Without a Trace
The other two rooms held nothing but a few sticks of old furniture, and she passed on quickly to the stone staircase at the end of the corridor. She crept up it and paused to listen before trying the door.
To her right there was the sound of running water and a clattering of dishes, so she guessed that it had to be the kitchen and that someone, or perhaps both women, was in there.
That meant the front door would be to her left. But, as country people rarely used their front door and normally locked and bolted it, she didn’t think she should rely on that door. Even supposing the keys had been left in it, it might be swollen through lack of use and she could waste valuable time trying to get it open.
She continued to listen carefully and, just as she was almost giving up on hearing anyone speak, Miss Gribble did. She said something about needing to use up the stew.
Christabel responded, ‘She won’t eat that.’
‘If she doesn’t, she can go hungry,’ Miss Gribble said sharply.
Molly was crouching down on the stairs, her ear to the keyhole. She was so hungry she felt she would eat a boiled cat if it were offered to her, but the conversation she’d just overheard made her forget her hunger: it was evidence to her that Petal was not just alive but in this house.
She forced herself to stay still and think about it. They might not be talking about Petal, of course; the person who wouldn’t eat the stew could be a friend or a relative. She mustn’t go charging about half cocked. She needed a plan.
Yet the thought that little Petal could be alive and in this very house made her pulse race.
If she could get through this door, there was a strong possibility she could get clear away, as she could probably run a lot faster than the two older women. At least, she could have done before she had been starved for a couple of days.
But it wouldn’t be easy to escape with Petal, if she was there. First she had to find her and then, somehow, they’d have to get out without being spotted. The two women weren’t going to give up without a desperate fight: they must know that there would be a long prison sentence for them if Molly managed to get out and fetch the police. She’d already been on the receiving end of one blow to the head, so she could testify to Miss Gribble’s strength.
So the choice was either to flee on her own and get help or to find Petal and, with her, take a chance on outrunning and outwitting the two women.
The first seemed the more practical option, but if the women found out she’d gone they might take Petal and flee. They knew the marshes well and could probably remain hidden for a long time, but what would happen to Petal in that time?
Cassie’s heart told her that she had to find Petal and leave with her. If she was in this house, she’d been through enough. She deserved to be rescued by someone who loved her.
Gingerly, Molly turned the door knob, not for one moment thinking it would just open. But, to her shock, it did. Presumably, the two women had forgotten to lock it, or maybe they’d thought that, if she wasn’t already dead, she had no chance of getting out of the cellar room.
‘Well, I’ve got news for you two,’ she murmured to herself, opening the door just a crack. She could see she was in the hall: it had gloomy, dark, varnished wainscoting with dark-green wallpaper above it. Opposite the cellar door was a mahogany demilune table with a huge, hideous brass eagle perched on a fake log.
She could only see the kitchen doorway and about a foot into the room, but she could hear both women. It sounded as if one of them was chopping something on the table and the other was walking about. Molly opened the door a bit wider, and now she could see it was Miss Gribble chopping vegetables at the table and Christabel pacing around.
Then she had to pull the door almost shut, because if either of them looked her way they would see it was open.
‘Oh Christabel, do stop stalking around like that!’ Miss Gribble snapped. ‘I don’t know what’s got into you today.’
‘She won’t talk to me. She cowers away from me,’ Christabel burst out.
‘I told you right at the start that a child of that age remembers too much about her mother,’ Miss Gribble said impatiently. ‘Anyway, I think she’s half-witted.’
Molly seethed at that insult. It was all she could do not to charge into the kitchen and lay into both women.
‘Come into the garden with me. It’s lovely out there today, and I’ll push you on the swing. That always calms you down,’ Miss Gribble said.
At that, Molly’s eyes widened in shock. They had stolen a child and one was suggesting she pushed the other on a swing to calm her down! Were they both completely mad?
But, mad or not, it was the opportunity Molly had been waiting for. She listened to the women’s footsteps receding and opened the cellar door far enough to see the women go out the back door and into the garden.
She came out into the hall, shut the cellar door behind her and turned right towards the front of the house and the staircase, which she expected to be facing the front door. It was, in a central position, with a further two closed doors to the right and left of it across the hall. The staircase was polished dark oak, large and imposing, with a narrow, almost threadbare carpet runner on the treads fixed in place by brass stair rods.
Molly went up the stairs like the wind, not stopping at the bedrooms on the first floor, because she guessed they’d put Petal in an attic room.
The narrow staircase leading to the attic was bare wood, and food and drink had been slopped on it. A glance out of a back window revealed Christabel sitting on a swing hung on a big oak tree, and Miss Gribble pushing her.
As fast as she could, Molly ran up the last few stairs. ‘Petal!’ she called.
There were four doors up here, but she expected Petal would be in one of the two back rooms. She heard a scuffle, little more noise than a mouse would make, from the second of those rooms. The door was locked and there was no key.
‘Petal,’ she whispered at the door. ‘It’s Auntie Molly come to get you. This door is locked and I need to break it down. Stand away from it.’
The only reply was a little whimper.
