Blood From a Stone

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Blood From a Stone Page 19

by Dolores Gordon-Smith


  With Celia chivvying them on, everyone sat down. Celia, predictably, was next to Duggleby but with her father on the other side, which, thought Jack, might cramp her style. Mary Hawker sat beside Frank Leigh, and Isabelle, Evie Leigh and Aloysius Wood completed the circle.

  Jack turned off the lights and groped his way back across the room to where the reading lamp shone over the back of

  the armchair.

  ‘Everyone put their hands on the table,’ said Celia. ‘Make sure you’re touching the fingertips of the person next to you.’ There was a certain amount of giggling. ‘Dad,’ complained Celia, ‘you’ve got to keep holding hands.’

  ‘If I want to drink my whisky and soda, my girl, that’s what I’ll do, spirits or no spirits.’

  There was a snort of subdued laughter from Wood. ‘At least we’re sure of some sort of spirit.’

  ‘Please, Mr Wood!’ chided Celia. ‘Be serious.’

  There was silence.

  Time crept on. Jack lit a surreptitious cigarette. He sat back in his chair, blew out a mouthful of smoke, then very nearly swore.

  From the table came a hollow plop, the sound of dripping water, the same sound he had heard in the cave that afternoon. It was followed by another drip and then another. Jack felt the hairs on the back of his neck rise.

  ‘Is anyone there?’ asked Celia in a wavering voice.

  The only sound was the drip of water.

  ‘Are you a spirit?’

  A loud crack sounded. Celia gave a nervous yelp. ‘Will you answer one rap for yes and two for no?’

  One rap.

  ‘Are you Anatenzel?’ asked Mary Hawker shakily.

  Two raps.

  ‘Are you –’ Celia Leigh broke off and swallowed – ‘are you from the cave?’

  One rap.

  ‘This yes and no business is hopeless,’ complained Wood. ‘Can’t you go into a trance or something, Mrs Hawker? It could speak through you then.’

  ‘I can’t summon up a trance for the asking,’ said Mary Hawker in a worried voice. ‘We could use the alphabet, I suppose. One rap for A, two for B and so on? Major Haldean, you can keep track for us, can’t you?’

  ‘Just as you like,’ said Jack, jotting down the alphabet in his notebook and numbering the letters.

  ‘Thank you, major. Spirit of the cave! Can you speak to us through the alphabet?’

  Jack counted as a quick series of raps sounded. Twenty-five, then a pause, five and another pause, then nineteen. That spelt ... ‘Yes.’

  It was handy, thought Jack, that the spirit should be so conversant with modern English. Another series of raps sounded.

  ‘Did you get that, Jack?’ asked Celia.

  ‘“Peace”,’ said Jack, reading his notes. ‘“The barrier is broken”.’

  It was hard, in the dim light, with the stilled hush of breathing from the group at the table and that inexplicable drip of water, to remember that this was meant to be nothing more than a parlour game.

  ‘Who are you?’ asked Celia.

  More raps sounded. ‘“Barita”,’ Jack read.

  ‘That’s a girl’s name,’ said Duggleby. ‘A Romano-British girl’s name.’

  More raps sounded.

  ‘“Euthius is trapped”,’ read Jack. ‘“Free him”!’

  ‘How do we free him?’ asked Celia. ‘Can I free him?’

  ‘“No”,’ Jack read. ‘“You are not the god’s choice”.’

  Celia gave a little cry. ‘Who, then?’ she demanded.

  ‘Hold on a minute,’ said Isabelle. ‘Do we want Euthius to be free?’

  A long series of raps sounded. ‘“Darkness. Trapped”,’ said Jack, working out the message. ‘“Release him. Tree. Walking tree”.’

  ‘What on earth does that mean?’ asked Mary Hawker.

  ‘“The tree must walk to the cave”,’ Jack read. ‘I’m not sure which tree,’ he added.

  ‘You’ll have to be rather more precise with your instructions,’ said Mary Hawker, addressing the spirit of Barita as briskly as if it were on a committee. She was very brisk indeed, with a nervous edge to her voice. ‘What are you talking about?’

  ‘“Follow the sign”.’

  ‘What sign? We haven’t got a sign.’

  They waited for an answer but there was silence, broken only by the dripping of the water. As the silence lengthened, that sound, too, became more and more spaced out, then stopped.

  ‘I think,’ said Evie with a little sigh, ‘the spirit has gone. How extraordinary! Turn the lights on, Frank, darling.’

