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Authors: Jacqueline Yallop

Marlford

Marlford

Jacqueline Yallop read English at Oxford and did her PhD in nineteenth-century literature at the University of Sheffield. She has worked as the curator of the Ruskin Collection in Sheffield and is the author of the non-fiction work
Magpies, Squirrels and Thieves
and the novels
Kissing Alice
and
Obedience
. She currently divides her time between France and Wales.

First published in Great Britain in 2014 by Atlantic Books,
an imprint of Atlantic Books Ltd.

Copyright © Jacqueline Yallop, 2014

The moral right of Jacqueline Yallop to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by her in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act of 1988.

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book.

This novel is entirely a work of fiction. The names, characters and incidents portrayed in it are the work of the author's imagination and not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or localities, is entirely coincidental.

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

Trade Paperback ISBN: 978 0 85789 105 1
E-book ISBN: 978 1 78239 028 2

Printed in Great Britain

Atlantic Books
An Imprint of Atlantic Books Ltd
Ormond House
26–27 Boswell Street
London
WC1N 3JZ
www.atlantic-books.co.uk

Marlford

E
very morning during the bleached summer of 1976, when the drought hard-baked the earth, deep down, so that it held still, Ellie Barton went to the mere. She arrived early, a little after dawn, walking quickly through the new housing estate and dropping down by the chain of yellow pedalos, docked in the hard, brown grass.

The long, sunny days, identical, give the odd impression of time standing still, everything suspended in the heavy heat and the landscape flattening out. The riddle of mine workings below is silent and, for many weeks, nothing seems to happen. But the lake is shrinking, a muddle of tree roots coming clear of the water; rocks standing proud at the edge.

As the weeks go by without rain, change becomes obvious, rapid, the shallows receding further and revealing, each day, more debris, the accumulated litter of unremembered moments. Most mornings some new curiosity rises into the uncertain shimmer of an early mist, like Excalibur thrust aloft by the Lady of the Lake: bicycle handlebars; the rotting timbers of a sunken boat;
a shopping trolley. Ellie walks slowly along the bank, peering at the collection of car tyres and tin cans, bottles and jars and discarded shoes. She wonders how all these things have come to be here.

As the summer wears on, the mere hardly exists. The frogs seem to have gone. Ducks slump disconsolately in the hardening sludge, or squabble over the remaining pools, brown and shallow, already disappearing. When Ellie kneels on the bank and looks closely, she can see fine fractures veining the dried mud, a membrane of tiny fault lines.

She waits for the water to dry up completely, hurrying to the mere earlier and earlier each day, before the dark has even lifted, perching on the bank until the exhausted daylight creeps back and she can make out what it is that lies in the silt.

She wants to be the first to see them. That is important. It does not matter if, after that, police come, or doctors, to take them away, or if it rains, a sudden deluge that quickly fills the cracked basin. Nothing at all matters after that, if she can just see them for herself.

She does not expect the bodies still to be intact; she knows that is not possible. Soft skin would have decayed long ago; discoloured bones, brittle and slight, would have washed apart by now and might look like nothing more than old sticks. There might be little to distinguish the remains from the natural bulges in the mud, the ridges and buried stones. In the end, it might be nothing more than the slightest of clues, an intimation of the past.

But, whatever is left, it will be visible eventually. There is hardly any water at all now, little more than a greenish
slime, thick and opaque with a smell of rotten cabbage. It cannot possibly be long until that, too, shrivels in the heat and they emerge. She will see them then, at last, and everything will be substantial; she will understand her place in things, and feel her own corporeal weight again, with relief.

So Ellie Barton comes to the mere every day, waiting for it to vanish.

One

S
even summers previously, the mere had been full, overflowing at one end into a marsh of flag iris and kingcups. The grass grew high and thick; the path was boggy.

Throughout the district, there were rumblings underground and, when Oscar Quersley walked up into the village, he noticed that one side of the Barton Arms had slipped again, the land beneath it slumping: several workmen were busy trying to buttress a tilting wall. A little further on, there was a sharp fissure in the pavement; a section of the cobbled roadway, too, was split, and a wooden barrier had been erected with a notice warning pedestrians of the dangerous ground. He quickened his pace, anxious, but the library was untouched by the subsidence. Everything there was stable.

By the time Ellie arrived, the library looked exactly as it had always done: the front doors were open, the steps swept. Inside, the striplights were buzzing and Oscar was seated at the desk, a book open in front of him and the wooden drawer of catalogue cards pushed to one side.