Molly didn’t even stop to think of what injury she might do to herself but took a few steps back and then charged into the top door panel with her shoulder. It cracked, and so she did it again. This time it caved right in, and there was little Petal standing there, eyes swollen with crying, thin and very dirty, in a smocked dress which was several sizes too big for her and almost reached the floor.
She looked dazed and unbelievingly at Molly.
‘You’ll have to jump up and wriggle through this hole,’ Molly told her. ‘Come on, be quick! They’re out in the garden, but they might have heard me break the door.’
Petal came through the hole as quickly and smoothly as a cat and threw herself into Molly’s arms, her arms tightly around her rescuer’s neck.
‘We’ll talk later,’ Molly whispered, kissing the child’s head and trying not to cry with joy at finding her alive. ‘For now, we’ve got to be fast and silent. Can you do that?’
Petal nodded, perhaps too overcome by shock to speak.
Molly picked Petal up to hold her on her hip and crept down the staircase. She could see the front door was, as she had expected, locked and bolted. The chances were she’d be struggling with it for too long and they’d be caught.
When she’d glanced out at the garden, she’d seen that the swing was about twenty-five yards from the kitchen door and, if she remembered rightly, there were bushes between them which would shield her and Petal from view. She hoped they’d have enough time to run round the house, down the drive and away.
They had just reached the hall when, to her horror, Miss Gribble appeared. Molly’s blood ran cold, because she had a long poker in her hands and, judging by the ferocious look on her face, she’d heard the door being broken and had every intention of using her weapon.
Molly shook with fear. There was no doubt in her mind that this woman would think nothing of killing both
her and Petal. She jabbed out with the poker at Molly, and Petal squealed and clung more tightly to her.
‘I should have dealt with you when you first got here, but I will now, and that brat!’ the woman snarled at her. She had big, yellow teeth like a savage animal.
‘Please let us go,’ Molly said. She knew that nothing she said would make any difference, but she hoped the woman would think she was docile and stupid enough to allow her to prod them down the hall and back towards the cellar.
The big brass eagle would make a good weapon if Molly could reach it and, even if Christabel appeared, Molly had the idea she was a bit thick, so Petal could probably run past her. ‘I told loads of people I was coming here, so the police will be here before long,’ she said, playing for time. ‘But if you let us go now, I’ll tell everyone I found Petal out on the road.’
‘Save your breath. You won’t have it for long!’ the woman roared at her. It was as if she was possessed: her eyes were rolling and she had spittle coming out of her mouth. She was lifting the poker up above her head ready to whack Molly with it.
Molly put her lips close to Petal’s ear. ‘Run when I put you down. Get help,’ she whispered.
Petal made a little grunt, which appeared to indicate that she’d understood, and as Molly jumped to one side as the poker came down to hit her, she let Petal drop to the floor.
The poker whistled past Molly’s shoulder by a whisker, but Miss Gribble was undeterred and lifted it again, at the same time pulling open the cellar door with her other hand.
‘Get in there!’ the madwoman shrieked, prodding out with the poker.
‘Please, please, not in there again!’ Molly screamed out. ‘It’s dark, there’s spiders and rats.’
Petal was clinging to her side, and Molly couldn’t tell her to go without revealing her hysteria to be an act. ‘Please, please, I can’t bear it!’ she yelled, and she grabbed hold of the demilune table as if to prevent herself being hauled back into the cellar.
Petal suddenly took off like a jack rabbit, through the kitchen and out the back door. Miss Gribble lifted the poker, but hesitated, as if unsure whether to catch the child or deal with Molly. In that instant Molly picked up the brass eagle, which weighed a ton, and flung it at the woman’s face.
It had the most dramatic effect. There was a crack, Miss Gribble’s nose splattered like a squashed tomato and she slid down the wall behind her like a drunk on a Saturday night.
Molly gave her only the briefest glance then ran for the back door. But, as she stepped over the threshold, she saw Christabel standing there, and in her hands was an axe.
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
George reached Hastings just on four. He was stiff from the long ride and it seemed hours since he had drunk the last of the tea in his flask. He stopped on the seafront to look at his map, and was pleased to see that Brookland was only about another half an hour away.
His mind had been on Molly constantly the whole ride. He kept on remembering little incidents, like when they were about six and he fell over and cut his knee badly while they were out playing. She had washed the cut in a stream and tied the belt of her dress round it like a bandage. Always the nurse and the comforter.
She had often tried to get him to play Mummies and Daddies, too, and he remembered how she’d told him off for not coming in and asking, ‘Why isn’t my dinner on the table?’ Of course he hadn’t realized then that her father was so difficult and demanding, not like his own, an easygoing, kind-hearted man who always had time for his kids.
Later, when he did know what a tyrant Mr Heywood was, he asked his mother if Molly could come and live with them.
‘I’d have her like a shot. She’s a lovely girl,’ his mother had replied. ‘But you can’t take children away from their parents just because they are grumpy and sour. I only hope that, when you have children of your own, you’ll be like your father with them, and not like that pig.’
