The Lamp of the Wicked (47 page)

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Authors: Phil Rickman

Tags: #Fiction, #Women Sleuths, #Mystery & Detective, #General

BOOK: The Lamp of the Wicked
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‘What, forever coming to him with headaches and various pains?’

‘That kind of thing.’

‘Maybe the sort of symptoms he was exhibiting in the interview room?’

‘What
is
this, Merrily?’

She was skimming through the first transcript, an interview laid out like a radio play.

DI BLISS: Roddy, a dead woman, now identified as Lynsey

Davies, was found in a truck registered to you and being

driven by you. How do you explain this?

DEFENDANT: What you saying?

DI BLISS: It’s a simple question, Roddy. Why was Lynsey
Davies’s body on your truck? A body that was decaying,
having been in the ground for some time.

DEF: She was cold down there, look.

DI BLISS: I see.

DEF: Told me she was cold, so I went and fetched her out.

DI BLISS: How do you mean she told you, Roddy?

DEF: She come to me.

DI BLISS: I’m sorry?

DEF: Come to me in the night, look. They comes to me in the

night and I’m cold too. Hard and cold. BLISS: Hang on, let me get this right – you’re saying this

was after she was dead? No – for the tape, please, Roddy, don’t just nod or shake your head. You mean after she was dead.

DEF: Yes.

DI BLISS: After you killed her.

DEF: Trying to trap me now, ain’t you, copper?

DI BLISS: I’m being absolutely straight with you, Roddy. You were found with the dead body of Lynsey Davies. Somebody killed her, and as you seem to have buried her and dug her up again, you will agree that it’s reasonable to suppose you also had something to do with her death. How well did you know Lynsey Davies?

DEF: Her said I was Satan. Give it her hard and cold like Satan.

DI BLISS: Was Lynsey Davies your girlfriend?

DEF: I ain’t feeling good. Got a headache.

DI BLISS: Can I get you a glass of water?

DEF: Got a headache. Can’t think proper.

DI BLISS: Roddy, you’ve seen a doctor, and he’s pronounced you well enough to be interviewed.

DEF: Can’t think. It’s bloody shitty in here.

DI BLISS: This is not productive, Roddy. I asked you if you wanted a solicitor, and you said no, giving me the strong impression you were prepared to answer my questions. Now why aren’t you doing that, Roddy? What’s up with you, son?

DEF. Can’t think in here.

‘I’m sure you said that, once or twice, he appeared to black out – to faint,’ Merrily said.

‘He put his head down on the table, yes. He gave the appearance of having lost consciousness. He gave the
appearance
of it.’

‘Frannie, if this was the same interview room you took me into, it was below ground level and lit by a fluorescent tube. It had electric air-conditioning. It had a tape machine. Also a video camera. An awful lot of electricity for a very small room – even
I
found it unhealthy in there.’

‘Well, you know,’ Bliss said, ‘we’d naturally prefer to chat to prisoners in the police conservatory, to a background of gentle fountains and aromatherapy candles, but the uncouth ruffians
are
apt to throw up, break things and wee on the walls.’

‘Humour me some more, Francis. How would the interview room compare to, say, Roddy’s cell, which I think he kept asking to be taken back to. How much power was there in the cell?’

‘Just the one ceiling light. But—’

‘You ever heard of EH, Frannie?’ She rose up. ‘And
don’t
tell me it’s a hospital show on Channel Four.’

‘No. I haven’t heard of it.’

‘Electrical Hypersensitivity. An allergy affecting people surrounded by electronic gadgetry or living in close proximity to high-voltage power lines and a confluence of transmitted signals, such as from mobile-phone masts, TV transmitters, satellite—’

‘Merrily—’

‘Probably only a very small percentage of people are affected to any marked degree. But in some cases we’re talking about a serious, chronic condition. You might find, for instance, if you looked into it, that Roddy Lodge was unusually sensitive to electric light and wore sunglasses even at night-time. You might find he was unable to wear nylon overalls because of the static or whatever. And we already know about his mood swings – miserable and withdrawn and then, “I’m Number One, I’m Satan, I’m the best drainage man in the known universe, the biggest serial killer…” ’

Bliss smiled. ‘So this is your personal diagnosis. Roddy was suffering from a condition that appears to have gone entirely undetected by various doctors and psychiatrists, but may be identified by priests.’

