Deadfall (44 page)

Read Deadfall Online

Authors: Lyndon Stacey

BOOK: Deadfall
5.82Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

‘Of course I do.'

‘So she wanted me to ask you. Please come, Linc. I know it's been rough on you and Josie these past few days, and I'm sorry, but we only wanted to protect Abby. She's been through so much . . .'

‘Rebecca, you don't have to apologise,' he cut in. ‘And yes, I'd love to come.'

He arranged to be at the Vicarage around eight o'clock and slipped the phone back in his pocket, feeling that finally things were beginning to look up.

Saul was waiting at the mill and together they did the rounds, inspecting the ongoing work, discussing the timetable for the following week, and standing for a long time watching the water that was now flowing back into the millpond, creeping imperceptibly up the newly rendered sides. The pump, piping the water away to the bypass stream, had been turned off thirty-six hours ago and Saul thought it would take the best part of a week to bring the pond up to its original depth but still the process held a fascination for Linc. When the millpond was full, water would start to pour over the weir, where – if it was found to be necessary to build up the level preparatory to milling – the old sluice-gates might one day be replaced.

Now the end of the renovation was in sight, Linc
was looking forward with increasing impatience to the day when the old waterwheel would come back to life.

They left the mill site by way of the new pedestrian gate into the car park, wincing as its hinges screamed a dry protest.

‘You would think the workmen would have oiled that when they put it on, wouldn't you?' Linc remarked.

‘I imagine there's some oil around somewhere,' Saul said. ‘If I'd come in my van there'd be some in the back, but I haven't.'

‘Well, as a matter of fact, I've got a pot of Vaseline in the glove compartment,' Linc remembered. It was the one he'd found in the coat he'd borrowed at Crispin's, and subsequently forgotten about.

He retrieved it and liberally smeared the offending hinge, working the gate to and fro until the squeak was silenced. Saul picked the tub off the gatepost where Linc had rested it, and made to put the lid back on.

‘Is this some special mix?' he asked, pausing in the act.

‘No. Just bog standard. I use it to stop my horse's mouth getting sore when I'm eventing. It acts as a barrier to all his slobber.'

‘But it's got bits in it,' Saul observed. ‘Looks like rust but it shouldn't be 'cos those hinges are new.'

Linc held out his hand, frowning. Sure enough, the clear grease
was
liberally speckled with tiny dark-coloured particles. He sniffed it but it seemed to have no smell so he replaced the lid, shrugging.
Perhaps it hadn't been his own tub, after all, but then there were the horse hairs . . .

It was with a mixture of eagerness and apprehension that Linc presented himself at the Vicarage that evening. In the past it had been his custom to let himself in at the back door and call a greeting as he made his way to the kitchen, but this evening he hesitated on the doorstep and then knocked instead.

A few seconds passed and then he heard footsteps approaching on the tiled floor.

‘Linc! Gosh, I thought it must be someone collecting for a charity or something,' Ruth exclaimed as she opened the door. ‘What are you doing out here?'

‘I didn't like to barge in,' he explained. ‘After everything that's happened, it just didn't feel right.'

Before Ruth could reply, Tiger, who'd insisted on coming with Linc, in spite of bribes offered by Mary, slipped between the two of them and disappeared up the passage towards the kitchen.

She looked after him in surprise.

‘Well, there's someone who doesn't mind barging in! Is that . . .? It looked like . . .'

‘It was,' Linc said apologetically. ‘I'm sorry, Ruth. I tried to leave him behind but he's a little bugger for getting his own way.'

‘No. That's all right, Linc. I didn't realise you'd got him, that's all. It's not his fault his owner turned out to be a bastard. Come on in.'

Linc put his hand on her arm.

‘Ruth, are you all right? About Sandy, I mean.'

‘Oh, sure,' she declared, perhaps a little too airily. ‘He's no loss.'

Linc wasn't fooled. He watched her with silent sympathy.

‘Okay, I'll admit it,' she amended. ‘I'm not all right. I feel wretched, betrayed, angry – but mostly I feel such a fool for having been taken in like that.'

