Part 10 (1/2)

Ryan looked smug.

'Nothing to do with me. I just happened to meet the sly b.a.s.t.a.r.d in a coffee shop. Made the suggestion he'd like to go and see where his lady wife was buried. It might not have been the tide covered her up, see? It could have been, course, probably was, but I made him think she'd been buried. Last rites delivered on her lily-white body by another man's big, chunky hands. I knew it would drive him mad. He might have beaten his own wife to a pulp, cut her face to ribbons, but he couldn't stand the thought of anyone else touching her. Listen, I couldn't have prayed he'd walk into the sea like he did: I just wanted him suffering.'

Ryan took a sip and it was gone. Time to go on to pints. Whisky was fine in spots; he'd go back to it later. Something nagged him, something he didn't like and knew Malcolm wouldn't either.

'So Sarah's gone off to the seaside, has she? Not her kind of place, I wouldn't have thought. Not very cla.s.sy. Fish and chips, big amus.e.m.e.nt place, caravans down the beach. I can't see your Sarah in a place full of yobs.'

Malcolm smiled again. Ryan decided the smile was sadder than the scowl.

'You don't know Sarah. She has . . . simple tastes.' He seemed to hesitate, draw back from saying more, plunged on. 'What I want to know is anything which may affect and upset her. The sort of things people might still gossip about, take her unawares when she ought to forget. You got to know the local cop in Merton when you were investigating. You know what people said, I never did; lawyers never do. How long did it take them to find Charles Tysall and what did he look like?'

Ryan was wearing that s.h.i.+fty look, the one Malcolm knew all too well as sending s.h.i.+vers of alarm up his spine. The expression worn by a police officer choosing economy with fact, sitting where he was, a.s.sessing the odds on the consequences of truth, a hesitation complete in the second it took to weigh up the fact there was nothing to lose.

'They phoned me up when they found a body,' Ryan said carefully. 'I gave them a description, and it tallied. Tysall was seen walking out of town with the tide coming in anyway, so it's pretty clear already. Then this doctor turns up on site, used to know Tysall a bit, and, oh, yes, by the way, according to local rumour, knew the wife quite a lot better.' He let that sink in. Any deceased, in Ryan's eyes, had few virtues and high nuisance value, especially women.

Anyway, the doc is told in advance the body is probably Tysall, and he agrees, so Tysall it is.

Mind,' he added, s.h.i.+fting with ever greater discomfort, 'they also say they get three or four bodies per summer off that coast. Unidentified. Tramp steamers, suicidal fishermen. Christ, I'd hate to live in a place like that. Three pubs, one church, nothing else to do.

The wife loved it.

He knew he should not have spoken. His own reservations about that flimsy identification should have remained exactly what they were, his own. If he talked long enough round the subject, maybe Malc would forget where he was. No chance, Ryan thought, looking at the calm face only slightly flushed with alcohol while his own was glowing; should have known better. Malcolm was staring at him. Once you've let some cat out of a bag, Ryan thought, you can't shove it back in.

I wouldn't regard identification by a slight acquaintance of a drowned man sufficient beyond reasonable doubt,' said Malcolm, refusing to register anything but polite curiosity. A policeman under attack, even a friend, could become as wooden as the table. 'Do you know that close relatives misidentify their dead with monotonous regularity? If you believe a person is dead and you see a dead person, it seems to close the circle. I think we need another drink.' He walked to the bar with the bouncy step of a runner, one hand feeling for his wallet. I should never fool with lawyers, Ryan thought, especially when they can drink. He patted the silky red head of Malcolm's dog which grinned in response. Now there was a good female, constantly obedient, loving, asking no questions, telling no lies.

'Just one thing more,' Malcolm was saying as he sat. 'You gave the locals a description of Charles which tallied with the corpse. What description?'

Ryan wrinkled his face, genuinely struggling for memory. He knew Charles Tysall, oh yes, knew him from the files and the cheats and the women. Knew he was a murderer perforce, a man with a pa.s.sion to destroy, looking all the time for perfection in ideas and the opposite s.e.x, knocking it into pieces when he did find it, but for all Ryan knew, he'd only been face to face with the b.a.s.t.a.r.d twice. The dead wife, whom he'd taken to hospital in his car, he'd seen more than twice, each time less recognizable than the last, sometimes talking, sometimes not. His brow cleared.

I gave them the description Elisabeth Tysall gave me. I sat with her, waiting in casualty. She told me what he was like.'

'How?'

'She said he was hung like a donkey.'

