Authors: Elly Griffiths
âThe nearer the bone, the sweeter the flesh,' she reads aloud. âThat's horrible, like cannibalism.'
âIt's a proverb,' says Nelson, âI looked it up.'
âSo, do you still think Cathbad did it?'
Nelson sighs, running his hands through his hair so that it stands up like a crest. âI don't know, but I haven't got enough to charge him. No DNA, no motive, no confession. We've been over his caravan with a toothcomb, found nothing. I'll keep him until I get the forensics report. If I find a trace of his DNA on Scarlet then he's finished.'
Ruth looks at Nelson. Maybe it's the rumpled hair and the dishevelled clothes but he looks younger somehow, almost vulnerable.
âBut you don't think he did it, do you?'
Nelson looks at her. âNo, I don't,' he says.
âThen who did?'
âI don't know.' Nelson lets out another sigh that is almost a groan. âThat's the terrible, shaming thing. All those hours of investigation, all that police time, all that searching and questioning and I've still got no bloody idea who killed those two little girls. No wonder the media are shouting for my head.'
âI got a call from
The Chronicle
this evening.'
âBastards! How did they know about you? I've been so careful to keep your name out of it.'
âWell, they were bound to find out sometime.'
Who could have told them though, Ruth thinks. Erik? Shona? Peter?
âThey'll make life hard for you,' warns Nelson. âIs there anywhere you could go for a few days?'
âI could stay with my friend Shona.' Even as she says it, Ruth dreads the long cosy evenings of Shona trying to worm out information. She'll just have to work late most nights.
âGood. I've sent my wife and kids away to my mum. Just until the worst is over.'
âWhen
will
the worst be over?'
âI don't know.' Nelson looks at her again, his dark eyes troubled. She can hear the rain and the wind outside but somehow it seems a long way away, as if this room, this tiny circle of light, is all that is left in the world.
Nelson is still looking at her. âI don't want to go home,' he says at last.
And Ruth reaches out to lay her hand on his. âYou don't have to,' she says.
*
The silence wakes Ruth. The wind and the rain have stopped and the night is still. She thinks she hears an owl hooting and, very far off, the faint sigh of the waves.
The moon shines serenely through the open curtains and illuminates the crumpled bed, the strewn clothes and the sleeping figure of DCI Harry Nelson, breathing heavily, one arm flung out across Ruth's breasts. Gently Ruth lifts the arm and gets up to put on some pyjamas. She can't believe she went to bed naked. Somehow that is even harder to believe than the fact that she went to bed with Nelson. That she laid her hand on his, that she, seconds later, reached over to touch her lips with his. She remembers his slight hesitation, a whisper of indrawn breath, before his hand reached up behind her head and he pulled her to him. They had clung to each other, kissing desperately, hungrily, as the rain battered against the windows. She remembers the roughness of his skin, the surprising softness of his lips, the feel of his body against hers.
How could this have happened? She hardly knows Harry Nelson. Two months ago she had thought him just
another boorish policeman. All she does know is that last night they seemed to share something that set them apart from all the world. They had seen Scarlet's body as it rose, lifeless, from the sand. They had, in some small way, shared her family's pain. They had read the letters. They knew of the evil presence out there in the dark. They knew of Lucy Downey too, feared that the next discovery would be her body. And, at that moment, it had seemed only natural that this knowledge should draw them into each other's arms, that they should blot out the pain with the comforts of the body. They might never do it again but last night ⦠last night had been right.
Even so, thinks Ruth, pulling on her nicest pyjamas (she isn't about to let him see the grey ones with built-in feet), he'd better leave soon. The press knows about her. The last thing either of them wants is for the media to discover the leading policeman in the Scarlet Henderson case in bed with the bones expert. She looks down at Nelson. In sleep he looks much younger, his dark eyelashes fanned out on his cheek, his harsh mouth gentle. Ruth shivers but not from the cold.
âNelson?' she shakes him.
He is awake immediately.
âWhat is it?'
âYou'd better go.'
