‘It doesn’t sound as if he’s with Margaret,’ she added. ‘We have every cause to think she’s in the south with a youth called Gibbons. Taking a country holiday is not her kind of fun. She’s not for tramping through the heather with the wind in her hair – she’s a city girl, she likes the bright lights, night-clubbing, amusement arcades, fairgrounds and so on.’
‘Even so, I’ll have to check it out,’ I said.
‘Keep in touch,’ she replied in her strong Tyneside accent, and I rang off.
Next I called Ashfordly police office and spoke to Sergeant Bairstow, explaining the circumstances and saying I now intended to carry out an immediate search of the area. He said he would enter details in our occurrence book so that other officers could also watch out for the little green Morris Minor. It did not escape my attention that, if this couple were staying locally in boarding houses, they would probably give false names and addresses to their hosts, and entries in the guests’ registers might also be false. They could be one of the countless Mr and Mrs Smiths who visit such places. But I could try.
It was around 10.30 that Monday morning when I left home in my official van for this tour of the local bed-and-breakfast accommodation. It was not a difficult task to conduct organized visits. We maintained our own lists of these premises simply because so many people asked us for addresses to stay, and so I began my enquiries. I visited each in turn, giving a description of the couple and the car, together with their correct names, emphasizing Frank’s name rather than the girl’s. But none had a teenaged couple staying with them, and none had entries of a Mr and Mrs Underwood in their registers. I spent the whole of that Monday on that task and failed to locate them.
I knew that my colleagues would do likewise when they came on duty, and so on the Tuesday I checked their visitations to avoid duplication and set off again. By lunchtime I had driven miles and checked eighteen bed-and-breakfast houses, five farms and one private hotel, all without result.
And then, after my packed lunch of cheese sandwiches, fruitcake and coffee from a flask, I crossed the moorland ridge from Lairsdale into Whemmelby. It was there that I saw the little green car. It was parked beside a small plantation of Scots pines and occupied a tiny lay-by where fire-fighting equipment stood in case of emergencies. The registration number confirmed it was the car I sought. I tried the doors; they were locked. Of the couple, there was no sign.
I knew this area well: a footpath ran across the moors at this point, and they could be anywhere along that path, in either direction. If I walked one way, they might have gone the other, and so I decided to wait, at least for an hour or two. I radioed Eltering police office to report my location and decision; they would inform Ashfordly office and Sergeant Bairstow.
And so I sat and waited.
There were some reports I could complete, so my vigil was not wasted. I had several returns, one accident report, a schedule of stock registers and a list of some visits to licensed premises to finalize, so I sat and worked, with the window down and the official radio burbling.
I enjoyed the scent of the heather as it mingled with the strong resin of the pines. I heard skylarks singing high in the heavens somewhere beyond my vision, and the burbling song of the curlew. All around, nature was busy with its own life, and the moorland creatures were preparing for autumn; soon those curlews would head for the coast, the silver birches would lose their leaves but the skylarks would remain to fill the moors with their distinctive song.
As I enjoyed those few hours alone, I saw an elderly couple, a man and woman, heading towards me. They were weaving their way through the high heather, following the sheep track which formed the footpath, and I saw that they were clad in hiking gear. Brightly coloured waterproof leggings and boots, warm kagouls and close-fitting woollen hats completed their outfits, and each carried a small rucksack. Both were using thumbsticks too, and they were moving at a swift pace. They were a couple accustomed to the moors and completely confident on a walk of this kind. I decided to ask if they had seen the teenagers during their rambling.
I waited until they had climbed through the V-shaped stile in the dry-stone wall and then hailed them.
‘Excuse me,’ I greeted them with a smile, ‘I’m looking for a young couple, teenagers, a boy and a girl. I wonder if you’ve seen anyone during your walk?’
They looked at each other, and in a Tyneside accent the man said, ‘Sorry, no. We’ve not seen a soul, have we, Joyce?’
The woman, in her late sixties, shook her head.
