Authors: Fay Sampson
He rose. âIf there's anything I can do ⦠If there's any news, don't hesitate to ring. Any hour of the day or night.' He pressed her hand.
âI'm sorry. I should have offered you a cup of tea. Or a cold fruit juice?'
âNo thanks. I get offered more tea and biscuits than is good for my waistline. I'll be off. Millie, look after your mother.' He smiled as he passed the pale, silent teenager. âI'll be praying for you too.'
âThat's it, then?' Tom reappeared as the front door closed. âYou've been signed off from work. We've been prayed over. There's nothing else we can do?'
âI've exhausted everything I can think of,' Suzie told him.
The rest of the day stretched out in front of her. And all the days after that. She tried not to think that the next time she contacted the minister it might be to arrange Nick's funeral.
T
om was upstairs with Dave. There was no sound of music. Suzie had no idea what they were doing. She felt sure Tom must have told Dave about Nick â in confidence, of course.
Millie would have rung Tamara.
How long would it be before the phone began to ring with friends giving her their sympathy and making well-meant but useless offers of help?
Suzie wandered through the house, unable to settle to anything. Her nerves were tensed, waiting for news from DS Dudbridge. She trusted him more than DCI Brewer. She both longed for and dreaded that call.
After a while, Millie came downstairs and went into the little-used dining room. She began laying things out on the teak table â a large Ordnance Survey map, a pad of paper.
âWhat are you doing?'
âWait till Dave's gone.'
It was about five o'clock when the boys emerged from Tom's room. Dave came through to the kitchen, where Suzie was wondering helplessly what to do for a meal she did not feel like eating.
âSorry about this, Suzie.'
So he did know.
The ginger-haired teenager hesitated. Normally, at this point, Suzie would have invited him to stay for a meal. But she was too preoccupied to be hospitable. And Millie was waiting silently in the dining room doorway.
âOK, then,' Dave said after a pause. âI'll be on my way ⦠See you, mate,' he said to Tom as he made his way to the front door. âChin up.'
The door closed behind him. The Fewings were alone.
Millie turned and walked back into the dining room. Suzie obeyed her unspoken command. Tom raised his eyebrows, then followed Suzie's beckoning gesture.
âRight,' Millie drew a deep breath. âWe've got to get to the bottom of this.'
âDo you think the police aren't trying?'
Millie ignored her. She gestured at the map. It covered the whole of the moor, with the towns and villages around it. âThis story is all over the place. Let's go right back to the beginning. It started
here.
' She laid her hand on Saddlers Wood, a mile or two outside Moortown. âTwo days before Eileen Caseley was shot, we were here. If we hadn't been, none of this would have happened. Mum wouldn't have gone to the funeral. Dad wouldn't have got Bernard Summers talking. You wouldn't have met either of those solicitors.'
âI would,' Suzie put in. âJohn Nosworthy, at least. He had some money to give me after the tractor pull. That would have happened anyway.'
âAnd Clive Stroud,' Tom agreed. âHe and Mum were already set up to be there.'
âBut it wouldn't have been the same,' Millie said impatiently. âI'm sure it wouldn't. Right from the beginning, everybody thought Mum knew something. And then there's Dad. He meets Bernard Summers
here.
' She moved her hand to Moortown. âAnd next day, as far as anyone knows, this geologist bloke meets his end in a stream somewhere
here.
' This time she indicated a wider area of open moor. âNext thing we know, someone gets Dad to drive his car across the moor to
here
.' She pointed out Fullingford, far over to the west. âHe must have driven it himself, mustn't he? So why?'
âThe police don't seem to know any more than we do,' Suzie said. âOr if they do, they're not telling me. If they've taken Elizabeth Stroud in for questioning, that must mean they now think she's a prime suspect.'
Tom gave a short laugh. âPerhaps it wasn't Philip who killed his wife, after all. If Stroud's wife found out Clive had been two-timing her with Eileen, she might have been the one who bumped her off.'
Suzie shook her head. âSomehow, that doesn't fit. By the sound of it, he was a serial womanizer. Why should she suddenly take offence at Eileen? And what's it got to do with Nick?'