He moans. âWhat time is it?'
âAlmost four.'
He looks at her for a moment as if wondering who she is and then smiles. The surprisingly sweet smile that she has only seen once or twice before.
âGood morning Doctor Galloway.'
âGood morning DI Nelson,' says Ruth, âyou'd better get dressed.'
As Nelson reaches for his clothes, Ruth sees a tattoo high on his shoulder, blue writing around some kind of shield.
âWhat does your tattoo say?' she asks.
âSeasiders. It's a nickname for my team, Blackpool. Had it done when I was sixteen. Michelle hates it.'
There, he has said her name. Michelle, the perfect wife, who hovered between them all last night, is suddenly there in the room. Nelson, pulling on his trousers, seems unconscious of what he has said. Perhaps he does this all the time, thinks Ruth.
Dressed, he looks a different person. A policeman, a stranger. He comes over to her, sits on the bed and takes her hand.
âThanks,' he says.
âWhat for?'
âBeing there.'
âJust doing my duty as a citizen.'
He grins. âYou should get a medal.'
Ruth watches as he retrieves his mobile from under the bed. She feels oddly detached, as if she is watching something on television. But she doesn't really watch that sort of programme; she prefers documentaries.
âWill you go to your friend's house?' asks Nelson, shrugging on his jacket.
âYes. I think so.'
âWell, keep in touch. Any trouble from those press bastards, give me a shout.'
âI will.'
At the doorway he turns and smiles. âGoodbye Doctor Galloway,' he says.
And he is gone.
Unable to get back to sleep, Ruth gets up and showers. Watching the water running off her body, she thinks of Nelson and wonders if she is symbolically cleansing herself, rubbing off any taint of his touch, his smell, his presence. That's certainly what her parents would want her to do. Be baptised, be born again. A phrase from her churchgoing past comes into her mind: washed in the blood of the lamb. She shivers. It sounds too much like the letter writer for her liking. She thinks of that last letter with its references to bones and flesh. Were those references meant for her?
She dries herself briskly and goes into her bedroom. She strips the bed (more symbolic cleansing?) and dresses quickly in trousers and fleece. Then she gets out a bag and starts to pack some clothes. She will take Nelson's advice and go to Shona's for a few days. She'll call Shona from the university.
Packing her unaesthetic grey pyjamas, she thinks of Nelson. Did he sleep with her only to blot out the horror of finding Scarlet's body? He can't possibly fancy her, not with Miss Blonde Housewife 2008 waiting for him at home. Does she fancy him? If she is honest, yes. She has been attracted to him ever since she saw him in the corridor that first time, looking too big and too grown up
for his surroundings. He is an antidote to the weedy academic types around her, men like Phil and Peter, even Erik. Nelson would never sit and pore over dusty reference books; his preference is for doing things: striding over the marshes, questioning suspects, driving too fast. Sleeping with women who aren't his wife? Well, maybe. She senses it isn't the first time he has been unfaithful to the sainted Michelle. There was something practised about his demeanour this morning, gathering up his clothes, carefully not making any promises about when they would meet next. But there had been emotion too last night, something almost shy, and surprisingly tender. She remembers his sharp intake of breath when she first kissed him, the way he had murmured her name, the way he had kissed her, softly at first and then much harder, almost violently, his body pressed against hers.
Stop thinking about it, she tells herself as she lugs the bag downstairs. It was a one-off. It will never happen again. How can it? He is married, they have almost nothing in common. It was only the circumstances of last night that conjured up that particular spell. From now on they will just be policeman and expert witness, two professionals working together.
Flint purrs around her ankles and Ruth wonders what to do about him. She can't take him to Shona's. The change would upset him, especially coming so soon after Sparky's disappearance. She'll have to ask David to feed him. She remembers him saying once that he didn't like cats because they kill birds but surely he wouldn't mind just for a couple of days? Anyway, with the weekenders back in London there is no-one else to ask.
