FOUR
Emily groaned and turned
over as she heard her husband, Jeff, get up and make his way
downstairs. He was going to get breakfast as he always did on a
Sunday. She told herself she was a lucky woman . . .
although sometimes it didn’t feel that way.
She could hear noise downstairs. The boys had
switched the TV on and were probably sitting, mesmerized on the
sofa munching on something unhealthy. But she had neither the time
nor the inclination to do anything about it.
She lay there going over everything she had to do
that day. After what she considered to be her well-deserved lie in,
she would meet Joe and they would call at the address Jenks had
given them for Jasmine, his alibi. Jasmine, unless they had a
remarkable stroke of luck, would be long gone but there was always
a chance that someone, an elderly neighbour or a landlord perhaps,
would be able to provide a clue to her whereabouts. And if that
failed they’d try the university first thing on Monday.
She put her hands behind her head and lay there
with her eyes closed. Jeff had opened the window so she could hear
church bells ringing in some distant tower. She had always liked
Sundays – until police work took over and Sunday became a day much
like any other. But at least today the case they were working on
lacked the usual urgency. Those two girls had been missing for
twelve years so it would hardly be a race against time to find
them.
When the phone on the bedside table began to ring
she looked at it with distaste for a few moments before picking it
up.
‘Oh bloody hell, Joe, what do you want?’ she said
as soon as she heard the voice on the other end of the line. ‘I’m
having a nice lie in here. Can’t it wait till later?’ She knew Joe
well enough by now to know that he wouldn’t take
offence . . . unlike some.
‘Someone’s just called the station to report a
missing person. Female student at the university.’
‘Can’t uniform deal with it?’
‘Wait till you hear the address.’
‘Go on,’ said Emily, suddenly alert.
‘Thirteen Torland Place. The address Jenks gave us
for Jasmine.’
Emily swung round so that her feet met the floor
and stood up. It was time to get dressed.
‘What did you want to go and do that for?’
Jason’s lips had arranged themselves into a sneer
but Matt stood his ground. They stood facing each other either side
of the kitchen table while Caro positioned herself at the end,
looking from one to the other like a tennis umpire.
Matt opened his mouth, trying to think up an
answer. Since the strange call, the cut off cry of pain, he had
lain awake worrying about Pet, the scenarios in his tired brain
becoming ever more dire and disturbing, and at eight thirty that
morning he had rung the police to report her missing. Now, over tea
in cracked mugs and barely tanned white toast, he felt that perhaps
he’d been a little hasty. But Jason annoyed him so he stood his
ground.
‘I think she’s in trouble,’ he said, glancing at
Caro whose expression gave nothing away.
Jason’s full lips twitched upwards in a knowing
smirk. ‘I reckon she’s with some new bloke. What you heard was
probably a cry of pleasure. She probably rolled over on to her
phone and it got switched on by accident at the moment of
ecstasy.’
Matt squared up to his opponent. ‘Pet’s not a
slapper.’
Jason gave a knowing chuckle and Matt resisted the
urge to punch him in the mouth.
‘Shut up. You’re like a pair of fucking kids,’ said
Caro, the umpire. ‘Does it matter whether or not Pet screws around?
The question is, is she in trouble at this moment?’
The answer was silence. Both Matt and Jason knew
Caro was right. If Pet was in any sort of danger, the last thing
she needed was for her housemates to be bickering about the
niceties.
Matt spoke first. ‘Well I’ve reported her missing
now and they’ve got her details. They said it was too early to
worry but then I said it was really out of character and I told
them about the phone call and said it sounded as if she was being
hurt. They said someone would call round.’
‘Probably some uniformed plod with a notebook,’
said Jason. ‘They won’t do anything.’
Matt felt his fist clenching but he told himself to
let it go. He found it hard to believe that he’d actually liked
Jason in their first year in hall of residence. He’d liked Caro and
Pet as well. They’d all got on so well. Until they’d moved into
number thirteen and everything had started to fall apart.
‘Anyone fancy a beer?’ Jason said, making for the
fridge.
‘It’s too bloody early.’ Caro stared at him. ‘And
where’s your share of the electricity bill? You promised to
transfer the money into the house account.’
Jason raised a grubby hand. ‘I told you before,
I’ve got a bit of a cash flow problem at the moment but I’ll ring
my dad tonight. He’ll pay up. No worries. Since he left mum for the
tart, he’s been very generous with the readies.’
Caro grunted. They’d all heard the saga of Jason’s
parents’ broken marriage and his father’s infatuation with a
younger woman at work. He’d moved in with the woman and had
assuaged his tender conscience by throwing cash at the problem.
