The Faceless (42 page)

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Authors: Simon Bestwick

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BOOK: The Faceless
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And then she understood, and then she was running again, laughing and crying, crying and laughing, towards the dying winter light that burned through the mist. She stumbled, nearly fell. A body, at her feet. A woman in police uniform, her skull crushed. Her face; Anna knew the face. It was the desk sergeant from the station in Kempforth. Sergeant Graham.

She looked back.The mist swirled and shifted; the thin black dead moved like predatory fish under its surface, waiting for it to rise. Anna ran on.

The mist thinned, dispersed; another street, no different from the one she’d left–

A shout, something flew past her eye with an angry wasp’s buzz. A moment later, she heard the crack of the shot.

“Don’t move!”

Soldiers, rifles aimed at her; she fell to her knees, arms raised. One of them grabbed her arm, dragged her away from the encroaching mist, wrenched the gasmask off. “The hell are you? Where did you get that suit? It’s military issue–”

She couldn’t speak. What could she say?

“Leave her, Dan,” another soldier called. “You can see she’s a bloody wreck. Love? Harbour’s this way. Come on. Everyone’s getting out.”

 

 

T
HE HARBOUR.

A gaggle of boats and ships; black smoke fouled the air. Some boats headed out to sea, others hove in towards the quayside, where the waiting crowds piled on. Dunkirk, but in reverse.

Soldiers patrolled the outskirts, but inside the cordon it was chaos. Anna was jostled, pushed, shoved. There were shouts, screams.

“Anna!”

Someone grabbed her arm: Vera, face white and streaked with tears. She pulled Anna close; after a moment, Anna hugged her back. Nothing else to cling to, either of them.

Screams: Anna looked round. The mist was billowing down the streets that opened out above the harbour. In minutes it’d be upon them.

A rifle fired, up into the air. “Alright!” a soldier bellowed. “Move it!
Move
!”

 

 

T
HE TRAWLER PULLED
clear of the quay, wallowing low in the water from the weight of its passengers. Another boat hove in to collect the last dozen soldiers on the quayside, their rifles aimed into the encroaching mist; no more heroic sacrifices today.

The mist swirled in over fallen suitcases scattered on the quay; excess baggage there hadn’t been space for. Anna’s day-pack, at least, had made it. A discarded police tunic lay on the ground.

Anna looked across the crowded decks; a familiar face caught her eye. Thin, gaunt. Another of the coppers from Kempforth. Brock, that was it. No tie, no tunic. He was shivering in his shirtsleeves. His eyes met hers. Did he recognise her? Was there a plea in his eyes?

She looked away. So his nerve had broken. So, he’d only wanted to live. There’d been enough soldiers like that on the Western Front. She could tell someone. But what’d be the point? Let him live. And if he felt guilt, that was the price he paid for survival; there was always a price. You did what you had to, and lived with it.

Someone was sobbing hysterically as they pulled out to sea. Someone else sang; a thin, wavering lost voice, seeking meaning and consolation in vain:
“God rest ye merry, gentlemen, let nothing you dismay...”

Vera sagged against Anna; Anna stroked her hair.
The last of England
, she thought;
the last of England
.

“For Jesus Christ our Saviour was born on Christmas Day...”

She had to be strong. And she would be. She only wavered when she remembered: everything Sir Charles had done had involved harnessing the souls of the dead. Why should the White Song be any different?

What might she have done with Mary’s soul?

“To save us all from Satan’s power when we were gone astray...”

No. She wouldn’t think that. She wouldn’t. She wouldn’t think of Mary, full stop; she mustn’t if she was to survive.

“Oh, tidings of comfort and joy, comfort and joy; oh, tidings of comfort and joy...”

And so she stood by the rail, and watched the last of England vanish into the gathering dusk beyond.

 

CODA: THE LAND OF MIST

 

 

And still he felt no pain. Only a terrible sadness that a ritual could use so much power and achieve so little.

 

– Joel Lane, ‘Playing Dead’

 

WARBECK

 

 

Old paper files and log books wait on desks for hands to brush the dust off and write in them again. A wheelchair rusts forgotten in the corner of the canteen; in the kitchen the great ovens crouch like cyclopean dogs of stainless steel, still and silent now, but waiting for the fires to start again. Like idols of Moloch; so easy to imagine ranks of human figures carried in unending succession into the fires’ heart.