  As the lights came on, she pushed her chair back and, interlinking her fingers, pushed her arms straight, stretching her shoulders, then stopped abruptly, staring at Aloysius Wood’s hands.

  Beside her, Wood had his hands clasped lightly together on the table. An ominous red stain rimmed his knuckles.

  ‘What’s that on your hands, Wood?’ asked Frank.

  Wood opened his hands slowly and stared in confusion at his palms. They were stained red.

  Celia started to her feet, pushing her chair over with a choking noise. ‘It’s blood! Can’t you see? It’s blood! Oh my God, it’s like the cave! First there was the water and now there’s blood! The next thing will be a fire!’

  ‘Calm down, Celia,’ said her father. ‘Wood must’ve cut himself somehow, that’s all. Don’t get so worked up about nothing.’

  ‘Have you cut yourself, Wood?’ asked Jack, as they all crowded round.

  ‘No, no I haven’t,’ he said in a bewildered voice. He looked horribly shaken. ‘I felt something sticky when you – the spirit I mean – was talking about signs, but I don’t know how this stuff got on my hands.’

  ‘But what’s it a sign of?’ demanded Celia.

  ‘Guilt,’ said Mary Hawker slowly. ‘Blood’s usually a sign of guilt.’

  Wood scrubbed at his palms with a handkerchief. ‘I’m not guilty of anything. This is creepy.’ He looked wildly at the faces round him. ‘Hasn’t anyone else got anything on their hands? No? Why me? What have I done?’

  Frank Leigh dropped a hand on his shoulder. ‘Go and wash it off, Wood,’ he began, when Mary Hawker gave a sharp cry.

  ‘Wood! That’s what the spirit was talking about! A walking tree. It’s a sort of ghastly joke. Mr Wood, you’re the walking tree!’

  Wood froze, looking down at his hands. There was a long moment, and when he spoke, his voice was quiet. ‘Yes, I am, aren’t I?’ He lifted his head and looked at her. ‘The spirit wanted a walking tree to go to the cave.’ He stood up like a man in a trance. ‘I’d better go.’

  ‘Now?’ said Isabelle sharply. ‘You can’t! It’s dark.’

  Wood gave her a twisted smile. ‘I think the powers, whatever they are, are probably more effective in the dark, don’t you?’

  ‘For God’s sake, man,’ protested Frank. ‘You can’t do it!’

  Wood looked at him, then his smile broadened. ‘Why not?’

  ‘It’s a preposterous idea,’ spluttered Frank.

  ‘Why? Do you believe in ghosts?’ He held up his bloodstained palms. ‘Do you believe in this?’

  ‘I don’t know what I believe,’ said Frank Leigh in a harried way. ‘It’s all a lot of damn nonsense. It has to be.’

  ‘Can the spirits harm me? Not if they don’t exist. If they do exist, I’d better do what they say, don’t you think?’

  The argument went back and forth, but Wood was absolutely determined.

  In the end, Wood, accompanied by Jack and Frank Leigh, carrying an oil lamp, torches and blankets made their way across the darkened gardens, through the temple and into the cave.

  Jack put the oil lamp on the old Victorian desk. The thin beam of light only seemed to make the darkness greater. At the back of the cave, beyond the reach of the light, stood, he knew, the altar of Euthius. The cave echoed with the drip of water and, after the summer night, the cold was biting. A loathing for the evil figure carved on that darkened altar twisted his stomach.


  This was just wrong. What had started as a silly evening pastime should remain just that. They couldn’t possibly have heard a message from the dead. At that moment, even if Euthius himself had spoken from the altar, Jack would have refused to believe it. And yet ...

  There had been blood on Wood’s hands. That had to be explained.

  Another thing he couldn’t explain was Wood’s frame of mind. On the one hand he spoke as if the séance had been a genuine summons from another world, on the other he seemed to think it was all a trick. Even if it was a trick, that wasn’t a very comforting thought.

  Mary Hawker had told Frank Leigh to get rid of Wood. She could’ve easily suggested the idea of a séance to Celia. If she’d done it subtly enough, Celia would’ve been convinced it was her own idea.

  It was Mary Hawker who had identified Wood as the man selected to spend the night in the cave and the upshot was that Wood was spending the night in the cave. Frank Leigh had protested, but as Wood’s employer and host, he could have refused his permission outright.

  Frank Leigh looked at the cheerless camp-bed and shuddered. He clapped his hand on Wood’s shoulder. ‘For heaven’s sake, man, this is crazy,’ he said gruffly. ‘Come back to the house.’

