Read The Haunted Season Online

Authors: G. M. Malliet

The Haunted Season (35 page)

BOOK: The Haunted Season
4.78Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“What she overheard was Konstantin asking Awena to say healing prayers over him. So far so good. Awena, completely used to this type of request and finding nothing odd about it, asked him to remove his glasses. He was wearing earphones—I guess he'd been listening to music or a podcast on his mobile, and the glasses got entangled in the earphones, so there was a bit of a fuss to disentangle him. Then she sat with him in the pew, talking with him, praying for him, holding his hand. Completely unafraid of helping this strange man who had come to her. You've met her—you know how she is. Compassion personified.”

Essex nodded. “Go on.”

“So there she was, holding the hand of a killer as deadly as a neutron star, as unstable as antimatter. And Awena looked carefully into the eyes of this creature and told him she had an ointment that would ease the dryness but that some things were beyond her ability to cure. When she told him the truth—that she could not cure him; only the gods could do that if they chose—he flew into a screaming, incoherent rage.

“He told her he had been praying to the face on the wall, and it had not healed him, either. ‘For seven days I've come here, like some peasant fool, and nothing's changed.' He called her a fraud. ‘You are all frauds. You're all phonies. Priests and shamans, witches and charlatans, all of you.' He grew more and more agitated, frustrated that his prayers had not been instantly answered—he'd lost faith in her power, which he had counted on as his last resort, and he quickly flipped over to a place where he wanted to destroy all that was holy. He pulled out a gun and fired a shot into the ceiling. According to Eugenia, the situation just spiraled out of Awena's control. One minute, he sat quietly listening to her, and the next, it seemed, he had her in a chokehold.

“Next he held the gun to her head: ‘Your husband will pay. While I still have light to see by, I'll make him pay.'”

“Holy mother,” whispered Sergeant Essex. “Pay for what?”

“God knows. He was ranting, out of his mind. Eugenia, now practically collapsed with fear, realized he was a madman. And knew that she had to do something, find some weapon to hand, before he spotted her. Or killed Awena. Or both.

“Then there was a sound. A scuffling sound near the face, coming from beneath it somewhere. It was little Tommy. Deliberately, we think, drawing attention to himself and away from Awena.”

“Tommy? Mrs. Hooser's son? What on earth was he doing there? Is that child never in school?”

“Not if he can avoid it, apparently. He'd escaped from his mother and ran just ahead of us to the church. Anyway, this is when Konstantin really lost it; he turned toward where Tommy had been and shot four bullets in a frame around the face in the wall. The next shot was through the forehead of the face. A lucky shot, given his eyesight—a perfect bull's-eye, obliterating it. Tommy took the opportunity to run like hell out the door. Fortunately, he's so small, the pews hid his progress.

“Of course, Eugenia would not know that six shots fired meant the handgun held one more bullet. Her knowledge of guns came from six-shooters she'd seen on the telly. Awena, the last person to know or care about guns, had no idea, either. She kept her cool, saying nothing to provoke him, and Eugenia stayed hidden. Then Eugenia thought she heard Awena say softly, ‘Please let me go. I have to get back.… Owen … Owen.' It was, says Eugenia now, like a prayer.”

“And that's when you and Max burst in,” said Essex. Like a child hearing a favorite story, she loved the retelling and was anxious that Cotton leave nothing out.

“That's right. Just as Eugenia was collecting herself, Max and I burst in. And because she is honing this story for the
Mirror,
here is the version she insists on telling: ‘I was suddenly overcome with a raging thirst. And all I could think of was the wine flagon on the altar. There was no reason for this thirst. What on earth is wrong with me? I wondered. It was hardly time for a drink. Although, when you think of it, when was there ever a better time?'

“I think Eugenia may enjoy a tipple or two in a private moment,” Cotton told Essex. “Anyway, ‘in a flash,' it all was made clear to her. Grabbing the flagon, she threw it straight at the man's head. Bull's eye. It didn't knock him out, but because he couldn't see it coming—remember his eyesight—it completely startled him. Even better, the liquid connected with the elements in the earphones around his neck. The resulting shock was minuscule, just unexpected enough to jolt him. It was the split second Max and I needed. Max put Owen into the collection basket; I flung myself at the guy, Max flying through the air right after me.