Millie was bending over, studying the map again, as if the secret was hidden there amongst the contour lines, the marks of bridleways, the green enclosures of woodland. Her finger strayed eastward again.
âIt comes back to the same thing. Whatever it is started that Saturday in Saddlers Wood. I'm sure it did. There must be something we've forgotten about. Maybe something we didn't even notice at the time.'
Tom blew out his breath and rumpled his hair. âAs I recall it, Dad drove us out to Moortown and we had lunch at a pub. I can't remember anything special that happened there.' He looked questioningly at the others. They stayed silent. âThen Mum navigated us out to Saddlers Wood. There was this cart track going up to the farm. We parked at the bottom.'
âWere there any other cars there?' Millie asked suddenly.
A pause. âNot that I remember. Wait. We did see a little green car driving away, but that was afterwards.'
âBut if someone else was there, who had no business to be, they might have hidden theirs.'
âWhat are you getting at?'
âI don't know yet, do I? Go on.'
âRight. So we walk up this cart track. But before we get to the farm, we hear a gunshot. Then Philip Caseley comes charging out from the woods. He looks upset, but he rallies round when he sees us. Mum tells him about how she's chasing up the ancestry trail, and he tells us to go on up to the house.'
âAnd Eileen Caseley's there, and she looks upset too.'
âOh, and I forgot to say, the last we saw of Philip he was heading off down a small path that we found out afterwards leads to that ruined cottage.'
âAnd on to Puck's Acre,' Suzie reminded him.
âFair enough. Anyway, Eileen invites us in for tea. And the place is pretty run-down. Not like a couple who've been told someone has found gold on their land.'
âThere'd been a quarrel between Philip and Eileen about that,' Suzie put in. âAnd two days after we'd been there, she added that peculiar codicil to her will. And almost immediately after someone shot her.'
âNever mind about that,' Millie said impatiently. âThat happened later. Go back to Saturday.'
Tom frowned. âWell ⦠Eileen Caseley gave us directions to find the remains of the cottage. Mum's ancestral home.'
âAnd yours,' Suzie retorted.
âSo we find these ruins in a clearing, beside a stream. And while we're poking around, and Dad's taking photographs, there's this sound of a branch breaking in the woods. Mum says she's sure someone's watching us.'
âThat's what it felt like.'
âDad thinks it's just an animal. A wild one, or maybe someone's taking their dog for a walk in the woods. We have a half-hearted sort of look, and Dad calls out to see if anyone's there, but there's no sign of anything odd.'
âI'm still convinced there was someone else there, besides us.'
âPhilip?' suggested Millie. âHe went that way.'
Suzie shrugged. âWe'll never know.'
âBut that's the point!' Millie exploded. âSomeone thinks we
do
know. Someone who doesn't want us to know they were there at all.'
âClive Stroud!' Light was breaking in Tom's face. âIf he was on some secret assignation with Eileen ⦠If Philip found them â¦'
âThat's what she was all dressed up for!' Millie exclaimed. âI thought she looked remarkably smart for someone out in the back of beyond.'
âMaybe that's what that gunshot was about. Philip was trying to scare him off. Literally firing a warning shot across Eileen's bows.'
Suzie shivered. âThat could explain why Clive Stroud was so sinister that day of the tractor pull. Why he warned me off coming back to Moortown. Infidelity is one thing. But with a murdered woman â¦'
âTerrible PR for an MP,' Tom said.
âExcept that Eileen was already dead by then,' Millie said sceptically. âIf you'd known he was there, you'd have reported it to the police, wouldn't you? It would be too late to stop you.'
âAnd you really think that day in the woods has got anything to do with someone carting Dad off?' Tom asked.
There was a painful silence. To Suzie it seemed as much of a dead end as it had been before.
Then Millie gave a great yelp and leaped up from the map she had been studying.
âWhat was that you said just now?' she asked Tom eagerly.
âWhich bit?'
â
While we're poking around, and Dad's taking photographs.
'
Tom and Suzie stared at her.
âGot it!' Tom cried. âDid he show you those photographs, Mum?'
