Kate Ellis was born and brought up in Liverpool and studied drama in Manchester. She has worked in teaching, marketing and accountancy and first enjoyed literary success as a winner of the North West Playwrights competition. Keenly interested in medieval history and ‘armchair’ archaeology, Kate lives in north Cheshire with her engineer husband, Roger, and their two sons.
Kate Ellis has been twice nominated for the CWA Short Story Dagger and her novel
The Plague Maiden
was nominated for the
Theakston’s Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year
in 2005.
The Merchant’s House, The Armada Boy, An Unhallowed Grave, The Funeral Boat, The Bone Garden, A Painted Doom, The Plague Maiden, The Skeleton Room, A Cursed Inheritance
and
The Marriage Hearse
are also published by Piatkus.
For more information regarding Kate Ellis log on to her website:
www.kateellis.co.uk
The Merchant’s House
The Armada Boy
An Unhallowed Grave
The Funeral Boat
The Bone Garden
A Painted Doom
The Plague Maiden
The Skeleton Room
A Cursed Inheritance
The Marriage Hearse
Published by Hachette Digital
ISBN: 978-0-748-12674-3
All characters and events in this publication, other than those clearly in the public domain, are fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
Copyright © 1998 by Kate Ellis
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the prior permission in writing of the publisher.
Hachette Digital
Little, Brown Book Group
100 Victoria Embankment
London, EC4Y 0DY
With thanks to Roger, Tom and Olly for their patience;
Ruth and Pat for their advice; and my parents,
David and Mona, for their encouragement.
31 August
The child flung his tricycle aside and toddled, laughing, towards the basking cat. The creature, sensing the impending assault on her dignity, stalked off with her tail disdainfully erect. She squeezed herself through the bars of the garden gate and headed towards some warm and inaccessible hiding place.
The child began to follow gleefully, but the wooden gate was shut fast, secured against his escape into the lane. He pressed his face against the bars of the gate and watched the cat stop to paw a butterfly, then disappear elegantly into the thick hedgerow opposite.
Then a great purring thing, a shiny black bulk, blocked his view of the lane as it stopped by the gate. The car door opened slowly and the driver climbed out, all the time watching the child, who stood and stared, mesmerised by the sight of the stranger. The driver opened the gate and, after looking round, stooped down to the child’s level, offering a hand that held something brightly coloured and desirable.
Elaine Berrisford pressed the mop into the bucket and began the final unwashed section of the stone floor. She would get it done while Jonathon was quiet, happy with the freedom of the cottage garden and his new tricycle.
She looked at the newly cleaned floor with satisfaction. At home this was her cleaner’s domain: Elaine had no time for housework – only in the holidays, only when she was at the cottage. In a week she would return to work and Jonathon would be back at nursery. The daily car journeys through ever-thickening traffic would begin again, relentless till the half-term break. The peace of Hedgerow Cottage would be exchanged for the large detached house on the busy main road into Manchester.
She looked at her watch. She would have an hour reading on the sunlounger while Jonathon played. Then maybe they’d drive down to the beach. Jonathon would like that. She remembered the delight on his face as he searched for shells in the gritty sand.
Elaine opened the bottom half of the back door, a stable type. It was kept closed in case that cat got in. She couldn’t stand cats, but Jonathon, obsessed with the creature, followed it round everywhere. She picked up her untouched paperback and went outside.
‘Jonathon.’
He must be hiding, playing a game.
‘Jonathon. Where are you?’
Perhaps he had crept back into the cottage.
‘Jonathon.’
The gate – it was shut and fastened, just as it should be; just as she had left it.
She searched with increasing agitation – first the garden, then the house. As her panic grew, so did the sounds. The birdsong, the hum of the insects and the distant throb of the combine harvester became almost deafening as they conspired to mask the only sound she wanted to hear – the sound of Jonathon’s voice.
12 September
Neil Watson scraped away at the earth surrounding the white object. Archaeologists know bone when they see it. On a dig in an Anglo-Saxon cemetery they can become quite blasé about the stuff. But in the cellar of an Elizabethan merchant’s house …
Neil scraped away some more earth. The thing was taking shape. It looked ominously like a skull. He called his colleagues over and offered a silent prayer that it would turn out to be an animal bone, discarded from the kitchens. They were working to a deadline. They couldn’t afford the official delays that would follow the unexpected discovery of a body, however ancient.
Jane and Matt began work. The three said nothing, but they knew each other’s thoughts. The area of white bone increased: a ribcage; the skull; the limbs.
