The Murder Pit. Mick Finlay

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The Murder Pit - Mick Finlay


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      I went over to feel the fire.

      ‘Stone cold. Hasn’t been lit yet today.’

      He climbed the wooden stairs of the caravan and peered inside the doorway.

      ‘Mrs Gillie? Are you there?’

      He stepped in. A moment later he turned back to me.

      ‘Have a look around the trees, Barnett. She might have had a fall.’

      It wasn’t a big copse. Perhaps a hundred yards over to the lane, and two hundred wide from the Ockwells’ field to the neighbours. I wandered around, calling her name. The trees were bare, the ground crisp with frozen leaf: not many places she could be hiding. I ducked under some rhododendron, where I found Mrs Gillie’s privy hole. I checked behind a couple of fallen trees overgrown with ivy and poked around a bramble thicket by the neighbour’s field. Mrs Gillie was nowhere to be found.

      ‘Look at this,’ said the guvnor when I got back. I followed him up into the caravan. It was dark inside. The shutters on the window were closed; the door, shaded by a hood, let in little light. He pulled the blanket from the bed and held it up. Underneath was her striped coat.

      The guvnor groaned as he lowered himself to his knee. He reached under the bed and drew out her soldier’s boots.

      ‘Gone out without her coat and boots,’ he said with a shake of his head. ‘On the coldest day of the year.’

      I lit the tallow candle on her table and we looked around the little wooden room. The guvnor was twitching, the way he does when he’s worried. He wrung his hands and cleared his throat; he stepped from one foot to the other.

      We went back outside, where he called out again. The crows cawed in the trees above.

      ‘Barnett, look!’

      He was pointing with his walking stick at the red box she kept her wooden flowers in. It was on its side in the leaves below the caravan, its lid hanging open. Two flowers, broken in pieces and dirty with mud, lay upon the floor.

      ‘Something’s happened to her,’ he said quietly.

      Just then we heard someone walking through the leaves on the other side of the stream.

      ‘Thank the Lord,’ he exclaimed, clapping me on the arm. ‘She’s back.’

      But it wasn’t Mrs Gillie who came through the trees. It was the two fellows we’d seen before up at the farm. They were dressed miserably, in greasy old smocks, patched and stitched so you almost couldn’t see what colour they were. Whatever they wore on their feet was wrapped round with rags thick with mud. The tall one wore an ancient felt hat that hadn’t any shape; the short one, the wide-faced Mongol, wore the same battered brown bowler with its rim torn off as before. His smile was full and warm.

      ‘Good day, sirs,’ he said, his voice all nose and little lung.

      ‘Good day,’ said the guvnor and me almost together.

      The fellow walked straight over to the nag and stroked its neck. ‘Hello, Tilly, how’s your leg?’ he asked, gentle as a child. The horse snorted, throwing its head back. ‘Oh, you hungry girl? That it?’

      The tall fellow stood watching as the Mongol felt under the axle of the caravan and pulled out a nosebag. He hooked it over the horse’s head, then rested the side of his face on the horse’s flank as it ate.

      ‘That’s better, Till,’ he murmured, running his hand up and down its belly. ‘That’s what you wanted.’

      ‘My name’s Arrowood,’ said the guvnor to the tall bloke. ‘This is Barnett.’

      The bloke didn’t reply. His weather-worn face was run through with thin blue veins, his head shaved like he had nits. There was an anger in his eyes I’d seen before in drinkers spoiling for a brawl, made harder with his sharp nose and upturned eyes. His wiry beard was more dried mud than hair.

      ‘Digger don’t talk,’ said the Mongol, coming over to us. ‘I’m Willoughby, sir.’

      ‘I’m most pleased to meet you, Willoughby,’ said the guvnor. ‘And you, Digger. Is Mrs Gillie here?’

      ‘Back soon, I reckon.’ Willoughby’s thick tongue curled out between the black stumps that were his teeth. Then, for no reason that I could see, he added, ‘I’m happy.’

      ‘That’s good to hear, my friend. And you both work at Ockwell’s farm, do you?’

      ‘Best workers, we are. Got three horses. Count Lavender, he’s the big white shire. You got a horse, sir?’

      ‘I’m afraid not.’

      ‘Mrs Gillie’s my friend, she is. She leave soup?’ he asked, patting his belly. ‘Got pinchy in here.’

      ‘No, Willoughby. The fire’s out.’

      Digger made an angry noise with his throat.

      ‘No soup?’ said Willoughby, stooping to check the pot.

      ‘I don’t think so, son,’ said the guvnor.

      Willoughby looked quick over his shoulder, across the stream to the field they’d come from. ‘Got to hurry. Get back to work.’

      ‘D’you know Mrs Birdie, Willoughby?’

      ‘She’s my friend, she is. I like Mrs Birdie.’

      ‘We like her too, Willoughby. How is she, d’you think?’

      ‘Happy, sir.’

      ‘I see.’ The guvnor reached into my coat pocket, pulled out the block of toffee, and broke off two pieces. He gave them to the men.

      ‘Thank you, sir!’ said Willoughby. His eyes shone in delight, his mouth wide like he was laughing. But instead of eating it, both men put the toffee in their pockets.

      ‘D’you think Mrs Birdie’s in any trouble?’ asked the guvnor in his gentle voice.

      ‘She’s happy. Pretty lady. And Dad is.’

      ‘D’you know why she won’t see her parents? They’re worried.’

      Willoughby shook his head. ‘Won’t see her parents, no.’

      ‘But why? D’you know why she won’t?’

      ‘Not allowed in the house. Me and Digger. Miss Rosanna say.’

      ‘You’re not allowed in the house?’

      ‘Not allowed. Get mud all over, see. Mud and stink. You ain’t got a horse, sir?’

      ‘No, Willoughby.’

      ‘We got three horses. I look after them, I do. You my friend, Mr Arrowood?’

      ‘Yes, my dear. Listen, can you bring Mrs Birdie to meet us? It’s very important we talk to her. We’d give you a shilling if you’d do it.’

      Willoughby shook his head. ‘Not allowed. She only come out for washing.’

      ‘Then how do you know she’s happy?’

      ‘She’s happy, sir,’ answered Willoughby. This time he was a little quieter, a little less smiley. He looked at me. ‘You my friend, Mr Barnett?’

      ‘’Course I am, mate,’ I said.

      ‘D’you know her, Digger?’ asked the guvnor.

      Digger looked up, the anger returning to his sharp face.

      ‘He don’t speak,’ said Willoughby.

      ‘Does he understand?’

      ‘Understands. Don’t speak is all, sir.’

      ‘Well, it’s good to meet you both. So very good.’ The guvnor grasped Willoughby’s arm and squeezed it. When he made for Digger’s, the


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