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Authors: Robert Swindells

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BOOK: The Shade of Hettie Daynes
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Harry smiled. ‘Lunch time, Rob turned his peas and mashed potato into a smiley face. The supervisor wandered past, said Rob was daft as Hettie Daynes. Who
is
Hettie Daynes, Mum?’

Christa slid the lasagna into the oven. ‘Hettie Daynes is an ancestor of ours, Harry. My great,
great
aunt to be precise. Something bad happened to her and she lost her mind. Took to tearing her clothes and weeping in public. Nobody knew what was causing her such distress. They started referring to her as Daft Hettie, and that’s where the expression came from.’ She straightened up, closed the oven door. ‘It was cruel and stupid to use Hettie’s name in that way, but people weren’t very PC in Victorian times.’

Harry nodded. ‘Wonder they didn’t stick her in the loony-bin.’

‘We say
psychiatric hospital
, Harry,’ retorted Christa tartly, ‘not loony-bin. And no, they didn’t lock her up. She disappeared, never to be seen again. Anyway.’ She glanced at the clock. ‘Tea’s in forty-five minutes: just enough time to do your homework.’

Flipping homework
, mumbled Harry as he trailed upstairs.
Up till eleven last night for Mottan, and at it again the minute I walk in the door
. At least it was English this time, not history.

He’d been all right this morning though, old Mottan.

‘Ah – a
dry
one,’ he exclaimed when Rob handed over his assignment.

‘Yessir,’ Rob joked. ‘You see, I
had
my annual shower Sunday night.’ It was risky, but the teacher just laughed.

Receiving Harry’s folder he asked, ‘You found the library then, young Midgley?’

Harry shook his head. ‘No need, sir, my computer decided to work.’

Mottan treated him to a wry smile. ‘Perhaps you’ll take the same decision yourself, laddie.’ Probably a decent bloke really, Mottan.

Can’t say the same for Carl Hopwood though. He approached the pair at morning break. ‘Wise of you not to grass me up,’ he purred. ‘I get quite irritated when somebody splits on me, and my associates don’t like it either.’ He smiled nastily. ‘Get on the wrong side of a Hopwood and you’ll find yourself in deep water.’ He forced a laugh. ‘
Deep water
– geddit?’

Prat.

SEVEN

IT’S DARK AFTER
tea in October, and Bethan wasn’t allowed out after dark. Trouble was, she couldn’t stop thinking about the ghost.

No such thing according to Mum, but she’d seen it. A woman in a long skirt. If Bethan stared up at the ceiling when she was lying in the dark, the woman always appeared, standing in the middle of the floating shapes and phantom lights you always see when you do that. Even with her eyes screwed shut she’d see her for a while, till she’d slowly lose shape and melt to a blob.

Bethan didn’t see the ghost in the daytime, but
it
was inside her head and Bethan couldn’t get rid of it. It was interfering with her work in class.
I’ve got to see her again
, she thought.
If I can just get one more look, perhaps I’ll be able to stop thinking about her
.

At break time she talked to her best friend, Alison. Alison’s mum wasn’t strict, Alison got away with all sorts of stuff. Sometimes her mum let Alison have a friend to sleep over, even when it wasn’t her birthday or anything.

‘Hey, Aly,’ said Bethan. ‘D’you want to see the ghost?’

‘What ghost?’

‘The ghost of Wilton Water of course.’

Alison shook her head. ‘Don’t believe in her.’

‘Well neither did I, till Harry took me to see her.’

‘You
saw
her?’

‘Yes, and now I can’t stop thinking about her.’

Alison laughed. ‘You mean she’s
haunting
you?’

Bethan nodded. ‘In a way, yes. I need to see her again, then maybe she’ll leave me alone.’

‘So why me? Too scared to go by yourself, is that it?’

‘No, but I’m not allowed out after dark. I was wondering . . .?’

‘What?’

‘Well, if I could sleep over at yours, say on Saturday? We could go up the reservoir after tea. Your mum wouldn’t mind, would she?’

‘ ’Course not,’ smiled Alison. ‘And I wouldn’t mind checking out this so-called ghost myself. I’ll ask Mum and give you a ring, OK?’

‘Magic.’

Alison shook her head. ‘No magic, no ghost, but we’ll have a laugh. See ya.’

EIGHT

‘BIG ISSUE
, SIR?’
said the thin man to the beefy one in a blue suit.

It was Thursday lunch time, and Councillor Reginald Hopwood was on his way to The Feathers for his customary plate of something and a pint. He didn’t break his stride, dashing aside the thin man’s magazine with a dimpled hand. ‘Get a job,’ he snarled, ‘instead of hanging around begging, making the place look untidy.’

‘This
is
my job,’ protested the thin man to the councillor’s receding back. ‘I’m an official vendor.’

‘Official scrounger, you mean,’ growled
Hopwood
as he strode away. He was a busy man, and a hungry one. The vendor gazed after him for a moment, then shrugged and turned away.

