'At the time they saw nothing unusual but when the film came back from the chemist, they saw this.' He pointed his stick at the tree-line behind the family antics. It was a forestry plantation with the characteristic uniform rows of conifers. Where the tree-line stopped there was a wire fence and some fire-beating equipment. And there, moving uncertainly between the trees, was a figure. If it had been any more shadowy it would have been imperceptible. If it had stood still it probably would have never been noticed. But the very act of moving detached it from the background gloom and give it substance.
'The quality's terrible, of course. But anyone can see that this is no fox, or deer, or any of the explanations people normally like to pin on things like this. We had it image-enhanced and analysed and all the usual stuff. The boffins couldn't tell us much, except to say it's definitely a biped.' Llunos paused for a second and pressed his fingertips together as if the next sentence was especially difficult for him. 'Gentlemen, we had reason to suspect, and we soon came to know, that this was Herod Jenkins. And that he had survived his fall from the plane.' No one said anything and the film ran out, filling the silent room with the repeated clack, clack, clack of the revolving celluloid whipping the tabletop.
The man in the racoon-skin hat was invited to take the stand. I half-expected him to speak with the heap-big Hollywood accent used to accuse us of speaking with forked tongue. But he just sounded like any other well-educated Canadian.
'This is the point where I was called in,' he began. 'I spent some weeks in the Nant-y-moch badlands tracking the creature. I found out that although the adults were scared of him, the children knew him well. They called him Mr Dippetty-doo — a helpless happy old fool eating dirt and wearing clothes of woven twigs. In stark contrast to his former persona, about which you are all better informed than me, Dippetty-doo would happily tousle the hair of the village urchins, or pull out pennies from behind their ears ... even the farmyard dogs would no longer bark at his passing but would scamper up and lick his hand ... in short, gentlemen, it became clear to me that the fall from the plane had caused him to lose his memory and no trace of it remained. He was in fact harmless.'
The woodsman sat down and there was a mild ripple of table-rapping in applause, although I didn't see what for.
Llunos stood up and cut the applause with his hand. 'This left us with a serious problem. What guarantee was there that at some point he wouldn't recover his memory? The prospect was alarming and in order to allay our fears we contacted Doctor Pritchard who is an expert on neurophysiology at the Clarach Institute of Behavioural Neuroscience. What he told us hardly put our fears at rest. Doctor.'
The man in the white lab-coat stood up and smiled thinly. 'I'll try and do this in lay terms as far as I am able. No doubt you are all familiar with the TV-soap version of memory loss. The patient lies on a hospital bed and his family sit around him showing him old photos and playing the records that were once his favourites in the hope that some emotionally charged event will somehow turn the key that opens the gates of memory. It's actually not as fanciful as it seems and is a well-proven clinical technique. But have you ever wondered what would happen if the family sitting round the hospital bed were impostors? And the lost memories they patiently tried to coax back were bogus? All those old songs he never sang and the specially doctored photos showing cherished childhood moments that never took place? That in essence was what we did.' There was a subdued gasp round the table at the audacity of what the doctor was telling us. He continued unabashed as if used to such a reception and perhaps slightly proud. 'The project was conducted under the supervision of Doctor Faustus from the sanatorium — a very brilliant and unconventional neuroscientist who has done some pioneering work on false-memory syndrome and who kindly agreed to undertake the mapping of Herod's psyche.'
One of men in dark suits asked a question. 'How did you get him to the sanatorium?'
The scientist smiled in acknowledgment, pleased at being given another opportunity to show off.
'Good question! Actually, it wasn't too difficult, we used a technique suggested to us by our friend here from the Tillamook Indians. Basically the same used for trapping mink. Laughing Bear told us that during his observation of Dippetty-doo he noticed his quarry was secretly engaging in an occasional lover's tryst with a local woman. We approached her and outlined to her out desire to make Herod well again and she was happy to assist us in our efforts by acting as a form of bait. I believe some of you may know this woman, Mrs Bligh-Jones from the Meals on Wheels.'
