That Still andWhispering Place
Page 1
THAT STILL AND WHISPERING PLACE
Kathy Shuker
Copyright
Published by Shuker Publishing
Copyright © Kathy Shuker 2016
The moral right of Kathy Shuker to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Design and Patents Act of 1988. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior permission in writing of the copyright owner.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or have been used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, events, or locales, is purely coincidental.
ISBN: 978-0-9932257-4-1
Cover design by Design for Writers
This novel is written in UK English.
Table of Contents
About the Author
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Note
Acknowledgements
About the Author
Kathy Shuker was born in Wigan, England. After training and working as a physiotherapist, she studied design then worked as a freelance artist in oils and watercolours. Now writing full-time, she lives in Devon with her husband. That Still and Whispering Place is her third novel. Her two previous novels: Deep Water, Thin Ice and Silent Faces, Painted Ghosts are both available as ebooks and in paperback.
To find out more about Kathy and her work, please visit her website.
For my parents
Chapter 1
Claire knew this tree. She remembered climbing it as a child, annoying the boys because, long-limbed, she could do it faster. Not that she hadn’t skinned herself doing it - but that had never stopped her. She reached out an uncertain hand to touch its trunk. It was strange to be back. The alder flanked one of the footpaths weaving through the woods to the east of the village, a stone’s throw from the banks of the sleepy river which cut the settlement in two. Claire knew all the woods round Bohenna - and the sly tapestry of footpaths that crossed them. It surprised her how little any of it had changed. Strange to be back, but good too.
And yet there was something wrong because she couldn’t hear the river and there was no birdsong either; the woods had never been this quiet. Then the piercing scream of a girl split the air and her unease quickly turned to panic. Claire turned, was certain she knew where the scream had come from and ducked away from the tree, starting to run.
She cut right, then left, weaving in and out of the trees, picking a footpath here, one there. She veered right again. This path wasn’t one she’d used before but she ran on anyway, blindly, urgently, driven, unable to hear anything save the thump of blood in her ears and the cracking of broken twigs underfoot.
Her headlong search came to an abrupt end. She’d found her: a limp twisted bundle on the ground, her blonde hair filthy with mud, her skinny arms thrown out sideways as they always were when she slept. The little girl was barefoot, wearing just a tee shirt and shorts, and Claire fell to her knees, reaching out to gather the child into her arms and hug her close. She must take her indoors, wrap her in blankets, give her hot drinks, never let the girl out of her sight again.
But Gilly’s white skin was covered in bruises, her clothes torn and blood-stained. To the touch her flesh felt frozen. Claire couldn’t get a grip on her and now the child was melting into the ground, her features rapidly dissolving away. Claire felt her heart twist inside her chest, as if someone was wrenching it out of her body. She was screaming her daughter’s name and turning in circles, anguished, searching for her…but there was nothing she could do because she was falling…falling…
A radio blared into life and music twittered into her head - a stupid, silly little jingle – but that didn’t make any sense because there were no radios in the wood. And it was getting louder. Claire opened her eyes and struggled to focus, her heart still thumping, her skin damp with perspiration. She was sprawled along the sofa, her left arm stretched up behind her, the hand tucked beneath her head. For a moment she couldn’t recognise the room though the furniture looked familiar. Her hand had gone to sleep and she unfolded her arm and stretched it, trying to make it feel again.
Slowly reality sank in and her heart rate subsided. She’d had that dream again. She remembered moving in - was it only yesterday? - remembered the old man next door watching suspiciously as the removal men carried each piece of furniture into the cottage. She remembered all the cleaning and unpacking and then she’d sat down and fallen asleep.
The stupid jingle was still playing and Claire sat up, shaking her left hand as it started to throb and simultaneously reaching with her right for the mobile phone on the coffee table, wondering why she had chosen such an inane ringtone. Glancing at the name on the screen, she hesitated before accepting the call.
‘Hello Neil.’
‘Claire? At last. You’ve finally deigned to answer. What the hell are you doing? Have you gone mad?’
‘Don’t start, Neil.’
‘But what possessed you to go dashing back to Bohenna? If you’re trying to make me feel guilty, it won’t work. I won’t be manipulated.’ He paused. ‘Are you all right?’
She swallowed, taking her time. ‘Of course I am.’
He was silent, long enough for her to wonder if he was still there.
‘How did you know I was here?’ she asked eventually.
‘I called at the house and one of the neighbours told me. So I tried ringing you, and when I couldn’t get a reply I rang Laura.’
‘You shouldn’t have gone bothering Laura.’
‘I wouldn’t have needed to bother her if you’d answered your damn phone. I just wanted to know what was going on. And she’s not happy about what you’re doing either. In fact she sounded quite upset. She’s worried about you.’ He hesitated. ‘What were you thinking?’
Claire shook her head silently and tipped her head back, rolling her eyes up to look at the ceiling. She’d missed a cobweb and she watched it dance in the draught coming under the front door.
‘Claire?’ he insisted in her ear.