‘No, we’ve been out there all morning, Officer,’ she said in that distinctive, lilting accent. ‘It’s been lovely, mind, not a soul; we’ve had the whole moor to ourselves. But are they lost or something?’
‘Not exactly,’ I said, ‘but they’re from your part of the world.’ I referred to their accents. ‘The lad’s run away and taken the girl with her – she’s only fifteen.’
‘Oh dear, it happens all the time,’ said the woman. ‘I used to be a teacher, and you’d be surprised how many fourth-form lasses ran off with sixth-form lads!’
‘Are you staying in the area?’ I asked.
‘Aye,’ smiled the man. ‘We’re at Spout House Farm near Gelderslack, bed-and-breakfast.’
‘There’s no teenagers there, is there?’ I asked hopefully, for I had not yet visited that farm.
‘No,’ he said. ‘Just us. But if we do see them, we’ll call you. Ashfordly police, isn’t it?’
‘That’s the nearest police station. We’d be most grateful,’ I said. ‘Well, thanks anyway.’
As they turned to leave, the man went towards the little green car. He produced a key and opened the door.
‘Er, excuse me,’ I said, wondering if I was about to make a fool of myself, ‘but is that your car?’
‘Well, not exactly, Officer. It’s my mother’s.’
My brain did a very, very rapid mental exercise.
‘Is she Mrs Underwood?’ I asked very slowly, and I gave her address.
‘She is,’ said the man.
‘And, at the risk of seeming a total fool, are you Frank Underwood?’ I was looking at his physical appearance. In spite of his age, he did have strands of fair hair protruding from his hat, and he matched the description of the ‘youth’ I was seeking.
‘I am. You don’t mean she’s reported me missing? The silly old fool …’ he laughed. ‘Look, what did she say, Constable?’
I did not wish to repeat her description of the lady at his side, so I said she’d called me to say her son had disappeared with a young woman and that she’d given me the impression he was seventeen.
‘Seventeen? I’m seventy!’ he laughed. ‘I’m seventy, officer. I am grown up, you know!’
And now I realized what I’d done. The fault on the line had made me mis-hear that word. I’d thought he was seventeen and had deduced, wrongly, that his girl was fifteen, whereas she was probably sixty-eight. I did not ask!
The couple laughed at my embarrassment. Frank explained how possessive his mother had become since she had been widowed – she was ninety-two now, but remarkably fit. Frank, himself a widower, had for a time lived with his mother, but now he’d met Joyce he had decided to allow himself a bit of romance and freedom. He’d borrowed her car because his own was undergoing a complete service. Amazingly, she was still fit enough to drive and insisted on running her own car.
‘I’ve never told mother where Joyce lives, or who she is or anything about her,’ he admitted. ‘If that seems selfish, Constable, forgive me, but if I did tell mother, she’d pester the life out of Joyce, trying to get her to end her relationship with me. And so I keep Joyce a secret from mother. She’s tried to use you to find out who she is – the crafty old thing!’
‘So what are you going to do now?’ asked Joyce, smiling in her amusement.
‘I’m going to ring Newcastle police Juvenile Liaison Bureau to cancel their records of the 17-year-old Frank Underwood. I’m going to confirm that he has not run away
with 15-year-old Margaret Ellison (who is missing from that area) and I’m going to ring Mrs Underwood to say that her son is safe and that his private affairs are nothing to do with the police.’
‘You won’t say where we are, will you? Or that you’ve found us?’
‘No,’ I said. ‘I promise.’
We departed on good terms, the couple chuckling at their curious experience, and I returned to Ashfordly to explain this clanger to Sergeant Bairstow. But he took it in good part and said he would cancel the searches going on elsewhere.
He would endorse the record, ‘Underwood traced with adult partner. No offences revealed.’ That would prevent daft questions from higher authority.
When I returned home, my wife and I laughed at the development, and then the telephone rang. It was Mrs Underwood.
‘I’m ringing to see if you have found my son yet,’ she said the line still crackling and faint.
‘Yes,’ I said, without going into details. ‘I gave him your message and he thanked me.’