Ellie put a hand to her head to check the pins in her hair and looked past the desk to the stacks of books beyond, the musk of rotting paper and old leather already drawing her in. The tiny burst of disappointment inside her was almost imperceptible, a soap-sud bubble popping unspectacularly into air.

‘I'm sorry… am I… am I late, Mr Quersley? I thought I left on time. I thought I heard the clock strike.'

She could not be sure.

‘The stable clock runs forty-three minutes late, Ellie,' Oscar pointed out.

‘Does it? Again? But I thought you'd had it fixed.'

‘The mechanism is fragile. It's difficult to adjust these days.'

‘Yes, well, I suppose so. I suppose it must be running late again – but, you see, I lost track of time. I had to call at the hutments with some clean linen and the men had a complaint and then I dawdled on the avenue because it's such a fine evening.' She let out a long breath. ‘I'm sorry.'

‘Dawdled?'

‘Well, I was going over something…“The Knight's Tale”.' She blinked, puzzled by the solidity of the library furniture, floundering still in the shallows of her fantasy.

Oscar closed his book. He looked at Ellie sternly for a moment, and then smiled. ‘It's of no matter. You're here now.'

He moved from the stool so that she could sit down. As she made her way behind the desk, she noticed that the rain from the previous night had filled the tin buckets to overflowing; a slop of dusty water ran away along the back wall towards the book stacks.

He caught her glance. ‘Now that you're here, I'll empty them and mop round,' he said. ‘I heard a forecast on the radio for more showers.'

Ellie picked at the darned fingers of her light gloves, then removed them carefully, folding them to one side on the desk.

‘I'll just – sort the tickets then, shall I?'

‘If you would.'

The pink readers' tickets were stacked in a thick-sided wooden box, their top edges faded to the colour of sucked candy but the card still vibrant below. Ellie checked their order, arranged alphabetically by surname. There were no aberrations. She placed the box carefully alongside the drawer of catalogue cards and reached underneath the desk, pulling a heavy ledger from the shelf. She opened it at the page marked by a length of blue ribbon.

‘There are no loans out, Mr Quersley.'

He was on his knees wiping the floor. When he stood, he was red-faced and flustered, his hair flopping forward over his brow, his shirt-sleeves coming unrolled – emphasising the crook of his spindly wrists – the thick tweed of his trousers stained with damp and sagging. It gave him the appearance of a bow-legged horse trader.

‘No,' he replied. ‘I imagine not.' He wrung the cloth into the bucket and brushed flecks of peeled paint from his clothes.

Ellie began a new line in the ledger and slowly wrote the date in her looping copperplate hand:
19th July 1969
. She allowed the ink to dry. For several months she had inscribed the paper in the same way without any need to record loans below: line upon line of dates peeled back through the pages,
rhythmic, a meditation of days passing without incident. She shut the ledger and returned it to the shelf under the desk. There were no more duties to be done.

‘Well, then.' Oscar had smartened his appearance again, as far as he could; he looked like the man Ellie was accustomed to, only slightly shabby and worn, his anxiety little more than the faintest of impressions. ‘It's almost eight thirty. We have an hour and a half. Shall we take up the
Enneads
again – or would you prefer Dante?
La Vita Nuova
, perhaps?'

‘Oh… I thought perhaps you didn't like…' She hesitated, blushing. ‘We've never re-read
La Vita Nuova
. Not after that first time.'

‘It's your choice, Ellie.' He could not look at her. He heard the clank of his words, not as he had rehearsed them.

‘Dante then. Please,' she said.

Turning to retrieve the book, Oscar grinned. He looked momentarily younger than his forty years, boyish even, mischievous, his eyes sparkling blue, his skin pricked with fleeting colour. If Ellie had seen him in that moment, she might have thought of him differently but, by the time he was seated beside her, with the text between them, he had been overtaken again by the abiding beige and khaki of his tweed, his demeanour studious and his expression drawn in concentration.

Ellie glanced at him then, and wished he was not so stern with her.

No readers came that evening to the library. Once or twice people passed the open doors, their chatter seeming loud; occasionally cars drove by, filling the air with a liquorice syrup of fumes. The click of beetles in the wooden
beams became insistent as dusk fell. But that was all; they were alone in a chivalric world where knights roamed on majestic steeds, veils and flags fluttered stiffly in the breeze, fires burned brightly, skies shone an azure blue and everything was intense and jewel-like, uncomplicated by the demands of accurate perspective or three dimensions.

At ten, precisely, Oscar sat back and closed the text. ‘We must finish, Ellie.'

‘Can't we just read on a little?' She frowned at the surprising proximity of the library, its gloom.

