I gather our coats up and we walk down the aisle and up the steps to go through the door into the vestry, which is full of plates of food and women dressed in black. It's as if the crows have left their nests in the castle and flown here and all started croaking at the same time. Mrs Evans said she would be in the little Meeting Room so I push my way through the women. Catrin grips my hand hard but I have to make sure I hold on to Angharad.
âBless them.' The words float above us. âPoor, fatherless mites.' A murmur of sympathy swells behind us. Angharad snatches her hand from mine and turns round to face the women and opens her mouth but I catch hold of her and push her through into the Meeting Room before she can say anything. What would she have said?
Mrs Evans sits by the grate where Mrs Davies Chapel House has lit a grudging fire. Her sister is with her and some other women I don't know. And there is Mrs Llywelyn Pugh sitting in the corner with tears running down her cheeks. She would have had her dead fox on today because it has turned so damp and cold. Poor Mrs Llywelyn Pugh. Maybe I could knit her a scarf before winter, if I could do it without Mam finding out. And then I could leave it for her so that she would find an anonymous gift on her doorstep one icy winter morning which would make her warm and happy.
âThank you, Gwenni,' says Mrs Evans and holds her arms open to her children. Catrin runs to her at once but Angharad holds back and slumps onto a bench by the door. âGwenni looked after Angharad and Catrin for me during the service,' says Mrs Evans to the other women and they all smile and nod at me and murmur words I can't hear.
Mrs Evans is dressed in a black darker and denser than a moonless night. There is no shine or gleam to it. Her hat with its big black veil is beside her on the bench and her hair is escaping its silver combs in smoky wisps around her face, working up to a halo again.
âYou leave Angharad and Catrin here with me, Gwenni,' she says, âand go to find your parents and have something to eat. The Chapel women have been very thoughtful and made plenty of food.'
I back out through the door and turn around to look for Mam and Tada but I can't see them in the crowd. The men have come in from the graveside now, bringing a misty steam with them from the rain, and the vestry is full of people. No one takes any notice of me, they're all too busy eating and talking, talking and eating and wondering aloud why their cups of tea are so long coming.
âShe's better off without him, and that's the truth of it,' says a voice behind me. It's Miss Owen Penllech.
âIt'll be hard to bring up those girls without a father. That little Angharad is a bit of a handful,' says Mrs Davies Chapel House. âElin would never say a word against him, you know.'
âShe always put a good face on it,' says Mrs Morris. âBut everyone knew what was going on, didn't they?'
âI suppose it could be just gossip.' Mrs Beynon sounds as if she hopes it isn't. Why is she here? Ifan Evans died the day before she ever came to our Chapel.
âYou haven't lived here that long, have you?' says Miss Owen Penllech. âHe's no loss, believe me.'
âWhy are you standing there, Gwenni?' says Mrs Twm Edwards.
âShe's keeping me company, ladies. Aren't you, Gwenni?' says Mrs Williams Penrhiw. âWasn't that a beautiful service the minister gave, Mrs Edwards? Quite beautiful.' She puts her arm around my shoulders, and draws me away. âYou're a good girl to help Elin with the children, Gwenni. It's difficult for her; little Angharad has taken it so badly. And there's so much to do. But there, it comes to us all sooner or later. And how's your nain? Don't tell me, I know what she'd say: Mustn't grumble, Bessie. I didn't expect to see her here, of course. She's not a one for funerals, is she? I thought Guto would be here, though. He's so fond of Elin. I was sure he'd come. You didn't see him on your way here with Angharad and Catrin, did you? No? I don't know what's to become of that boy. The police were asking him all sorts of questions, you know. And in English, too. The poor boy didn't know what they wanted from him. Well, he wouldn't, would he, being the way he is? You'd think they could see that. He's too innocent for this old world. No harm in him, just as your father says. On my word, Gwenni, there's your father by the vestry door. He'll be looking for you. Off you go.'
I spy Tada's family hair above the crowd and push through everyone towards him.
