Catherine looked at the intense man beside her as if for support. He nodded.
âWho are you, sir?' Heap said.
âMy parishioners call me Vicar Dave.'
Heap and Gilchrist exchanged glances.
âGo on, Miss Watts,' Heap said.
âIt fell out of the pocket of my father, Bob Watts.'
Gilchrist frowned. What was going on here?
âAnd what disturbs you?' Heap said.
Catherine handed him the phone. âSee for yourself. Look on the video.'
Gilchrist and Donaldson pressed in close to Heap as he turned the phone lengthways and touched the video icon. Catherine Watts never took her eyes off Gilchrist.
Gilchrist watched the video again with Heap in the back of the car heading for Saddlescombe. She had quickly ascertained, with some relief, that it wasn't Bob Watts' phone but she was puzzled about why he had it. Donaldson was back in the office finishing off the interview with Bob's daughter and tracing the owner of this phone.
The video was filmed in low light in Callaghan's flat. The camera panned across the wall with the scriptures on it to Callaghan, sitting on a stand-up chair in shirt and trousers, trussed with tape. There was tape over his mouth. The camera moved in on his eyes, wide and fixed.
A woman's voice, indistinct. âYou refuse to see what's going on? Well, soon you will see.'
A Stanley knife was waved in front of the camera.
âI'm going to cut your eyelids off,' the woman said.
The camera pulled back to show a figure leaning over Callaghan, almost obscuring him. The elbow of the right arm moved as the figure presumably started to work with the knife.
The woman started to talk again. âDid I just nick your eyeball? Sorry. I don't know how to do this really. Who does? I know it's important you keep still so I've made sure of that. Ugh â that stuff coming out of your eye doesn't look good.'
There was a muffled voice from somewhere else in the room.
âIs that so? It's your vitreous humour apparently. Sounds quite alchemical, doesn't it? It's the gunk between the lens and the retina.'
She got to work again.
âDid you ever see that Salvador Dali film? He made it with Luis Buñuel. Starts with a moon and then someone holding a woman's eye open and then a razor and then â ugh. Horrible. Of course, it wasn't really her eye. They used a cow's eye. Or did they? Maybe the cow's eye substitution was just a story they put around to cover what really happened. Maybe the woman was never seen again. Maybe they killed her and disposed of her body. She might have been the woman in that trunk at Brighton station. Well, no. That was years later, I think.'
The woman held up to the light something papery and thin between long fingers and thumb. She put it in her pocket. âJust so you know: I probably will dice your eyeballs anyway. I don't believe it will hurt. I'm told eyes feel no sensation. But even if they did there's nothing you could do about it. “Dark, dark, dark, amid the blaze of noon.” That's Milton.
Samson Agonistes
. “Eyeless in Gaza” and all that. Listen to me â the literary allusions just keep flowing. A bit like all this blood going into your eyes. Who knew eyelids bled so much?'
The other voice came from somewhere in the room again.
âNo, not like Oedipus,' she said. âOedipus put out his own eyes. Samson had it done to him. Philistines with swords or hot pokers or hot coals did it.'
The video ended there.
âSamson â you know he pulled down the Temple on the heads of the Philistines?' Heap said.
âWe're back in the Temple of Solomon, are we?'
âWho are they, do you think, ma'am?'
âI assume the other voice in the room was the camera person,' Gilchrist said.
Heap shook his head. âThat voice would have been the clearest because it was nearest the phone.'
âSo you think three people?'
Heap nodded.
âLesley Henderson, her mother Avril and Colin Pearson?'
âMaybe,' he said, as the car pulled into Saddlescombe Farm.
âLook at that moon, Bob,' Travis said. âA true Devil's Moon. There'll be some dark deeds tonight under that cold light, for sure. Here's a trivia question: from what stage and film show does the song “Old Devil Moon” originally come?'
âMusicals aren't my thing,' he said.
â
Finian's Rainbow
. Fred Astaire is in the film. Don't usually associate him with the Devil, do we? Well, I don't. He's associated with Brighton too. In
The Gay Divorcee
he comes to Brighton for a quickie divorce, you know. The film was released in 1934, same year as the Trunk Murders.'