The pub was busy too. The landlord looked up as Hopwood shouldered his way through the crowd.

‘Afternoon, Councillor!’ he boomed. Reginald liked to be called Councillor, especially where a lot of people could hear. ‘The usual?’

Hopwood nodded. It pleased him that the landlord knew what he always drank. It showed he was a valued customer.

He carried his pint of bitter to the corner table the landlord reserved for him every Thursday. He sat down and sipped his beer, watching the door. A minute or two later Stan Fox came through it.

‘Now then, Councillor.’ Fox slipped into his customary seat and grinned at Hopwood across the table. ‘Anything I should know?’ Stan Fox was senior reporter on the
Rawton Echo
, the town’s weekly newspaper. Hopwood kept him informed about council business, and Fox made sure the councillor’s name and picture graced the front page from time to time.

Hopwood smiled. ‘We’ve decided who’ll do the reservoir job.’

The reporter looked at him. ‘Who?’

‘Forgan.’

Fox frowned. ‘But I thought it was going to be Wexley.’

The councillor nodded. ‘It was, but Forgan came up with an offer we couldn’t refuse.’

‘What offer?’

‘Playground for the school, state of the art, no charge.’ Hopwood shrugged. ‘Rude to say no.’

The reporter grinned. ‘And for you?’

‘How d’you mean, for me?’

‘I mean for you personally, Reginald. You had to approve Forgan. What did they give you?’

‘Well.’ Hopwood winked, rubbed the side of his nose with a finger. ‘Expenses, you know? The usual out of pocket expenses.’ He looked at the reporter. ‘That’s off the record, of course.’

‘Of course.’ Fox raised his glass. ‘To you, Councillor.’ He grinned. ‘I assume lunch is on you?’

‘Naturally,’ purred Hopwood.

NINE

THURSDAY, AFTER TEA
. Christa Midgley riffled through a sheaf of bills on the table while Harry and Bethan did the washing up.

‘Mum?’

‘What is it, Bethan?’ She tried to keep the irritation out of her voice, but she was tired. Tired after her long day working down the minimarket: tired of the endless struggle to make ends meet.

‘Can I sleep over at Alison’s, Saturday night?’

Her mother sighed. ‘Why, is there a party or something? It isn’t Alison’s birthday again
already
, surely?’

Bethan giggled. ‘No, Mum, she only has one a year, in May. This is a sleepover for no special reason, it’ll just be her and me. Can I, Mum,
pleeeease
?’

Christa scribbled something on the bottom of the gas bill, looked up. ‘Has Alison asked her mother if it’s all right to invite you?’

‘ ’Course. She’s the coolest mum in Wilton, Mrs Crabtree. Lets Alison do just about anything she wants. Probably won’t even notice I’m there.’

Christa shook her head. ‘No, and that’s what worries me, Bethan. I was at school with Norah Crabtree, and she was just the same then. Didn’t let anything get to her. She’d come to school looking like a trainee bag lady, and sit gawping out of the window all day. She wasn’t Crabtree then of course, she was Nolan. Anyway, I can never quite relax while you’re at Alison’s, sweetheart.’

‘Oh, Mu-um!’ Bethan stood with a plate in one hand and a tea towel in the other, looking tragic. Harry came up behind her and squeezed out the dishcloth over her head. She shrieked, turned and swiped at him with the tea towel. The plate
slipped
out of her hand and shattered on the tiles. Bethan burst into tears.

It came right in the end. Harry was sent to his room till bedtime, no TV. The pieces of plate were picked up, binned and forgotten. Bethan got a hug, and her mum relented.

Ghost-watch was go.

TEN

AT MORNING BREAK
Friday, Rob and Harry strolled round the perimeter of the all-weather pitch. It was a still, warm day, with a thin haze that hinted it might be one of the last.

‘There’s a ginormous digger by the reservoir,’ said Rob. Wilton Water was just about visible from his house.

‘Yeah?’ Harry kicked a pebble. ‘It’s starting then. We should check it out, home time.’

Rob shrugged. ‘Sure, why not.’

The day dragged. Fridays always drag, like the weekend’s dug its heels in, doesn’t want to come.
The
saying
time marches on
should have a bit added to it that says:
except at school
.

Three thirty came at last, and the two friends headed for Wilton and the reservoir, wading through drifts of fallen leaves. On the banks of Wilton Water gorse still flowered, though sparsely. The light was fading, but the booms of two earth-movers stood silhouetted against the sky at the western end, where the overflow lay.

‘Look like dinosaurs don’t they?’ said Rob.

‘Uh . . . oh, yeah.’ Harry was gazing where he and Bethan had seen the ghost. The water there lay black and still, no figure stood on its surface. He shivered though, and cried out when somebody emerged from a nearby clump of alder.

Rob laughed at his friend. ‘What’s
up
, you numpty, it’s only Steve.’

BOOK: The Shade of Hettie Daynes
11.11Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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