‘Ellie, you might not appreciate the lateness of the hour – you know I cannot continue, or I'll be late for the frogs. Next time, perhaps, we can read on.'

Ellie had her hand on the book. ‘But could I – I could continue at home; I could take out a loan and read it myself.'

‘I'm not sure that's wise. It's just as I always say, Ellie – you might lose it. Or damage it, perhaps.'

‘No – I wouldn't. I'd take good care of it.'

‘Even so, we've managed perfectly well up until now with the existing arrangement.' He pulled the library keys from his pocket and selected one with care, giving the process enough of his attention to prevent him having to look at her.

‘But I wasn't even eight years old when we started reading together – it's been twelve years and, well, I'm… I'm grown up now. It's not the same. I can take care of a book, can't I?'

Oscar picked up the ledger and the box of readers' tickets and locked them in one of the wooden cupboards behind them.

‘Quite possibly. That may be so. But, still, a loan seems unnecessary.' He regretted that he had given her the choice of such a text, knew with absolute certainty that she could not be allowed to read the Dante alone. He came back to the desk and took the book from her. ‘I believe I'll replace it in the stacks for another time – or another reader.'

‘But no one else will ever want to read
La Vita Nuova
– not in Marlford. You know that.'

It sounded like praise. But Oscar just sniffed sharply and shook his head. ‘Enough, Ellie. It's not for discussion. I'll be late.'

She conceded defeat. She had read enough already; she felt the bulge of the story in her head, as yet too new to be completely contained, a fresh bruise rising.

‘You're probably right,' she said.

When Ellie stepped out onto Victoria Street she felt a momentary queasiness. The dark was not yet steady below the streetlights and, across from the library, the bank appeared to shift within its shadows. Shop windows rippled unreliable reflections. At the top of the village, she could just make out the statue of her grandfather, Braithwaite Barton, rising from the clipped gardens around the Assembly Rooms. In the dusk, his expression was ambiguous.

She turned her back on him and walked with Oscar down towards the almshouses, where the ground was firmer, the road and pavements even. The village was little more than a single street which looped with a final flourish around a circular stone fountain. The nymph at its centre, untroubled by nightfall, poured water
with unerring precision into a basin of blue tiles; short terraces splayed away briefly on either side, a few cottages grudgingly suggesting some kind of suburbia. Beyond the houses, wasteland fell away and disappeared into the dark; beyond that, abruptly, was the flare of the chemical works, illuminated with intimidating brilliance, consuming itself in piles of white light, flames spurting from sheer chimneys.

They skirted the unnatural brightness, following a narrow path that edged along the side of the almshouses, leading through a kissing gate that marked the boundary to the estate. They cut across to the drive, a stately avenue of overgrown lime trees, the scents of the day still trapped in the heavy dusk under the canopy. They did not speak. Ellie felt the evening only loosely. She suspected that Oscar might be angry with her: he seemed stiff and preoccupied; there was something demanding about his gaunt profile. He approached the manor steadily, as if it were a trial of some kind, his rigidity either an accusation against her or a defence. She did not know which. She feared that the men had been talking about her again, but she did not dare ask.

She put the thought aside, too old and frayed, conjuring instead the evening's poems, skipping to their rhythm, kicking through leaves, drifted husks and fallen blossom. In the settled quiet, her steps seemed loud, as though echoing back from the polished surface of the mere, which could be seen here and there slicing through the foliage to their side. Her youthful movement was extravagant; it yanked at the dense fabric of summer growth, tugging at the marshy air, dragging the dappled dark, seeds and burrs, the mushroom
smell of the soil and centuries of trapped memories, into the uneven rise and fall of her stride.

But if he felt any of this, Oscar showed no sign of it. He paused. ‘Well. Good night, Ellie.'

She checked and held out her gloved hand. It hovered, disembodied, the start of a magic trick.

Oscar touched her fingers, bowing over them as he always did, an old-fashioned habit. ‘Perhaps we have worked too hard.' He studied her for a moment. ‘You should rest.'

But she hardly heard him. She glanced behind, to the familiar, wide façade of the manor house, a mottled backdrop of greying stone, and she felt for a moment that she held all kinds of possibilities poised in the iridescence of her imagination, like a raindrop on a holly leaf.

He did not know what else to say. He bowed again, slightly, and went away.

It was some time before Ellie pulled herself back, feeling her skin thicken, her weight returning to anchor her, a momentary chill. She went quickly then, forcing herself to inhabit the place. But, in the avenue behind her, she knew, another girl remained, not quite out of reach, leading some other life.

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