A serious warning coming from an armed man big as a shed. But Lionel hadn’t finished. “Have you ever seen his sister wearing a riding habit. Polished boots, all very pukka?”
At this, Morgan smiled a ragged smile. “Oh yes, and I can tell you about her little Welsh costume, too. Talk about butter wouldn’t melt. Till she starts speaking, that is. And as for her riding crop, can you guess what that’s made of?”
Lionel was caught by surprise.
“Leather?”
“Thought you’d say that, sir. No, it’s a bull’s dick, dried and stretched. So Dai Meat said. A friend of his over in Hereford made it for her. She’s never without it. You see, her and Idris are the Cerberus, guarding Hell’s gates.”
Lionel was too startled by news of the crop and Peris Morgan’s unlikely show of erudition to jot anything down, while all the while, the picture of Heron House was growing more bizarre by the minute.
Lionel then made a decision. The time had come to share his own fear. “She threatened me with a gun after Walter Jones’ funeral on Saturday,” he said. “I was quite shaken up, just like today during my lunch hour.”
“I’m not surprised. Only fifteen, mind, but she’s the spy, the lookout, while tending the grave and all. More than once I’ve been tempted to take a pot shot. Vermin those two are, sir. Vermin, and that’s a compliment.”
When he’d finished, Peris Morgan raised himself from his chair and moved towards the window, patting Lionel’s shoulder as he went. “You’re a good man, Mr Hargreaves. Although you’re no Welsh speaker, you’ve done a lot in your first year in Rhandirmwyn. But if I were you – and unlike me, you’ve many more days to live and nights to sleep – I’d get yourself back to the Midlands. More people, see; where you wouldn’t stand out like you do here. You’d be safe.”
Lionel stared at the fire, then his notebook’s jottings. No, he told himself. These aren’t going in the flames. Nor am I leaving. “So whose screams did I hear coming from the house?” he persisted. “There must be someone else up there. What are you keeping from me?”
A pause followed, as long and dark as the Severn Railway Tunnel where too many workmen had perished.
“If I tell you, sir, you must swear never to breathe a word. Even when you’ve gone. Let me hear it.”
Lionel swallowed hard as if a stone had lodged in his throat. “I swear.”
“There’s a young woman. Just two years older than Gwenno. The daughter. Spit of her mother she is, if what my da said was true. I’ve only caught sight of her the once. Hair as black as a rook’s wing. Eyes as dark as any coal could be.”
“Please go on,” Lionel urged him as he might a shy pupil. His heartbeat quickening.
“She’s the one they all come to see. Those... those...” Here Peris Morgan faltered. His voice beginning to break up, as his listener watched the once lively log suddenly give up the ghost and lie on its ashes like some old charred relic.
The same girl as young Walter had seen?
“Has she any friends from the village?”
“Her? No, sir. She’s more like a prisoner. All I can say.”
With a shiver, Lionel recalled what Betsan Griffiths had written down to win his prize. How she was apparently unhappy at winning. Now he knew why, but Peris Morgan was speaking again. “There is one friend, sir, if you can call him that. The conchie. Talk is, he’s been sniffing around her. My wife saw them together by the old adit up Pen Cerrigmwyn. Kissing they were.”
“The organist from St. Barnabas?”
“Yes, sir. A fool for love. But sure as there’s breath in my body, his dainty little feet won’t be pumping those pedals for long. And hard as it might sound, I wouldn’t care. In my book, cowards like him don’t deserve to live.”
“That’s rather harsh, Mr Morgan. It seems he’s suffered enough already.”
“Pah!”
The last of the Home Guard snatched his hat and coat from the peg in the lobby. “Tell that to those poor lads who never saw their loved ones again.”
The silent night soon claimed him and the quickening tread of his boots on the stony track, while Lionel shivered again in the still, damp air. Having checked his fire was well and truly dead, he picked up his torch and his beloved tweed overcoat then closed his front door behind him.
There’d be no relaxing tonight. Not with three important visits to make, and while he picked his way over to Troed y Rhiw, realised with a jolt, he’d forgotten to ask the worthy but misguided bigot the unfortunate young woman’s name.