‘We were all taken in. He fooled us all, but if it helps, I don't believe he set out to do it. I think, for all his happy-go-lucky bluster, he's really a pretty lonely bloke who fell under the spell of your lovely family. I should know – it happened to me.'

Ruth shrugged. ‘I don't know whether it helps or not. Maybe it will in time. But it was a nice thing to say, thank you. Now, come on in before you have me in tears again.'

The meeting with Abby, which Linc had been viewing with a certain amount of apprehension, went better than he had dared hope. The whole family, with the exception of her father, was gathered around the kitchen table when he went in, as on so many of his visits in the past. He could hear them chattering as he followed Ruth down the passageway and Rebecca immediately drew him into the conversation, allowing no time for awkwardness.

‘Ah, Linc, we were just discussing possible names for this kitten Josie's foisting on us in a week or two. I still think if it's ginger it should be Marmalade, but Hannah and Abby don't agree.'

‘But that's so boring!' Hannah protested. ‘It's like calling a white one Snowy, or a black one Sooty. My friend Katy's got a cat called Einstein and a dog called Shakespeare. They're cool names!'

‘And everything has to be
cool
at the moment, doesn't it, Hannah?' her mother said tolerantly.
‘But all the same, I'm not sure I could live with a literary cat, and Einstein is giving the poor thing a lot to live up to!'

‘It's no good asking me to suggest a name,' Linc said, going round the table to greet both Rebecca and Josie with a kiss on the cheek before slipping into a vacant chair next to them. ‘I can never think of anything. So what's your suggestion, Abby?'

He glanced across at her and saw a faint pinkness stain her still too-pale skin. Her hands and face looked painfully thin, but her hair had been washed and brushed into a shining dark curtain. This, in itself, took a bit of getting used to, as Linc couldn't recall ever having seen it loose before. Watching the way it fell forward as she now dipped her head, he realised that it was indicative of her present, vulnerable state of mind.

With an obvious effort she looked up under her lashes to meet his eyes.

‘I like Toffee,' she said.

‘Toffee?' Hannah repeated, scornfully. ‘You always go for food names. Syrup, Treacle, now Toffee!'

‘What about Fudge?' Toby put in, with the air of one not expecting to be considered. He had one hand under the table and Linc guessed that was where Tiger had got to.

‘Actually, I think Fudge is a good name,' Linc said approvingly. ‘Especially when you see what I've got here.' He opened a brown paper bag he'd been carrying and took out a large box of dairy fudge, amused to see Toby's eyes instantly light up.

‘Wow! That's huge!'

‘Linc, you shouldn't . . .' Rebecca began, but Hannah cut in with a sneer.

‘I hope you didn't bring that for Abby because she's not eating at the moment. It would be a real waste.'

‘It's for all of you,' Linc assured her.

‘I
am
eating, you little cow!' Abby said, stung into childish retort. ‘Just because I don't want to end up stocky, like you!'

‘I'm not stocky!'

‘That's enough!' their mother interposed, but Linc could see she was pleased to see some of Abby's old spark resurfacing.

‘Right. Time to lay the table,' Josie said, getting to her feet. ‘Hannah – tablecloth.'

David Hathaway, who appeared just before the meal was served, took Linc aside and offered a gracious apology for the scene at the hospital.

‘The silly thing is, as soon as I stopped to think, I knew you couldn't have done it, but for a moment there I just saw red. I couldn't see anything beyond the fact that somehow your presence was upsetting my little girl, and after everything she'd been through, I couldn't bear it. It wasn't very Christian, but I think in that moment I'd have turned on the Archbishop of Canterbury himself!'

Linc accepted his apology without hesitation, and his relationship with the family slipped back on to more or less the same footing as it had been prior to the trouble. The exception, unsurprisingly, was Abby, who picked at her food and was noticeably withdrawn, and although Linc found her watching him on a number of occasions, she always looked away when their eyes met.

After the meal he joined in a boisterous game of Monopoly, and it wasn't until he was on the point of leaving that he finally had a chance to speak to Abby alone. Hannah and Toby had been sent up to bed, and somehow, as the coffee cups were cleared away, Linc found that the rest of the family had disappeared, on one pretext or another, leaving Abby sleepy-eyed at one end of the kitchen sofa and him at the other.