‘Well, if you see him again, Officer, tell him I’m not feeling very well. Tell him I’ve had another of my dizzy turns and I think he should come home – without that hussy of course.’
‘Yes, I’ll do that, Mrs Underwood,’ I said.
To clear myself, I rang Mr and Mrs Jackson, the owners of Spout House Farm at Gelderslack, to ask them to pass on the ‘sickness’ message to Mr Underwood.
‘Underwood?’ asked Helen Jackson. ‘I’m sorry, Mr Rhea, there’s no one called Underwood here. Our only guests at the moment are two pensioners, a Mr and Mrs Smith from Newcastle-on-Tyne.’
A story of comparable mother-love involved Mrs Lucy Haines of Crag Top Farm, Briggsby. A great deal younger than Lavinia Underwood (and much younger even than Lavina’s son, Frank), she was the widow of Michael Haines. He was a farmer who had died in his early forties. His sudden and early departure from this life meant that Lucy was left with the farm to run and five sturdy sons to rear. In both challenges, she succeeded admirably, for the farm was well run and profitable, while her sons had all responded to their new responsibilities by working hard on the farm before launching themselves into fresh careers.
As Lucy nudged towards her middle fifties, the eldest four sons had all left home. After their youthful taste of the tough work on the farm, they had decided on easier careers.
Andrew had joined the army, Simon had found work in London, first as a motor mechanic and then as a taxi-driver, Paul was doing well as a quantity surveyor with a building company in the Midlands, while John had opened an electrical goods shop in York. Only Stephen, the youngest, was still at home. Now in his middle twenties, he worked alongside his mother, the pair of them slogging from dawn till dusk to keep the farm viable. It was a busy, non-stop life of hard work, for they had a large dairy herd, pigs, sheep and poultry, as well as many acres of arable land which produced barley, wheat and potatoes. That was what Michael Haines had established before his death – he’d worked so hard to create a profitable farm which he could pass to his sons.
The farm occupied a splendid site. Its buildings formed a kind of defensive cluster around the sturdy, stone-built farm house. In some ways, it was like a castle, because the foldyard was akin to a courtyard, with the buildings arranged around it to form a protection against the bitter weather which could blow across that hill top. The house was like the keep, while the barns and outbuildings formed the battlements. The entire group of buildings stood on the summit of a limestone crag with a winding, unmade road leading down to the dale below. The fields were spread across the lofty plain, and some of the slopes were covered with deciduous trees. I always enjoyed the ride back from Crag Top, if only for the long views one could obtain from the descent.
In his endeavours to carve a working farm from that lonely site, Michael Haines had had some help – an aged farmworker called Ralph had supported him for the whole of his (Michael’s) life and most of Ralph’s. Ralph had started work here when he was fifteen and had worked for Michael Haines’ father. Even though the widowed Lucy was never financially well-off, she would never consider getting rid of Ralph. He was part of the establishment and had, over the years, been largely responsible for creating a working farm around this lofty house. Following Michael’s death, however, the bulk of the work fell upon the broad shoulders of Lucy and Stephen, because Ralph was, quite simply, too old to undertake the heavier tasks. The years of toil had taken their toll, and he should really have retired by now. But he did not leave – he stayed on to help and would probably stay there until he dropped dead. Unmarried, he knew no other life and lived in a rented cottage in the village.
Ralph’s work was his life – and so it was with Lucy and her son. Neither she nor Stephen went anywhere for social outings or holiday visits – they had never been to any of the other sons’ homes, for they never had the time or the money; they never took a day off unless it was to visit a local mart or perhaps the Great Yorkshire Show at Harrogate. For them, their farm was their entire life, even if it was a never-ending routine of near drudgery. Lucy saw no alternative; born of moorland farming stock, her parents had also lived this kind of life.