This hadn’t gone down well with his wife and three teenaged
children and Jason had no qualms about turning the situation to his
advantage.
‘Well I need that money by Tuesday.’
She was about to leave the room when Jason spoke.
‘I think we should look up Obediah Shrowton on the
Internet . . . see if he existed.’
‘OK, if it’ll stop you going on about it.’
Without a word Caro marched out of the room and
returned half a minute later carrying a laptop case. She cleared
the table of breakfast debris, took the computer out of its
protective case and placed it carefully on the Formica
surface.
When the thing had woken up she typed in the name
Obediah Shrowton and waited, the others huddling round her in
anticipation.
Matt watched the words appear and he heard Caro
swear softly under her breath.
Obediah Shrowton was a murderer. In 1896 he killed
five people at a house in the Bearsley district of Eborby. And he
lived at thirteen Valediction Street. Wherever that was.
‘Well at least it isn’t here.’
The young woman who opened the door of thirteen
Torland Place had short dark hair and the businesslike manner of
someone who normally wears a suit to work. Today she was wearing
neatly ironed jeans and a plain white T-shirt but she was the sort
who would never really master the casual look.
Emily held up her warrant card and recited her
name. Joe watched the young woman’s face and saw that she had
merely raised her eyebrows in mild surprise. No worry, no panic. It
was almost as though reporting a missing person was a routine
matter, something that happened every day.
‘Well, I must say you’re very quick off the mark,’
she said. ‘I didn’t expect such good service. My name’s Caro Smyth,
by the way.’ She stuck out her hand and Emily shook it. Joe was
rather surprised to see that the nails were ragged and bitten;
somehow they didn’t fit with the efficient persona Caro presented
to the world. But we all have our hidden side. ‘You’d better come
in. I told Matt that it was far too early to involve the police but
he seems really worried. I think she’s just met someone and gone
off for the weekend but . . .’
‘So you share this house with the missing girl,
Petulia Ferribie?’
Caro was about to lead them inside but she turned
and focused her intense gaze on Joe, looking him up and down, as
though assessing his suitability for the task. Joe guessed that she
didn’t have a high opinion of men; Emily, being one of the
Sisterhood, had received no such examination.
‘That’s right. There are four of us. This
way.’
Joe looked around. He had known many places like it
during his student days in Manchester: large semi-detached houses
built in the last decade of the nineteenth century with high
ceilings, and shabby paintwork. Like many student houses he had
seen, someone had made misguided alterations in the nineteen
sixties, ripping out original features and installing cheap
coloured bathroom suites and hideously coloured chipboard kitchens
on the smallest possible budget. At one time these measures would
have been termed improvements but now nobody pretended any
more.
Caro opened the first door on her right. ‘The
police are here.’ She announced. She didn’t sound too happy about
it. But, Joe thought, few people do.
They followed her into the room. A young man was
sitting at an old, bulbous legged table, drumming his fingers
nervously on the stained wooden top. He was medium height with
short ginger hair and had the pale, slightly puffy look of a
student who survived on lager and pizzas with too little exercise.
He stood up as they came in, fingering the hem of his washed-out
T-shirt nervously.
‘I’m Matt Bawtry,’ he said, his voice a little high
pitched. ‘I reported Pet missing. Nobody’s seen her since yesterday
morning and . . . Well, it’s out of character. She’s
never gone off like this before.’
Joe heard a muffled snort from the direction of the
doorway and turned to see another young man enter the room. He
wouldn’t often have described a man as beautiful but this one could
have served as a muse for any variety of Italian Renaissance
artists with his dark curls, warm brown eyes and flawless, slightly
tanned complexion. He wore skin tight jeans and a thin cotton shirt
and underneath the mask of cynical bravado, Joe sensed an
underlying tension.
‘Did I hear someone say the word “police”?’
Emily turned to face him. She looked unimpressed.
‘And you are?’
‘I’m Jason Petrie. I live here. I assume you’ve
come about Pet. Matt’s panicking. She’ll be back as though
nothing’s happened . . .’
‘Mr Bawtry said her absence was out of character,’
said Joe.
Jason shrugged.
‘How long have you known Petulia?’ Emily addressed
the question to all three of them.
It was Caro who answered. ‘About eighteen months.
We met in our first year when we were all in Dewsbury Hall – that’s
at the university. We decided to get a house together
and . . .’
‘I take it you’re all students?’
‘Apart from Jason,’ said Matt. ‘He failed his
exams. Dropped out.’
Jason gave a wry smile and inclined his head.
‘What do you do now?’ Joe asked.
‘Good question,’ said Caro under her breath.