“But Eugenia reached him first.”

“Right. It was just chaotic.” Cotton shook his head. “Pure chaos.”

“And then came the explosion. Max had the gun and was already turning back toward Owen; taking him from the basket, he shielded him from the blast. You, meanwhile, had wrestled the suspect to the ground—both you and he and Eugenia were behind one of the pews. Protected.”

“That's right.”

“And only Awena still sat near the bomb,” said Essex. “The guy had planted it in that makeshift altar beneath the face—an IED hidden among all the flowers and petitions and photos people had left. Perhaps he was hoping it would go off while people were praying there.”

Cotton breathed a sigh. “Right. But thank God,” he added, “he didn't use shrapnel. We'd have had a far worse outcome if he had.”

“Wait a minute. Not that it really matters—we've got him for this—but how can we know this was the same guy who killed Max's friend Paul? We have Max as an eyewitness, sure, but it was ages ago, and he barely had a glimpse of the suspect. I think it was the glasses he remembered more than anything.”

“There was a security camera near the scene of Paul's murder. Grainy footage, but good enough. Enhanced, as we can do more and better these days, it will help ID him. It shows him attaching a magnetic bomb onto the car—the car Max would have himself been killed in had Paul not taken his place.

“But there was more—evidence we at first knew nothing about. Max had a grim souvenir of that day of Paul's death. Preserved on the top shelf of his closet was the shirt he, Max, had been wearing the day of Paul's murder, and on it was a spot of blood. Max handed it over to the prosecutors. He had assumed all along it was Paul's blood on the collar, but it turns out it is not—it is the killer's.

“The DNA on that collar is a perfect match for the blood of Konstantin Konstantinov. He managed to injure himself that day; he didn't run fast enough after planting the explosive.

“Analysts need only a speck of blood to tie him to the scene. And thanks to Max, we have it.”

 

Chapter 28

FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE

One day many weeks later, as the case wound its way through the court system, Essex and Cotton met again, this time over bangers and mash (her) and a vegetarian Cornish pasty (him) in the police canteen.

“When they searched Konstantin's flat, they hit pay dirt,” Cotton told her. “Sulfuric acid, nitric acid, phenol, wiring, lab equipment, you name it. A one-way ticket to the U.S., flying under a false ID, of course. He also had some experimental stuff—MI6 is not talking about it, not to the likes of us yokels. But according to Max, who still has his channels, it's the sort of thing that is not routinely screened by security. Pity is Konstantin didn't blow himself up long before, but we have him now. He had to have had accomplices, given his eyesight, and that's where they're putting the pressure on him, to find out. He'll talk.”

“There is the strangest rumor going around,” began Essex hesitatingly. “They say he's already made a written confession to the whole thing. Helpfully, he's naming names of some of his worst colleagues.”

“Good. Glad to hear it.”

“But … Remember he came to Nether Monkslip on a sort of pilgrimage, seeking a cure. For his eyes?”

“Right.”

“The face drew him there, and stories of Awena's powers, and legends of Nether Monkslip as a place of healing. The stories of miracle cures, especially for people losing their vision—the ties with Monkbury Abbey and the nuns and so on. He hung around the pub at the Horseshoe, where he was staying, soaking up the gossip. Of course he heard of Max, and probably recognized him from the news photos. Came to hear all about him, Awena, the baby.”

“Yes,” said Cotton tersely. He was terse because he was having the most unprofessional thoughts about the case, in rare moments wishing he'd used a little more force on the guy. Just a little more. He'd had him in a chokehold, and … He had talked about this to Max, who did not surprise him by saying, “Paul's wife has a right to see justice done, in court. As for me, I am satisfied to think of him spending his life in jail, detained at Her Majesty's pleasure. Besides, think of what he knows, what he might tell us one day.”

Cotton returned his attention to what Essex was saying.

“They say his sight has come back.”

“What?”

“Konstantin. Our guy. Our
bad
guy. His sight has been restored. And that's why he's confessed.”

“He had some operation? What?”

“No, he was
cured.
A miracle. He says he woke up one morning and his sight was restored. Presumably by the face on the wall.”

“Impossible.”

