Authors: Elly Griffiths
âWhere have you been?' Shona hugs her. She is wearing a witchy green dress that billows in the wind from the sea. Her hair flies out in fiery points. Shona's beauty sometimes makes Ruth feel almost angry; at other times it makes it possible to forgive her anything.
âAt the university.'
âYou work too hard.'
Shona is also a lecturer at the university, in the English department. Over the past ten years she has embarked on a series of disastrous affairs with married colleagues and is currently involved with Ruth's boss, Phil. Ruth hopes that she is not in for an in-depth analysis of Phil's prowess as a lover and the likelihood of his leaving his wife. The thought of making love to Phil would make her feel sick even if she wasn't pregnant and in her opinion his marriage to Sue, a dull aromatherapist, will endure for ever.
Ruth opens the door and fends off an ecstatic Flint. Shona bends down to stroke the cat. She has often looked after him when Ruth is away.
âHallo, darling, come to Auntie Shona. Ruth, I'm going to give up men and buy a cat.'
Ruth has heard this many times before. âCats aren't so good at mending the Christmas lights. Or checking the oil in cars.'
âNo, but they're better listeners.' Shona cuddles Flint who stares hopefully at the floor.
âTrue. And they don't leave the loo seat up.'
Shona sits on the sofa with her feet curled under her. She looks like someone preparing for a long, cosy chat. Ruth offers tea but Shona says she'd prefer a glass of wine. Ruth puts some crisps in a bowl and stuffs a handful in her mouth before bringing them through to the sitting room.
âPhil says you've found a skeleton,' says Shona.
âWell, the field team found it. It's on a building site in Norwich.'
âThe field team. Is that the mad Irishman?'
âTed. Yes. He's not Irish though, is he? Why's he called Irish Ted?'
Shona's eyes gleam. âIt's a long story. So, the body. Any signs of foul play?'
Ruth hesitates, Shona is always interested in a good story. Maybe that's what comes of being a literature expert. Ruth is less sure about her discretion. The last thing she wants is Shona telling everything to Phil in some steamy pillow-talk session. On the other hand, she badly wants to talk to someone.
The head has been chopped off,' she says.
âNo!' Shona is agog. âIs it a ritual killing then?'
Ruth looks curiously at Shona. Strange that this should
be Shona's first question. Or maybe not strange coming from someone so closely involved with Erik, that expert on ritual, sacrifice and bloodshed. She doesn't think that most people would immediately connect a headless body with ritual.
âMaybe,' she says. âThe Romans sometimes made sacrifices to Janus, the God of doorways. This body is under a door.'
âIs it Roman then?'
âWe won't know until we've done the dating. It could be Roman or medieval but I don't think so. The grave cut looked modern.'
âJanus. Was he the guy with two faces?'
âYes. The God of beginnings and endings. January is named after him.'
Shona shivers. âSounds creepy. But, then again, a lot of men are two-faced.'
âHow's Phil?'
Shona smiles, rather sadly. âPour us a glass of wine and I'll tell you.'
Ruth pours two glasses of wine and hopes that Shona won't notice how slowly she drinks hers. Wine makes her feel sick these days. It's almost as if her taste buds can separate the drink into its component parts: acidic grapes, fermenting alcohol, a hint of vine leaves. She can almost taste the peasants' feet.
Phil, it seems, has been showing his unpleasant face to Shona. He wants her to come away with him to a conference in Geneva but is insisting that they travel separately and that she pays her own fare. Ruth hides a smile. Phil's stinginess is a standing joke in the department. Apparently he says he loves Shona but has taken to referring to his wife's
âfragility', as if it will be Shona's fault if anything happens to upset her.
âI wouldn't mind but she's as strong as a horse. Looks like a horse too. An unattractive horse ⦠Ruth, why aren't you drinking?'
Ruth looks guiltily at her glass. Shona has emptied hers but Ruth has only managed a few queasy sips.
âAre you OK?'
Everyone seems to be asking her that, thinks Ruth. She suddenly feels a great urge to tell Shona about her pregnancy. People are going to have to know sometime. Cathbad has already guessed. Maybe everyone is talking behind her back. And she'll need an ally when she tells Phil. She takes a deep breath.
âShona? I've got something to tell you.'
