Read Coincidence: A Novel Online
Authors: J. W. Ironmonger
Tags: #Fiction, #Literary, #Romance, #Suspense, #Psychological
âRead them to me,' she said to Thomas in a whisper.
âAll of them?'
âYes. All of them.'
âFintan Kissack,' read Thomas, âaged 43. Lost at sea December 12th 1841. J
oshua Kissack, aged 21. Lost at sea December 12th 1841.'
âThey must have been brothers,' said Azalea very softly.
âThey were father and son,' said the Reverend Lender.
âAbraham Clague, aged 61. Lost at sea March 1st 1876; Christian Costain, 42, November 12th 1901; Peter Kissack, 27, December 24th 1936.'
âChristmas Eve,' whispered Azalea. The transept seemed to swallow up her words.
âJohn Joughin, 40, March 6th 1949; David Joughin, 44, March 6th 1949, Samuel Yves, 38, March 6th 1949.'
âHe was your great-grandfather,' said Lender.
âAbraham Yves,' read Thomas, âaged 33. Lost at sea June 21st 1962.'
âJune 21st!' Azalea sat upright. âMidsummer's Day?'
âHe was Marion's father,' the priest explained.
Azalea started to rise from the pew. âI think we should go now,' she said. Her heart was beating too fast for this place. It was too silent. There were too many ghosts.
Thomas squeezed her hand. âWait,' he said. âJust one more.' He paused for a second and then he read, âGideon Robertson, aged 54. Lost at sea. 2002.'
âWhat was the date?' asked Azalea.
Thomas hesitated.
âIt was a June day,' said Jeremiah Lender. âIt dawned very bright and clear. Sometimes the men on the small boats go out for two tides when the day is so long. There were three men on the boat, Gideon Robertson and two brothers â the Clagues â Adam and Tom. Around early afternoon a dreadful squall came over the sea. They had a good catch, and all three men were on deck tying everything down before the wind grew too high. Gideon must have seen these conditions a thousand times. While the Clagues were aft, Gideon was at the bow and a high wave broke above him just as the boat fell to the side. No one saw it happen, but it must have been that wave that took him. When Adam and Tom discovered he was missing, they turned and searched the sea. Air-sea rescue came out, and a helicopter from Anglesey. They searched until dark and were back at first light. The Clagues were out all night. But alas, he was never found.'
The silence of the transept consumed them. Then Azalea asked again, âWhat was the date? What was the date in June?'
âIt was June 21st,' said Thomas, and he felt Azalea release his hand as he spoke. âIt was Midsummer's Day.'
âS
o what are the chances,' Clementine asks Thomas, âof all those dates coinciding?'
It is a summer evening in Clementine Bielszowska's ground-floor office at the university. It is the Monday following her Friday visit to him in his little room on the fifth floor when he told her the story of Azalea. Clearly it has been on her mind over the weekend, as this time she has summoned him. He sits like a disobedient student, his big hands trapped between his knees. He looks sullen.
âAnd don't tell me that the chances are one hundred per cent,' she adds. âI
know
your answer to this question. History happened, and we all live extremely unlikely lives. I don't want to hear that. I just want to know the particular probability in this case. Wind back to 1962. Now tell me the chances of every significant date in the life of Azalea Lewis crashing into Midsummer's Day.' She is hunched up in a deep leather armchair, watching him like a patient predator.
âIn most of Europe,' Thomas says miserably, âpeople don't even celebrate midsummer on 21 June. They celebrate it on 24 June.'
âWell that,' Clementine says, âis plain stupid. But it doesn't answer my question.'
Thomas rises from his seat. There is a flipchart propped up against the wall. He writes âMidsummer' in faint red marker pen at the top.
âMidsummer's Day 1962,' he says, âAbraham Yves is lost at sea.'
He writes this down.
âMidsummer's Day 1982, Marion Yves is murdered at a fairground.'
âTwenty years later,' Clementine says.
âYes.'
âSo what happened on Midsummer's Day
1972
?'
âNothing. So far as I know.'
âGood.' She taps her walking stick on the floor. âNext.'
â1992. June 21st. Luke and Rebecca Folley are gunned down at the Langadi Mission in Uganda.'
âAre you sure?'
âAm I sure of what?'
âAre you sure they were gunned down? How do you know?'
Thomas thought about this. âBecause it said so in the newspaper.'
âWhich paper?'
âThe Nairobi
Daily Nation
,' Thomas says, but his expression is troubled.
âYou've seen the article?'
âYes. I've been researching Azalea's coincidences. I found a library copy.'
âDo you believe everything you read in the papers?'
âNot always, but this was a pretty authoritative article. It had a photograph . . .'
âA photograph of the bodies?'
He stalls a little. âNo,' he says. âA photograph of Luke and Rebecca and Azalea standing outside a building.'
âAll alive?'