This was greeted with snorts from around the table of the sort that suggested 'rather you than me, mate'.
There were no further questions so Doctor Pritchard carried on. 'Once we had successfully installed the subject in the sanatorium we invented a new past for him and hired a group of actors to sit round his bedside from dawn till dusk pretending to be his family. They were called the Flying Laszlofis — a troupe of Magyar circus performers. Day by day they sat there drip-feeding him the sweet balm of memory of all those lost tender cherished moments — hunting the black bears of the Carpathian Hills with his grandfather, Vadas; learning to dance the polka in the rustic parlour at the age of six; his old dog Цcsi, and that first sweet kiss with the seventeen-year-old Ninбcscska. It was an audacious undertaking but, amazingly, it started to produce results. Before long Herod took up the violin and soon mastered the rudiments of a number of Hungarian folk songs. He began to express pangs of homesickness for those far-off Carpathian Hills. He refused to eat the hospital food and insisted on goulash and pickled cabbage.
In short, the experiment had been an astonishing success; or to put it another way, gentlemen, Herod Jenkins had gone from this world, and in his place stood Zsigбcska Melles.' He paused and fought down a half-smile that was twitching the edges of his mouth. 'Er ... those of you who think us scientists are a rather cold-blooded, humourless lot might be amused to learn that Melles is the Magyar term for big-chested.' There was a ripple of chuckling, and he continued, 'It was an epoch-making moment in the annals of neuroscience; until, that is, the morning when the nurse went to his room and found him gone.' The doctor made an apologetic gesture with his hands and walked to the window and spoke to the sea and the sky: 'Since then there have been rumours and the occasional reports of him standing at the edge of the woods at sunset, staring, so they say, with a strange yearning at the rugby on TV in the darkened houses ...'
*
I walked with Llunos down Pier Street and accompanied him to his office. As we strolled he told me about Harri Harries. The two men from the Kamp were currently in protective custody, down at the station.
'They thought it was a trick,' said Llunos. 'And Harries hasn't reported to work. Don't know where he is. I've sent a fax to Cardiff about it.'
'Why did they send him here in the first place?'
'It's because certain people down in Cardiff are not happy with me.'
'I thought you were doing fine.'
His step unconsciously followed time with mine. 'First the flood and now Herod ... black marks against my name ... it all adds up.'
'They surely can't blame you for ... for all this?'
'It happened on my watch. Plus they think I've gone soft. Got old. They say I don't run a tight ship any more, all this aggro between the druids and the Meals on Wheels. They can't see, it's a different world after the flood, all the old certainties have gone ... time was you knew who was bad and who was good, even if you could never prove it you still knew it. But now, life being such a struggle, the line is blurred. And then there's the problem of you.'
'Me?'
'They see me having coffee with you and generally ... fraternising they call it, and they say that proves it. Once upon a time I would have run you out of town every now and again just to keep you on your toes.'
'It's true, you would have.'
'I know. But after a while ...' He stopped at the corner and looked at me. 'I mean, what's the point?'
When we g
ot to his office we sat in contemplative silence. 'We're going to make a posse, if you're interested,' said Llunos after a while. 'The boffins say he'll probably make for some place sacred to him.'
I tried to look hopeful. 'I suppose that's something.'
'Yes,' said Llunos sadly. 'It's something.'
Chapter 15
Marty's mum's house was a two-mile walk off the main road up a country lane. There were no streetlights but the wet drizzly sky gave off a soft luminescence and provided more than enough light for eyes that had got used to the dark. Despite the cold and wet it was strangely pleasant, calm and peaceful so far away from the frenetic activity of Aberystwyth. The only sound was the occasional bark of a distant dog and even that was comforting. You could tell without seeing that these were wholesome well-fed dogs who would run up to you and nuzzle your hand, not the snarling, half-starved packs of curs that slunk through the rubble of town at night. After a while I began to make out the orange light from the house, glowing through the swaying black filigree of the trees.