‘I think we've been set up,' he remarked, smiling at her.

Abby bit her lip and looked down at her hands.

To Linc's horror, a tear welled up and spilled over to run down her thin cheek.

‘You don't have to say anything, you know,' he said gently, feeling intensely sorry for her. ‘I know what happened, and I understand.'

‘But I
have
to say something!' she insisted. ‘The things I said – I can't believe I ever thought it was you! I must have been out of my head!'

Linc moved across and took her thin hands in his. She made as if to pull them away, then stopped herself but still wouldn't look at him.

‘Abby, you were ill. Drugged up to the eyeballs. You weren't thinking straight. You have to put it behind you; to move on. And you've got to eat.' In a private moment, earlier, Josie had told him that Abby was existing on almost nothing. ‘You'll have to put on a bit of weight if you're going to groom for me on Hilary Lang's training course in August. It's not long now.'

The girl's eyes lit with sudden interest.

‘Hilary Lang? It
is
true then? I thought I'd dreamed that. I had some seriously weird dreams.'

‘Yes, it's true. So you'd better concentrate on getting fit.'

‘Wouldn't you rather take Josie?'

‘Josie? No, she's not such a good groom as you.'

‘But I thought . . . Um, she told me about you and her . . .' Abby looked sideways at him through her glossy fall of hair.

‘And you don't mind?'

‘Of course not. I know I was a bit silly before but . . . well, I suppose I always knew nothing would come of it. Besides, you're way too old!'

Linc nodded wryly. ‘I'm afraid so. Positively prehistoric!'

Linc left the Vicarage on his own to make his way back to Farthingscourt. The kisses he'd shared with Josie when she'd walked him out to his car had left him filled with a frustrated longing, and she'd obviously felt the same because as they drew apart, she murmured, ‘I know, I know, but it won't be long now, I promise. Soon they won't need me.'

Bugger them! I need you! Linc's inner self cried, but he kept the selfish words in his head, knowing that when she did come to him, it must be wholeheartedly.

Home once more, he installed Tiger in the office, switching on the light briefly to check that he had water and to give him his biscuits. There, laying on his desk was a brown envelope with
LINC TREMAYNE – BY HAND
printed in capital letters on the front.

With casual interest, he slit the top and drew out the paper it contained, but felt a jolt of shock when he realised it was a folded sheet of newsprint.

Surely that was all in the past. Al Judge was locked away in the police cells, as was – presumably – Sandy. The scare-tactics were done with.
Weren't they?

He unfolded the paper carefully, holding it by the outer edges with deference to Rockley and his forensic team, and read it with deepening dismay.

It was identical in form to the previous three and this time the highlighted words stated:

You were warned but you took no notice.

Now you and the bitch will pay the price.

16

LINC WASN'T SURE
afterwards just how long he stood there with the sheet of newspaper in his hand. In the end it was Tiger who recalled him to the here and now, by bringing it to his attention, with a prodding paw, that he still hadn't received his biscuits.

‘Sorry, lad.' Linc tossed the treats on to the dog's bed absent-mindedly, and then sat heavily in the chair at his desk, trying to make sense of the situation.

Why had the note arrived now, when the investigation into Abby's attack was over and done with? Was there someone else involved who'd slipped through the net? But if so, he'd be stupid to draw attention to himself now. Unless, Linc thought, his heart thumping, it was warning him of a revenge attack.

. . . y
ou and the bitch . . .

Oh, God, not Josie!
Please
, not Josie!

He forced himself to think rationally.

If the note had been delivered by hand, who had brought it? And where had they left it? Presumably
not in the actual office, although apart from public days it wasn't always locked. Had they, perhaps, been seen by someone at Farthingscourt?

Linc's best hope was that Judge had sent it before his arrest and it had taken a day or two to get to him. That was possible and, he decided, the most likely answer. His pulse rate slowing to the low hundreds, he stowed the paper in his own private drawer, gave Tiger a pat and headed for bed.

Other books

Carousel Nights by Amie Denman
The Judas Pair by Jonathan Gash
Boy Still Missing by John Searles
Energized by Edward M. Lerner
Murder Stalks by Sara York
Ex Machina by Alex Garland