The tiny thing lay there exposed, clean and bleached. It was obviously human, but so small, Neil thought… a baby.
The three exchanged looks. It had to be reported. Neil went to the office to call the police.
19 September
As the young couple passed her, Dorothy Truscot glanced critically at the girl’s flimsy sandals.
‘Good morning,’ she said briskly. It was her custom to greet fellow walkers. The young couple – blond, bronzed and clad in denim shorts – looked slightly startled, grunted a greeting then walked on quickly in the other direction.
Dorothy strode onwards. Her own shoes were of the sturdy, sensible variety; shoes for country walking.
‘Rags … here, boy.’
The spaniel bounded towards her, eyes glowing with adoration, tail wagging like a windscreen wiper. Dorothy picked up a stick and threw it.
‘Fetch.’
She breathed deeply as the dog dashed away, sucking the fresh sea air into her lungs, and looked out towards the vast expanse of glistening sea. It was high here: a hundred yards away the green countryside tumbled down cliffs to unite with the sea. Calm today, the sea held a score of miniature boats; child’s playthings. It was only the oil tanker crawling across the horizon which brought a reminder of the outside world of dirt and commerce to this lovely patch of South Devon.
Rags returned with the stick, his exuberance tempered by the demands of nature. As he squatted to add his own personal bit of pollution, Dorothy looked round furtively and drew the plastic poop scoop out of her capacious handbag along with a small plastic bag to contain the offending article. Perhaps true inhabitants of the countryside were accustomed to a bit of muck on their boots and a few
dubious smells, but Dorothy was a believer in leaving things as you would wish to find them.
Rags ran on up the path and Dorothy followed. The sun was warm for mid-September, and she regretted wearing her thick Aran jumper. But she climbed the path knowing that the seat – her and Sidney’s seat – would be waiting at the top of the slope. When she reached it, panting, she sat down heavily to get her breath back and turned, as she always did, to read the small brass plaque screwed to the back of the seat.
In loving memory of Sidney Truscot
who loved this place.
And he had. She smiled as she remembered how they had bought Dark Lane Cottage on their retirement: sold up and moved down to their holiday paradise. But then came the heart attack; the funeral; adaptation to a solitary country life so different to the Birmingham suburbs. She looked at the grassy ground. His ashes had been scattered here at his request. She felt near to him here.
‘Rags. What are you up to, you silly animal? What have you got there?’
Rags bounded up to his mistress and placed the trophy carefully at her feet – a woman’s shoe.
‘Rags, come here.’ He ran away gleefully. This time Dorothy followed. ‘Rags … Rags. What are you doing, boy? Come here.’
She spotted the wagging tail behind a clump of bushes at the side of the path.
‘Rags, come here now, this instant… Rags.’ He appeared bearing another gift, a shoe to match the first.
‘Where did you get that, you silly dog?’
She walked round the bush. Her heart began to beat faster with indignation. Perhaps somebody had left some litter there; fouled her lovely spot with a bin-bag full of old clothes.
Then she saw it. It looked unreal, like a grotesque life-size rag doll – a rag doll without a face. It lay half in the bush. Dorothy’s eyes were drawn to where the face had been, now a crusty brown mass heaving with buzzing flies.
Her hand went to her mouth as if preparing to stop a scream or a stream of vomit.
The human body can do extraordinary things in extraordinary situations. If anybody had told Dorothy Truscot that at the age of sixty-five she could run the half-mile to Hutchins Farm without stopping to rest, she would not have believed them. But she managed it in what seemed like a remarkably short time, Rags following at her heels, enjoying the game.
The Periwinkle is now restored to a goodly condition but Master Cornworthy, the shipwright, doth tell me that the Starfish is in need of a new mizzen mast. She must be ready to sail for the Newfoundland by March.
Elizabeth is sick of a morning and thinks herself with child. I rejoice if this be so. We have awaited the Lord’s blessing full ten years this Michaelmas.
Elizabeth hath taken in a new maidservant to help in her time of sickness. The girl’s name is Jennet and she is most comely.
Extract from the journal of John Banized,
Merchant of Tradmouth, 15 February 1623
The streets that led from Wesley Peterson’s newly acquired house, perched above the town, down to the crazy huddle of buildings that clung to the riverbank were hill-steep, narrow and winding; not built for cars. Wesley felt it would be easier to walk to his new place of work. He told himself that this was a good thing: he would become fit. In London he had never walked; had never really had the time. Downhill was easy; the return journey up those cobbled streets would be the real test of endurance.