Authors: Elly Griffiths
Behind the archway, wide steps lead up to an impressive portico: columns, pediment, the lot. Ruth walks through the stone porch (the door has been taken down) and finds, on the other side of the wall, utter desolation. The interior of the house has vanished, leaving only rubble and churned-up stone. The occasional staircase and doorframe still stand, looking unreal, like stage scenery. Here and there, Ruth can see patches of wallpaper on half-demolished walls and stray pieces of furniture, washed up like flotsam and jetsam: a filing cabinet, a ceramic bath, a fridge door still sporting its jaunty magnets, âYou don't have to be mad to work here', âThere's no I in Teamwork'.
âBuilding work's well advanced,' she says.
âYeah,' Ted smiles sardonically, âEdward Spens is in a hurry.
He doesn't like archaeologists slowing things down.'
âThe arch is very grand.'
âIt's staying apparently. Going to be a feature in the new building. Spens reckons it gives the place class.'
âAny idea what the inscription means?'
âAre you kidding? I went to school in Bolton. Watch your step here.'
Behind the doorway the ground drops away sharply. All that remains of what must have been the entrance hall is a narrow ledge, still paved with black and white tiles, chipped and discoloured. In front and directly underneath the doorstep is a trench. Ruth recognises archaeologists' handiwork at once. The sides are perfectly straight and a red-and-white measuring pole marks the depth. A young woman in a hard hat is standing in the trench, looking up at them.
âThis is Trace,' says Ted, âone of the field archaeologists.'
Ruth knows Trace by sight. She's a familiar figure on summer digs and she also works at the museum. She is just the sort of woman who makes Ruth feel inadequate â whippet-thin, wearing a sleeveless jerkin, her muscles standing out like whipcord. The hair protruding from the hat is dark purple.
âWhere are the bones?' asks Ruth.
Trace points to the far end of the earth wall.
âRight under the main doorway,' says Ted, reading her thoughts.
She sees it at once â the grave cut. Below the stone doorstep (still in place) and a thin layer of cement, the earth has been churned up. Normally you would expect to see a layer of brick followed by foundation rubble, but here sand, stones and earth are mixed together like builder's soup. These layers have been disturbed, not that long ago, and the line cutting
through them is called â Ruth realises for the first time how ominous the name is â the grave cut. And, sure enough, below the disarranged earth lie the bones.
Ruth kneels down. They are human, she sees that at once.
âHave you called the police?' she asks. âThe coroner?'
âNo,' says Trace, rather sullenly. âWe thought we'd wait for you.'
âWhat do you think?' asks Ted, leaning over her shoulder.
âThey're human, they look like a child's. Hard to tell the age.' Recently unearthed bones are fairly easy to date but after that, as Ruth knows to her cost, analysis is a difficult business. Though the grave cut is recent, the bones could be anything from fifty to several hundred (maybe even thousand) years old. She is looking at a cross-section, the bones suspended in the side of the trench. They appear to be crouched in a foetal position. She looks at Ted. âNo skull,' she says.
âNo,' he says chattily, âwe noticed that.'
All of a sudden, Ruth knows she is going to be sick again. She lurches away from Ted and retches violently in the corner of the trench. Trace looks at her with horror.
Ted, though, seems undisturbed. âAre you all right?' he asks. âWould you like some water?'
âYes please.' Ruth's head is pounding and she knows that she is shaking. Why did this have to happen here? It will be all over the department by tomorrow. She crouches down, trying to control her breathing.
âHere.' Ted has returned with a battered-looking water bottle. Ruth takes a cautious sip and feels her insides settle slightly. She must stay calm. Breathe.
âI'm sorry,' she says, âmust have been something I ate.'
âMotorway food,' says Ted sympathetically.
âYes,' says Ruth, straightening up. âWe'd better call the police.'
âShall I dial 999?' asks Trace, sounding animated for the first time.
âI've got a number,' says Ruth, getting out her mobile phone and dialling.
âRuth!' says a surprised voice, âwhy are you calling?'
âWe've found some bones, Nelson,' says Ruth. âI think you'd better come.'
*
By the time Nelson arrives the builders have gone home, leaving only the very irritated foreman. âEdward Spens wants this site clear by the end of the week,' he keeps saying.
âI'm sure he wouldn't want to get in the way of a police inquiry,' says Ruth tartly. The foreman looks as if he isn't so sure about this.
Ruth hears Nelson's Mercedes screeching around the curved driveway. She is not sure how she feels about Nelson. She likes him, more than likes him, but she knows that as her pregnancy becomes more obvious things are going to get very difficult between them. Still there is no reason for Nelson to suspect for a few weeks yet. Lucky she has always worn baggy clothes.
Then Nelson himself appears, framed briefly in the doorway. At his shoulder is a policeman called Clough, whom Ruth knows by sight. Nelson speaks briefly to Clough and then strides along the narrow walkway, jumping lightly into the trench. This is Ruth's main memory of him; always hurrying,
always eager to get on to the next thing. But she knows that he can be patient when it comes to an enquiry. Almost as patient as an archaeologist.
âWho's in charge?' is his first question.
âMe', Ruth wants to say, but the foreman bustles forward.
âDerek Andrews,' he says, âforeman.'
Nelson grunts and looks past him, to where Ruth is standing.
âWhere are the bones?'