Just then, as he reached his gate, he was aware of his visitor retracing his steps. Peris Morgan, smelling of whisky was close enough to send a tremor of apprehension through Lionel’s body. “Something I just remembered,” Peris Morgan began. “Them judges at Heron House what I was telling you about. Heard a whisper they call themselves The Order, though God knows what that means. Might just be gossip, mind.”
“That’s a strange name,” Lionel said, half to himself, immediately thinking of Masons. Besides, Betsan hadn’t mentioned anything about that.
“I’ll leave you now. Just you watch yourself, sir.”
“I will.”
Yet the moment the other man had gone, Lionel drew his coat tighter around his body and let his lit torch roam for a few moments around the surrounding dusky bushes and trees that had suddenly acquired an air of menace and danger.
21.
Sunday 5th April 2009 – 6 a.m.
‘There’ll be no hiding place. So don’t get cocky. And if you squeal to anyone else, you’ll end up in bin bags where no-one’ll find you. Got it, bitch?’
That message left on Helen’s phone was from someone definitely male, definitely Woods, but more of a Welsh intonation than in the cab. Perhaps he’d also lied about living in Surrey, and the rest. She had thought of nothing else since, and yet, as a dirty grey light seeped under the slightly wedged-open lid into her squalid quarters, she realised from her watch showing 6 a.m. she must have slept.
What the Hell’s that?
Had war suddenly broken out in the middle of Wiltshire? A grumbling roll of wheels and men shouting were drawing closer. She pushed up the bin’s lid a bit further to see what was going on.
Damn.
A vast refuse lorry, complete with churning drum and a bad smell, was backing up while a fluorescent yellow guy was already investigating the first bin in the row.
Stay calm. Get a grip.
She must wait for the inevitable. To get out and run would only arouse suspicion and might bring the willing Trouser Suit on her case. Besides, if that threat had been left by Ethan Woods, he probably wasn’t far away and at least she’d have company.
Here goes...
Suddenly more daylight appeared and the peak of a red baseball cap followed by two startled eyes stared down at Helen. The hydraulics’ din drowned the man’s surprised shouts.
“I can explain,” she croaked, aware of her period surging southwards. “I’d nowhere else to go. This bloke was chasing me.”
“You Welsh?”
“What’s that got to do with it?”
“All Taffies are bonkers.” Nevertheless, two filthy gloved hands reached down towards her. “Up you come before you get shredded.”
Her knees wouldn’t straighten, nor her elbows. She was as stiff as her ancient mamgu, still clinging to life in her Care Home up in Machynlleth. The bin man called for help, and as the rotting rubbish stench filled her nose, two more hands pulled her clear and helped her along to a wooden bench conveniently placed near the Travel Lodge’s main entrance.
“Thank you,” was all Helen could say. Her eyes beginning to sting.
“Got to get back,” explained the one in the baseball cap. “We’re on short time as it is. Fuckin’ stingy council.”
With the men gone, big fat tears fell on to her precious rucksack, until an inner voice told her all wasn’t lost. She’d got her Visa card, hadn’t she? And a working phone that only needed a top-up.
“Come on,” she sniffed. “With a bit of luck, I could be with Mr Flynn in a few hours.”
***
No sign of the Trouser Suit or the white van and its driver. Something else to be grateful for. With less stiffness now, Helen returned to the shop and its welcome loo, where a basinful of hot water and a nice-smelling hand wash made her feel ready to face the day.
Ten minutes later, with her phone topped up, she dialled the taxi firm’s number given to her by the Asian guy at the till. She was warned that the bill could exceed a hundred pounds. “Sod it,” she told herself. At least she’d be safer than here. At least Mr Flynn might put her in the picture.
She waited by the counter until the shopkeeper had finished stacking a new delivery of cigarettes, then she said, “that man with the black beanie. Did he ever come back in here after I gave him the slip?”
“Not to my knowledge. I’m often in the storeroom. But,” he indicated a small TV positioned discreetly near the till angled away from prying eyes, “he’ll be on this if he did.”
