Blood Harvest

82

EVI WAS IN HEPTONCLOUGH. THE STREETS WERE QUIET again. She pulled her car up to the kerb and got out. If she’d ever been more tired in her life before, she really couldn’t remember. She crossed the pavement and walked up the short path to the terraced house. As she stood on the doorstep waiting, something white floated down and settled on her coat sleeve. The snow that had been predicted all day had arrived.
‘I can’t get an answer from Gillian’s flat,’ she said, when the door opened. ‘I’m worried about her.’
Gwen Bannister sighed. ‘Come in, love,’ she said. ‘You look fit to drop.’
Evi followed Gwen along the floral-patterned hall carpet and into a small living room. The carpet was worn in places, the room hadn’t been decorated in a long time. A television in the corner of the room was switched on.
‘Have you seen her today?’ asked Evi, glancing at the television, wondering if Gwen would turn it off.
‘Sit down, love. I’ll put the kettle on.’
The last thing Evi wanted to do was drink tea, but she sank gratefully on to the sofa. ‘I’m not sure we should hang around,’ she said. ‘I’m really quite worried. When did you last see her?’
‘About two hours ago,’ replied Gwen, after a moment. ‘She’s been helping with the search all day. Then, about five o’clock, when it was just too dark to go on, I saw her chatting to the vicar.’
The television was too loud. Evi flinched as the TV audience started applauding. ‘And did she seem OK?’ she asked.
Gwen shrugged. ‘Well, I think he might have said something she didn’t much like, because she spun on her heels the way she does and flounced off down the hill. Is she definitely not at home?’
‘There are lights on but she won’t answer the phone or the door.’ Evi had waited outside Gillian’s house for fifteen minutes, getting colder and stiffer. In the end, she’d had to try something else.
‘I’ll walk down and check on her,’ Gwen was saying. ‘Will it wait till I’ve had my tea?’
‘Probably,’ said Evi, although she really would have preferred Gwen to go immediately. ‘If you’re at all concerned about her, especially if she isn’t there, I need you to phone me,’ she went on. ‘If she seems basically OK, could you tell her that someone will call her in the morning? A colleague of mine from the hospital. She’s going to be taking over Gillian’s case.’
Gwen frowned. ‘I thought you and she were doing quite well.’
‘We were. I’m sorry, I can’t really go into it. Thank you for your help and please phone me if you need to.’ Evi pushed herself to her feet.
‘I will,’ said Gwen, as she did the same. ‘There’s been no more news on the little lad, then?’
Evi shook her head.
‘His poor mother. Makes you wonder what’s going on up here, doesn’t it? And in church too. I hear they’ve left a constable in the vestry overnight, just in case … well, it doesn’t bear thinking about, does it?’
Evi moved towards the door. Gwen was standing in her path but there really was no time for chatting. Evi made a show of looking at her watch and Gwen stepped aside.
‘I should be more sympathetic to Gillian, I know,’ Gwen began, as she followed Evi down the hall. ‘She lost her daughter and two other little girls she was fond of. Course, nobody thought it was anything other than coincidence, what with all the time in between each one. Four years in between Lucy and Megan, then another three before we lost Hayley. And what happened was so different. One fell, one disappeared, one died in a fire. How could we have known they were all linked?’
‘You couldn’t,’ said Evi. ‘Nobody should feel to blame.’ She stopped, three feet from the front door. All linked? ‘Gillian was fond of Lucy and Megan?’ she asked.
‘Oh aye. She did some nannying for Lucy when she was alive. Can you manage that door, love?’
‘I think she told me that,’ said Evi. ‘I didn’t realize she knew Megan as well.’
‘Used to babysit for her. Sweet little lass, she was. The family moved away. You don’t get over something like that, do you? I should have more sympathy with Gillian, I know that. Look, let me.’
Evi watched Gwen reach past her to open the door. She made herself step forward and over the threshold. ‘Thanks, Gwen,’ she said. ‘Keep me posted.’
Outside, Evi leaned against her car. Already a fine dusting of snow was covering the windscreen. She couldn’t lose her head now. Find the link, Steve had said: the victims were not selected at random, there is a link between them. Had she found it? Did she have enough to go to the police?
She drove down the hill, noticing Harry’s car outside the Fletchers’ house. A few seconds later she parked. Ignoring Gillian’s flat, she went to the door of the newsagent’s beneath it. The shop was in darkness. She banged on the door. Was there a bell? Yes, up there in the top left corner. She pressed it for five seconds, waited a second, then pressed it again. At the back of the shop, a door opened. Lights flickered on and someone was coming towards her. Let it be – yes, it was the woman she’d spoken to yesterday.
‘We’re closed.’
‘I need to ask you something,’ said Evi. ‘I was here yesterday, do you remember? I was trying to find Gillian?’
‘I’m not her keeper, you know.’ The woman was in her sixties, plump, short, with straight grey hair.
‘You told me you’d seen her catching a bus,’ said Evi. ‘Do you remember?’
‘I may have done,’ the woman said, folding her arms across her chest.
‘Did you see which bus she caught? Where it was going to?’
‘What is this, Crimewatch?’ The woman’s face fell. ‘It’s nothing to do with that lad, is it?’
‘It might be.’ Evi was desperate. ‘Please, if you can remember, it’s really important.’
‘It wasn’t one of those Witch Way buses,’ the woman said, her bolshie attitude gone. ‘They’re black and red, aren’t they?’
‘I think so,’ said Evi, although she never travelled by bus.
‘Green, that was it. I remember now, because I saw Elsie Miller getting on it and realized she must be going for her monthly hospital check.’
‘And the green buses go to …?’
‘Past the hospital, dropping off in the town centre.’
‘Which town centre?’
‘Blackburn, of course.’