is proper, yellow daylight outside the window and Shona is standing by her bed holding a cup of tea.
âYou have slept well,' she says brightly. âIt's past nine.'
Ruth sips the tea gratefully. It's ages since someone brought her tea in bed. In daylight, sitting in Shona's sunny, tasteful spare room, she no longer feels destined to die a violent death. She feels, in fact, ready to fight. She gets up, showers, and dresses in her toughest, most uncompromising clothes (black suit, white shirt, scary earrings). Then she goes downstairs ready to kick ass.
She is sitting in her car, ready to drive to work when her phone goes off. Despite her scary earrings, she is absolutely terrified, breathing hard, palms clammy.
âHi Ruth. It's Nelson.'
âOh. Nelson. Hello.' For some reason, her heart is still thumping.
âJust wanted you to know, we're releasing Malone tomorrow.'
âYou are? Why?'
âForensic reports have come back and there's none of his DNA on Scarlet. So we're charging him with writing the letters and that's all. He'll come up in court tomorrow and I expect he'll get bail.'
âIs he still a suspect?'
Nelson laughs humourlessly. âWell, he's the only one we've got, but we've got nothing that ties him to the murder. We haven't got any reason to keep holding him.'
âWhat will he do?'
âWell, he can't leave the area. I suspect he'll lie low though. Might even get police protection, what with all the media interest.' Nelson sounds so scornful that, despite herself, Ruth smiles.
âWhat did the ⦠the post-mortem say?'
âDeath was by asphyxiation. Looks like something was shoved in her mouth and she choked on it. Her hands were tied with some sort of plant plaited together.'
âSome sort of
plant
?'
âYes, looks like honeysuckle and â you'll like this â mistletoe.'
Ruth thinks of the letters and their mention of mistletoe. Does this mean that the writer was the murderer? Does this mean that it was Cathbad after all? Then she thinks of the ropes that had hauled the henge timbers into place. Honeysuckle rope. As Peter had remembered.
âBody had been in the ground about six weeks,' Nelson is saying. âHard to tell because of the peat. No sign of sexual abuse.'
âThat's something,' says Ruth hesitantly.
âYes,' says Nelson, his voice bitter. âThat's something. And we'll be able to let the family have the body for burial. That'll mean a lot to them.' He sighs. Ruth imagines him scowling as he sits at his desk, looking through files, making lists, deliberately not looking at the photo of Scarlet Henderson.
âAny road' â Nelson's voice changes gear, rather jerkily â âHow are you? No more calls from the press, I hope.'
âNo, but I had an odd message last night.' Ruth tells him about the text message. She imagines Nelson's eyes shooting heavenwards. How much more trouble is this woman going to cause me?
âI'll get someone on to it,' he says, âgive me the number.'
She does so. âCan you trace a mobile phone number?'
âYes. Mobile phones have a unique number that they send out every time they make a call. It's like they check in
to their local base. If we have the number, it won't be hard to trace the call. Of course, if he's clever, he'll have ditched the phone.'
âDo you think it was ⦠him?'
âChrist knows. But we need to get you some protection. How long are you staying with your mate?'
âI don't know.' As she says this, Ruth is assailed by a longing for her home. For her bed and her cat and her view over the ill-omened marshes.
âI'll send some men to watch her house and to keep your place under surveillance. Try not to worry too much. I don't think he'll come out into the open. He's too clever.'
âIs he?'
âWell, he's been too clever for me, hasn't he?'
âYou'll catch him,' says Ruth with more conviction than she feels.
âWish the press agreed with you. Take care, love.'
As she clicks off her phone, Ruth thinks:
love?
*
At the university, the first person she sees is Peter. He's waiting outside her room and the memory comes back, unbidden, of seeing Nelson in the same place, so harsh and unyielding next to the conciliatory Phil. Unlike Nelson on that occasion, who had shown all the swagger of a professional coming into a room full of amateurs, Peter looks nervous, flattening himself apologetically against the wall every time a student goes past (which, as it is still early, is not very often).
âRuth!' He steps forward to greet her.
âPeter. What are you doing here?'
âI wanted to see you.'
Ruth sighs inwardly. The last thing she needs this morning is Peter going on about his marriage and wanting to relive the henge dig.
âYou'd better come in,' she says ungraciously.
In her office, Peter swoops on her cat doorstop. âI remember buying you this. I can't believe you've still got it.'