âTake a plate, Gwenni, and get some food before this lot falls on it,' he says. They've already fallen on it but I can see a plateful of egg sandwiches near us on the table. Inside my head I say: Please let them be Mrs Edwards the Bank's egg sandwiches. And I take three.
âDid Angharad and Catrin behave themselves for you?' says Tada. âThey must have been a bit upset, considering.'
âThey were good girls,' I say. âBut Angharad is angry all the time, Tada. I don't know why. She's angry with her mother.'
âI'm sure she's got no cause to be angry with Elin,' says Tada. âThe woman's a saint.' I look round for Mam but she's not nearby. And then I hear her. Her voice is rising and falling like the waves of my sea at night, and someone is calling, âIs Emlyn Morgan here? Find Emlyn; he'll take her home.'
Tada puts his half-eaten sandwich back on his plate, and the plate on the table, and the crowd parts to let him through. Mam is on her knees upon the hard wooden floor of the vestry, sobbing. Tada walks up to her and scoops her up in his arms and limps towards the door. I run after him.
âYou stay here and have something to eat, Gwenni,' he says. âI'll take your mam home to bed. It's her nerves, look. It's no good her staying here.' He heaves her over his shoulder. She seems to have fallen asleep now and her arms hang down his back like the dead fox's paws on Mrs Llywelyn Pugh's pink jacket.
As the vestry door swings shut behind them everyone starts to chatter again. Someone puts a hand on my shoulder and I spin around to see Mrs Williams Penrhiw.
âDon't worry, Gwenni, your father will take care of her,' she says. âNow, eat your sandwiches before they curl up on the plate. Oh, look, here comes the minister. I must tell him what a lovely service he gave . . .'
Mrs Williams Penrhiw winds down as the Voice of God holds his hands in the air as if he's blessing us all. âDear people,' he says. âDear people. A terrible mistake has been made. The police have arrested Guto Edwards for killing Ifan Evans and they've taken him away to the police cells in Dolgellau. Mr Pugh is going to take me there in his car to see what we can do for Guto. But I must see Mrs Evans and the children before I set off.' He shakes his head. âA terrible mistake.' He pushes past all the silent people, standing with cakes and sandwiches and cups of tea halfway to their open mouths, and goes into the Meeting Room and pulls the door closed behind him.
âOh, Gwenni,' says Mrs Williams Penrhiw. âOh, Gwenni. That poor boy. That poor boy. Innocent as a lamb, Gwenni.'
But everyone knows what happens to lambs, don't they? That's not a secret.
By the time Nain and I manage to get out through the front door, Lloyd George has disappeared. Nain and I look at one another. âYou go down and I'll go up,' she says and she runs up the road, her legs kicking out sideways, screeching, âLloyd George. Lloyd George.' I've never seen Nain run before.
I've been in her house all evening because Tada's taken Mam to the pictures to take her mind off the funeral. Tada said not to mention Guto being arrested to her yet. Poor Guto. Nain said: Those detectives of yours must be bird-brained if they think Guto killed Ifan Evans; they won't keep him in Dolgellau long, you'll see. She was bird-brained to let Lloyd George out of his cage when the window was still open. But I didn't tell her that.
I run down the hill, then slow down. Lloyd George might be sitting on the wall outside Nain's house. How far can budgies fly? He's probably scared; he's never been outside Nain's living room before. If we don't find him, the other birds will kill him and Aunty Lol will cry. She cried when we found the baby blackbird fallen out of its nest, and that didn't even belong to her.
âPotato flower. Potato flower,' I call. I try to squawk like Lloyd George. âLol. Lol.'
But he's not on Nain's wall. I cross the road to lean on the Youth Hostel's garden wall where the moss is wet and squidgy, and narrow my eyes to look through the rhododendrons in the front garden. But there are no bright blue feathers lying on the ground.
It's difficult to see anything in the mist and the rain. It's as if someone's spread Tada's old army blanket over the world. Lloyd George is so tiny, but his bright feathers would show up, wouldn't they?
