Authors: Jim Kelly
âSo one day soon you'll be seeing someone. A representative. He'll want their money â the Russians' money. All of it. He'll be terrifically keen. I don't think the Russians do IOUs. You may think â on reflection â that a cell would be the best place to be.'
She looked up at the two-thirds sky. âNever.'
The final cruelty was too exquisite to be denied.
âAnd there will be nothing for the boy now. Martyn's son. The heir. By the time the Russians have finished with you I doubt you'll own anything on Petit Fen. You'll be landless, homeless, and so will he.'
She looked at him frankly then, her eyes wide, and he saw some genuine hatred in the light.
âMartyn was never suited for this â for the farm, the land,' said Dryden. âHe lived in his head. He was happy to make you the money you needed. And he got some cash back â for his toys. But what about your grandson?'
And then Dryden knew; the final piece of the Petit family jigsaw falling into place.
âYou brought him up, didn't you? But not here â at Petit Hall. That would have prompted too many questions. Boarding schools â abroad, even? Then university. No â because he wasn't academic, was he? That's what Martyn told one of his pupils â that he wasn't good at school. So maybe college, a land economy degree? Yes, that would be perfect. And his reward?'
Dryden pointed down the drove towards Home Farm. The Victorian farmhouse stood on one side of an open square, barns and outhouses on the other two. A yellow John Deere tractor stood in the lee of a few trees, washed clean.
âEdward Petit,' said Dryden. âYour nephew â running home farm. Really? Sure he's not your
grandson
. Why don't we ask . . .'
Dryden turned to go but she raised a hand.
âStop,' she said.
âI wonder what he knows?' asked Dryden. âAnd there's his child too â a girl? A virtual dynasty.'
Her lips formed a line, murderously straight. âHe knows nothing,' she said. âNothing.' The colour flooded out of Sheila Petit's face. Given the calculated dishonesty she'd been capable of Dryden was appalled to feel pity for her.
âShall I tell him â or will you?'
H
umph brought breakfast to Petit Hall in the Capri: egg and bacon sandwiches wrapped in foil washed down with Russian vodka in little airline bottles marked
Reyka
. He'd brought a flask too, into which he'd got someone to decant half-a-dozen double espressos. They sat in silence, waiting for the moment of dawn, as a small convoy of police vehicles left Petit Hall. Sheila Petit was in the last one, alone in the back seat, and something in her eye caught the morning light as she slid past the parked cab.
Dryden had two cellophane packages in his lap.
He talked Humph through them. One was his father's compass watch, which had been found hooked over the wheel of Rory Setchey's boat when the floating crane had brought its remains to the surface of Adventurers' Mere. The watch was in no better condition than the body of Miiko Saar. The watch face was marbled with cracks, the glass shattered, the little compass needle blown away. There was a slight smear of blood on the inside of the plastic evidence bag in which it lay.
Humph wiped grease from his lips with the back of his hand.
âKross said I could keep it,' said Dryden.
The other bag contained a metal ID tag and bracelet. The bracelet was minute, and would only encircle three of Dryden's fingers. The clasp was open and the jagged tooth-edge had entangled in it several shreds of very dark hair.
âThat's all that's left of the child the Yorubas lost at Manea. To the fox â I told you?'
Humph nodded. âWhy'd he give it to you?'
âI asked for it. It's important.'
âHey up,' said the cabbie, nodding back towards Petit Hall. Halfway up the drove a police car was parked outside the entrance to the Home Farm. Edward Petit stood with a woman by the gate, a baby girl held between them. Then he got in the car and it crept towards them, past them, to follow the convoy which had already left. Edward waved back at his cottage, but the woman didn't wave back.
âLet's go,' said Dryden.
âIs it over?' asked Humph.
Dryden knew he meant the whole case: Jack Dryden, Martyn Petit and Rory Setchey â and, most of all, Roger Stutton.
âYes. For us, it is over. We just have to bury Roger. The funeral's next week.'