Travis was standing when she started to sing. She had a pretty good voice. She did a twirl or two on tiptoe, giving him exaggeratedly arch looks.
âSomething in your eyes I see . . .'
She leaned in.
â. . . wanna laugh like a loon.'
She touched his cheek with her finger.
â. . . that old devil moon in your eyes.'
She stopped in front of Watts and shook her head.
âOh, Bobby, Bobby. Your beautiful eyes.'
Watts shifted in his seat again. Or tried to.
Tabby McGrath answered the door.
âIs Lesley Henderson here?' Gilchrist said without preamble.
âWe haven't seen him for a couple of days.'
âWhy didn't you tell us Lesley Henderson's mother lived nearby?'
McGrath bridled. âI didn't know,' she said indignantly. âWho is his mother?'
âAvril Pearson,' Heap said.
McGrath looked surprised. âNone of us know that. But then we don't know Lesley well.'
âDo you know him as a man or a woman?' Gilchrist said.
âAs a person.' McGrath was smug now. âWe don't judge people here.'
âWe're not judging anyone either,' Gilchrist said. âWe're trying to solve a crime.'
âWe also respect each other's privacy.'
âSo you never noticed anything unusual about Lesley?' Heap said.
McGrath chewed her lip. âSometimes Lesley dressed as a woman; sometimes as a man. Either way was cool with us.'
âHow well do you know Avril Pearson?' Gilchrist said.
âAvril cultivates a lot of the particularly unusual produce we provide local restaurants with.'
âProduce that goes to Plenty?' Gilchrist said.
âAmong other restaurants.' McGrath was defensive now.
âThe produce that got the restaurant closed?'
âThat was a mix-up. We thought we were supplying lilies but we took something else by mistake.'
âDatura, wasn't it? What was that batch for?'
âYou'd need to ask Avril about that.'
âBut you know,' Heap said.
McGrath looked cagey.
âWas it to do with Avril's cancer?' Heap said.
Gilchrist kept her face expressionless.
McGrath nodded. âShe was trying to cure herself using datura
.
'
Gilchrist was remembering the shit smeared on Callaghan's walls and dropped on her. âIs she with you?' she said.
McGrath shook her head. âShe never comes in here. Try the gardens or her house.' McGrath pointed. âIt's that one there. If she's not there, try her daughter.'
âWho is where?' Heap said.
âWho is who?' Gilchrist said.
McGrath shrugged. âI don't know the answer to either of those questions.'
Gilchrist and Heap thanked her and turned to leave as she shut the door pretty much in their faces.
âHow the hell did you know about the cancer?' Gilchrist said.
âEducated guess,' Heap said. âI figured Avril Henderson would be anti-conventional medicine.'
He opened the gate to Avril Henderson's cottage. There was no answer at the front door. Heap got out his torch and they walked down the side of the house into the back garden. The torchlight caught a clump of tall white flowers.
âWhat are they?' Gilchrist said. âThey're beautiful.'
âBell lilies or trumpet lilies.'
âAnd Avril Henderson grows them.'
âAs well as the datura
that features in the painting.'
The kitchen door was locked and there was no reply to their knocking. Heap swept his torchlight around and beyond the garden.
âMa'am.'
The beam of light had landed on a chalet out towards the end of the garden with light spilling from the window.
They made their way between half-a-dozen garden sheds to the chalet. Heap knocked on the door. No answer. No sign of movement. Gilchrist tried the handle and was a little surprised when the door opened.
âHello?' she called, then stepped inside.
The room was sparsely furnished. A single bed in one corner; a Welsh dresser against the wall. There were candles in abundance on each of the shelves of the dresser. Leaning against the wall beside the dresser was
The Devil's Altar
.
Heap pointed at a wax disc and a black object laid out on the dresser. âJohn Dee's paraphernalia, I would guess,' he said.
Gilchrist picked up a book. âAnd the
Key of Solomon
.'
âLesley Henderson or his mother stole these things, do you think?'
âBoth,' Heap said. He was peering out of the window towards Newtimber Hill. âMa'am? I think the Wicker Man is on fire.'
