Authors: Elly Griffiths
âMiss Galloway,' Hennessey's soft Irish voice cuts into her thoughts, âI wonder if you can show me ⦠where you found the body.'
âAll right. And it's Ruth.' She hates to be called âMiss' and Dr Galloway seems too formal somehow.
Part of the front wall still stands, the steps and the stone portico. Was this from the same period as the arch? It has a similar grandiose feel. A folly, the priest had said. The words reverberate uneasily in Ruth's head.
âCareful here,' she says as they go through the doorway. On the other side, the ledge of black and white tiles is still there. It will be the last thing to go, thinks Ruth. The last link to the old house.
âThis way.' She leads Hennessey along the ledge. As they climb down into the trench, he stumbles and almost falls.
âAre you all right?'
âFine.' But he is breathing heavily. He must be in his late seventies or even eighties, Ruth thinks.
Ruth points to the pile of earth in front of her. âThe body was buried directly under the doorstep. We've removed that. We tried to leave everything else undisturbed.' She looks at Hennessey's face. âWe're very careful,' she finds herself explaining, âvery respectful.'
Hennessey's lips move silently for a second. Is he praying? Then he says, âBuried under the doorstep, you say?'
âYes.' She doesn't mention the foetal position.
âAnd the skull was in the well?'
âThat's right.'
Hennessey is silent for a few minutes and then he says, âWould you mind if I said a prayer?'
âGo ahead.' Ruth backs away. She finds public prayer embarrassing at the best of times but to be trapped in a trench with someone chanting in Latin and waving incense â it's her worst nightmare.
However Hennessey's prayer turns out to be mercifully short, the words muttered and not (as far as Ruth can tell) in Latin. At the end he takes a small bottle from his pocket and sprinkles water onto the earth.
âHoly water,' he explains. He looks at Ruth's face. âYou're not a Catholic?' He sounds amused.
âNo. My parents are Christians but I'm not ⦠anything.'
âOh, you're something, Ruth Galloway,' says Father Hennessey. He looks at her for a second and Ruth has the strangest feeling that he knows her very well, almost better than she knows herself. But then the moment passes and Hennessey says briskly, âI'm parched. Do you fancy a cup of coffee?'
*
Nelson is leaving the museum when he gets a call from Judy.
âI've got Annabelle Spens' death certificate, boss.'
âGood. Anything interesting?'
He hears her rustling paper and he thinks of his father's death certificate, those few stilted words encompassing all the pain and grief. His father's cause of death had been âmyocardial infarction'. At the time he had no idea what that meant.
âDate and place of death,' reads Judy. â24 May 1952, Woolmarket House, Woolmarket Street, Norwich. Cause of death: Scarlet fever. Children don't get that any more do they?'
âThey get it,' says Nelson, âthey just don't die of it.' He stops as a party of schoolchildren stream past him, holding photocopied worksheets and trying to trip each other up.
âShe died at home,' Judy is saying. âHow come she wasn't in hospital?'
âI don't know. Perhaps it was more usual to nurse children at home in those days.'
âBut they had money, they could afford health care. This was before the NHS, wasn't it?'
âEarly days of the NHS.'
The children push through the glass doors of the museum. He can hear their teacher telling them that they're going to be divided into groups. âYou're in my group, Ryan.' That's your day ruined, Ryan, you poor sod.
âWhat about the certificate of interment?' he asks.
âTanya's getting it,' says Judy, sounding slightly pissed off. âBoss, do you really think that Annabelle was buried in the house and not in a grave?'
âI don't know,' says Nelson. âBut there's something odd about that house. There's something odd about this whole case.'
He had been to see the curator, to ask how the foetus model could have escaped from the museum and ended up at Ruth's feet in the trench in Swaffham. The curator had been perfectly pleasant but unable to offer any answers. The stages of development model had been taken down from display a few weeks ago (they had had some complaints from parents) and the components placed in the store room. Who had access? Well, any of the museum staff. The more valuable exhibits were kept in a safe but who would steal a plastic model of a baby? Who indeed?
