Authors: Elly Griffiths
Sir Roderick's eyes gleam. âNow that I'd like to see.'
âIt's back at the university,' says Ruth, âbut I'm sure we could arrangeâ'
âNow, Dad,' says Edward warningly, âwe don't want to bother Miss Galloway.'
âDr Galloway,' corrects Ruth mildly, âand it's no bother.'
âStrange to think, Dr Galloway,' the older man leans forward, deliberately, it seems, excluding his son, âthat this church was destroyed by Henry the Eighth yet later became a Catholic children's home.'
âYes.' Ruth is not particularly interested in the age-old struggle between Catholic and Protestant. To her, all religions are as bad as each other. Though at least Catholicism has nicer pictures.
âDo the police think these bones are linked to the home?' asks Edward.
âAs far as I know they're keeping an open mind,' says Ruth. âNow if you'll excuse me â¦'
She turns back to the bones and, after a second or two, Edward Spens takes his father by the arm and leads him away.
*
Nelson does not arrive until late afternoon, by which time Ruth has finished cataloguing the bones and is helping Trace in one of the trenches at the back of the house. They have found some Roman pottery and what looks like a signet ring. So this site, like the one on the hills, was also once Roman. Hardly surprising, thinks Ruth, and yet the link disturbs her slightly.
Nelson is accompanied by Clough and a sandy-haired man with a furrowed brow under his hard hat. Clough, Ruth is interested to note, peels off immediately to talk to Trace. Nelson and the other man approach Ruth.
âDr Ruth Galloway,' Nelson's introductions are always brusque, âKevin Davies. Mr Davies was once resident at the Sacred Heart Children's Home.'
âI'm afraid there's not much left of the original building,' says Ruth. And there will soon be less, if Edward Spens has his way.
Davies has a misty, far-away look about him. âThis was the conservatory,' he says, âand over there we had a swing and a tree house. There was a wishing well too. We used to play football on the lawn. Father Hennessey was a really good player. He could have been a professional.'
Nelson rolls his eyes. The last thing he needs is to be told that Father Hennessey, on top of all his other virtues, was Norfolk's answer to Pelé.
âDo you remember a pet cemetery?' ask Ruth. âOr anywhere where pets might have been buried.'
Davies looks at her with mild blue eyes. âNo. Sister James was allergic to animals so we couldn't even have a cat. We had a canary though. Lovely cheerful little thing.'
âWhy don't you have a look round, Mr Davies,' says Nelson. âRefresh your memory.'
Davies wanders off and Ruth climbs out of the trench. She sees Nelson looking at her strangely and realises that she must, by now, be both sweaty and mud-stained. Well, there's not much she can do about it. Her back is killing her too.
âIf I have to hear once more that Father Hennessey is a saint who walks on water in his spare time, I'm going to go mad,' says Nelson as they walk away from the trench.
âBit of a fan, is he?' asks Ruth, indicating Davies, who is staring at the ruins of the kitchen garden with a rather shell-shocked look on his face.
âA fan! According to him Father Hennessey is a combination of Mother Teresa, Nelson Mandela and Winnie-the-bloody-Pooh.'
Ruth laughs. âHave you met him, this Father Hennessey?'
âYes.'
âWhat's he like?'
Nelson hesitates. âSeems a nice enough chap. Big, strong man he must have been when he was young. Strong character too, I think. Razor sharp.'
âSo, any suspicious deaths at the children's home?' asks Ruth lightly. To her surprise, Nelson answers soberly, âYes.'
âReally?'
âWell, a disappearance. Two children. Martin and Elizabeth Black. Vanished without a trace in 1973.'
âHow old?'
âTwelve and five.'
They look at each other, thinking of the little skeleton under the door.
âDo you think it's her?' asks Ruth.
âIt's possible, isn't it?'
Ruth thinks of the size of the bones. âYes. But that would mean â¦'
âThat she was killed by someone at the home? Yes.'
âDo you really think that might have happened?'
âWell, we won't know until you've done your dating but ⦠I don't know, Ruth. There's something funny about this place. Something's not right. Something smells funny. And what was all that about a pet cemetery?'
âWe found the skeleton of a cat buried by the back wall.'