“CCTV?”
“Sure. Remind me of the time.”
She tried thinking back through the blur of her recent nightmare. “Must have been half past midnight.”
“OK.” He flicked a switch and swivelled the screen round until its monochrome duplicate of the shop itself and surroundings came up on the screen.
“And he had this van. White it was,” she explained. “Newish, judging by the state of it.”
But no lamb…
“Take a look, but be quick,” said the guy. “We’re getting busy again.”
And sure enough, the grainy sequences showed the odd motorist and biker filling up at the pumps, until he swiftly swivelled the screen away from new customers queuing up to pay. “All quiet,” he said once the shop was empty again, letting her look until suddenly, she spotted a shadowy, but nevertheless familiar figure running between the vacant pumps and round the corner where she’d been hiding.
“That’s him.” Helen’s finger stabbed the screen. “Look!”
“12.38,” the clock says. Off to the Travel Lodge by the looks of things. There’s nothing else out the back apart from our rubbish bay.”
Her period pain kicked in again as the film ended and a new one began, showing Ethan Woods in his beanie and duffle coat pushing open the hotel’s outer door and not coming out again. So he could have seen her on that bench. Could still be there, with his van tucked out of sight.
“Seen enough?” The guy was clearly busy with yet more boxes of stock arriving.
“I have, thanks.” She then noticed the Cosicab taxi draw up alongside the shop’s front window. Its driver, a smart middle-aged woman wearing a maroon dress. “If he comes in here and starts asking about me, say you don’t know anything. Please.”
“I’ll warn my brother. My shift ends in ten minutes.”
His promise followed her outside where the silver Mondeo’s rear passenger door was already open.
“Your firm said they’d take Visa,” Helen said, keeping a lookout for the black beanie.
“That’s fine. You want Islington, right?”
“Right.”
***
No chat. No radio, or inquisitive glances. Just a professional called Maureen doing her job, cruising along the damp tarmac between the other Sunday morning early birds like her, a long journey to make. No sign of that white van either, and after signs for Swindon came and went, Helen gave up looking and closed her eyes...
Her mam’s favourite scene of a sunny autumn day – with blues and greens of sky and water contrasting with the reds, oranges and browns of leaves about to fall, came into view. But gradually, the planned sky had become earth-coloured, dome-shaped. Nothing like the intended vista from Dan y Bryn, her mam’s chalet bungalow. And the more she tried to retrieve her original idea, the more the pressure on her brush increased until stroke by stroke, colours that had mysteriously appeared on her palette were in place.
This was no seascape or landscape. She was staring at a face. But not only that. A beautiful, screaming face...
The taxi driver was eyeing her through her rear-view mirror. “Shall I pull over? Do you need to get out for a minute?”
To Helen, the voice seemed to come from far, far away, while beyond the car’s windows a bleak, grey world sped by. She simply said, “can you please turn the heater up? I’m freezing.”
The woman frowned. “Will do. But it’s already near max.”
How could it be? With skin that felt shrunken over her bones? Fingertips numb, cheesy-pale? Even the inside of her mouth was like an ice-box; the nerves in her teeth dancing to a hurting tune. And all the while, the vision of that terrible, tortured face filled her mind.
***
More traffic now near the eastern end of the M4, and the Mondeo slowed down alongside a solitary, static wind turbine whose white blades almost blended with the lightening sky. Normally, Helen would be envisaging this same aberration repeated hundreds of times on every beautiful Welsh hill and wondering yet again what she could do to stop it. But not now, with survival top of her agenda.
Suddenly, Rhandirmwyn’s stifling beauty seemed like two massive hands gripping her throat until she couldn’t breathe. Those terrified eyes she’d seen on that canvas, boring into the far reaches of her mind.
“I’ll stop if you like.” Maureen’s concern made her drop down another gear. “Just say when.”
“I’m fine, thanks,” Helen wheezed. “I just need to get to Mr Flynn.”
“Flynn, you say?” quizzed the driver, negotiating a big roundabout signed for Hammersmith and routes south. “Is he Irish?”