‘My coming here is not about you,’ she said slowly. She watched a tiny spider abseil down an invisible silken thread from the edge of the web. ‘It has absolutely nothing to do with you. Why should it? Soon we’ll be divorced. You wanted the divorce as much as I did.’ More, she thought. Much more. ‘You’re in no position to dictate what I should do with the rest of my life. I told you I was planning to come back but you obviously weren’t listening. I wasn’t going to hang around waiting for our house to sell. And our daughter’s all grown up now with plans of her own. Maybe you’ve been too busy to notice? So I’ve come home.’
Claire stopped short. It was the first time she’d put it that way. Home. She nodded. Yes, that was exactly right.
‘Anyway,’ she added, ‘I explained what I was doing to Laura and she was fine about it. You’re using her as emotional blackmail. It’s typical of you. You say you want a new life so get on with it a
nd leave me alone. How is Samantha by the way?’
‘Damn it, Claire. You know very well our marriage had fallen apart way before Sam came on the scene. You were impossible to live with. You wouldn’t move on. And look at you now: you’re back chasing shadows.’
Claire said nothing. Neil constantly put the blame on her as if he’d done nothing, as if he had been easy to live with, and it made her angry. But she was tired of all the arguments and recriminations and didn’t bother to retaliate. She was tempted to cut him off – he’d done it to her several times over recent months – but couldn’t quite bring herself to do it. She was pleased to hear his voice and that made her cross too.
She got up stiffly and walked to the window, looking out to the front. The old man from next door was standing on the rough ground opposite the house, staring into the interior of her car as if it was an invention he hadn’t seen before.
‘Claire…darling…’ Neil’s voice in her ear now held something of the old familiar warmth. It was easy – tempting - to believe he still cared. ‘Stop blaming yourself. Please. It wasn’t your fault. You know these things happen. She’s gone. You’ve got to let her go.’
Claire hesitated, squeezing her lips together hard, feeling tears prick at her eyes but refusing to let herself cry.
‘You think you understand me,’ she said. ‘But you have no idea why I’m here. None at all. And I’m not convinced you care, Neil. I think it’s about your pride. You think Bohenna is your patch, the Pennymans’ patch, but it’s mine too, remember? Well, I’ve made the choice to come back. That’s all there is to it.’
He grunted. 'I’m sure you didn’t tell me and I wish I’d known before.’ He now sounded sulky; she could imagine his expression perfectly, the pout of his lips, the frown making the top of his nose crease up.
‘I did tell you. We discussed which furniture I could take.’
‘I thought that was for the future. I didn’t expect you to run away like this. It’s insane.’ He sighed. ‘Does mum know you’re there? I’d better tell her.’
‘There’s no need. I’m going to tell her myself.’
‘It might be better coming from me… Claire, are you listening?’
‘Neil, it’s my life. Butt out.’
This time she closed the call without giving him a chance to respond and stood for a moment, painfully aware of the sudden silence and the pressing insistent heaviness of it. If there was birdsong now, she didn’t hear it. She was back in the past, a succession of painful images running through her head. That dream had unnerved her but she had known it would be like this. It was never going to be easy to come back.
She saw the old man walk away from her car with his bent, lurching gait and the movement brought her back to the present. Old Eddie. She had known of him growing up, had seen him round the small Cornish village, but had never had a single conversation with the man. He’d been an agricultural worker, she dimly remembered, lived alone and didn’t bother much with anyone except maybe a walk to the pub now and then. And he kept chickens. She knew that because the cock kept crowing all hours.
And now the weak October sun was already setting; gloom was descending. The nearby bank of trees appeared to suck what little light remained. She moved away from the window, hesitated, then brought up Eve’s number on her phone. But no, she couldn’t face it now. Neil’s mother could wait. It was hardly urgent and, despite what the Pennymans might think, the woman did not rule the world. She put the phone down.
She needed to go for a run to get that dream out of her system. Jogging was the only thing she had ever found which helped. She went upstairs to change.
*
Standing outside the pub, Adam Thomas shuffled his feet and glanced at his watch again: it was six fifteen and still there was no sign of Zoe. He sighed heavily. She had forgotten again - or maybe not. A small voice at the back of his head told him that she was doing it deliberately, trying to prove some kind of point. But it was rapidly going dark and it had been a long day; he could do without this.
He pulled the phone out of his pocket. There was only one bar. Reception was sometimes patchy along the valley, especially if the weather closed in. He punched in her number but there was no answer and it cut through to the answering service. A couple of men heading for The Swan looked his way curiously and Adam turned away, mumbled a brief message into the phone and closed it down. This was the second time in the last couple of weeks that he’d been stood up. It was becoming more and more difficult not to accept that there was something wrong. At home, Zoe had become increasingly moody, one minute full of some plan or other, the next crabby and confrontational. He felt like he was walking a tightrope all the time.
