House of the Lost (49 page)

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Authors: Sarah Rayne

BOOK: House of the Lost
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‘Yes. I always hoped you didn’t.’

‘Of course I knew,’ she said. ‘But I wanted to get away from London after his death. I found this house. It was very different then, smaller, shabbier, but there was a good feeling about it. You all thought it was Helen’s discovery, didn’t you? But I found it long before Helen persuaded Desmond to buy it. I lived here for a little while and liked it. I felt safe. I missed John very much, but at least I didn’t have to wonder whose bed he was in, or whether there would be enough money to pay next month’s bills.’ She leaned back, her eyes going over the warm, comfortable, rather shabby room. ‘And then,’ she said, ‘I met someone and he turned my entire world upside-down.’

Her eyes went back to the sketch, and very softly, Theo said, ‘Matthew.’

‘Yes, I met Matthew,’ said Petra, ‘but that’s not who I meant.’

‘Who?’

‘Matthew’s father,’ she said, and smiled. ‘I met Andrei.’

Into the silence that followed this, Theo said, ‘So Matthew did find him. He did get him out.’

‘I don’t know how much you know,’ said Petra studying Theo thoughtfully. ‘But you clearly know about Matthew and Andrei . . . Yes, Matthew got him out of Romania and they came to England.’

CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO

Romania, early 1980s

Matthew stood just inside the terrible room, and stared numbly at the gaunt man who was his father.

And then Andrei said, ‘Matthew.’ It came out in a whisper, but with such trust and such love, that the emotion that had held Matthew motionless vanished. He reached for Andrei’s thin rough fingers and clung to them, and thought: if I live to be a hundred I will never forget how I feel at this moment. He was aware of tears stinging his eyes, and he blinked hard, because he would not – he absolutely would not – break down. Not yet. But, oh God, what had they done to him in here? He’s so fragile, so frail.

In as unemotional a tone as he could manage, he said, ‘Explanations later. I’m hoping to get you out, but it could be dangerous. We might be caught, and—’

‘If we’re caught, I’ll be shot,’ said Andrei. ‘That’s something I’ve faced for almost ten years. But I’m damned if I’ll let you be shot as well.’ Matthew heard, with delight, a flicker of the old fervour and knew that whatever else might have been done to his father, his mind was untouched. As he moved to open the door, Andrei turned back to take the hands of the other men.

‘It’s not goodbye,’ he said. ‘You know if I can come back for you, I will.’

They nodded and murmured good luck, and Matthew peered into the passageway.

‘There’s no one around,’ he said.

‘No, but there will be soon for the evening work shift,’ said Andrei. ‘You have keys?’

‘Yes, but I don’t know how many doors they unlock, and at any minute the guard I knocked out might be found.’

‘I think all we can do,’ he said, ‘is walk out openly as if you’re taking me somewhere.’

‘Where? Where would I be taking you?’

‘You’d better say to the solitary room. It’s on one of the lower levels.’

‘All right.’

‘If we make it to the main doors, pretend I’m being transferred and we’re waiting for transport.’

‘Where would they transfer you?’

‘Cluj or Aiud perhaps. I think they’re still operating as prisons. Either should be safe. Did that guard have any handcuffs on him?’

‘No,’ said Matthew.

‘Pity. If you could handcuff me it would look more authentic. What time did you come in? Don’t bother to tell me the cover story, not now.’

‘After five. It’s nearly seven now.’

‘That means the guard should have changed, so they won’t recognize you from when you came in.’

‘You’re very sharp about details,’ said Matthew.

‘I’ve had a long time to think about such things,’ said Andrei. ‘The main thing to remember about an escape is to behave with panache. Bluff.’

‘I’m not sure I’m very good at that.’

‘You got in here, didn’t you? I think you’re very good.’

It seemed to Matthew that as they went along, the stone walls of the old fortress closed round them, as if Jilava itself was trying to stop them escaping. With every step he expected to hear shouts and running feet, but nothing happened to disturb the brooding silence. They came in sight of the guardroom and the open courtyard.