He checked his watch: it was too early to ring Laura. The pain in his hip was worse now than it had been for hours so he took some of the painkillers he'd been given at the hospital, then asked Humph to put the cab in a lay-by. He was asleep before the hand brake creaked. He didn't so much go to sleep as pass out.
When he woke Humph was banging on the roof of the Capri.
Getting out Dryden saw that something extraordinary had happened to the sky. He couldn't have been asleep for more than ten minutes because it was just a few seconds before the moment of dawn. Above them stretched a high rack of cloud, like a skein, made up of the brightest colours Dryden had ever seen in the sky â not iridescent, brighter than that. Other clouds, scuds, drifted past, but these brighter clouds seemed untouchable.
âThat's what I saw,' said Humph. âI couldn't find them in the book. So I thought . . .' He seemed lost. âI thought of the Northern Lights but that's crazy â all the books said that was crazy. So I just made up a name.'
âI know what they're called,' said Dryden. His father had seen them on the farm â always at the same times â just before dawn, just after sunset. They were high level, stratospheric, and that was their secret, because they were so high they caught the sun that had not risen, and the sun that had just set. They were the clouds of sunrise and nightrise.
Humph seemed captivated.
âNacreous â they're called nacreous clouds,' said Dryden. âIt's Latin for mother-of-pearl. They're rare here â exotic. What did you call them?'
The colours were getting brighter so that Dryden made a physical effort to widen his eyes, open them out, to let in the light.
âI see them all the time,' said Humph. âI call them The Eastern Lights.'
A
police squad car stood outside the Victorian folly which had been Billy Johns' home. The front door was open and the hall beyond was empty â the Electra Glide long gone, and with it the cemetery caretaker. Money and a Harley Davidson would get Billy Johns a long way â DI Friday had told Dryden they'd had reports of the bike from Spanish customs in the Pyrenees. And there'd been those crisp euro notes in his wallet. But Dryden suspected that was not quite far enough to slip the grasp of Interpol and Scotland Yard. Which was a shame because he suspected that Miiko Saar had ordered Johns to bury Dryden alive the night the Estonian had dumped his body in the open paupers' grave. Johns had disobeyed orders, then fled. If they ever did bring him to trial, Dryden would be more than happy to tell a judge and jury of his act of mercy.
The caretaker's absence, and the police presence, had brought chaos to the orderly running of Manea Cemetery and Crematorium. The interment of Roger Eden Stutton had been delayed two days. Beneath the chosen cedar Dryden and Laura joined the small crowd which had gathered, finally, for the burial, ferried by a cortège of polished black limousines which had zigzagged over the fen from Buskeybay. Eight spotless cars and Humph's Capri. Con stood slightly apart with her son Laurie, holding him by the arm but looking away. Humph sat on a bench on the gravel path in what might have been a suit; but stood when the priest appeared, walking ahead of the coffin.
The service was mercifully brief and might have been for a stranger. No one cried. When it was over Dryden took out the forensic bag Kross had given him and ripped it open, taking out the compass watch. The time said 12.08 a.m. The exact moment Miiko Saar died. He walked to the grave's edge, didn't look down, but dropped the watch. He felt strangely giddy, even weightless, and standing there, trying to think of Roger, he saw instead his father, or rather felt that he
was
his father, floating in that Scottish tarn, reaching out to try and save the boy who was already dead. And then the moment was past and he felt the clay beneath his feet, and locked his eyes on the distant flat horizon, so that he could walk away from the grave's edge. Eden lay in the grass on his back, his eyes full of sky.
Dryden gave Laura an envelope. âThis was on my desk.'
It was from Fenland Newspapers, owners of
The Crow
. They were delighted to inform him that they were able to offer him the position of editor of
The Crow
and the
Ely Express
newspapers and associated website.
âAssociated website,' he said. âWe haven't got a bloody website.'
âThat's your first job then,' said Laura. âWell done.' The smile was genuine but brief.
âIt's a good job we're moving. You'll need to be nearer.'