Nelson stands on the steps, looking about over the Norwich rooftops and wondering what his next move should be. Should he go back and question Edward Spens again? He is sure that the man is holding something back. Should he get back to the station and bully Tanya about the interment certificate? They need to get hold of the dental records too. He sighs. It's a hot, muggy day and more than anything else he fancies diving into a pub for a cold beer. That's what Clough would do, he's sure of it.
âHi, Detective Chief Inspector.'
Nelson whirls round. A young woman with lurid purple hair is smiling cheekily up at him. Who is she? One of his daughters' friends? A trendy acquaintance of Michelle's?
âI'm Trace,' says the apparition. âFrom the dig.'
Oh yes. The skinny girl who was on the site the first day. The one they all think Cloughie fancies. Rather him than me, thinks Nelson, looking at the metalwork gleaming on Trace's ears and lip. But she seems friendly enough.
âWhat are you doing here?' she asks.
âRoutine enquiries,' he answers. âWhat about you?'
âI work here, Mondays and Fridays. There's not enough field archaeology to keep me busy all year round so I do some curatorial work, processing finds and that.'
Nelson has no idea what âprocessing finds' means but he knows one thing: Trace could be an important contact within the museum. She might well know if anyone has been waltzing off with the exhibits. âFancy a drink?' he says.
Ruth tries to steer towards one of the picturesque cafés around Woolmarket Street but Father Patrick Hennessey
heads like a bloodhound towards the shopping centre and Starbucks, a place Ruth loathes. âYou can get a grand coffee in here,' says Hennessey, rubbing his hands together. The air-conditioning is so strong that Ruth is shivering.
She notices some odd glances as they enter the café â the overweight woman with mud-stained trousers and a plaster over one eye, and the priest, red-faced in his black clothes. Ruth orders mineral water but Hennessey goes for the full skinny-latte-with-an-extra-shot-of-espresso palaver.
âIt's impossible to get a decent coffee where I live,' he explains.
âWhere do you live?'
âIn a godforsaken corner of the Sussex countryside.' He says âgodforsaken' like he really means it.
âNelson, DCI Nelson, said it was very pretty.'
âIt's pretty enough if you like trees. No, I'm a city boy. Born and brought up in Dublin. I've always lived in towns â Rome, London, Norwich.'
It sounds a bit like Del Boy's van â New York, Paris, Peckham. Ruth suppresses a smile. âNorwich isn't exactly cosmopolitan.'
âSure and it's a fine town. I miss it. I miss my work, my parishioners, everything.'
âYou ran the children's home, didn't you?'
âI started it and ran it, yes. I'd seen an orphanage in the East End of London, a place where the children lived together almost like a family. I tried to create something similar. Recruited all the staff myself. I chose young religious people, people who still had some ideals left.'
âI met one of your ex ⦠residents. He remembered the place with great affection.'
Hennessey looks interested. âWho did you meet?'
âDavies, I think his name was.'
âOh, Kevin Davies. He was a nice boy. He's an undertaker now I believe. He always had a serious way about him.'
Ruth thinks of the worried, crumpled-looking Davies. She can't imagine him as a child. She is sure that he always looked forty.
Hennessey is looking at her. He has very blue eyes, with white smile-lines etched against his weather-beaten face.
âMust be a difficult job,' he says, âuncovering the past.'
Ruth is struck by this description. Most people see archaeology as âdigging up bones' but âuncovering the past' is really what it is. She looks at the priest with new respect.
âIt is hard,' she says carefully, âespecially in cases like this where you're dealing with the fairly recent past and especially when there's a child involved.' She stops, feeling that she has said too much.
But Hennessey is nodding. âAs a priest I've often come across things that are best kept hidden. But the truth has a way of coming to the surface.'
Like the bones under the doorway, thinks Ruth. If Spens hadn't been so keen to develop the site, if Ted and Trace hadn't dug in that exact spot, would they have remained hidden for ever? Or would the long-forgotten crime have risen to the surface, crying out for vengeance?
âSometimes it's hard to know what's true and what isn't,' she says.