‘Bit of busking. Bit of bar work to make ends meet.
I get by.’
‘And he’s got a rich daddy with a guilty
conscience,’ said Caro with a hint of bitterness. ‘OK for
some.’
‘Actually I’ve got an audition on Tuesday – playing
guitar with a jazz group,’ said Jason. He sounded a little
defensive. ‘They get regular gigs at weddings and hotels
and . . .’
‘You never mentioned that,’ said Caro.
‘Why should I?’
‘Oh fuck off,’ said Caro. ‘I just wish you’d grow
up.’
The vehemence of Caro’s words surprised Joe. There
was hostility in this house. He could almost smell it.
Emily took charge of the situation. ‘Let’s get back
to Petulia, shall we? When did you last see her?’ She looked at
Matt expectantly.
‘We had a party on Friday night. Fancy dress. Pet
was floating around dressed as a fairy or something. I didn’t see
her the next morning but then I slept in till lunchtime.’
‘Was she with anyone at the party?’
Matt shook his head. ‘She was just wandering about
on her own. I thought she looked a bit lost.’ He looked regretful,
Joe thought. Perhaps he’d have liked to have been with Pet
himself.
‘She was probably bored,’ said Jason. ‘I know I
was. What idiot invited that rugby crowd anyway?’
When Matt didn’t answer Joe suspected a guilty
conscience.
He gave Caro a businesslike smile. ‘And you, Caro?
When did you last see her?’
‘The Saturday morning after the party. She was
going into town. The Eborby Music Festival was on and there was an
outdoor concert of early music. Pet’s a music student and she’s
into that sort of thing.’ She paused. ‘Actually she seemed quite
excited about it . . . which isn’t like Pet. Maybe
there was going to be an added attraction – something more
interesting there than a load of flutes and lutes.’
‘A man?’
‘Well, she’s not interested in women,’ Caro said,
sounding slightly disappointed. ‘And like Matt and Jason said, she
certainly wasn’t with anyone at the party.’
‘And you?’ Joe was suddenly curious.
‘What about me?’
‘Were you with anyone at the party?’
She was suddenly on the defensive. ‘I don’t see
that that’s relevant.’
‘Oh come on, Caro,’ said Jason. ‘You were draped
around that rather butch girl from Media Studies.’ Caro was about
to open her mouth but Jason continued. ‘And for the record I
borrowed a white coat and stethoscope from a medic mate of mine and
Matt here went as a cowboy. Such imagination.’
‘What are you all studying?’ Joe asked.
‘I’m doing Accountancy and Business Studies,’ said
Caro. ‘Matt’s electrical engineering and, as I said, Pet’s studying
music.’
‘And I was wrestling with the finer points of the
Metaphysical Poets before I was chucked off my course,’ said Jason.
‘English.’
‘I did English at Leeds,’ said Emily, hoping to
establish a rapport.
‘Then you followed the path of Dogberry and
Verges?’ said Jason with a smirk.
‘We’re not all “foolish officers”,’ she answered
quickly.
Jason looked rather surprised that she’d picked up
so quickly on Shakespeare’s description of his two inept law
enforcers from Much Ado About Nothing. Surprised and a
little deflated.
‘You don’t seem very worried about Petulia, Jason?
Why is that?’
Jason shrugged. ‘Caro’s just told you she was
excited about that concert or whatever it was. I was out busking –
entertaining our illustrious tourists – and I saw her making for
Stone Street where this festival thing was being held. At a guess
she’ll have been meeting someone who wasn’t at the party. That’s
why she’d been looking so pissed off in her little fairy
costume.’
‘What about the phone call? Tell us again what you
heard.’
Everyone looked at Matt as he told them about the
strange call from Pet’s mobile, stumbling over his words as if
rendered suddenly nervous by his rapt audience. When he’d finished
Jason chipped in with his salacious interpretation of events but
Matt shook his head vigorously.
‘And what time was this exactly?’
‘Eleven thirty last night. I’ve been trying ever
since but I’m just getting voice mail.’
Joe and Emily exchanged looks. If necessary they
could pinpoint where the phone had been when it had been answered
so strangely. But Joe hoped it wouldn’t come to that.
They kept the conversation going, finding out all
they could about Pet, about her background, her friends and her
lovers. Not that there had been many of the latter, according to
Caro who seemed the most dispassionate of the trio.
Then Joe asked whether they had Pet’s home address.
Caro shook her head. There was a stepmother, she said, but there
was no way Pet would have gone to her because she detested the
woman. There were no brothers or sisters and her father was in
Dubai. Pet didn’t talk about her family much. In fact she hardly
mentioned them at all.