Merrily sighed. ‘I realize it’s something not universally accepted.’

‘Now tell me something I
hadn’t
already surmised.’ Bliss leaned back, locking his fingers behind his head. ‘Like what other bullshit Mr Sam Hall filled you up with.’

Jane put her head around the door then. Merrily hadn’t heard her come in from school. A long talk was way overdue.

‘Hello, flower. You want some coffee?’

‘No, thanks. Sorry, didn’t know you were busy.’

‘You can come in if you want, Jane,’ Bliss said. ‘This is nothing
I
’d be terribly afraid of a little child hearing.’

‘It’s OK,’ Jane said, with world-weary indifference. ‘I try not to be seen hanging out with the Filth. People might think I’m a snout.’ Her head vanished and they heard her going upstairs.

‘I love that kid,’ Bliss said. ‘She’s just like you, only more so.’

‘Thanks.’

‘Look, don’t get me wrong. I even quite like Mr Hall, the old shit-stirrer, and I think his intentions are good. I even think there’s probably a lot to what he says, about the profusion of overhead power lines arguably causing ill health. I just think that kind of wild speculation, at this stage of the game, about a man who isn’t ever gonna be able to confirm it, is a totally pointless exercise.’

‘It does explain a lot of things, though, doesn’t it? It might even make sense to Mr Nye, the lawyer, who was convinced his client was in poor health.’

‘So tell him! I’m sure he’d absolutely love to spend an hour or so, at no fee whatsoever, discussing his dead client’s medical mythology.’

‘It also explains why Roddy blacked out – which is commonplace, apparently.’

‘Who says?’

‘Frannie, look, I had already
heard
of this. But it’s something Hall’s been researching for years, here and in America. I find it convincing, or at least worth investigating, but that’s neither here nor there. I’m not out to try to prove or disprove it, I’m just saying it answers – very plausibly – a lot of questions.’

‘No, it
doesn’t
, Merrily, it just—’

‘And it also explains why Roddy Lodge confessed to every putative murder you could lay on him.’

‘Aw, come
on
!’

‘EH is an acute condition. It can apparently become entirely unbearable. He’d have confessed to strangling his own granny to get out of that interview room.’

‘Whose side are you
on
at all?’

‘He’d offer to show you as many bodies as you wanted just to get you to take him out of there. All the people he
hadn’t murdered
.’

‘All right.’ Bliss finished off his coffee and laid down the mug. ‘Let’s look at this. He wanted us to take him out of the horrible, electronically charged interview room, back to his nice country home under the big pylon – which he then proceeded to
climb
.’ He gave her a big smile. ‘Go on, you take it from there.’

Merrily didn’t say anything. She’d put the same point to Sam Hall. He’d said that in his experience no two cases of EH were exactly the same. He said allergics were often mysteriously drawn to the allergen in its most obvious form. He said a certain frequency of the electromagnetic field might prove particularly addictive to a particular person. He said this all needed much more research, but it was one explanation of why Roddy had climbed that pylon, just like he’d done repeatedly as a boy.

‘Did you know that Melanie Pullman was a fellow sufferer?’

Bliss’s eyes narrowed.

‘With side effects. You interested?’

‘Go on,’ he said.

She told him about the side effects. She brought out the transcript of Canon Dobbs’s report. Bliss read it slowly. He looked up and didn’t smile. This is getting very silly, Merrily, even by your standards. Now we learn she was taken by aliens. Could even be the same aliens that strangled Lynsey and buried her under the tank.’

She carried on, in the face of it all. ‘I also gather Roddy Lodge had been having inexplicable experiences for most of his life, and that his condition worsened when he moved to the bungalow, where electromagnetic radiation levels were far stronger. It seems likely their relationship – him and Melanie – grew out of mutual support.’

Frannie Bliss gritted his teeth, making a hissing noise. ‘So they were both bonkers. What does that tell us? Does it explain why he might have killed her?’

‘You’re sorry you got me into this, now, aren’t you?’