The Spindly Men have gone; a few still prowl the woods around Ash Fell out of habit and familiarity, but most, their duty done, have left for other pastures; this now is the land of the dead, and they can walk in it freely.

Here at last is Ash Fell’s heart, slowing, stopping, a dead, empty shell at last. Or is it? On cold days yellow veils of mist hang in the corridors; at night they turn the colour of milk, white amidst the black. In them and in the offices, kitchens, store-rooms, staff-rooms, dormitories, day rooms, library, the voices and footsteps still echo and whisper. Those sounds, and those who made them, died long ago. But some things leave a mark that can never wholly pass away.

 

CHAPTER THIRTY-EIGHT

 

 

From
Ghosts Of War: Ash Fell and the Legacy of World War One
by Anna Mason:

 

T
HE
I
NDUSTRIAL
R
EVOLUTION
began in the late 18
th
century. Over two hundred years later, we’re just waking up to the pollution and climate change it’s caused. The era of modern industrialised warfare began in September 1914; a century later, its consequences manifested themselves catastrophically at Ash Fell Hospital, in Kempforth, Lancashire.

Since World War One, countless other conflicts have sowed the same grim harvest; the Spanish Civil War, World War Two, Korea, Vietnam, Cambodia, the myriad undeclared killing grounds of the Cold War and the ‘War on Terror’. Will these toxic legacies come back to haunt us too? It’s a question only time will answer.

 

 

“T
HE
R
USSIAN GOVERNMENT
has refused to rule out the use of its experimental thaumaturgic weapons system if the crisis in...”

“Thaumaturgic?” Vera asked. How different she’d become: cropped hair; a vest top, pumped-up biceps, a tattoo on her arm. More mannish, but more at peace. But less Anna’s type.

“Fancy word for magic,” Anna said.

“Why not just say that, then?”

“‘Magic’ would sound silly.”

“And ‘thaumaturgic’ doesn’t?”

“More scientific.”

“Hm. Anna?”

“Yeah?”

“Katja’s here.”

“Oh. OK then.”

“My stuff’s all packed, so...”

“OK.”

“I’m no good with this crap,” said Vera. “Goodbyes and stuff. And, no point moping about the past, right?” Anna didn’t answer. “Well. Never gonna agree on that are we? Oh well. Onwards and upwards.”

“I’ll see you off.”

“You don’t have to... you OK?”

Anna rubbed her belly. “Little one’s kicking, that’s all.”

“I’ll see you around then, yeah?”

“Yeah, right.” Silence. “Take care, Vera.”

“Yeah.”

“I mean it.”

“You too.”

Outside, Anna watched her carry boxes out to Katja’s pickup.

Katja nodded to her. She was younger than Anna; late twenties. A slight accent – Polish, Czech? “Hi.”

“Hi.” Silence. “Take care of her, yeah?”

“I will. I knew her, before.”

“I know. It’s alright. You were with the escort agency she used to use.”

“Back in–”

“Back in England.”

“Yes.”

“Yes. It was before she and I met. Surprised really. She doesn’t like being reminded of the past.”

Katja shrugged. “We’ll see how long this lasts. Will you be alright?”

“Fine,” Anna said. “Just make her happy. She deserves that.”

“Katja? I’m ready.”

“Alright. Best go. Nice to meet you, Anna.”

“You too.”

Vera looked back once, then away.
Find peace
, Anna thought.
One day, stop running
. When the pickup was out of sight, Anna shut the door and went upstairs. The house seemed larger now, and emptier. She tried not to look at the gaps on shelves and wardrobes; too many of them seemed poised to shift into something else. The Sight had been quiescent since she’d left Britain, but now and again there were moments like this, a threat or promise to return. The room blurred with the first tears; shivered when the first sob wracked her. Was that someone standing in the corner of her room? No. Just the tears.

When she’d finished crying she washed her face, lay down and closed her eyes. Blackness. A pool of light. Nan stood in it, mouthing urgently, reaching out. Beyond her, another circle of light in which Mary knelt in a white dress, her back to Anna. Anna reached for her shoulder, but the moment seemed to slow. There was an irrational fear of what Mary’s face would look like when she turned round. But still, she reached out.