âWhat?' Shona is instantly alert, her eyes, with their long glittery lashes, fixed onto Ruth's face.
How to put it into words? âI'm expecting a baby' sounds twee somehow. And she has a hard job thinking of the baby end of things. Better just be as factual as possible.
âI'm pregnant,' she says.
âWhat?'
Suddenly Ruth is scared of what she might see in Shona's face. She knows that Shona has been pregnant twice and has had two abortions. Will she see envy, hatred, resentment? She forces herself to look at Shona and sees, to her amazement, that there are tears in her eyes.
âI'm pregnant,' Ruth repeats.
Shona reaches over to touch Ruth's arm. âOh Ruth â¦' she says tearfully. And then, âAre you sure?'
âYes. I'm about thirteen weeks.'
âThirteen weeks. Oh my God.' Shona wipes her eyes and seems to recover some of her equilibrium. Her expression is now straightforwardly curious. And she asks the question that Ruth dreads.
âWho's the father?'
âI'd rather not say.' This doesn't go down any better with Shona than it did with Ruth's parents. Shona flicks her hair impatiently.
âOh, come on, Ruth. You can tell me. Is it Peter's?'
âI can't say.' Now Ruth feels herself getting tearful. âPlease.'
Shona leans over to give her a proper hug. âI'm sorry. I'm just ⦠gobsmacked. Are you keeping it?'
âYes.'
âThat's brave,' says Shona quietly.
âNot really. I haven't thought it through. The implications, I mean. But I do want it. Very much,' she adds.
âYou'll be a great mum! Can I be godmother?'
âIn a strictly non-religious sense, yes.'
âI'll be its auntie. Like I'm Flint's auntie.' There is a distinctly brittle edge to Shona's laughter now.
âIt'll need all the family it can get,' says Ruth. âMy parents have more or less disowned me.'
âReally? Does that still happen? Everyone has babies now without being married. Even my mother wouldn't mind. And she's a mad Irish Catholic.'
âMy parents are ⦠old-fashioned.'
âThey must be.' Shona fiddles with her wine glass for a second before asking, âDoes Phil know?'
âNo, not yet. I'll have to tell him soon, before it becomes
too obvious. I saw Cathbad today and he guessed immediately.'
âCathbad, really?' Shona knows Cathbad of old. They met on the henge dig all those years ago. Ruth remembers that Shona initially sided with the Druids who wanted to keep the henge in place rather than with the archaeologists who wanted to move it to a museum. She wonders what Phil, an establishment man to the core, thinks about Shona's newage leanings
âPerhaps the spirits told him?' suggests Shona.
âPerhaps.' Ruth remembers Cathbad saying that Max respected âthe spirits'. She has a sudden vision of a shadowy army hovering around, questioning, commenting and passing judgement. Funnily enough, they all look a bit like her mother.
âHe's having a party on Friday,' she says.
âA party?'
âWell, a celebration. In honour of Imbolc, some Celtic thing about the coming of spring. He's organising a party on the beach. Do you want to come?'
Shona brightens up at the prospect of a party. âWhy not? A spot of satanic ritual's just what I need to cheer me up.'
As it turns out, nothing could be less satanic than the Imbolc celebration on Saltmarsh beach. Some of Cathbad's colleagues have even brought their children who play happily on the sand, daring each other to jump over waves. Even the vast bonfire, constructed out of driftwood and old packing cases, seems more like something made by the PTA to raise funds for playground equipment than an offering to the pagan gods of fire.
Ruth and Max walk over the Saltmarsh, carrying offerings of wine and crisps. Though Max does not know it, they are following the path taken by Ruth and Lucy, that wild night in February, when the wind howled from the sea and the marsh shifted treacherously in the darkness. Sometimes it seems to Ruth as if that night was something that happened to someone else; she can think about it quite calmly, as if she is reading about it in a book. At other times, the memory is as sharp as if it happened yesterday: the flight across the marshes in the night, the moment when she knew that she was going to die, the dark wave coming from nowhere.
Now, though, the sky is palest blue and only a light, companionable
breeze blows through the coarse grass. Ruth and Max take the path through the dunes and see the beach spread out before them; the silver line of the sea, the deep pools reflecting the evening sky, the miles upon miles of rippling sand.