âProbably just the final resting place of some old moggy.'
âIts head was cut off. No sign of the skull.'
Nelson whistles soundlessly. âBloody hell. Do you think there's any connection?'
âProbably not but I'll have a look at the bones back at the lab.'
âThis case gets wackier and wackier.'
âWell,' says Ruth, not wanting to be drawn, remembering her ridiculous fears yesterday, âthere could be all sorts of explanations for the bones. In fact, considering that there
was supposed to be a churchyard somewhere around here, it's surprising we haven't found more.'
âBut a decapitated cat,' Nelson raises his eyebrows, âthat doesn't strike you as odd?'
âThere's sure to be a logical explanation,' persists Ruth. Nelson is still looking at her oddly. She can feel herself going red. Ruth has always had trouble with blushing and it seems to have got worse during the last few weeks. Feeling the blood pumping into her cheeks, she ducks her head. âEdward Spens was here earlier,' she says. âWith his dad.'
At least this diverts Nelson's attention away from her. He kicks viciously at an upended paving stone.
âInterfering bastard,' he says. âWhat did he want?'
âTo interfere, I suspect. His dad was sweet though. Very interested in history. He was talking about the church that was meant to have been here.'
âFather Hennessey mentioned it too. Said it used to cure lepers.'
Ruth thinks of St Hugh's decapitated skull, performing miracles on its own, of St Bridget's cross, holy fires and sacred wells. Fairy tales all of them but, like fairy tales, curiously compelling.
âThey're Catholics, you know,' says Nelson suddenly, âthe Spens family. Edward Spens was telling me. His grandfather converted sometime in the fifties.'
âI thought there was something odd about him,' says Ruth.
They are walking back towards the archway, where Kevin Davies is now standing, looking sadly at the devastation all around him. Ruth stops and takes a gulp from her water bottle.
Nelson puts his hand on her arm. âAre you all right?'
The sudden kindness in his voice makes the blood rush to her head again.
âFine,' she snaps, âjust hot.'
âHot?' says Nelson. âIt's never hot in Norfolk.' And he bounds away across the rubble.
I suppose I have always known that I am special. Even before all this happened and the curse fell upon us, I always knew that the Gods had something special in store for me. It's not just that I am clever (though my Intelligence Quotient is in excess of 140), it is more that I
understand.
When I read Pliny or Catullus the gods are not just names to me, they are real. Their power and might overshadows all that comes after â the puny love-feast of Christianity, the ridiculous modern gods of horoscopes and hypnotism and the moving pictures. The Roman gods are
logical
and that is why I like them. If you kill, you must make amends in blood, a life for a life. Blood can be cancelled out but only by blood. The gods demand their sacrifices but, unlike modern gods, they do not demand more than their due. If you sacrifice correctly, the past is wiped out, made clean.
Soon I will be alone in the house (well, apart from the women and children who do not count) and then maybe I will have the chance to do what must be done. In the meantime I must keep my strength up, eat healthily, more meat and less potato. Caesar himself would not have been able to function on the diet I eat. Must speak to Cook about this.
By the time Ruth gets in her car, her back feels like it is splitting in two. She wedges her jumper at the base of her spine and thinks that it is only a matter of time before she has a little corduroy lumbar cushion and thus becomes officially middle-aged.
She drives to the university to drop off the animal bones. As she gets the box out of the car she wonders whether lugging bones about is ideal behaviour for a pregnant woman. Funny but they don't mention that in the books. Ruth estimates that she is now thirteen weeks pregnant. She is having a scan next week which should, apparently, give a more accurate date. Maybe then, at last, the whole thing will start to seem real.
She is so deep in thought that she doesn't notice the white-coated figure coming in the other direction.
âSorry!'
Thank goodness, she doesn't drop the box but the effort causes her to fall to her knees. The white-coated man helps her up.
âRuth! Are you OK?'
It is Cathbad.
When he is in his full Druid outfit, complete with flowing purple cloak, Cathbad can look impressive, even magnificent. Now, with his greying hair drawn back in a ponytail, white coat, jeans and trainers, he looks like any other ageing hippy who has finally found a nine-to-five job. Ruth is pleased to see him though. Despite everything, she is fond of Cathbad.