When Joe asked if they had a recent photo of Pet,
Caro left the room and returned a minute later with a photograph.
Joe took it from her and studied it. There were four people in the
picture: Caro, Matt and Jason and, at the edge of the group was a
girl with fine blonde hair tumbling to her shoulders. She was small
with perfect, almost feline features. But despite her beauty, she
had a rather vacant look, as though her mind was somewhere
else.
‘Mind if I keep this?’ he said.
Caro shrugged. ‘Help yourself.’
Joe tucked the picture carefully into his wallet.
Perhaps Caro was right. Perhaps Pet had just gone off for the
weekend with some new lover she wanted to keep from her housemates.
But Matt was sure that was out of character so maybe he was right
to worry. If she didn’t turn up soon he’d want to speak to Jason
again as he was apparently the last of the group to see her – Joe
almost mentally added the word ‘alive’ but it was far too early to
fear the worst.
He caught Emily’s eye. It was time to ask their
next question – the original reason for their visit. Emily gave him
a small nod. She was leaving it to him.
‘I know this is a long shot,’ he began. ‘But have
you heard of a young woman called Jasmine who lived at this address
about twelve years ago?’
As expected, Jason gave a dismissive grunt. ‘You’re
joking, aren’t you. We would have been about eight.’
‘I realize that but I imagine you can put me in
touch with your landlord.’
‘He won’t be able to help you,’ said Caro. ‘He only
bought this place three years ago. And twelve years ago he would
have been at uni.’
‘Where?’
Matt looked up. ‘Here in Eborby. He stayed and went
into property development.’
‘Then we’ll need his contact details,’ Emily
said.
Caro wrote something on a sheet of paper and handed
it to Emily who stood up.
‘If Pet turns up, inform us right away.’ she said,
making for the door.
Joe followed her, looking around, thankful for
once that his own student days were over.
The visit to Petulia Ferribie’s student house had
taken Joe’s mind temporarily off the strange letter from ‘K’ he’d
received in the post the previous day but now, as he followed Emily
up the crazy-paved garden path of the house next door to number
thirteen, it pushed its way to the forefront of his thoughts. There
was only one certain way to discover the identity of ‘K’ and that
was to keep the appointment. He was tempted to share his problem
with Emily but he decided against it. This was something he’d have
to deal with himself.
He stood a little behind Emily as she rapped firmly
on the door of number fifteen Torland Place. In contrast to its
neighbour, here the paintwork was fresh and the windows, with their
Roman blinds, sparkled clean in the weak spring sunlight.
The door swung opened to reveal a woman in her late
twenties. She had a wide mouth, shoulder length blonde hair and her
jeans and loose floral top showed off her slim figure to best
advantage.
But her attractive face was marred by the angry
scowl she aimed in Emily’s direction. ‘We’re not interested,’ she
said, preparing to shut the door in the DCI’s face.
But Emily held up her warrant card and introduced
herself and the scowl turned into a worried frown.
‘What is it? What’s happened? Is it Rory?’ The
words came out in a rush.
He saw Emily’s expression soften. Finding two
police officers on the doorstep was enough to make any law-abiding
person fear the worst, especially if a loved one is away from
home.
‘It’s nothing to worry about
Mrs . . .’
‘Quillan. Jackie Quillan.’
‘We’d just like to ask you some questions about the
house next door. How long have you lived here?’
‘Two years.’
Joe saw the look of disappointment on Emily’s
face.
‘Do you know where we can find the previous
owner?’
Jackie Quillan nodded. It looked as if they were in
luck. ‘We bought the house from my husband’s uncle. He couldn’t
manage any more so he went into sheltered accommodation. We were
coming back up to Eborby to live so it seemed like the ideal
arrangement.’
‘Where can we find him?’ Joe asked, notebook at the
ready.
Jackie recited an address in the suburb of Pickby,
not far from Emily’s own home. ‘What’s all this about? Why do you
want to see him?’
‘It concerns something that happened twelve years
ago. We’re trying to trace a young woman who lived in the house
next door. Number thirteen.’
‘There are new students in there every year so
you’re going to have your work cut out.’ She held the door half
open, as if she was anxious to shut it and get rid of them.
‘Do you know the students who live there now?
There’s a girl called Petulia Ferribie?’ Joe asked.
The answer was a shake of the head. ‘I don’t know
their names. They don’t communicate much. Are you going to see
Uncle Norman then?’
‘Yes. We’ll pay him a visit. Just routine. I don’t
suppose there’s anyone else in your house who might have had more
contact with the students next door?’ Emily asked hopefully.
‘There’s only me and my husband and we’ve hardly
said a word to them. High fences make good neighbours, so they say.