In spite of living in the middle 1960s, Stephen had found himself emulating his mother’s early years. It seemed he was destined to follow his ancestors into a life of hard work and little relaxation. I don’t think he’d had a girlfriend since leaving school, and I never saw him pop into the local pub for a drink or join the other lads into the cricket or football teams. He was almost a recluse at the grand old age of twenty-five. The only time I noticed him around the village was when he came down to the garage to purchase spares for the tractor. He spent hours working on the tractor, fixing defects, polishing it, mending broken bits and devising modifications of his own. There were few local lads more keen and knowledgeable about tractors.
I did, of course, see both mother and son during my regular visits to the farm. I had to visit the premises at least once a quarter to check the stock register, and there were other occasions of duty, such as renewal of their firearms and shotgun certificates, or warnings if outbreaks of notifiable diseases of animals were suspected within the county. During my visits, I grew to like Lucy. She was a stocky woman scarcely more than five feet in height and slightly overweight in spite of her hard work. She had a round, ruddy face, very dark and pretty eyes, good white teeth and jet black hair which hinted at Continental or gypsy ancestry, though I don’t think she had any foreign blood in her veins, for many moorland girls had these dark good looks.
Her face was weathered and tanned and she usually wore her hair tied back in a bun. Her attire about the farm was generally a heavy frock worn beneath a well-used pinny, with an old cardigan about her shoulders in winter, and black Wellingtons on her feet all the year. I had never seen her dressed in smart clothes – even when she visited Ashfordly market on a Friday for her fruit and groceries, she wore that old cardigan and her wellies. But, I often thought, she was a good-looking woman who, with a little care and thought about her appearance, could have attracted a fine man – as indeed she once had.
The villagers, myself included, often wondered why she did not sell the farm to provide herself with an income from the capital it would generate. Oddly enough, she gave me a clue during a visit one September.
I called one misty morning, and Lucy produced a mug of coffee and a scone, asking me to join her, Stephen and old Ralph at the kitchen table. She brushed aside some mountaineering books which were on the table, and then Stephen came in and, blushing slightly, removed them to the sideboard. I wondered if he was taking up a new hobby, for these were colourful books full of photographs and descriptive passages, but I did not embarrass him by asking.
‘You look tired,’ I said to Lucy as we settled down for a chat over the coffee. Stephen had left us, taking his coffee and Ralph’s outside, saying there was work to be done in the foldyard.
‘He’s very shy,’ she said, as if in apology for Stephen’s awkwardne
ss in company.
‘I know the feeling!’ I smiled, knowing that some country lads were painfully shy in company of any kind, especially that of girls. ‘But how about you? Are you working too hard?’
‘Mebbe I am.’ She regarded me with a friendly look. ‘It makes me realize I’m getting older, Mr Rhea. I’m past fifty, you know.’
‘Well you don’t look it.’ I hoped I was not being patronizing by merely stating the obvious. ‘But you can’t go on for ever. You ought to sell up and invest the money, and enjoy the result of all your hard work.’
‘There’s many times I’ve thought of doing that.’ I thought I detected a note of yearning in her voice. ‘But Michael wouldn’t have wanted it. He was building up this farm for the lads – that’s all he worked for.’
‘But they’ve left the farm.’ I wondered if I was being too forward in reminding her of this, but I felt I could be honest.
‘Aye,’ she sighed. ‘That’s summat Michael never foresaw. He saw all his sons taking over, sharing the work and expanding the farm. He trained them for that – and then he died. They stuck it for a while, but they’d had enough of long hours and hard work with no money to spend. They’ve all gone, except our Stephen. Mind, if I go, the farm’ll be theirs, to share. They’re all part-owners, even if I do all the work.’
‘And what about Stephen?’ I asked. ‘Will he stay?’
‘I don’t know,’ she sighed. ‘What I would like, Mr Rhea, is for him to find a good, hard-working and honest lass, one who’s been bred on the moors, one who’ll take to this kind of life. Then he’d stay, he’d produce some bairns, and the farm could be kept in the family just as Michael wanted, and then handed down. The others say they don’t want it; they’ve said I should sell up, and they’ll let me have their shares till I die. But, well, there’s Stephen. He needs the work, he’d not find anything else, you know …’
Constable among the Heather Page 18