âI'm all right.' She gets to her feet rather slowly, annoyed to find herself slightly out of breath.
âAre you taking those to the lab? I'll help you.'
Ruth hands over the box though still keeps hold of her precious rucksack.âDid you get my email?' asks Cathbad as they walk along the deserted corridor. It is nearly six o'clock and most of the students, and a lot of the lecturers, have gone home.
âAbout Imbolc? Yes.'
âAre you going to come?'
âYes. Is it OK if I bring a friend?'
âOf course. The beach belongs to everyone.'
He smiles modestly but Ruth knows that Cathbad regards this particular stretch of beach, where the henge was discovered, as very much his personal property.
âHe's an archaeologist. I think you'll like him.'
âIs he the chap from Sussex? I've heard good things about him.'
Impressed by Cathbad's spy system (or sixth sense), Ruth asks, âWhat have you heard?'
âOh, that he's got an open mind. That he's respecting the spirits. That sort of thing.'
Ruth wonders which spirits Cathbad means. Earth spirits, nature spirits, household spirits â there's a wealth of choice for the truly open-minded. She decides not to enquire further. They have reached the lab and Ruth locks the animal bones in the safe. Tomorrow she will clean them and examine them further.
Cathbad is waiting for her outside. âYou look tired,' he says as they walk back towards the car park.
âI've had a long day. Been working on site.'
âEven so,' Cathbad reaches out to take her rucksack, âyou ought to be careful, in your condition.'
Ruth stops dead. The rucksack, which she had not quite relinquished, falls to the floor.
â
What
did you say?'
Cathbad looks back at her innocently. âJust that you should be careful. Especially in the early months.'
Ruth opens her mouth and then shuts it again. âHow did you know?'
âIt's fairly obvious,' says Cathbad, âto the trained eye.'
âSince when have you had a trained eye?'
âWell, I'm a scientist,' says Cathbad, sounding offended, âand an observer.'
âAnd you guessed just from observing me for a few minutes?'
âWell, I saw you the other day on campus and I thought ⦠maybe. When I saw you today, I was sure.'
Ruth does not like the implications of this. If Cathbad has noticed, who else has realised? Phil? Her colleagues? Nelson?
âHow far on are you?' Cathbad asks chattily, as they push through the swing doors.
âThirteen weeks.'
âLovely.' Cathbad is obviously doing the sums. âA Scorpio baby.'
âIf you say so.' Ruth is never sure which star sign is which. She is Cancer, home-loving and caring according to the books, which proves that it's all crap. They have reached Ruth's car and Cathbad hands over the rucksack.
âThanks.' Ruth slings it into the back seat. âSee you on Friday.'
âYes,' says Cathbad. âTell me, Ruth, does Nelson know?'
âDoes Nelson know what?'
âAbout the baby.'
Ruth looks hard at Cathbad who stares guilelessly back. There is no one on earth who knows about her night with Nelson. Cathbad must surely be fishing in the dark.
âNo. Why should he?'
âNo reason.' Cathbad raises his hand in a cheery gesture of farewell. âTake care of yourself, Ruth. See you on Friday.'
*
After her brush with Cathbad's sixth sense, Ruth is in the mood for solitude as she negotiates the narrow road across the marshes. But even from a distance she can see that she has company. A low-slung sports car is parked by her gate and a flash of brilliant red hair is visible in the driving seat.
Shona. Once Shona was Ruth's closest friend in Norfolk, perhaps her closest ever friend. But then the Saltmarsh case came up and, along with everything else in Ruth's life, her friendship with Shona was thrown into disarray. Ruth discovered things about Shona's past that made her wonder if she had ever really known her friend at all. Worse, she felt
betrayed. But somehow they have survived. Shared grief over Erik, a shared sense of regret and a desire to salvage something positive from that terrible time, have drawn them together again. Perhaps they are not quite as open with each other as they once were. Ruth can't forget that Shona lied to her, by omission at least, for almost ten years. Shona feels that Ruth judged her too harshly for those lies. But they need each other. Neither has another close confidante and friends are precious. Ruth's slight sense of irritation at the disruption of her solitude has almost dissipated by the time that she has parked her car behind Shona's.