It is still only six o'clock. She makes herself coffee and toast (her first meal for twenty-four hours, she'll be a size 12 before she knows it) and sits at the table to watch the sun come up. The sky is still dark but there is a faint line of gold against the horizon. The tide is out and the early morning mist lies low over the marsh. This time yesterday, she and Nelson were just setting out across the mudflats.
At seven, she goes to call on David. She is sure he gets up early, for the dawn chorus or something. It is light now and the day is cold and clear, the sky washed clean by yesterday's rain. There will be nothing to stop the journalists today. Nelson is right; she must get away.
David takes a long time to open the door but when he does he is, thankfully, fully dressed. He is wearing waterproofs and looks like he has already been outside.
âI'm sorry to call so early,' says Ruth, âbut I've got to go away for a few days. Could you possibly feed Flint, my cat?'
David looks bemused. âFlint?' he repeats.
âMy cat. Could you come in and feed him for a few days? I'd be really grateful.'
David seems to be registering her for the first time. âRuth,' he says. âWere you involved in all that drama yesterday?'
Drama. The word seems wrong for what happened yesterday on the Saltmarsh. While the day had felt many things, it had never felt unreal. âYes,' says Ruth shortly, âI found the body.'
âMy God!' David looks really shocked. âHow awful. I can see why you'd want to get away.'
âThe press were after me yesterday. I want to lie low for a bit.'
âThe press.' David's face darkens. âVermin. Did you see them yesterday? Trampling over the reed beds, dropping litter and cigarette butts everywhere. Will they be back today, do you think?'
âI'm afraid so.'
âI'd better be on patrol.' David looks grim. Ruth thinks it might be time to remind him about Flint. She proffers her key.
âSo, is it alright about the cat? His food's in the kitchen. He has one small tin every day and some biscuits. Don't let him persuade you he should have more. Otherwise, he'll just come and go. He's got a cat flap. I'll leave my contact details on the table.'
David takes the key. âFood. Cat flap. Contact details. Fine. Yes. OK.'
Ruth hopes that he will remember.
The roads are clear and she gets to the university in record time. The car parks are empty. It seems that journalists, like academics, are not early risers. She punches in the code to open the doors and escapes to her office with a sigh of relief. Here, at least, she can be safe for a while.
Three cups of coffee and several pages of lecture notes later, there is a knock at the door.
âCome in,' says Ruth. She assumes it will be Phil, coming for his dose of vicarious excitement.
But it's Shona. Ruth is surprised, Shona hardly ever ventures over from the Arts Faculty.
âRuth!' Shona comes over to give her a hug. âI've just heard about yesterday. You actually found that poor little girl's body.'
âWho told you?' asks Ruth.
âErik. I saw him in the car park.'
It will be all over campus, thinks Ruth. She realises she was stupid to imagine that she could be safe, even here.
âYes, I found her. She was buried in the peat, right in the centre of the henge circle.'
âMy God.' Shona had been on the dig ten years ago, she would know the significance of the place, the sacred ground.
âDoes Erik know where she was found?' asks Shona, sitting down.
âYes. I think he's more upset about that than anything. The police digging up the site. Contaminating the context.' Ruth surprises herself with the bitterness in her voice.
âWhy are they still digging?'
âWell, they think the other girl may be buried there. Lucy Downey.'
âThe one who disappeared all that time ago?'
âTen years ago. Just after the henge dig.'
âDo the police think they were killed by the same person?'
Ruth looks at Shona. Her face is soft, concerned, but Ruth also catches a trace of the slightly shamefaced curiosity that she recognises all too well. In herself.
âI don't know,' she says. âI don't know what the police think.'
âAre they going to charge that druid chap?'
âCathbad? I'm sorry, Shona, I just don't know.'
âErik says he's innocent.'
âYes,' agrees Ruth. She wonders how much Erik has told Shona.
âWhat do
you
think?' persists Shona.
âI don't know,' says Ruth for what feels like the hundredth time. âIt's hard to think of him as a murderer. He always seemed a harmless old thing, into peace and nature and all that. But the police must have some evidence otherwise they wouldn't be able to hold him.'