‘This is the test,’ said Andrei. ‘This is the dangerous part. You’d better hit me, as if I’m resisting.’

‘I can’t!’

‘Matthew, just do it,’ said Andrei sharply. ‘Wait until they can see us properly. I’ll give you the signal.’

They were within ten yards of the guardhouse when Andrei gave a cry, and appeared to flinch from Matthew. Matthew saw a movement within the guardhouse, and feeling slightly sick, raised his hand and dealt his father a blow, managing to land it on Andrei’s shoulder, praying it would look authentic from a distance.

‘Trouble?’ called out the guard. Matthew saw with relief that his father had been right and it was a different man.

He said, ‘Bit of a rebellious one. I’ve got him in hand, though.’

‘It’s Valk, isn’t it?’ said the guard. ‘Trouble-maker, that one. Where’s he going?’

‘Cluj,’ said Matthew, adding, ‘Orders from higher up.’

‘Oh, not far then. Where’s the transport?’ For the first time a questioning note sounded in the guard’s voice.

‘It should be here – isn’t it?’

‘No.’ The guard had stepped nearer and was looking at Matthew more intently.

‘I don’t know you,’ he said, suddenly sounding suspicious, and Matthew saw him reach for his pocket. He did not wait to find out what for. He sprang forward, and drove his clenched fist against the man’s jaw. The guard staggered back, and Matthew dived on top of him, this time managing to knock the man’s head hard against the concrete floor.

As he straightened up, Andrei said, tersely, ‘Drag him into the guardroom. Pray no one comes along, and get the uniform off him.’

‘We go out as two guards?’ said Matthew.

‘Yes.’

As they stripped the uniform from the guard, and his father scrambled into it, Matthew saw light and energy shining in Andrei’s eyes.

‘Keep talking to me,’ said Andrei, as they crossed the courtyard. ‘We need to appear casual.’

‘Yes.’

‘Where do we go?’ he said. ‘They’ll realize I’ve gone before much longer and they’ll have the Securitate out scouring the countryside for miles.’

Matthew had already worked this out. ‘Sister Teresa – you remember her? – is going to get Mara and Mikhail to England, to the sisters’ convent there.’

‘England?’

‘I know it’s a long way from here,’ began Matthew.

‘Yes. Yes, it’s an awfully long way. There’ll be so much to leave behind.’ Then Andrei squared his shoulders, and said, ‘But the further away the better. What about papers and passports?’

‘Mikhail’s getting the October Group to sort those out for himself and Mara. If they can get two people to England, I should think they can get four,’ said Matthew. ‘Will you risk it?’

‘Yes,’ said Andrei. ‘I don’t think there’s anything to keep me in this country. Once I believed there was, but all the searching and the enquiries . . . Yes, I’ll risk it.’

The energy was still in his eyes and his voice as they walked along the road, but when they came within sight of the town, he faltered and Matthew had to grab his arm to prevent him from falling.

‘I’ll recover soon enough,’ he said. ‘I’ll be all right.’

England, early 1980s

He did recover, but Matthew knew he was not really all right. He knew Andrei got through the tense, exhausting, complex journey to England by sheer force of will. When they finally reached the tiny village of Melbray and St Luke’s Convent, he was scarcely able to walk.

Mara and Mikhail were already there. As one of the October Group had pointed out, passports and visas could not be created overnight, and Matthew and his father had had to hide out in the Romanian convent for nearly two weeks before they could leave. That, too, took its toll on Andrei; Matthew saw him start every time he heard footsteps, and at night, in the small room they shared, he heard his father’s agonized dream-ramblings.

When they arrived in Melbray, Mikhail was away attending an interview for what the English called a sixth-form college – a place where he could complete his education and go on to university. Matthew was grateful for the smattering of English he had learned in Budapest, but he could not manage the odd English place names very well.

‘It’s safe here,’ Mara said, almost at once when she met them. ‘We can’t be found here.’