âWell. Of course.'
âAnd this photograph proves what, exactly?'
He looks uneasy. âI guess it proves that the journalist who wrote the article must at least have visited the mission. Someone must have given him the photograph.'
âYou've just assumed,' the elderly psychoanalyst says, âthat John Hall and a group of mercenary soldiers simply took off after Azalea and risked their lives to save her. Why? Why would they do that?'
âI don't know. I've never really thought about it.'
âSomeone must have paid them. Isn't that what mercenary soldiers are â paid muscle?'
âI guess . . .'
âSo who paid them?' She fixes him with a glare. âLess than twelve hours after the abduction, someone is paying mercenaries to rescue Azalea. Who would do that?'
Thomas gulps slightly. Clementine's forensic intelligence makes him nervous. âSomeone else from the mission?' he suggests. âAnd we aren't sure it was just Azalea they were after.'
Clementine leans forward and slides open a narrow drawer. She pulls out a sheet of paper. âDo you remember the report you saw in the Kenyan paper about the mercenaries being deported?' she asks.
He nods.
âDid you make a note of their names?'
Thomas looks surprised at the question.
âOne name is notably absent,' she says. âJohn Hall. It seems that he died before they could deport him. But the other names were given, and I tracked one of them down.' She gives him a satisfied grin.
He looks at her in disbelief. âYou tracked . . . How did you do that?'
âGoogle. A lot of international phone calls, a friend in Johannesburg and some serendipity.' She waves the printed page at him.
âWhat's that?'
âIt's an email from our friend,' she says. She pulls on her spectacles. âPieter van der Merwe.'
â
The
Pieter van der Merwe?'
âThe same,' she says. âPieter van der Merwe, mercenary and rather unpleasant alumnus of the Johannesburg police.' She tosses the page across the room and Thomas snatches it up.
âHave you spoken to him?' he asks with urgency in his voice.
âI have.'
âAnd what did he say?'
She grins. She is enjoying this. âHe told me that a man came to a hotel in Gulu to meet with John Hall. An Englishman. No one else met this man. It's a long time ago and his memory is shaky, but Pieter is reasonably sure it was Luke.'
âIt might not have been.' Thomas's hands are shaking.
âWhoever it was paid for the transaction with the deeds of a house in Cornwall,' she says. âThose deeds are probably still in a safe somewhere in Uganda. The boys never did anything about it.'
âOh my God.' Thomas straightens up. âLuke had a house in Cornwall.'
âHe did.'
âSo Luke is still alive?'
âWe don't know that. But we do know that he
was
still alive on the afternoon of 21 June 1992,' Clementine says. âSeveral hours after Azalea was abducted.'
âShit.' Thomas begins to pace up and down the room. âShit, shit, shit.'
She permits him this rush of expletives.
âSo if Luke survived the shooting in Langadi . . .' Thomas tails off again, struck by too many new thoughts to process them all. âWhy didn't he go looking for Azalea? I mean, after the mercenary thing went belly-up? Why didn't he try to track her down?'
âHow do we know he didn't?' Clementine removes her spectacles. âJust think about it. The trail must have been cold. According to Van der Merwe, John Hall told Luke
not
to come after them. He made that very clear. If no one made it back from the LRA camp with Azalea or any of the hostages, then they
all
had to be dead. So just imagine you're Luke Folley. What do you do? You wait around for a few days, desperately waiting for news. It never comes. Eventually, what? What do young men do in such circumstances?' She taps her stick as if it is helping her to think. âI would expect him to head north into Sudan looking for the LRA camp himself. But how would he find it? The mercenaries knew where it was â Luke probably didn't. And the chances are that after their encounter with our dogs of war, the LRA would have moved the evidence anyway. But even if they hadn't, what would Luke find? A bombed-out truck? A dead driver?'
This is sinking in. âBut what about Ritchie and Lauren?'
âWhat about them?'
âLuke could have tracked them down. He must have had ways of contacting them.'
âWhy would he think to do that? So far as Luke knew, Ritchie and Lauren had fled the mission compound. He told them to go. He probably saw them go. He'd have expected them to be on the first bus back to Kampala and then the first plane back to London. He didn't know they'd been abducted too.'
Thomas remains silent, absorbing this.
âAnd even if it did cross his mind to contact them, he could never have imagined that they would have known anything about Azalea â or where she was, because if they did know, they would surely have tried to contact
him
.'
âOne phone call,' Thomas says, emphasising this by stabbing the air with a long finger. âOne cheap, lousy phone call to Ritchie Lewis and he could have been back in touch with his daughter.'