He glanced at his watch again. He needed a beer but Zoe always insisted that they meet outside because she didn’t like walking into the pub alone. For an apparently self-assured Mancunian, she was ridiculously nervous of country pubs. They’re too dark, she would complain, and everyone stops talking as soon as you walk in. What Zoe liked was the anonymity of a crowded, raucous city pub where an extra body was ignored and where you had to shout to make yourself heard. The Swan was old-fashioned and cosy: it still had its original lounge bar and a separate public bar and a snug - and a menu where virtually every meal came with chips and the word jus didn’t appear once. Adam liked it, though it had occurred to him that, at thirty-eight, he was already turning into his father.
He saw a woman jogging up the road from the direction of the bridge, her long legs sheathed in leggings, a huge long-sleeved tee shirt draped over the top and cinched in with one of those funny little bum bags that cyclists wore. Her curly hair had been pulled into a short, stubby bunch at the back. He was pretty sure he’d never seen her before. Not that he had lived here very long - five months, in village terms, was the blink of an eye, or so one of the locals had told him.
Bored, he watched the jogger stop, panting, in front of the shop on the other side of the road and now she seemed to be reading the adverts in the window. That was a novelty; he didn’t know anyone ever read the adverts. He thought they were put up more in hope than expectation, then went yellow and curled up at the corners in the sun.
In the harsh fluorescent light cast from the shop, he saw her scrabbling in her bag, looking for something. Then a taxi drew up not far from him and his attention was distracted. The driver was Nick Lawer and he was alone in the car. He lived in the village and Adam had met him in the bar a few times where he was sometimes friendly and sometimes ignored everyone. He was a surly man with a lascivious tongue and a short fuse. Adam watched him get out of the car then stand, motionless, looking across at the woman who was now writing something down. A moment later she was jogging down the road again with Nick pointedly watching her.
Then he turned and took a few steps towards Adam, a cheap grin on his face.
‘Not bad, eh - for her age anyway? Get those legs. I’d maybe give her eight.’ Nick liked to rate women on a scale out of ten - Adam had heard him do it in the pub several times. Anyone would think he was God’s gift to women. Adam disliked the man and was surprised he ever managed to get any fares. ‘D’you know who she is?’ Nick enquired, eyebrows raised knowingly.
‘No idea,’ said Adam.
‘That’s Claire Pennyman. Neil’s wife.’
‘You mean like the Pennymans from the vineyard? I don’t know Neil.’
‘Well you wouldn’t. Neil is Tim and Julia’s brother. Left here about five years ago. Had two daughters. Then… Don’t tell me you haven’t heard about the younger Pennyman girl? Thought every last bugger knew about that.’
Adam frowned, reluctant to get drawn into this conversation but curious to know all the same.
‘What about her?’
‘Disappeared,’ said Nick. ‘About a year before they left. Came home from school one day, went out to play and never came back. Police were here for ages, questioned everyone. Spent a lot of time with the family, they say. It was all over the telly for days. Where were y
ou, mate? Outer Mongolia or something?’
‘Didn’t they ever find her?’
Nick laughed. ‘Nah. Police chasing their own tails. Didn’t have a clue what they were doing. Anyway, this place is crawling with visitors in the summer. She was probably miles away by the time she was even reported missing. Waste of time searching the village. They admitted as much themselves in the end.’
‘How old was the kid?’
‘I dunno,’ Nick said carelessly. ‘Eight or nine maybe.’ He leaned forward conspiratorially though there was no-one around to hear. ‘Course there were some said Claire Pennyman was to blame herself. I mean, not just careless of the kid but the one who made her disappear - if you know what I mean.’ He gave an exaggerated wink and straightened up. ‘But, hey, there’s some people in this village’d condemn you for farting. And if they don’t know the whole story about something, they make it up themselves. Anyway, I need some fags.’
He crossed the road, glanced up the lane in the direction Claire Pennyman had gone, then walked into the shop.
Adam pulled out his phone and checked the screen. There was no word from Zoe. He toyed with going into the pub anyway but wasn’t in the mood any more and began the walk home.
*
Claire stepped out of the shower, dried herself quickly in the draughty bathroom, dressed and put a quick brush to her hair. She threw a jacket on, slipped on some shoes and left the house. Running had focussed her mind as it often did. She had decided she had to see Eve that day and get it over with. In any case, there was good strategy in speaking to the woman so soon after her arrival: it showed that Claire was in charge of the situation; it suggested that she didn’t feel guilty, that she wouldn’t be intimidated. A phone call wouldn’t do: it looked weak.
Neil’s mother was a widow, the matriarch of the Pennyman dynasty and still the lynch pin of their wine business: domineering, hard-working, astute. It was more than three years since Claire had been back to Bohenna and seen her. Too many missed family gatherings and events had frayed her already tenuous link to the Pennymans. But Eve had never liked Claire much, had never thought her good enough for her eldest boy, and had liked her still less when she had failed to give Neil a son. Even so, she was Laura’s grandmother and if Claire was going to live in the village again, she would have to face her sooner or later.