They'd made the decision the day Humph ran Dryden up to Cromer. Living in Flightpath Cottages had been a dream. But the reality had been stifling. It was too remote for Laura, too domestic for Dryden. They'd come back from the coast by a boatyard at Denver Sluice and bought a narrow boat to moor beside PK 145 â their old floating home on the river near Ely. They'd sleep in the new boat, live in the old, and teach Eden a life afloat. There was a FOR SALE sign outside the house.
Laura was watching Con, alone, stood beside the grave, which seemed to hold her in a kind of spell.
âThey should fill it in,' said Dryden. A mechanical digger stood under the trees, waiting silently, a workman smoking at the wheel.
âIt's a good place,' said Laura. âWe can get another bench â over there, nearer the grave. Look.'
Following her pointing finger east Dryden saw the West Tower of Ely Cathedral. It was a fine day and Dryden knew then he'd sit here and try to see it many times in the future but that he'd often fail. The dense, damp fen air was ideal for shrouding distance.
Dryden was glad his father didn't lie in a grave. He thought of him still as being
out there
,
washed away into the waterscape, beneath the clouds.
He picked up Eden and showed him the view.
Con walked over and sat with them. Her son, Laurie, was talking to the priest. Laura produced a flask of tea and what looked like sandwiches neatly packaged in tin foil, and a plastic container for biscuits.
Con smiled. âThis is our wake.'
D
ryden left them and walked alone to the crematorium chapel. It had a working area, screened off, at the rear. There was a single wooden door, studded in a mock-medieval style, but unlocked. Inside was a waiting area. On a trestle table a small white coffin stood. It made Dryden's blood rush to his heart.
The undertaker he'd met at the funeral parlour appeared from the chapel. âThey're here,' he said.
Dryden recalled the name â Matthew Carney.
âI'll see them at the graveside,' said Dryden.
Carney nodded and then, turning to the small casket, simply lifted the lid.
Dryden looked away. An instinct of self-preservation. It was, after all, a perversion of nature, the child going before the parents.
âMr Dryden,' prompted Carney.
He turned back and produced the forensic bag with the ID tag inside.
Now they both stood looking into the casket. There was a teddy bear which seemed brand new, a Bible, and a single lead weight marked seven pounds. Dryden held the tag up to the sunlight which streamed in through the stained glass. The jet-black hair glistened. Dryden placed the bracelet at the head of the casket and stood back. Carney screwed the lid on â six screws, arranged at intervals.
Dryden was dismissed with a smile.
Outside the sun fell on the landscape with its full weight. Humph slept in the Capri. Everyone else had gone so that the cemetery seemed muffled in heat, silent, the hot air buckling slightly. Out on the road he could see a bus, the logo faded but discernible: CERTIO. He could see faces inside, pressed to the windows. The driver's door stood open.
He walked away, along a path which led towards the row of pines which shrouded the public graves. There was a spot here, on the edge of the cemetery, where they buried children. Most of the graves held flowers and toys. A single grave lay open, a trestle beside it, artificial turf set around on three sides. A ditch marked the boundary with the fen. Even now, at the end of an arid summer, there was water flowing slowly by, heading north. This spot felt more like the open fen than graveyard, the black soil running into the distance.
Dryden heard them coming and was ready but he hadn't expected David Yoruba to carry the coffin. He set it on the trestle. A Catholic priest stood mouthing prayers to himself, Carney, the undertaker, at his shoulder.
Gill Yoruba came to Dryden and took his hand. âThank you. You found her for us. Should I ask how?'
âTrust me,' said Dryden.
They heard gravel scatter behind them and Humph appeared, sweating, a clean handkerchief in one hand.
âThey're taking David after we've buried her,' she said. âThe tribunal found against him. They'll go to Brize Norton, then a flight back to Niger. I'll follow. He wants you to deal with the documents he left you?'
Dryden nodded.
âWe don't know what will happen. But this is a comfort. It's a place to come back to.'
The shadow of the priest slid over the coffin.
David Yoruba lowered the coffin using linen tapes, and then they sprinkled earth in the grave. Humph rearranged his feet at the edge as if he might fall over. Dryden went last. He held the handful of peaty clay for several seconds then raised it up high, letting the dust slip through his fingers, mixing earth and sky.