  ‘Not ruddy likely,’ said Wood cheerfully. ‘I’ve been challenged and I’m going to face it.’ He patted his pocket. ‘I’m armed, you know, and I’ve got a light, a good book – it’s one of yours, Haldean, as a matter of fact – and a flask of whisky. If anything happens, I’m ready for it. Now off you go and leave me to Euthius.’

  He accompanied them back down the passage to the cedarwood door. ‘I’m going to lock myself in,’ he said, putting the key in the lock. ‘That should stop anyone fooling around. See you in the morning.’

  Jack and Frank Leigh stood in the temple, the cloud-broken moonlight shifting across the marble floor and columns. As they heard the key turn in the lock on the other side of the door, Leigh heaved a deep sigh. ‘I hope he’s all right.’

  They set off down the path, the light of the torch dancing before them. It was a little time before Frank Leigh spoke again.

  ‘I don’t like it, Haldean. I don’t mind telling you, that séance rattled me. There’s ...’ He hesitated. ‘There’s too much history in Breagan Stump. What happened in that cave was real. Even though it was nearly two thousand years ago, it’s real and I don’t like it.’

  He motioned back towards the temple. ‘You asked this afternoon where the name Breagan came from. I had a tutor when I was a boy. He called himself a philologist, very keen on the origin of words. He got me to look up Breagan. It isn’t Roman or Celtic, it’s Anglo-Saxon. They knew the place was somewhere to be avoided. Breagan comes from the word gebrégan. I’ve never forgotten that word.’ He paused, uncomfortably. ‘It means dread or sudden terror.’

  ‘Panic,’ said Jack involuntarily. He remembered his sensations by the temple earlier in the day.

  ‘That’s right. Panic, dread, sudden terror.’ He shrugged. ‘It’s easy enough to laugh at these things, but I don’t like it.’

  TWELVE

  It was odd to come out of the darkness of the garden into the brightly lit drawing room.

  Evie Leigh looked at them with a worried smile. ‘Is Mr Wood settled in?’

  ‘He’s as comfortable as he can be,’ said Frank Leigh absently, walking over to the sideboard. He poured himself a whisky and, lighting a cigar, sat down, his chin in his hands.

  ‘I don’t think I’d ever be brave enough to spend a night in the cave,’ Evie said to the company in general. ‘So uncomfortable and so chilly and damp, too.’

  ‘I can’t explain what happened this evening,’ said Mary Hawker dubiously, looking up from her newspaper. ‘The spirits usually send messages of comfort and reassurance.’

  ‘He will be all right, won’t he, Aunt Mary?’ asked Celia. She swallowed. ‘There isn’t anything that could happen to him, is there?’

  Isabelle got up and went to sit beside her, putting her hand comfortingly on her arm. ‘Come on, Celia. Mr Wood’s a grown man. He can take care of himself.’

  ‘Exactly,’ said Mary Hawker gruffly. ‘You mark my words, he’ll be as right as rain in the morning.’ She glanced at the clock. ‘It’s probably too late to start a game of cards now, but there’s an interesting bridge problem in the paper. Celia, my dear, come and give me a hand, will you?’

  Celia reluctantly joined Mary Hawker in the pool of light cast by the standard lamp by the sofa.

  ‘Is Mr Wood okay?’ muttered Isabelle to Jack.

  ‘He was fine when we left him,’ said Jack in a low voice, sitting on the arm of her chair. He flicked a glance over to Mary Hawker. ‘Any reaction?’ he murmured.

  Isabelle shook her head. ‘Nothing much. I can’t make it out, Jack. Did she set it up?’

  Jack shrugged. ‘Maybe.’

  ‘It beats me,’ hissed Isabelle in frustration. ‘She seemed really shaken by the séance. She’s been talking about bridge to take our minds off things. She said as much.’ She nearly smiled. ‘Leonard Duggleby lit out as fast as he could. He can’t stand bridge, so he’s retreated to the library.’

  Mary Hawker looked over the top of her glasses to Isabelle and Jack. ‘Mrs Stanton? Major Haldean? You play, don’t you? What d’you think of this?’

  Jack and Isabelle joined Mary Hawker and Celia Leigh on the sofa. As usual in newspaper bridge problems, the players were East, West, North and South.

  ‘East’s got adequate trump support for a raise but no ace or king so he’d better bid two no trumps on the first round. West can’t possibly be thinking of a slam. What about West playing a heart lead and continuation?’ asked Mrs Hawker.