His mother said she had gone out of her way to befriend Mary Heywood when she and her family had first arrived in the village. She said that Mary had been a sweet, kind woman, but even then she had become like a little mouse when Jack was around. Yet Mary had made good friends in Sawbridge: they watched over her and popped round to see her when they knew Jack wouldn’t be there. Everyone said what a kind heart she had; she’d slipped many a customer a few extra slices of bacon or a few ounces of cheese when she knew they were having a hard time. She passed on the girls’ clothes when they outgrew them to those who were struggling, and there was hardly a new mother in the village that hadn’t had a lovely hand-knitted pram set from her.
Since Molly had gone off to London, some people had told George that Mary seemed distant and withdrawn, but he hadn’t found this himself, and he’d gone in to see her often to check. He felt that she was happier now than she’d been for a long time, going off to Mothers’ Union meetings or popping in to see friends.
She had told him herself that she didn’t want Molly to come home. ‘She needs to make her own way in life and not worry about me,’ she said. ‘Besides, Jack is a bit better since she’s been gone. So you can stop checking up on me!’
He hadn’t stopped, of course; he just made out he was coming to the shop to buy something.
Brookland was easy enough to find, as the marsh was as flat as a pancake and the old church, with its strange, wooden three-part tower, which reminded him of a child’s stacking toy, stood out like a beacon. He asked a man out walking his dog if he knew where Mrs Coleman and her housekeeper lived.
‘They won’t open the door to you,’ the man said. ‘Completely cuckoo, both of them.’
‘Are they now?’ George said. ‘Well, I’m with the police, so they’ll have to open up for me.’
The dog walker shrugged and gave him directions to Mulberry House. It turned out George had already driven past the house, so he turned his bike round and set back off. He hadn’t gone far when a little girl darted out of a side lane and ran towards him, waving her arms.
He slowed right down, as it was quite clear she was in great distress, and as he got closer, to his shock, he realized it was Petal.
He pulled up and jumped off his bike.
‘Petal, sweetheart,’ he said. ‘I’m George, the policeman from back home in Sawbridge. I came to find you and Molly.’
‘She’s in there!’ The child waved her hand towards the high stone wall beside the road. ‘She came and got me, she told me to run for help, but the nasty lady has got her now.’
George took in the neglected dirty state of the girl, the long, far too large dress, and no shoes. However much he wanted to go straight to Molly’s aid, he couldn’t leave the child here unprotected.
‘Jump on behind me and hold on tight,’ he said, getting back on his bike. ‘There’s a shop along here. I’ll take you there and get them to phone for more police. Can you be a brave girl for a little bit longer?’
She nodded and climbed silently up behind him. He looked down at her thin, brown arms clasped around his waist and felt a lump rising in his throat.
It took only a couple of minutes for him to flash his warrant card at the stunned shopkeeper and to ask him to phone 999 and explain that PC George Walsh had left a missing child called Petal with him while he returned to Mulberry House. He told the shopkeeper to tell them he was assisting Molly Heywood, who was being held captive there. An ambulance might be needed, too.
George roared back to the house, left his motorbike by the gate and ran around to the back door.
There, on a paved area by the back door, he found Molly lying in a pool of blood and a wailing woman crouched a little way off with her head on her knees and an axe lying beside her.
Kneeling beside Molly, he found that she had a pulse but it was very faint. The blood was coming from a wound on the top of her head. He couldn’t tell how deep it was because of her hair.
‘You’re safe now, Molly,’ he said to her, even though she was unconscious. ‘It’s George, and I’ve got Pet
al safe and sound, too, and I’ll have you in hospital in no time.’
As he waited for assistance, he heard a sound from inside the house. He went in to see what it was and found another woman slumped on the floor. She was older than the first one, and her face was a bloody mess where she’d been hit. She was conscious, but appeared to have taken leave of her senses. She was just making a keening sound and didn’t respond when he asked her name.
The woman outside didn’t appear to have any injuries, but she was still just crouching there, rocking herself to and fro. He removed the axe, just in case she thought of using it again. He guessed that Molly had thrown the big eagle thing he’d seen on the floor in the hall at the other, older woman to escape, and that this younger one had hit her as she came through the kitchen door.
It seemed to take for ever for the emergency services to arrive, and he sat at Molly’s side, urging her to hold on until help came. Looking at what he could see of the house and thinking of the unbalanced state of the two women who lived here, he felt sick to think that Petal had been kept here for months, and he was astounded that no one had reported seeing her.
But, above everything else, above even his anxiety for Molly and Petal and the need to get the two older women into custody, he felt so proud of Molly. She had said she was going to find Petal, and she had. She’d stuck at it like a dog with a bone, even coming to work down here because she had what he thought was a crazy idea that Cassie had lived here. How wrong was he? It was Molly who should become a detective.
Then, all at once, he heard the clanging of an ambulance bell and a police siren.
‘That’s it now, Molly,’ he said to her. ‘You’ll be in hospital in no time and I’m not leaving you.’
George sensed the detective inspector’s hostility even before he opened his mouth to speak. He was middle-aged with a military-style moustache and had introduced himself as DI Pople.
‘We got the message about this from Somerset. So why did you feel it was necessary to come?’