And so do thick walls.’ She gave them an insincere smile and made
to shut the door.
‘Don’t take too much notice of anything Uncle
Norman tells you. He gets confused,’ she said before the door swung
shut in their faces.
‘The lady doth protest too much, me thinks,’ Emily
muttered as they made their way back to the car.
‘You’ve got a suspicious mind,’ Joe said, flicking
the remote control that opened the car doors. ‘Where next?’
‘Let’s go and spoil the landlord’s Sunday lunch.’
She sighed. ‘Ever get the feeling you’re wasting your time,
Joe?’
‘Frequently.’ At that moment Joe longed to be in
some cosy town centre pub with a Sunday roast and a pint of Black
Sheep to wash it down with. ‘Fancy lunch at the Star?’
Emily looked at her watch. ‘I’m tempted but we’d
better see the landlord first.’ She paused. ‘I think those students
were worried about something other than the missing girl. There was
an odd atmosphere in that house, don’t you think?’
‘And it backs on to the woods where Jade and Nerys
were last seen.’
‘You’re right, Joe. That house is the epicentre for
something but God only knows what it is.’ Emily gave him an
enigmatic smile. ‘So let’s go and see this landlord and then mine’s
a roast beef and large Yorkshire pudding.’
She climbed into the driver’s seat and set off,
exceeding the speed limit by ten miles per hour.
Obediah Shrowton. Matt mouthed the name. It was a
name from another era, conjuring a picture of a whiskered patriarch
in a starched collar and forbidding black. Stern, humourless and
mildly malevolent. He couldn’t leave it alone. But what, if
anything, was the connection between Obediah Shrowton and the
hectic transient lives they led at Torland Place? If he dug deeper
it might start to make sense.
He sat in his room, overlooking the wood where the
skeletal branches of the trees had acquired a green mist of buds.
There was something unsettling about those trees. They leaned
together as though they were sharing some nasty secret and at night
when the wind blew they whispered like conspiring ghosts. He’d
always liked trees; they represented the fun of climbing and the
beauty of nature. But Dead Man’s Wood was different somehow. And he
didn’t know why.
He’d already discovered the bare facts of the
Shrowton case but it was time to find out more. After clicking on a
variety of websites eventually he struck gold. Obediah Shrowton’s
full biography, laid out neatly and easy to read.
He balanced his laptop on his knee and stared at
the text. Obediah Shrowton had been an upright citizen of Eborby,
employed in the City Treasury. He went to work in the Town Hall
each day and was respected by the small army of clerks under his
command.
In 1889 at the age of thirty-two he had married a
girl called Violet Nicksen. Violet was the daughter of a clergyman
from near Sheffield and she had been working as a governess in
Eborby when the couple had met at a church event. They settled in
the Bearsley district and Violet gave birth to five children, only
two of whom survived infancy. The children who hadn’t survived were
buried in St Aiden’s churchyard, their little graves marked by the
most costly headstones their parents could afford.
Then one day – an apparently normal day in April
1896 – Obediah had come home from work and proceeded to slaughter
his wife, his two young children, the nursemaid and the cook. He
had taken an axe from the garden store – probably like the
crumbling brick outbuilding that stood near their back door – and
hacked his victims to pieces. Newspapers at the time had called it
a scene of butchery and carnage. This was probably an
understatement.
Obediah had denied any involvement, claiming that
he’d returned home and been greeted by a scene of unimaginable
horror. A postman who had been delivering the evening post
investigated the open front door and discovered the gruesome
tableau of dismembered bodies and Shrowton sobbing on the hall
floor with a bloody axe in his hand. Later Shrowton had claimed
he’d been too shocked to report the deaths immediately to the
authorities and this went against him at his trial. The jury hadn’t
believed his story and he was hanged for his alleged crime at
Eborby jail in October 1896.
Matt picked up his mobile phone and tried Pet’s
number again. Somehow he felt a little better now that the police
were aware that she might be in danger – almost as if the burden
was now shared – although he hadn’t felt that the pair they sent
had taken her disappearance seriously enough. They’d seemed more
interested in someone called Jasmine who’d lived in the house many
years ago. Still, they had both been senior detectives. At least
they hadn’t sent a brace of probationers.
He knew he had work to do for university but he
found it hard to concentrate. He typed Torland Place into the
search engine. A number of sites came up and his eyes scanned the
results. Then one in particular caught his eye and he clicked on
it.
Valediction Street, it said, was renamed Torland
Place after the gruesome murders of five people at number
thirteen.
‘Shit,’ he whispered, his heart beating so fast
that he could almost hear it in the heavy silence.