  ‘It’ll be awkward for West to play in spades,’ said Jack, trying to drag his mind away from Wood in the cave. Could this middle-aged, tweedy, county, bazaars and committee woman really want to murder anyone? Let alone him or Wood? It seemed incredible but Wood had taken a gun with him to the cave. What on earth was he expecting? ‘He should give his partner the chance to play in clubs.’

  ‘Exactly,’ said Mary Hawker triumphantly. ‘That’s precisely what I would do. Would you bid six here, Major Haldean?’

  ‘It’s tempting, but I don’t think so,’ said Jack, forcing himself to concentrate. ‘Look at East’s bidding pattern. He’s made a series of minimum bids. I’d say he’s too weak for six.’

  ‘I’d say the slam needs more than the club finesse,’ said Celia, hesitantly. ‘If the defence begins with two rounds of hearts, West’s trumps are shortened to the ace and queen alone.’

  ‘Well done, dear,’ said Mrs Hawker approvingly. ‘Exactly right.’

  ‘He can’t pick up South’s king of clubs,’ commented Isabelle, looking over Mary Hawker’s shoulder. ‘I can’t see East has anything more to contribute.’

  As the discussion went on, it was clear that someone else, as well as the fictional East, had nothing to contribute.

  After half an hour listening to bridge, Evie Leigh was obviously bored to tears. She picked up a magazine, flicked through it, tossed it to one side, yawned, examined her nails, added

  to perfection with an emery board, looked at the clock,

  yawned once more and then, evidently struck by an idea, sat up straight.

  ‘Major Haldean, I don’t believe you’ve ever seen my sapphires?’

  ‘I have, as a matter of fact, Mrs Leigh,’ Jack said with a smile. ‘I went to meet Isabelle at Charing Cross station after her adventure on the train. Inspector Rackham showed them to me.’

  Evie shuddered. ‘Don’t! I can’t bear to be reminded of that horrible affair.’

  ‘I’d like to see them again,’ said Isabelle kindly. It was perfectly obvious that Evie Leigh wanted to show off her jewels. She probably wanted to do almost anything other than talk about bridge. ‘I’ve seen them, of course, but I couldn’t really say what they looked like. All I knew was that they sparkled.’

  ‘They certainly do,’ said Evie
enthusiastically. ‘We’ve had them cleaned and re-set. They arrived back from the jeweller’s today and they’re simply stunning.’

  ‘Why don’t you get them?’ asked Mary Hawker, putting down the newspaper and bowing to the inevitable.

  ‘What a good idea!’ said Evie, as if the thought had only just occurred to her.

  She went out of the room, returning shortly afterwards with a blue leather box, but, before she undid the clasp, pursed her lips in a little petulant frown. ‘Where’s Mr Duggleby? He saved my sapphires. I want him here to see them. He can’t still be stuck in the library, can he? Go and get him, Frank.’

  When they were all assembled, Evie put the box on the table and opened it with a little, happy sigh.

  ‘Good Lord,’ said Jack in involuntary admiration as he gazed at the sapphires on their ivory silk background. Gone was the heavy gold elaborately ornamented surround. Instead was a sleek, streamlined necklace where the sapphires, framed by diamond chips, shone deep blue against white gold.

  ‘They’re beautiful,’ said Evie Leigh, stroking her hand over the jewels. ‘Seddon and Coles have the most marvellous little man who’s an absolute genius with jewels. Truly sympathetic. I told him what I wanted and he drew the most perfect design right away. I said he was a positive mind reader, didn’t I, Frank? I added a few touches of my own, and here we are.’ She stroked her hand over the necklace once more and sighed happily.

  With Evie’s permission, Mary Hawker reached out and picked up the necklace. ‘It’s very fine,’ she said with grudging respect. ‘Remarkable. It’s just a pity to think of the circumstances, though.’

  Evie Leigh looked puzzled.

  ‘Mrs Paxton,’ said Mary Hawker heavily. ‘To say nothing of that poor fellow on the train.’

  ‘Sapphires are often thought to be unlucky,’ said Duggleby chattily. ‘I don’t know why. In medieval times they were meant to protect their wearers from evil. The ancient Greeks thought the sapphire, the colour of the sky, was the gem of Apollo, the god of the sun.’

  ‘They certainly are beautiful,’ said Jack, taking them from Mary Hawker. He turned his back so the light shone on them. ‘They look very different now they’ve been re-set.’

 

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