She woke, sat up in bed, went downstairs. Life went on; work had to be done. She made herself a sandwich- she was always hungry now

and ate it staring at the computer, trying to decide what came next; when the doorbell rang, it was almost a relief.

“Miss Mason?” The man was in his fifties, bald on top, long grey hair gathered in a last defiant ponytail; the woman was a pretty, pre-Raphaelite redhead half his age.

“Ms.”

“Sorry. I’m Arnold Renwick. Joan Renwick’s dad.”

 

 

THE TESTAMENT OF GIDEON DACE so here we are we three sole or should i say soul ha ha tenants now of ash fell the unholy trinity father the son and the wholly goat ha ha well the dead kept their promise i will say that much the years of torment inflicted on me are at an end but still they got the last laugh ha ha i am confined to the grounds unable to venture outside

 

 

THE TESTAMENT OF SIR CHARLES DACE oh shut up gideon you vile little bastard bastard oh how i wish you were little has been so hard or unwelcome in my life or death as acknowledging you are indeed my child you perverted this place from its original intent exploiting those who sacrificed for us

 

 

THE TESTAMENT OF GIDEON DACE CONTINUED as did you pater dearest in building ash fell or had you forgotten if indeed you ever considered it at all

 

 

THE TESTAMENT OF SIR CHARLES DACE CONTINUED mine was for a valid purpose a good cause not for my own aggrandisement gratification or profit something you never would or could understand

 

 

T
HE BACK GARDEN
was warm with the summer sun; the air was sweet with pine resin. A wooden picnic table; they sipped Orangina, ate baguettes with Brie and grapes.

“I was a university lecturer,” Renwick’s father said. “Social Sciences. Lorraine – her mother – was a social worker, often dealing with a lot of abuse cases. As far as Joan was concerned, we were the classic woolly-minded liberals. I remember her shouting at me once that I never
judged
anyone. Always saw both sides, never took a stand or
did
anything. She saw the damage we had to patch up, her mother especially. When she joined the police, she said she wanted to stop the kind of people we spent our lives clearing up after. At first I treated it as a sort of youthful rebellion.” He half-smiled. “Which just made her angrier, of course.”

Morwenna stroked his arm, gazing up at him adoringly. She seemed genuinely in love with her much older husband, which was rather sweet, but Anna could understand how Renwick could have found her maddening.

“She was something of a wild child when she was younger. But she was doing well in the Manchester police. And then Lorraine died. Joan was angry, more than anything else. Didn’t understand why I wasn’t, or didn’t seem to be. I wanted to help her, but... Lorraine’s death only pushed us further apart. And then she moved to Kempforth. And then–” He smiled at his wife, squeezed her hand “–I met Morwenna, and that just made it worse. To be honest, I’d almost resigned myself to losing Joan. But I kept trying. I kept telling myself she was an adult with her own life, but... she was still my little girl.”

“I’m not sure what you want me to say,” said Anna. “She was a very brave woman. Determined. She saved my life. And Mary’s, for a while at least. If it wasn’t for her, no-one would’ve got out of Kempforth. If she could have rescued the missing child, she would have. That’s all I can tell you. I’m sorry I didn’t get to know her better.”

Arnold nodded, eyes bright. “That sounds like my girl,” he said at last.

The three of them were silent for a while.

“And what about you?” he asked.

“What about me?”

“You seem happy,” Morwenna said.

“In some ways.”

“You lost a lot, too.”

Anna shifted in her chair. “I think everybody did. But something good came out of it.” She stroked her belly again. Her breasts were tender, sore. Except for one spot. The piercing cold of the white mark had faded within a few weeks of leaving Britain, but the skin remained hard, numb and dead.

“When are you due?” Morwenna asked.

“Another five months.” She leant back in the chair. “It was Vera’s idea. We had a male friend who was willing to provide the necessary.” She smiled. “Plus a turkey baster.”

“Oh.” Morwenna looked a little queasy. Anna managed not to laugh, feeling a little cruel.

“But you’re not together anymore?” asked Arnold.

“No. I wanted the child too, but

I think for Vera, it was a way of trying to... almost...
make
me choose the present over the past.” That was Vera’s reason; she wouldn’t talk about hers.

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