“Yes. Apparently he’s written two novels.”
“I’m impressed.”
“About the Freemasons.”
“I love anything like that. Conspiracy theories, alien encounters. Dan Brown meets David Icke, I suppose. Odd I’ve not heard of him.”
“I think the books were withdrawn early on. Their publishers had cold feet. So he said.”
Maureen didn’t reply.
***
At last Helen stepped out on to the damp, uneven pavement and waved the Mondeo away. Not for the first time did she feel suddenly stranded and alone, missing Jason.
“There’ll be no hiding place. So don’t get cocky. And if you squeal to anyone else, you’ll end up in bin bags where no-one’ll find you. Got it, bitch?”
She scoured her surroundings, listening hard for that van’s distinctive engine, and then, just as she was about to phone Jason and her mam again, heard a man’s voice calling out to her. First of all, she looked upwards at Sandhurst Mansion; but there on her right, three cars along the nearby kerb, was the familiar grey Volvo and its driver with a not-so-familiar expression in his eyes. Mr Flynn himself. Or rather, what seemed to be a dishevelled, older version. He looked worse than she did.
Having unfolded himself from his seat and, with his driver’s door still open, Mr Flynn walked towards her, arms spread wide. That same sticking plaster attached to his right index finger. “I’ve been worried stiff about you, Helen Myfanwy Jenkins. How the Hell did you know I was here?”
“That Metro notice gave me a useful start, then my cab driver took a guess.”
The hug that followed this lie took her by surprise, taking the air from her lungs until he spotted her taxi indicating to rejoin the traffic. “What did that cost? Please, I can’t let you pay.”
“Mr Flynn, I’d actually prefer it if you told me the truth.”
He rolled his eyes. A stray cloud covering the pale sun cast his face in shadow.
“Not again, Helen. You’ve already given me the third degree.”
“Some weirdo attacked me at Heron House yesterday, and then late last night must have followed me to Llandovery where I was dumb enough to cadge a lift from him. Ethan Woods he called himself. I recognised the same trainers. How he had the same build and smell… Is that his real name? Do you know of him?”
“No, I’m
sorry. You just have to be so careful these days. And as for Heron House, the Davieses are supposed to be on guard.” Her boss inclined his face towards her. In close up, his normally wavy hair was a greasy mess. “Why no mention of this when you left your message?”
Helen inwardly counted to three to calm herself down. He was wrong-footing her. The sod.
“Do the police know?” Mr Flynn asked.
“Yes. DC Prydderch went looking for clues, but he’s rubbish. Shall I tell you about this freak’s vile threat to me? Shall I? It’s still in my phone. There’ll be no hiding place…” she began, hearing her voice tremble. When she’d finished, she noticed how those same eyes had closed. That mouth a tight unmoving line.
***
She followed him towards the apartment block, unsettled by this sudden change of mood. Reminding herself from now on to watch and listen. To not give too much away because with every passing second, the man now in front of her was becoming more of a stranger.
A police cordon had been stretched across the entrance to what she assumed was the underground garage. The sight of it adding to a growing sense of danger. Nevertheless, she kept her distance, even when her boss introduced himself and shook hands with a short, anxious-looking Philippina dressed in a belted camel coat already waiting by the gateless path. He then turned to Helen. “Mrs Pachela used to clean for Mr Pitt-Rose. And this is Helen Jenkins, my cook at Heron House.” He gestured for Helen to come closer, but she held back. Something about this obviously pre-arranged encounter felt very wrong indeed.
“You know what I’ve come for,” he returned to Mrs Pachela whose red-rimmed eyes were welling up. “Keys, as agreed.”
His wallet was already out and open, revealing a wad of new notes inside.
“I’m sorry, sir,” said the woman. “They won’t be ready until four o’clock. I did try...”
Disappointment slackened his shoulders. “Not good enough,” he tutted while shoving the wallet back in its place. The sun slid out from behind another hanging cloud, revealing the cleaner’s perspiring olive skin.
“Four on the dot it is,” he barked and, judging by her expression, didn’t need to add ‘or else.’
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