‘I just don’t understand why you suddenly care so much,’ he said.

‘Because I’m burying him, and too many funerals today are superficial and meaningless and don’t manage to lay anything to rest – we talk to relatives and we gather up a handful of anecdotes about the deceased and reel them off, then it’s on with the soil and bring on the next one. I just think we owe it to them to try to understand what their lives were about. God, didn’t
that
sound pompous?’

In the dregs of the daylight, she saw a shadow shambling past the big kitchen window. Not many people came round the back, not even Lol. This was someone who liked to move softly, like God’s secret agent. Someone who even used spy-type euphemisms for the negative numina of his trade:
volatiles, insomniacs, hitch-hikers
… Bliss had his back to the window and hadn’t seen the shadow.

She stood up. ‘So… how are things at home, Frannie?’

‘Crap, thank you,’ Bliss said.

‘Huw’s here.’


Owen?
’ He stood up quickly. ‘Shit. Is there another door out of here?’

35
Sackcloth

S
HE’D NEVER SEEN
Huw like this before. He was white with anger, and he was wagging a forefinger under Frannie Bliss’s nose.

‘… Always feet first. Bloody great copper’s boots. No matter how long you’re in the CID, you never lose them copper’s boots!’

The finger trembling in the lamplight.

‘Huw…’ Bliss was out of his chair again, and they were nearly head-to-head across the table. ‘It’s
my
career going down the bloody toilet, pal!’

Not the most well-chosen response, all things considered.

‘Oh aye.’ Huw’s expression was… not priestly. ‘Never a thought for the parents of all them dead and missing girls, lying awake night after bloody night wondering precisely what were done to their kids and how many times. Waking up in the dark, heads full of cellars and concrete. Dreams full of blood and filth and sobbing and wondering how long it went on before they died. How much of it they took before they wound up naked and dead under some… some bloody septic tank.’

‘For starters,’ Bliss said through his teeth, ‘Lynsey Davies wasn’t in fact found naked.’

‘You
wanted
a national scare. Big, high-profile case to play with.’

‘But not
now
, for Christ’s sake! Will you just let me—?’

‘Will you both, for God’s sake, shut up?’ Merrily said quietly. ‘You’re scaring the cat.’ She came and sat down at the far end of the long table, away from both of them. ‘And me.’

‘Aye,’ Huw said, looking at her at last, as if realizing where he was. ‘I’m sorry.’

And she was shocked at the sight of him, at how much someone could change in six months or so. He was wearing his clerical shirt, the dog collar parchmented with age, under a patched tweed jacket. The effect was decrepit rather than casual. His long hair was dry and salted with dandruff, and there were lines she didn’t remember down each cheek, deep as sewn-up knife wounds. He was breathing hard.

‘Papers came same day for once.
West, West, West
. They all want him to be another West.’

‘And what do
you
want?’ Frannie Bliss’s face was maroon under the freckles. ‘We let it lie? We let the missing stay missing, the bodies stay buried?’

Huw had shut his eyes, was digging his knuckles into the table top. He stayed like that for several seconds before breathing out and opening his eyes, pulling out a rueful smile like an old handkerchief.

‘Hello, lass.’

‘Hello, Huw.’

‘That woman,’ Huw said to Bliss, as if the last few minutes had somehow been wiped. ‘Lynsey. Were there any bits of her missing?’

‘Bits?’ Bliss sat down again.

‘Bones. Fingers, toes.’

‘Like Fred did to them?’

‘Aye.’

‘What are you talking about?’ Merrily said.

‘All of the West victims,’ Bliss told her, ‘had several bones missing. Mostly fingers and toes, but sometimes shoulder bones. Like he was keeping souvenirs.’

‘Another of the reasons the Gloucester coppers suspected occult belief,’ Huw said. ‘A sense of ritual about it – always took the same bones.’

‘I’ve been reading as fast as I can,’ Merrily said. ‘I just haven’t got to this bit.’

‘Came to a lot of bones – well over a hundred. None of them have ever been found.’ Bliss turned to Huw. ‘No, Roddy didn’t go that far. Not with Lynsey. But then, she wasn’t your
regular
victim, was she?’

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