The man in the beach hut made tea. He had a small gas stove stolen from an empty caravan, water which he collected from the lake near the small caravan site, a camping gaz cylinder stolen from another beach hut. These wooden edifices he liked above all; they reminded him of doll's houses. They stood along Merton's public beach, stringing away down the coast with all the grace of wet was.h.i.+ng on a line in a downpour, irregular, highly-coloured, lumpish and graceless, decorated to individual taste as if they could ever be permanent.

They were a series of garden sheds with stable doors on stilts, hired for the season, subject to wind and flood, raised far above the sand to cope with the high tides they were so unlikely to withstand. Some did, more by luck than judgement, remaining upright with peeling paint and all their romance gone long after some family moved on to where the children had alternatives other than an amus.e.m.e.nt arcade in the rain, and the parents were not sick of a caravan, the cold, the moaning and the spartan splendour of the beach. Merton's claim to holiday-making fame was for those with old-fas.h.i.+oned stamina, a taste for chips, sticky sweets, pints of ale and mugs of tea.

The leftovers were abundant. The man with the white hair was grateful for that.

My name is Charles and I have no name, he chanted, rocking back and forth in the small s.p.a.ce of the hut, watching the dawn rise on a Sunday morning. I rose from the sea like Christ from the dead. Sunday is a day of grace for sinners and I am not one of those. My name is Charles. There were occasions when he almost forgot. Just as he forgot what it was he had been when he had the name, until he remembered again.

The beach hut, last of the line, was slightly askew; the stool on which he sat also slightly crooked, so that he leaned, constantly to one side. The stick with the carved duck's head a.s.sisted him to redress the balance. It was against the local by-laws to stay in a beach hut at night, in case the wind got up and encouraged the endless hunger of the tide. People obeyed the rules. Charles held such people in contempt. Also those who treasured the small possessions he stole, but left them out for him to steal all the same.

People without names cavorted on the beach in front of the hut by day, looking to their own pursuits, their games, their dogs, their delicious children, never to left or right and never towards anyone old. He could walk amongst them as if he were invisible. When there was a crowd, faintly excited, they sounded like the geese which had travelled over his head the autumn before, when he decided his new existence became his so much it was better than the one before.

Who needed prestige, when they could reach out and reclaim it whenever they wanted? Who needed a fine apartment when an empty holiday cottage would do? Places like the one where Edward found him. Looking for Elisabeth and who had buried her, giving himself a reason to live. When he had done that, meted out his own version of justice, then he could go home.

It was necessary for a man without a name to have a reason. From his casual and contemptuous observation of humankind, no-one else needed such a thing. They just existed, like lumbering animals.

A child was attempting to clamber up the rickety steps of his beach hut. A plump little thing with a nappy rump and curly hair, grunting with the effort. Charles peered over the top half of the stable door, hissed, bared his teeth, watched as the child met his eyes, waddled away, crying.

Good. Oh, it was a clean little thing. He could have cooked it. The thought made him dizzy.

The tide was out again this morning, fickle b.i.t.c.h, leaving a huge expanse of mud and sand for the fools to play on. If only they knew how difficult it was to keep clean. It was the desire for fresh water which drove him the half mile into town, made him careless.

Between the daily business of eating and cleaning, cleaning was the worst. He slithered down the steps of the but with his stick, dived behind and up the bank into the dunes, to find the place where he met Edward, if the young man deigned to arrive. Sandwiches would be nice: he could live on sandwiches and save himself foraging time. It was only when he was hungry that the urge to destroy became so paramount. A hypoglycaemic rage, he would have said, when he had a name. Which he didn't, now. Nor half the command of words. Snippets of poetry was all. The haunting and cynical voice of Browning, all he remembered from a thousand books.

' The moment she was mine, mine, fair, perfectly pure and good: I found A thing to do, and all her hair In one long yellow string I wound Three times her little throat around And strangled her . .

He sang the words to the tune of a hymn.

From inside the worn pockets of the track suit rescued from behind the church hall, he pulled out the crumpled letters, the medical record card and the envelopes he had taken with such fastidious care from Dr Pardoe's desk in the surgery ' Darling Julian,' he mimicked, reading in a high and breathy voice. 'How wonderful to know that I shall see you soon . . . Your loving Elisabeth.'

Oh yes, he loved you, darling Elisabeth; the good doctor loved you to death; look at what he did for you, in case you should cause him a scandal. Look at the record of what he did. The last billet-doux, a prescription on the record card for enough diazepam to stun a crowd of women, let alone one.

Charles without a name looked out to the sea. 'Escape me?' he murmured. 'Never.'