Suzie struggled to remember. The search for her ancestors seemed far away and unimportant, compared with all that had happened since. âHe copied two of the best ones across to me for my files. I didn't see the rest.'
âWhere's his camera? He didn't take it with him yesterday, did he?'
âOn a work day? I shouldn't think so.'
Millie flew next door to the study. As Tom and Suzie crowded after her, she dragged open the drawer where Nick kept his camera equipment. She pulled out the Canon and waved it triumphantly.
âTurn on the computer, Mum. We've got to see this. I'll swear the answer's here.'
Tom rummaged in the drawer for the right cable to connect the camera to the computer's USB port. Suzie found that she was holding her breath. Would there be any more photographs left on Nick's camera from that day, besides the two she already had? Nick had selected for her a close-up of the cottage ruins and a longer shot of the clearing in which it stood, looking down over the pink spires of fireweed towards the stream with the ruins in the foreground. She had noticed nothing unusual about either of them.
âGot it!' Tom took over the desk chair. He brought up on the screen an array of thumbnail images. He scanned the dates. âResult! Trust Dad to take forty photos where half a dozen would do.'
âSo he didn't delete the rest.' Millie craned forward in excitement.
One by one, Tom began to bring each of the photographs from that Saturday up to full screen. Some were similar to the ones Suzie had added to her files. There were more of the old cottage, taken from different angles, the shapeless walls of cob, disintegrating once they had lost their roof. There were artistic close-ups of weeds springing out of the crevices, a wall split by a young ash tree. Nick had picked out the wild flowers that carpeted the clearing. Even the word âclearing' was losing its meaning as the trees began to take back what had once been a large open space. Charlotte Day's kitchen garden, no doubt. The place where she hung her washing. Where her children played. Nick had peopled some of these photographs with his own family, sometimes not. Suzie's imagination supplied other figures from a century and a half ago.
She snatched back her wandering thoughts. What should she really be looking for?
Tom leaned closer to the screen. âNot sure what he's trying to get here.'
Nick had turned his camera away from the cottage, to focus on the woods beyond the stream. Through his lens, Suzie saw more gradations of colour among the foliage than she would have thought possible. Her less artistic eye would have dismissed these leaves as simply green, but Nick had found a variety of shades of gold in the oak, the blue-green needles of fir, the glossy darkness of holly.
âThere!' cried Tom and Millie simultaneously.
Suzie's attention snapped back to the new image which had suddenly appeared on the screen. The stream still ran sparkling in the foreground. Beyond, there was that same wall of trees. Except â¦
âWhat is it?' asked Millie. âIt looks like a very small car's headlights or a very big owl's eyes.'
âSomebody's glasses,' said Tom. Suzie could hear his breath coming fast.
Her own eyes had fastened on what they were staring at. To the right of centre, among the leaves, Nick's camera had caught the flashes of light from two small circles.
âThere
was
someone there in the woods,' Tom breathed. âWell done, Mum! I assumed it must be a deer or something. But deer don't wear spectacles. Someone really was watching us.'
Suzie leaned further over his shoulder, craning to see more closely. Was that all there was? Just the reflection of light on a pair of glasses from â what? â thirty metres away? Nick had not used his most powerful lens.
âCan you enlarge it?' she urged.
Tom homed in on that detail. A bigger, more blurred image replaced the whole. It was just possible to make out a pale oval surrounded by a darker smudge which merged into the leaves.
Suzie scrabbled through her memories, trying to think of any of the players in this story who wore glasses. Philip? She thought not. Eileen? Possibly. Frances Nosworthy? No, and she was almost certain John Nosworthy did not. She couldn't be sure about Clive Stroud. It was strange, but when you thought about almost any of your acquaintances it was possible to imagine them wearing spectacles, and less easy to remember which ones actually did.
âTry the next picture,' Millie ordered.
The image on the screen changed again. Nick had shifted the angle, so that he was looking further up the stream. The screen of foliage was still there on the left, but more of the foreground was now the sunlit flower-strewn grass on the nearer side of the brook. There was no sign of a flash of light among the leaves.