Croft tore the envelope along its sealed,
top edge, squeezed the edges to pop it and under a baleful glance from his
housekeeper, drew out the sheet of A4, unfolded it and read the two lines along
the top edge.
Check load glint on sow for the latest
suspension.
And where grown seed eat, they saw a bum
fall.
The first thing that struck Croft was that
every word was correctly spelled. There was no use of text shorthand, no
vernacular and the punctuation, such as there was, was precise. There was no
acrostic, but several possible anagrams. While Mrs Hitchins simmered in silent
disapproval of his blatant disregard for police instructions, he took out his
pen, snatched up The Independent and using the blank margins, began work
on the puzzles.
In the first line, the anagram stood out; load
glint on sow. Taking the word, check, in context, as an instruction
to investigate, Croft assumed that the anagram was a location and struck out
the word ‘towns’, then ‘land’, leaving O-G-L-I-O, from which the only word he
could get was ‘igloo’. No matter which way he looked at it, town’s land
igloo made no more sense than load glint on sow.
Scrubbing that and finding no words such as
‘road’ or ‘street’, he looked for abbreviations, like ‘Rd.’ or ‘St.’ but all he
could get out of it was Downing St., which he knew to be somewhere in West
Scarbeck. Even then he was left with the letters, O-L-A-L-O.
Then he noticed that the centre portion of
‘load glint on sow’ almost spelled Adlington, a small town south of Chorley on
the A6, where he had attended sixties-themed car boot sale some years
previously. The word had nothing to do with Scarbeck, but reminded him of
Allington, the village just along the road from Oaklands. Using that as a
starting point, he eliminated the letters of ‘Allington’ from the anagram and
the solution shouted at him. Allington Woods! He was being instructed to
check Allington Woods.
Frozen to his seat, he stared from the
sheet of paper through the windows and across the rear of the house, beyond the
high retaining wall to the dense foliage of the woods. Check Allington Woods.
He snapped out of his trance, leapt to his feet and ran.
‘Mr Croft,’ the daily called as he
disappeared into the hall.
He dashed for the front door and, barely
pausing to snatch up a dark blue, waterproof blouson, rushed out of the house
into torrential rain. One word rang through his head; a word not mentioned in
the note. Trish!
No point taking his car, he thought as he
ran between the blackened, sandstone pillars at the boundary of his property.
The entrance to the woods was less than three hundred yards along Allington
Lane and there was no proper track through the woods for a car.
His clothing was instantly soaked as he
struggled to put on and zip up the blouson while still running. He hardly felt
the cold, barely noticed that the thin coat, designed to stave off summer
showers, had already adhered to his wet shirt. He was due to attend a staff
meeting at the university at ten o’clock , the Vice-Principal was an
unsympathetic bitch when she wanted, and would not let him duck out on the
grounds of Trish’s abduction , but thoughts of the UNWE were furthest from his
mind. All he could think of was an anagram pointing him into the woods and the
remote possibility that Trish may be there, still alive. It was no better than
a faint and ridiculous hope. All logic told him that if she was there, she was
dead, but even that tiny spark of optimism, as distant and dim as the most
remote star ever seen by human eyes, drove him through the foul weather and
into the woods.
Croft hurried through thick grass and moss
that formed a soft and treacherous carpet underfoot. Which way, which way?
He was confronted with thousands of square yards of land, most of it a
condensed mass of uncontrolled vegetation. There were three or four paths
through the woods coming out in various places: Allington, the main road
between Allington and Esterham, the moors, and Huddersfield Road, but in the
dim light of a grey, rainy November morning, all he could see were dark trunks
and fading foliage, a riot of centuries old, arboreal propagation, twisted into
dark, often macabre shapes.
Was that a pair of green eyes staring at
him or his imagination? Croft blinked the rain away and they were gone.
He paused a moment to considered his
options. If this note was serious, and he had no reasons to suspect it was not,
then The Handshaker must have brought her here by car, and although there was
no vehicle track this side of the official car park, it was well known that
lovers often drove into the woods.
He cursed his hastiness. If he had stopped
to think, instead of rushing blindly out of the house, he would have brought a
flashlight with him so he could check the grass for signs of a car having been
driven this or that way.
He pressed forward, running along a barely
visible path of flattened grass that had been worn down by years of common
usage. His foot slipped, he threw out an arm to prevent a fall and his hand
landed in something soft and vaguely disgusting. Mud? Shit? He didn’t know and
didn’t pause to wonder. Instead he righted himself and pushed on, running
blindly, deeper and deeper into the woods, driven on by the image of a woman
struggling to cling to was left of her life, and the absurd hope that he would
be in time.
He tripped over an extended, half-buried
root and fell flat on his face. His clothing now thoroughly soaked, he swore,
got to his feet and stared wildly around. In the semi-darkness, monstrous
things lurked, moving, shifting stealthily, surrounding him. Something flitted
through the branches above him and he looked up in alarm, the rain streaming
into his eyes.
He took several deep breaths and forced
himself to calm down.
You are a rational, educated man and
there is nothing in this wood that can hurt you. Think. Use your mind.
Reason began to take over. He turned his
mind from imaginary fears populating the dark woods with hideous creatures,
turned it from The Handshaker’s actions, and concentrated on The Handshaker as
a person. What was he about? A braggart. A man who had successfully eluded
detection and arrest for two years and yet a man with a desperate urge to show
the world how smart he was. He would not wait around. He had not planted some
clever trap for Croft. That would not serve his ego. He had left a body here ,
Trish’s body? Croft prayed it was not , but he would not hide it too deeply. It
would not be in broad daylight, but it would be easy to see for someone who
knew it was there. So where?