âIt's beautiful,' says Max. âI'd forgotten how open it is in Norfolk. Nothing but sand, sea and sky.'
âYes, it is beautiful,' says Ruth, pleased that Max appreciates her beloved Saltmarsh. âIt can be desolate in the winter but on evenings like this I think it's the loveliest place on earth.'
âI like the desolation too,' says Max, looking out towards the retreating tide. The seagulls are swooping low over the waves and the shouts of the children seem thin on the evening air.
Ruth looks at him curiously. She knows what he means. Sometimes the Saltmarsh's sheer loneliness and splendour gives her a thrill of almost sexual pleasure. But she hadn't expected Max to feel the same. Doesn't he come from Brighton, where the beach is more about kiss-me-quick hats than desolate beauty? But he was brought up in Norfolk, she reminds herself.
They walk towards the bonfire, very black against the white sand. Cathbad, wearing Druid's robes and the purple cloak is supervising the stacking of wood but when he sees Ruth he breaks away with arms outstretched.
âRuth!' They hug and Ruth feels Cathbad's beard tickling her cheek.
âCathbad, this is my friend Max.'
âWelcome!' Cathbad gives Max a two-handed âvicar's' handshake.
Indeed, in his white robes, he looks not unlike a priest greeting parishioners at the door of his church. Of course, Cathbad would say that this is just what the Saltmarsh is â a church, sacred ground. After all, man has worshipped here for hundreds, thousands, of years; first the Bronze Age people building their henge and then the Iron Agers who buried bodies and treasure at the point where the sea meets the land. It was one of these bodies that Ruth discovered last year.
âGood to meet you,' says Max. âThis is a wonderful spot.'
âYes,' says Cathbad, looking closely at Max. âThis is a liminal zone, the bridge between life and death.'
âErik Anderssen 1998,' says Max immediately. âI love that book. Anderssen was one of my heroes when I was a student.'
Ruth can't stop herself exclaiming. âDid you know Erik?'
âI never met him but I've read almost everything he ever wrote. No one has ever understood prehistory better.'
âHe was a wonderful man,' says Cathbad. âRuth here was very close to him.'
âWere you?' Max turns to Ruth.
âWell, I was his student,' Ruth says guardedly. She still finds it hard to talk about Erik.
âHis favourite student,' says Cathbad rather aggressively.
âI wouldn't go that far.'
âI wish I'd met him,' says Max lightly.
âWe've brought booze,' says Ruth, wishing to turn the subject away from life and death.
âGreat,' says Cathbad, âthe gods need their libation. Freya over there is in charge of drinks.'
Freya, a wispy blonde in blue robes, takes their bottles
and stows them away carefully. She then offers them punch from a copper cauldron. Ruth sniffs suspiciously at her plastic cup as they walk away.
âWhat's in this?' she asks. âBattery acid?'
âWell, you did say that he works in the chemistry department.'
âHe used to be an archaeologist, you know.'
âIs that how he knew Erik?'
âYes. Erik was his tutor at university. Then they met again on the henge dig. You know, the one I told you about? Cathbad was one of the Druids protesting about us moving the timbers.'
âYou can see their point,' says Max slowly, looking out across the expanse of sand, perhaps imagining the henge in place, the circle of wooden posts stark against the sky. As for Ruth, the image is so clear that she is surprised it hasn't materialised in front of her, complete with Erik kneeling in the centre, rhapsodising about the preservation of the wood.
âErik sympathised,' she says, âbut the sea was getting closer all the time. It would have destroyed the henge in the end.'
Max smiles. âDestroyed or changed?'
For a second, Ruth thinks about the Latin motto on the archway at Woolmarket Street:
Omnia Mutantur, Nihil Interit
, everything changes, nothing perishes, and she feels a sudden chill, as if a cold hand has touched her shoulder.
âYou
are
a fan of Erik's,' is all she says. Erik believed in the cycle of change, decay and rebirth. Has he been reborn? Sometimes it seems impossible that Erik's vibrant spirit can really have died alongside his body. Surely there's some blue-eyed baby somewhere that is Erik having a second go at life.
Or some water spirit maybe, some animal â a seal or a sleek arctic fox.