I'm not sure which way to go now, down to the high street or along the track behind the primary school. Maybe Lloyd George made for the trees along the track. I meander along, trying to look up into all the leafy branches through the dense air. Lloyd George could be hiding anywhere. I call again in his voice, âPotato flower. Potato Flower.'
âWhat are you doing?' says a voice in English from the gloom beneath the trees. A boy's voice. I don't like boys. I peer into the gloom. It's Richard, Caroline's brother.
âLooking for an escaped budgie,' I say, and carry on walking.
He catches up with me, lighting his way with a torch. âAnd I'm escaping from my sister and your sister.' He smiles at me. âShall I help you find your budgie?' His two big front teeth have a gap between them like mine and Aunty Lol's. Aunty Lol's gap makes her a good whistler, but my gap doesn't seem to work. I wonder if Richard can whistle.
âIt's not my budgie, it's my Aunty Lol's,' I say. âYou don't have to help.'
âBut I'd like to,' he says. âWas that the budgie's name you were calling?'
I have to think for a second. He has freckles over his nose, like me, too. âNo,' I say. âThat's something Aunty Lol taught him to say: blodyn tatws. It means potato flower.'
âPotato flower?' says Richard. âWhat's his proper name?'
âLloyd George,' I say. âI can't stay here to talk, I've got to look for him.'
âMy grandmother's got a grey parrot called Blind Pew,' he says. âIt swears a lot. She says it's because he used to belong to a sailor. She has to put a cover over his cage when she has visitors.'
âLloyd George doesn't swear,' I say. âBlind Pew from
Treasure
Island
?'
Richard nods. âHave you read it?' he says.
âYes,' I say. âBut I like his verses better. You know:
The lights
from the parlour and kitchen shone out, through the blinds and the
windows and bars. And high overhead and all moving about, there
were thousands of millions of stars.'
âIt's a bit babyish,' he says.
Babyish? âI like it,' I say. âIt was in a book I borrowed from the town library ages ago with lots of verses and pictures.' The picture for that verse was exactly like my night-time sky when I'm flying.
âIt's not much good, is it?' says Richard. âThe town library. We've got more books at home.'
We haven't. Tada's got a book called
Teach Yourself Bricklaying
under his chair cushion that Mam got for him so he could learn to build with bricks as well as stones and earn more money. And Mam's got a cookery book she never uses, and Mam and Bethan and I have a Bible and a hymn book each. I've got more books in the box under my bed than everyone else in our house put together. But I don't tell Richard. His family must have hundreds of books, like Mrs Evans. I wonder if their shelves sag under the weight.
From the distance comes Nain's voice, still calling. âLloyd George. Lloyd George.'
Richard looks at me with his eyebrows raised.
âThat's Nain, my grandmother,' I say. âShe left the window open. Aunty Lol will be sad if she comes home to find Lloyd George has flown away and we haven't found him.'
Richard picks up a stick and begins to rattle the branches above us with it. Beads of water drop from them. âWe need to find him before the other birds gang up on him,' he says.
âBecause he's different?' I say.
âThat's right. Studying birds is one of my hobbies,' he says. âCome on, then.'
We walk along in silence, side by side. Richard is not like my bêtes noires. He's clever; he knows things. Alwenna knows things, too, but not the same kind of things. But I won't think about Alwenna. I look into the undergrowth and up to the branches on one side of the track and Richard rattles his stick everywhere on the other side.
âWhat if you frighten Lloyd George with that stick?' I say.
âThe fright'll make him fly out,' he says.
âIt might just make him put his head in his feathers and stay where he is,' I say.
âWell, we won't be any worse off than we are now, will we?' Richard says.
We look and look. But we don't see Lloyd George anywhere. The rain falls and falls, fine and misty; it runs down inside the neck of my school mackintosh and chills me. It's hard to see anything at all. Even the lights from the houses find it difficult to spill out into this mist.