There were, Croft knew, a number of
clearings in the woods, places where, during the summer months, visitors to the
area would pause to catch their breath, listen to birdsong, watch squirrels
dart through the trees. They were used infrequently at this time of year and
only then by couples seeking somewhere for discreet sex. Perhaps … No. Croft
cut the thought off before it could properly mature. Those same couples would
present too big a risk for The Handshaker. He could never afford to be seen
stringing up one of his victims. It had to be somewhere other than the
clearings. Somewhere deeper in the woods, somewhere where perhaps the
maintenance workers might find her when they came to repair the fences or trim
the trees overhanging Oaklands’ retaining wall, or clear out …
His thoughts came to a tumbling, stuttering
halt. Oaklands’ retaining wall! How many times had he complained to the council
about trees encroaching on his property? It was somewhere to his left; twenty,
thirty yards away. Not far. Would The Handshaker have the audacity to leave her
there where he may have been seen from the first floor windows of Croft’s home?
Would he have left her hanging so that in her final moments she would be able
to see the place where she had been so at peace with the world? He wanted Croft
to find her, so the answer was obvious. Yes, he would.
The rain ran down Croft’s face in a
continuous stream. Making his way towards the dark shadow that was the high
wall surrounding his property, he was suddenly aware that he was filthy. Less
than an hour ago, he had climbed out of the shower, slipped on a pristine,
white shirt, clean tie, brushed off his business suit and prepared for the
coming day’s argument with the Head of Department, the Bursar and
Vice-Principal. Arguments on student numbers, on research funding, on meeting government
targets. Now he was wet, mud-stained, clambering, scratching his way through
impossibly dense and untamed woods on the trail of a madman and his acts of
savagery. There was something surreal about it.
Close to the wall he looked in either direction.
The maintenance men had done their job well this year. Looking up he could see
the bland, leaden cloud unleashing its fury on the land. Following the line of
the wall east and west, there was not a single branch threatening his property.
Then he saw her.
At first he thought it was some strange
configuration of an oak tree; a branch hanging down at a severe angle,
depressed into a contorted bow by the weight of wet weather and the
restrictions of the wall just a few inches from its tip. As he narrowed his
eyes on it, he could see that it had a rough, human form. It was no overhanging
branch.
He trod the soft, damp grass along the wall
side, frequently stumbling on the uneven ground, putting a hand to the mossy
stone to support himself.
Under the tree, he trembled, afraid to look
up. Not Trish. Please don’t let it be Trish. He realised instantly that
his prayer was so unfair. Some woman had been hanged here, and if it was not
Trish, then it meant some other poor creature, every bit as innocent as his
partner, had met her doom.
Her feet were twelve to eighteen inches
from the ground, well within his line of sight. To avoid looking at them, he
concentrated upon his shoes, the black leather soaked and already showing a
line of ingrained, white salt. He was conscious once more of his own disarray,
the wet shirt sticking to his chest as it dried from his body heat, his legs,
trembling, aching after their mad dash, the trousers of his business suit
creased, bagging, soaked in a mixture of cold perspiration and even colder
rain. His heart pounded and he began to shiver, as if, with the end of his
crazy race into the woods, the cold had permeated for the first time. He knew,
however, that the beating of his heart and the shivering had nothing to do with
breathlessness or the cold.
He drew in breath, charged his lungs with
oxygen and stared at those feet, forcing a memory into his mind of Trish’s
feet. Did they look the same? It was impossible to know. Feet were not that
recognisable. They were bodily addenda, not enhancement. A woman’s feet did not
attract a man, her personality and the rest of her body did.
Slowly he forced his head up to look up and
up past the strong legs, the flat tummy, sagging breasts until they came to the
dead, staring features.
Relief flooded him, followed rapidly by
guilt at the relief, followed even more rapidly by fury.
In life Victoria Reid was still
recognisable as the woman whose face had been all over the previous evening’s Scarbeck
Reporter. She had been a vibrant and attractive young woman; a curvaceous and
sexy temptress, a little lacking in breast to be a true beauty, but
nevertheless holding forth promise as a thrilling partner. Now she was a mere
shell. The eyes were open, staring at the ground. Her tongue lolled grotesquely
from her mouth, the blonde hair was a straggled mass of weed strung around her
neck and face, the skin had a grey cast and a leathery look to it. Around her
face, she was bright red, and there was a barely visible weal where the narrow
rope had cut into her skin. Her legs too were livid, the blood having settled
to the lowest point. At her midriff, the skin had already begun to wrinkle,
prior to flaking. He did not know how long she had been here and he dare not
touch her. Naked, dehumanised, she had suffered god knows what indignities
heaped upon her by this evil man only to be faced by the final terror of a slow
and tortuous death, without even the blessing of a long drop to break her neck
and leave her unconscious while she expired.
Croft fell to his knees, the frantic dash
from Oaklands to this shocking site of execution, the horrifying sight up
above, had drained him of energy. He felt sick, wanted to throw up, but he
forced the queasiness down. In its place, there came a growing sense of rage. Rage
for this innocent woman whose only crime was to be in the wrong place at the
wrong time, rage against the arbitrary manner in which The Handshaker had
dragged her , and Croft , into his web of insanity, and rage against the man
himself. A maniac, whose clasped palm spelled death for anyone grasping it.