âPontius Pilate would agree with you. “Truth” he said,
“what is that?” And he was a wise man, Pilate. A coward but a wise man.'
Ruth is slightly confused by the way he is talking about Pontius Pilate as if he might, at any moment, walk into Starbucks. âDCI Nelson will find the truth,' she says, with more confidence than she feels, âif anyone can.'
âAh, DCI Nelson. He's a fine man, I think. A man with morals.' Ruth is furious to find herself blushing. âHe's a good detective,' she says.
âAnd a good man,' says Hennessey softly, âwhich may prove more difficult for him.'
*
Rather reluctantly, Nelson settles for a coke but Trace asks for a pint of bitter.
âI thought all archaeologists drank cider,' says Nelson.
Trace pulls a face. âCider's for wimps.'
I could get to like this girl, thinks Nelson.
âHow long have you been an archaeologist?' he asks.
âI left uni five years ago. I did an MA in London and worked in Australia for a bit. I didn't really want to come back to Norwich but my mum and dad live here and it's cheaper to live with them. There's lots of archaeology here too.'
âLots of prehistoric stuff,' says Nelson. He knows this from Ruth.
Trace nods. âBronze Age and Iron Age. And Roman. That's my favourite period. The Romans.'
âDid you see
Gladiator
? Great film.'
Trace snorts. âFilms get everything wrong. All that decadent stuff, lying about eating grapes. The Romans brought
law and order and infrastructure. We were nothing but a band of disparate warring tribes until they came along.'
Identifying âwe' as the British, Nelson says, slightly aggrieved, âThey were invaders, occupiers, weren't they?'
âThey were here for four hundred years. That's more than fifteen generations. And, when they left, we forgot everything they taught us â all the stone building and engineering works, glass-making, pottery. We slipped into the Dark Ages.'
Nelson feels rather proud of this. They may have been here four hundred years, he thinks, but to us they were still foreigners, occupiers, with their fancy, glass-making ways. He does not say this to Trace though.
âHave you been to the site in Swaffham?' he asks. âMax Grey's site?'
Trace's face lights up. âYes. I've done quite a bit of work there. He's great, Max. He really knows his stuff. He did this great tour the other week for the Scouts. Made it all come alive.'
âDo you get lots of visitors on the site?'
Trace shrugs. âA few. It's become quite well-known since they mentioned it on Time Team. We've had some coach parties.'
âHas Edward Spens paid a visit?'
Trace's face, so open and animated when talking about the superiority of the Romans, becomes closed again. âI think he came once. I wasn't there though.'
âDo you know him?'
âEveryone in Norwich knows him.'
*
âThe Spens family,' Nelson tells his team, âhave lived in Norwich for generations. Walter Spens built the house on Woolmarket Road. He was, by all accounts, rather an eccentric. Had a collection of stuffed animals and liked to dress as an African chieftain.'
Clough, scoffing peanuts at the back of the room, coughs and almost chokes. Nelson glares at him.
âHis grandson, Christopher Spens, was headmaster of St Saviours, the public school that used to be on the Waterloo Road. According to his son, Roderick Spens, he was a bit of a tartar, made his children call him sir and forced them to speak in Latin at mealtimes.'
Nelson stops. Sir Roderick had not described his father as a tartar, in fact he had sounded almost admiring, but Nelson had the strong impression of a cold, controlling man. He wonders if he is betraying his own prejudice against public schools, Latin and posh people in general.
Nelson looks at his team. Clough is still spitting out peanut crumbs. Tanya Fuller has her notebook open. Judy Johnson has her eyes fixed on Nelson's face, frowning slightly.
âSir Roderick Spens is in the first stages of senile dementia,' continues Nelson, âso his impressions are rather confused. He remembers his father very clearly but it upsets him to talk about his sister. According to the death certificate Annabelle Spens died of scarlet fever aged six. She died at home and is buried in the churchyard at St Peter and St Paul.'
He looks at the team, wondering if they realise the implications of this. Judy does, obviously, but Clough can sometimes be a bit slow on the uptake. Sure enough, it is Tanya
who speaks, âCould it be Annabelle who was buried under the door?'