They were given a room overlooking lawns and lanes, and were welcomed at meals in the long refectory. No one fussed, no one asked questions; they were free to do whatever they wanted. ‘We are accustomed to helping people from troubled lands,’ said one of the older sisters.

England was almost exactly like the childhood worlds Matthew had created. Here were the cool green fields and silvery rivers, and the houses with flower gardens. Here were the shops with everything anyone could want to buy all arranged on the shelves. He thought Melbray beautiful, even in the midst of a frozen December. It was a strong, stark beauty, made up of blacks and whites and greys. Matthew wanted to paint everything. He had no paints with him, and did not think he had enough money to buy any. The October Group had managed to arrange for the exchange into English currency of the little he had, but it was still not much. But if he could not have paints, he could sketch the area. He would like to sketch St Luke’s itself and have the results framed for the nuns who were being so kind. There were river views which would make really good subjects as well, twisty lanes, and unexpected houses made of brick, looking as they had been dropped carelessly down in their gardens. Along one of the twisty lanes, only a short distance from St Luke’s, was a house called Fenn House. Matthew liked it; he liked its Englishness and its air of having been here for a long time.

‘It’s usually rented to people for the summer,’ said one of the nuns, when Matthew asked about Fenn House in his halting English. ‘So it tends to be a different set of people each year and there’s no – do you know the word continuity?’

Matthew repeated it carefully, and understood the gist. He said he had admired the house and seen lights in the windows. Did people take holidays in December?

‘No, but we heard there’s a young widow there at the moment, recovering from her husband’s death. Very sad. Her small son is with her. Her name is something rather unusual, something a bit foreign – a name we don’t often get in this country, I’ll remember it in a minute . . . Petra, that’s it. Petra Kendal.’

Matthew liked walking to Melbray and trying out his English in the little shops. Occasionally Mara came with him, but she seemed nervous outside the confines of St Luke’s. When Andrei was stronger, Matthew persuaded him to accompany him. It took a bit of doing because Andrei was still deeply hesitant about venturing far from the convent. There was also a degree of agoraphobia. Matthew had noticed this and been unsure how to handle it, but one day Andrei said, quite openly, ‘Matthew, I know you’re aware that I don’t like going outside. It’s a hangover from Jilava and I think it will eventually fade. But all those years of living in a confined space – those small cells . . .’

‘I understand,’ said Matthew, with the familiar twist of pain. ‘Take your own pace.’

‘He’ll probably beat it in his own way,’ said Mikhail, when Matthew reported this. ‘Don’t force anything. Don’t fuss or crowd him.’

Matthew did not, and when Andrei occasionally spoke about Jilava and some of the brutalities he and the other prisoners had endured, he listened carefully. When once Andrei said, ‘I’m not telling you all of it, Matthew, because you’ll never get rid of the images.’

‘I understand that. But I’ll listen to whatever you want to tell me.’

He was pleased when his father finally accompanied him to the village. Andrei was nervous and hesitant on the brief walk, but when they reached the little main street with its cluster of shops, his scholar’s curiosity kicked in, and he became interested. ‘We’ll do this again,’ he said as they walked back.

The third time Matthew took him into the small inn, which the English called a pub. They drank a glass of cider each, which Andrei enjoyed, and exchanged a few halting words with some of the people in the pub who were friendly and casual.

‘That reminded me a bit of home,’ said Matthew as they walked back. ‘D’you remember? We used to go into the little town and I always had lemonade at a teashop and we talked about the arithmetic cartoons.’

‘Of course I remember. Did you ever do anything about those cartoons?’

‘No. One day I might.’

They fell into the way of walking to the village two or three times a week, looking at the shops which even in this small place seemed to them to have a bewildering variety of goods, generally going into the pub for their glass of cider. Matthew tried the beer which the English always seemed so enthusiastic about, and thought it tasted peculiar.

The lanes were starting to become familiar, and they shared newly acquired English expressions as they walked back, liking the quirkiness of the English speech and the casual companionship of the people in the pub. It’s going to be all right, thought Matthew. He’s starting to put Jilava behind him.

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