The door was on a chain, Marty's mum lived alone, and peered at me from inside as a wave of hot firelit air hit me. Air filled with cinnamon and baking smells and that indefinable but not unpleasant aroma that the insides of other people's houses have. Recognition took only a fraction of a second and she let out a gasp before closing the door slightly to release the chain.
Once I was inside she stood facing me looking up and grasped my face in her hands. We didn't speak, she just beamed at me, her old watery eyes sparkling and then her face darkened as a thought occurred to her. 'I knew you'd come when I heard.'
I nodded.
'So it's true then? He's alive?'
'Yes. I came as soon as I could.'
She touched my cheek. 'You're a good man, Louie.' Then she turned and I followed her down the corridor to the kitchen at the back.
'It's funny, I always suspected it. I had a feeling ... they say a mother always knows. Mind you, it's always good to see you, Louie, whatever the occasion.'
The kitchen was filled with warmth and I sat down at the table while Marty's mum stirred some stew on the stove. There was a rifle on the table, half-way through being cleaned. We both looked at it at the same time and then our eyes met.
'It's no good you looking at me like that.'
'Bit late in the year to be hunting rabbits, isn't it?'
'Bit late in life, too, that's what you're thinking, I know.'
'Or perhaps you're hunting something a bit bigger?'
'This one's no bunny rabbit, that's for sure.'
I put my hand on the gleaming oily barrel. 'This isn't the way.'
She stopped stirring and stood motionless at the stove and then said, 'He took my son, Louie. Sent him off on a cross-country run in weather that even the SAS on the Brecon Beacons don't go out in.'
She brought over the stew and I ate hungrily. Through the steam swirling up from the spoon I could see the smiling picture of Marty on the mantelpiece above the fire. It was a washed-out colour snap of him on a beach at some south-coast English resort, seven or eight years old.
'All the same,' I said, 'you should leave it to the experts. I hear there's going to be a posse.'
She scoffed. 'Bank tellers, postmen, ironmongers, filing-clerks ... They'll try and take him alive, the fools.'
'A hunt is no place for you. It's not right.'
'Right or not right, I don't care any more, Louie. I'm getting old now and I've got no one here to comfort me. I lost a good husband to the mines and a good son to the games teacher. It's lime to even the score.'
'You'll be wasting your time, he could be anywhere between here and Welshpool.'
'It's not so difficult if you know where to look. He'll make for somewhere sacred. No different from a wounded fox. Somewhere that means something special to him, from long ago. Some place he cherishes, that he holds dear from a happy time before everything got ruined.'
'Sure, I said. 'But no one knows where that is.'
After supper we talked until late. I told Marty's mum about what I'd seen, about the fall of Valentine, and how the Meals on Wheels had eclipsed the druids. She scoffed and warned me not to pay too much attention to outward appearances. Druids or the Meals on Wheels, underneath they were all the same. Like shoots growing in different parts of a garden that come from the same tree. The one to really watch out for, she said, was Mrs Llantrisant, even though she was still in prison.
At midnight, the clock chimed and Marty's mum looked slightly startled.
'Oh my word!' she said. 'Almost forgot. Come! we must be quick, he usually starts at midnight.'
Ignoring the puzzled look on my face she beckoned to me to follow her. She doused all the lights in the house and switched on a torch and led me up to the attic bedroom, a small garret that looked out over the hills south of Aberystwyth. The night was dark and featureless, even the lights of the scattered cottages having been extinguished, and only the ceaseless blink of the lighthouse beyond Cwmtydu reminding us that there were other people alive tonight.
'Wait for it now,' she whispered.
We stared out, holding our breath, waiting and watching for I knew not what, the lighthouse the only point of focus in the darkness. And then it happened.
'Oooh! Here we go,' hissed Marty's mum.
