Heartstone

We followed Wilf along an overgrown path between the trees, alongside the large stream that ran through the town. This would have been a pretty scene in other circumstances. ‘This stream fed the mill,’ Wilf called over his shoulder. ‘Here, Caesar!’ He called to the dog, which had got a little ahead and seemed impatient. He stopped, running a hand over his bald brown pate. ‘I walked this way to work for many years,’ he said quietly. ‘It was so busy then, carts coming down here with loads of iron. We come to the foundry first, the pond’s behind.’


We reached the clearing where the foundry had stood just as heavy drops of rain began to fall. All that was left was a pile of low ruins, jagged remnants of wooden walls, black and burned, festooned with ivy. At one end the smashed remains of a water-wheel leaned against a tall, round structure with rooks’ nests on top. The furnace chimney no doubt. Beyond the ruined building I glimpsed a long, rectangular expanse of brown mud, through the centre of which the stream now ran. Large overgrown mounds stood on the banks. ‘What are those?’ I asked Wilf, pointing.

‘Slag heaps.’

Seeing the empty pond, the dog tried to dart ahead. Wilf reached out and put a hand on its collar. ‘We’ll need to find something to dig with,’ he said. He led us into the ruins through a gap in the broken walls. Inside, the wide stone floor was covered with weeds. At one end stood the old furnace shed. The walls had almost gone but the big stone furnace stood blackened but untouched, a dark hole at the bottom: no doubt the hatch through which the semi-molten iron was collected. Wilf began picking among the rubbish on the floor. Barak and I stood looking around. The rain had started to come down steadily, pattering on our heads and on the stone floor.

‘The building is larger than I thought,’ I said. Even now I caught the tang of iron in the air.

Wilf looked up. He had unearthed the remains of a spade, the blade half rusted away. ‘If a fire started here it would take a long time to burn up the whole enclosure. And those walls weren’t high, anyone active could climb over.’

Ellen’s words came back to me again: He burned! The poor man, he was all on fire – One man, I thought. Was the other already in the pond?

‘I see what a wreck this place must have been after the fire,’ Barak said.

‘Burned almost to the ground,’ Wilf replied. ‘They found bones, of course. Burned right through, charred.’ He pointed to the furnace. ‘Just there.’

‘How many bones?’ I asked.

Wilf shook his head. ‘It was hard to say which bones were there, they were so burned. But there was only the remains of one pelvis. Priddis said the other bones must have been been burned beyond recognition. Now, sirs, come. Let us see what Caesar found.’

We left the ruined foundry. The rain was still coming down, and I blinked water out of my eyes. We went over to the muddy depression, which gave off a rotten stink. It was surrounded by reeds, dying now from lack of water. Wilf produced a length of cord and tied Caesar to a tree. The dog whined, looking longingly out at the mud. Wilf pointed at a spot near the centre of the pond, perhaps twenty yards in. I saw a trail of footprints leading to what looked like a large blackened stick protruding from the mud. Barak whistled softly.

Wilf pointed to a wooden pole protruding from the reeds. ‘The boat used to be tied to that post, see, there. When Master Fettiplace’s daughter was little she used to go rowing out on the pond. Someone could have taken that boat on the night of the fire and dumped the body in the middle.’ I suddenly thought, Ellen could. But why not leave it in the foundry?

Wilf’s mouth set firmly. ‘We’d best do it now, sirs.’

He put the rusty spade over his shoulders, and Barak and I removed our shoes and followed him onto the dried, cracked mud, walking carefully. Once the crust gave and Barak sank to mid-calf, swearing mightily as he pulled his leg out.

Wilf was first to reach the middle. ‘See, sir?’ he said quietly.

I looked down at the shrivelled remains of a human arm, dried skin and wasted tendons over bone. I was reminded of the saints’ relics that were forbidden now. Wilf took the spade from his shoulders and set it in a crack in the dried mud. ‘Stand back, sirs,’ he said.

‘Let me do it,’ Barak said roughly. ‘I’m younger than you.’

‘No, sir. It’s easy enough, even with this broken thing. I just have to dig through the crust into the mud. But you’ll have to help me get it out.’ Wilf thrust the spade into the mud. Barak and I watched, the rain tipping down relentlessly on our heads, as he dug. Underneath was a layer of stinking, viscous ooze. Once Wilf stopped, winced, then stood with his head lowered.

‘What’s the matter?’ Barak asked.

‘I think I hit the body.’ He had gone pale.

‘Do you want me to take over?’ Barak asked.

‘Yes, please.’

After about twenty minutes Barak had exposed an area of thick silty mud perhaps seven feet by three. Then he leaned over and reached down. He felt around, then tugged gently, dragging up another arm. He turned his head from the smell of the ooze. ‘Try to find the feet,’ he said. ‘If we try pulling it out by the arms it might come apart.’

Wilf and I knelt carefully on the wet crust and reached into the mud. The rain still beat down on us all and on those exposed, withered arms. ‘I’ve got a leg,’ Wilf said in a shaking voice.

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