Clementine nods. âLuke couldn't track down Azalea because he didn't even know if she was alive. He would calculate that if even one mercenary had survived â just
one
â they'd have come back to him with news. He probably checked all the reports from Sudan and Uganda to see if there was any news of them. He'd probably never dreamed they'd fled to Kenya. Or that Ritchie and Lauren were with them. Or that the mercenaries would all end up dead, imprisoned or deported. Or that Van der Merwe's message would be lost. Or that Azalea would have changed her name. Even a very sharp detective would run aground on all of that.'
âNot if the detective were as sharp as you,' Thomas says.
Clementine ignores this. âAnd then, Luke would also have assumed that if Azalea
was
alive, and if she had made it out of the clutches of the LRA, then
she
would be in touch. She was thirteen â quite old enough to find her way back to Langadi â or at least to tell someone to get a message to her parents. She was a resourceful teenager, by your account. Luke knew that. Living in Uganda he wouldn't see the Kenya press. He probably never suspected that a newspaper in Kenya had told Azalea that he and Rebecca were dead. He would never have known that she'd mourned them both for twenty years.'
âClementine, you're a wonder. Why didn't I come to you before now?'
She nods, enjoying this appreciation. âWhy indeed?'
âWhat an extraordinary set of circumstances.'
âWould you call it chance?' she asks, âor providence?'
âGuzen or hitsuzen?' he echoes. âEither way, it was one almighty helping of crummy bad luck.' He whistles slowly through his teeth and flexes his long arms. âYou might even call it coincidence,' he says.
She grunts agreement. âYou may pour me a glass of red wine,' she says.
âIt would be a pleasure.' He crosses her office to a set of bookshelves. He has done this before. There are volumes here by Freud and Jung, by Reich, Lacan and Schimek. He runs his finger down a row of spines.
âTry the Pleasure Principle,' she says. â
Jenseits des Lustprinzips
. Freud.'
He locates the volume and slides it forwards. The book is a fake. Behind the false spine stands a bottle.
âChateau Talbot,' she says. âNamed after a Shropshire earl who died in the Battle of Castillon.'
He retrieves the bottle, and a corkscrew. âIs it a claret?' he asks.
âMy dear boy. Have you ever known me to drink anything else?'
He pulls the cork and pours two generous glasses.
Clementine savours the wine slowly, swirling it round the glass and inhaling the bouquet. âSo Azalea went off to England with the Lewises,' she says, âthinking that Rebecca and Luke were dead. But Luke â at least â was alive.'
âAnd Rebecca?'
âWho knows? It seems possible that she really was killed. But who knows?'
Thomas releases a long whistle of a sigh. He swings his arms around behind his head.
âNow,' Clementine says, âcan we get back to the maths?'
âI need to get in touch with Luke Folley,' Thomas says. âIf he's still alive, and if he's still in Langadi, that must be where she's gone.''
âWhere who's gone?' Clementine asks.
âAzalea. She left in February, and I'm sure that's where she's gone. Back to Langadi. Oh my God!' He claps his hands to his face.
âI see. Always assuming he survived this long.'
âIt was twenty years ago.'
âHow old was Luke when . . . ?'
âHe would have been forty-something. Forty-three. Or forty-four.'
âNot so old, then.'
âNo.'
They look at each other.
âHe probably wouldn't still be in Langadi though,' Thomas says.
âWhy not?'
âBecause the mission doesn't exist any more.'
âAre you sure of that?'
âOne hundred per cent. I've googled every possible combination of “Langadi” and “Mission”, and there's no listing. I even had a letter from the Church Missionary Society. They say the St Paul Mission was closed down in 1992. They don't have any record of any new mission in its place.'
Clementine fixes him with a stare. âAll the same,' she says, âI would expect Luke still to be living in Langadi. He has to stay there. He has no choice.'
âWhy?' Thomas looks puzzled.
âWhy do you think? In case Azalea ever comes home.'
This is almost too much for Thomas. He covers his face with his hands.
âCan we get back to my list?'
âOK.'
He lifts himself up and goes to the chart.
âTwo thousand and two?' she prompts him.
âMidsummer's Day 2002, Gideon Robertson is lost at sea,' Thomas says. He writes this down.
âAnd finally?'
He pauses, and breathes in slowly. âTwo thousand and twelve. Midsummer's Day . . .'
There is a long silence. âYou know the rest.'
âI want to hear it from you.'
âAzalea Lewis dies,' he says. There is another long pause. âOr else she doesn't.'
âAnd what do you think will happen?'
âI don't know.' He feels a pressure on his chest. He screws up his eyes. âI don't know. I don't know. I don't know.'
âPerhaps it would help if we were to finish the calculation,' she says.
âOK.' He drags his attention back to the scrawled list of names and dates.
âEach of the events involves a death,' Clementine says. âEvery death is brutal and unexpected. No one dies in comfortable old age in the saga of Azalea Lewis.'
She raises an eyebrow as if anticipating a challenge from Thomas on this point, but he shrugs agreement.
âAll the deaths happen on the same day of the year, at the same point in a decade.'