W
atts seemed to be stuck in the chair. His limbs didn't obey his brain's instruction. In fact, he couldn't remember how he had ever been able to move his limbs. His brain felt disconnected from his body.
Nicola walked over to him. She tilted his head back to look into his eyes, kissed him slowly on the lips, breathed into his open mouth.
âThe Native Americans of the desert regions used Sacred Datura as a medicine. They'd make a paste to use it as anaesthetic for bone-setting or toothache. You're experiencing the numbing effects in a rather different form now. Of course, ingesting it can be a bit kill or cure. If you get the dose wrong people can go psychotic, suffer permanent physical disability or have a lethal heart attack.'
She walked behind him.
âBut you looked sturdy enough to ingest
datura stramonium
. That's what I've given you. Your sturdiness is what attracted me to you all that time ago. A lifetime, really. If you only knew the journey I've been on since then.'
She reappeared in front of him.
â
Datura stramonium
is popular in Haiti. I wonder if you can guess what for?'
Watts could guess. He believed he said it but didn't know if any sound had emerged from his lips.
âZombies!' She clapped her hands. âIsn't that great? All those wonderful Hammer horror films with coffins in graveyards breaking open, spewing out the dead â and the undead. Well, of course, they've been doing that here lately because of the floods. The dead, at least. The colloquial name for
datura stramonium
over there is
concombre zombi
. Bit of a giveaway, really.
âSo voodoo practitioners use datura
to put people into the zombie state. The part I don't get is how you get from paralysing someone to getting that person to do your bidding. I'd love you to do my bidding but if I commanded you to get up out of that chair to serve me â or do I mean service me? â I don't see how you could, since I've paralysed you.' She chewed her lip. âDifficult one.' Then looked up. âLot of stars out tonight. Beautiful sky. I love the night.'
Something moved in the little peripheral vision Watts had. Another person was in the garden.
As Gilchrist and Heap crunched up the path to Newtimber Hill they could see the legs of the Wicker Man ablaze. In front of the figure a circle formed of hundreds of candles cast a softer light. In the middle of the circle, silhouetted against the flames, stood the Goat of Mendes with erect penis and full breasts.
âJesus,' Gilchrist muttered as she approached the circle. Heap moved off at an angle to come up beside the circle of light.
Feeling foolish, Gilchrist called: âLesley Henderson?'
The Goat of Mendes put its hands to either side of its head and pulled the head off. It had concealed a bearded person with long flowing hair. Gilchrist looked from beard to breasts to penis. She was sure there would be a vagina beneath the penis.
âAre you Lesley Henderson?'
âHe is Dionysus.'
A woman with long grey hair was standing near the Wicker Man, a wheelbarrow in front of her. A body was slumped in the wheelbarrow.
Gilchrist sighed. Here we go.
âI wasn't aware Dionysus had a goat's head,' Heap said.
Henderson put the head on the ground and straightened.
âThat was for revelry,' the woman said. âYou know the Dionysian rites have been carried out on this site for centuries?'
âAre you Avril Pearson?' Gilchrist said.
âAnd if so, who is this person?' Heap called. Gilchrist saw Heap take possession of the wheelbarrow and roll it a few yards away from the woman.
âThe rites are sacred frenzy,' Avril Pearson said to Gilchrist.
Gilchrist looked at the goat's head then back at Lesley Henderson. She echoed Heap's question: âWho is that person in the barrow?'
âHis name is Colin Pearson,' Avril said.
âYour husband?' Heap was down on one knee now, feeling for a pulse in the neck. âYou were trying to set fire to your husband?'
âIs that Lesley Henderson?' Gilchrist persisted.
âI gave him that name, yes. But the name has nothing to do with what he really is.' Avril Pearson pointed at her husband. âAnd that man is nothing to do with him.'
âBecause his father is a god?' Heap said, stepping towards Henderson and shaking his head at Gilchrist. Pearson was dead.
Gilchrist looked from the mother to the son, wondering exactly what to do.
âMum knows a lot more about datura
than I do, of course,' Travis said. âWe use it to hex and to break hexes. You can commune with birds.'