Something happened to the light from the lighthouse. Something that I had seen only once before in my life, that I struggled to find words for, seen once many moons ago at a meeting of children whose purpose was now lost to me. A shadow temporarily obscured the light, like a cloud sliding across the face of the moon. And then it passed and was followed by another smaller shadow. And then a bigger one. Marty's mum nudged me and pointed further to the south where the object that had temporarily eclipsed the sun of the lighthouse threw a shadow, one huge and measured in miles across the face of the darkened hills and all at once I realised in astonishment what it was. It was a bunny.
'It's Mr Cefnmabws,' explained Marty's mum in a hushed voice. 'The lighthouse keeper. He's a dissident.'
The county-sized rabbit waggled its ears across the benighted hamlets above Llanfarian, and for a moment I was transported back to my seventh birthday party where a conjuror had done a similar thing with the shadow of his hand on the kitchen wall.
'What's it all about?' I asked in disbelief, as the rabbit was joined by three others who chased it.
'It's his way of publishing the truth,' she said. 'About the death of Mrs Cefnmabws on Pumlumon.'
A shadow-chase ensued across the hills south towards Llanrhystud.
'He had a printing-press and a radio station but they closed it down. This is his only way.'
The three rabbits caught up with the first and started beating him. Then the shadows disappeared and the light returned to its usual steady blinking.
'That's your lot for tonight, he'll be on again tomorrow. Doesn't do it for long in case someone notices.'
We stayed there staring out into the night even though Mr Cefnmabws's passion play had ended.
'What's he trying to say?'
'He wants an inquiry, doesn't he? He wants them to ask Mrs Bligh-Jones the question, the one they dare not ask.'
*
The caravans were strung out like plastic diamonds on the cheap necklace of the River Rheidol. I sat in the car for a while, listening to the radio, and waited for her to go to whichever caravan she lived in. And then I waited some more and got out.
Dew was forming on the bonnet of the car and the town was asleep. I walked up to her trailer and a man appeared out of the shadows in a way that suggested he had been watching me.
'Do you want something, mate?'
I looked at him. He didn't look the type to be accosting strangers at this time of night. He looked about sixty, with a scared face and old, tired eyes.
'What's it to you?'
'I'm the security. You don't live here, what do you want?'
I walked up to the caravan and knocked. 'Just visiting a frien
d.'
'Miss Judy doesn't accept visitors after midnight.'
'That's funny, last time I came here you said you hadn't seen her for weeks. Why don't you shove off home before you get hurt.'
The man reached out to grab my coat and I shoved him back viciously. 'Look, old man, whatever they're paying you, it's not worth it.'
The door opened and Judy Juice stood there in a silk dressing-gown.
'What's going on?'
'Someone snooping, Miss Judy.'
I turned to Judy Juice. 'Sorry to trouble you, miss, but I was wondering if I could talk to you about Dean Morgan —'
Her eyes flashed scorn. 'Do you know what time it is?'
'Yes I'm sorry, miss, but it really is important. Someone's life could depend on it ...'
She narrowed her eyes and considered me. 'Cops?'
I shook my head, said, 'Private investigator,' and held out a card.
She took it and read and then looked at me again, this time with a sense of recognition. 'You're the guy with the little girl.'
I nodded.
'It's OK, Lester. Thanks.' Then she pulled open the door and let me in.
The place had a cloying, sour smell of unwashed bedclothes and not enough air and what little air there was had been burned up by the camping-gas stove. The floor was littered with discarded clothes and so many foil take-away trays they were ankle-deep like silver ingots on the floor of a vault. On one wall was a makeshift dressing-table before a mirror with a halo of light bulbs set around it. And at the far end a three-piece suite was angled into the space beneath the big window. She waded through the silver sea of ingots and sat on the sofa and poured herself a gin with a shaking hand and drunk it in one go. She didn't offer me one. I sat down opposite her.
She took a deep drag on a cigarette and screwed up her eyes with what might have been pleasure.
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