“So the prison doctors say. That's why he wore those glasses in the first place, to protect what was left of his eyesight. His world was going dark, and so he flailed about looking for a cure.”

“Impossible,” Cotton repeated.

“Me, I think he may have been cured by Awena,” Essex continued, ignoring him. “I wish my gran had been around for this; she lost her vision the last few years of her life. Remember Awena sat by him and tried to comfort him, urging him to open himself to what was possible but to be ready to accept what wasn't possible. Eugenia said she held his hand. There was nothing about this guy that wasn't scary—the owner of the Horseshoe said he was grubby, dirty and disheveled, and he'd soon been ready to toss him out—but nothing scared Awena. We will never know for sure, will we? What cured him? But something did. Make that Something with a big
S.

Cotton, who up until now had had little use for the supernatural, still found himself shaken to his core. But he would not let it show. Essex was apparently more easily swayed by reasons beyond this world.

“Konstantin will end his days in prison,” said Cotton. “So now he'll have a clear view of those concrete walls. On a good day, he might see birds flying free overhead and wish he could join them.”

He became lost in thought, separating the peas from his pasty with a fork and lining them up into a grid of four across on his plate. He surfaced to hear Essex say, “… Chanel doing?”

“Hmm? Well, she'll do a lot better if she wises up and throws Bree into it, but so far she won't. If Chanel were Bree's lover, a conclusion we simply leaped to, there might be hope that she'd see the light. But since Chanel is her mother—a mother protecting her child, as she sees it—that whole mother bear thing … well. She may turn, but it's a much, much longer shot. In a sort of role reversal from the John the Baptist story, it was the mother doing the daughter's bidding.

“Max was right, of course. Bree's maiden name was Porter. Of course, we knew that, but since Chanel was nowhere near to being a suspect, we never made the connection. Never thought to look at Bree's birth record while we were busy looking up Peregrine's. But there it was, clear as day. How many Bree Porters born in Wiltshire to unwed teenagers named Chanel can there be in the world? Of course, Chanel later married briefly and became Chanel Dirkson. Even so. She lied about that, by the way: she told several villagers that she'd never been married. I suppose that in pretending that Dirkson was her maiden name, she was trying to bury the fact of her relationship to Lady Baaden-Boomethistle, née Bree Porter. Which suggests she was planning something bad when she moved here. Had probably moved here at a summons from Bree. Otherwise, why lie about something so innocuous?

“Looking back further, with the help of Interpol—Musteile remains beside himself over that and will
not
shut up about it—we found Chanel's birth record in Russia.”

“I still don't get—” began Essex.

“How Max made the connection? That conversation Destiny overheard—part of the problem she was having was that they were speaking partly in Russian, Chanel's native tongue. Chanel was born in Russia but came to the UK as a young girl when her mother married a Frenchman, later settling in Wiltshire. It was in Wiltshire that Chanel gave birth, as a young unwed mother, to Bree. I wondered at the names, the way they were sort of Frenchified—I mean really, Chanel and Bree?—but Porter in this case is not of English origin, but French.

“Anyway, the mother taught the daughter what she remembered of the Russian language and they sometimes slipped into old habits as they talked. What Destiny heard as ‘not yet,' for example, being used in a way that was slightly out of true in English, was
nyet,
or no.

“I'd imagine a lot of the garbled language Destiny overheard and couldn't understand that day had a Russian phrase or two thrown in—this was a sort of private language, a pigeon Russian, if you like, that the pair had adopted. Another example: Destiny heard one of the women say the word
obit,
used in a strange, ungrammatical way. What the woman actually was saying was
ubit
. The English
obit
was close enough in meaning that it made sense, but not quite. The Russian word
ubit
means ‘to kill' in English. The woman, probably Chanel, knew someone who could
kill
for them.

BOOK: The Haunted Season
4.78Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Apocalypse Crusade 2 by Peter Meredith
Sold by K. Lyn
Red Lightning by John Varley
The Gift of Battle by Morgan Rice
Seams of Destruction by Alene Anderson
Ghost Warrior by Jory Sherman
A Woman so Bold by L.S. Young
Flash Fire by Caroline B. Cooney
Jacq's Warlord by Delilah Devlin, Myla Jackson