Flames danced in front of his eyes, the morning sun blazing over shallow stretches of water left by the tide, moving and dazzling. He could burn down the Pardoe house, that was what he could do, a house he had entered and left a dozen times, all of them so mad or so preoccupied they never noticed. Charles could hear the crackling sound of fire, imagine the sight in the dark, as they rushed out screaming, for him to pick them off with a knife or a stick, one by careless one, until finally, he would stamp on the hands which had touched his wife, buried her without permission.

The images were soothing; Sunday was a day of grace. Charles without a name, listened for the church bells, hearing nothing but the wind in the pine trees at his back and the desolate mewing of the gulls on the beach before. One day soon he would go home. He wondered how he would ever get clean enough to go home - and where home was.

Edward despised the mere notion of going to church, quoted religion as the opiate of the ma.s.ses.

Joanna went to accompany her mother, also to put flowers on her father's grave. There had been no ordinary plot for Mr Pardoe, of course: he could not have been buried in the serried ranks of the others who now stretched out into the field behind, not he, but in a plot in the old graveyard, bought from the vicar long before as the price of charity.

Joanna thought of it now as she sat in the congregation with her mother, saw for the first time how people might resent Pa's privileged resting place. She was thinking too, of how much better her own life would be if the family did not own so much, how pleasant if she could ever present herself as an ordinary contender for friends.h.i.+p instead of a race apart, unable to enter a shop without putting someone in mind of owing rent. Perhaps if she had nothing, Rick would love her, but on this footing, she could never be equal, never belong, even here with her elders, singing the same hymn in a great, slow groan of tuneless sound.

Mother sang l.u.s.tily , Da, da, da da da daah, her voice loud and cracked, humming without words, the feathers from her hat curling over her face, another evening gown of purple trailing round her pink-shod feet beneath the mackintosh, her face flushed from yesterday's sun. n.o.body minds, Joanna thought defensively, so why should I? Mother was popular, always had been; men flocked to say hallo after church. Men had always flocked in that direction, Joanna realized, surprised at her own observation. Poor little Mouse, to be so pitied.

On the other side of the feathers, Julian gently took his mother's hymn book and turned it the right way up so that she could at least pretend she was reading the words. She ignored the gesture. On the last hymn of the service, he sensed rather than saw Sarah Fortune slipping out of the pew behind, late arriver, first to go, with her hair concealed under a straw hat. He shut his eyes for the final blessing, seeing nothing inside his own skull but the vision of her body in those circus cartwheels, hand over graceful hand across the lawn.

The sun struck with cruel brilliance as they emerged blinking from church, the sound of the organ receding behind them, the bells taking over. Groups formed on the paths between the graves, women with women, men with men, a division as old as time. Julian counted a small congregation of largely advanced years, hinged together by habit and the continuity of their lives rather than belief or commitment to virtue. That was certainly true of Rick's dad, from the amus.e.m.e.nt arcade, sedulous as ever towards the doctor even though he must have known the evidence Julian had seen on his own son, signs of drunken violence which were always explained away as the boy falling downstairs. Rick's dad, his cousin, PC Curl the village copper, others who may have needed G.o.d's forgiveness as much as Julian felt he did himself, but never prayed for it, believing, perhaps, as he did not, that a visit to Church wiped the whole slate clean.

There was a murmur at his elbow.

'Can we have a word, Doc, before you have to rush away?'

He liked the presumption that he was always busy, always in demand, disliked the deference. If it had been towards him for his qualifications and his value, he would have been pleased, but they bowed to a Pardoe for the supposition of money and influence. It was that which put him beyond companions.h.i.+p, nothing more, not even his own brusqueness, which they tolerated.

'What do you think, Doc? Time we began to take this ghost business seriously, don't you think? I mean, after Miss Gloomer, not fair, is it? Could have been this white-haired b.a.s.t.a.r.d did the fis.h.i.+ng shop, other places too. I mean, he's real all right. He ain't a ghost at all.'

'He hasn't hurt anyone, has he?' Julian said sharply. He couldn't make himself care, except about Miss Gloomer. If there was a poor, summer vagrant wandering about at night stealing the surplus, it wouldn't be the first or last to go of his own accord. The idea of hunting him was vaguely repellent, although not to Rick's dad, nor to PC Curl who always dramatized problems of law and order.

'My nephew seen him plenty,' Curl murmured. Julian laughed. Stonewall Jones was his favourite child, stubborn, discreet, incredibly brave in the face of a cut arm, chickenpox and anything which had ever ailed him, but not, surely, a reliable source of information.

S'not funny, Doc. Something's got to be done.'

'Such as?' he suggested lightly, refusing to take the lead. They were silent. No-one else wanted to do anything other than talk.