âHere,' says Ruth. During the wait she, Ted and Trace have exposed more of the bones and she has photographed them, using the measuring pole as a scale. The skeleton is now protruding like a macabre mosaic. Nelson squats down and touches a bone gently with the tip of one finger.
âAre you sure they're human?' he asks.
âPretty sure,' says Ruth. âThere may be animal bones mixed in there but I think I can see tibia and fibula.'
âAre you going to take them out?'
âI want to expose the whole skeleton first,' she says. âRemember what I said on the Roman site, about context?'
Nelson straightens up. âHow do we know these bones aren't Roman?' he says. âOr bloody Stone Age, like the other ones.'
âIron Age,' says Ruth, through gritted teeth. âWe don't know for sure,' she continues coolly, âbut the grave looks fairly recent. See the lines cutting through the strata? I guess the body was buried when the walls were built.'
âWhen was that?' asks Nelson.
âWell, the house looks Victorian. About a hundred and fifty years ago maybe.'
âYou call that recent?'
âWhat was on this site before?' asks Clough.
âChildren's home,' says Nelson briefly. âRun by the Sisters of the Sacred Heart.'
Clough gives a sharp intake of breath.
âWhat?' Nelson asks irritably.
âWell, it was run by nuns, wasn't it?' says Clough. âAnd you know what they're like. This could be some poor kiddie they killed.'
âNo I don't know what they're like,' says Nelson, his face darkening, âand you, Sergeant, would do well not to jump to conclusions.'
âWe think there was a medieval churchyard on this site,' cuts in Ted. âThat's why we're excavating here. County archaeologist insisted we do a dig before the new build goes up.'
âEdward Spens was furious,' says Derek Andrews, âsays you're costing him thousands of pounds a day.'
âWell, we're not being paid thousands,' says Trace sulkily. âEvery brickie on site gets paid more than we do.'
Nelson ignores this, turning to Ruth. âCould the bones be medieval?'
âIt's possible,' says Ruth, âbut the context looks modern. Of course, they could be medieval bones that have been buried relatively recently. But I think it's unlikely. The skeleton looks intact, as if it was buried fairly soon after death.'
âWell,' says Nelson decisively, brushing soil off his trousers, âwe need to close the site until you've finished your investigations.' He raises his hand. âAnd I don't want to hear what bloody Edward Spens thinks. This is a police matter now. You did well to call me, Ruth, and not the local boys.'
Nelson, Ruth knows, is in charge of something called the Serious Crimes Unit and resents any interference from âuniforms'. She is ashamed of how pleased she feels at the praise. Nelson turns to her now, ignoring Trace who obviously hates being outranked like this.
âHow long will you need, Ruth?'
âA few days, at least. We'll have to see if there are any more. Also, the head is missing.'
âThe head?'
âYes, it looks as though the skeleton is missing its skull. It could be buried somewhere else on site.'
âIs it a child?' asks Nelson. âThe skeleton?'
âI think so. We'll be able to tell more when we examine the bones. Children's bones have growing ends on them, called epiphyses. As they get older, these fuse with the main part of the bone. Of course,' she adds, seeing Nelson looking glassy-eyed, âexamining the skull is the best way of determining age.'
âYou mean because of the teeth?'
âYes and the growth patterns.'
âWill you be able to tell its sex?'
âIt's very difficult if the skeleton is pre-pubescent. Though there was a case recently in Sussex where archaeologists were able to sex foetal skeletons using DNA analysis. Of course, if it's older, the skull should give us a clue.'
âWhy?'
âThe brow-ridge is more pronounced in post-pubescent males.'
Nelson smiles faintly. âYou mean we're all Neanderthals?'
âNeanderthal man died out,' says Ruth, âbut, yes, something like that.'
âOK.' Nelson turns to Clough. âWe'll need to get the scene-of-crime boys down here.'
Over the last few minutes, Derek Andrews has been looking ready to explode. âWhat shall I tell Mr Spens?' he says at last.
âTell him this is a suspected murder enquiry,' says Nelson, climbing out of the trench. Andrews mutters something incomprehensible.
Ruth follows Nelson along the raised path. She is still feeling sick and slightly dizzy. The black and white tiles merge unpleasantly before her eyes. She stops, breathing hard. Nelson looks at her sharply, âAre you all right?'
âYes,' she says lightly, forcing herself to straighten up. âWhy wouldn't I be?'
âYou tell me.'
There is a slightly awkward pause. Ruth sees Clough looking at them curiously.
âI'm fine, Nelson,' says Ruth. âThis is my job, remember.'
Nelson looks at her for another long minute, frowning.
âRather you than me,' he says at last and heads off back to his car without saying goodbye.
Ruth drives slowly back along the Norwich ring road. She has stopped feeling sick and now feels ravenously hungry, a common pattern over the last few weeks. She stops at a garage and buys a baguette and some mineral water. Plain carbohydrate is what she needs. That and water. She drives along stuffing pieces of bread into her mouth. She's going to put on several stone with this baby, she can see it now. This has been one of the very best things about being pregnant though; not worrying about her weight. Ruth has been overweight since school. How many years of her life has she spent dieting, worrying about her body-mass index and trying to stand on the scales in a way that makes her four pounds lighter? She has been to WeightWatchers and Slimming World and has had several bloated weeks on the cabbage soup diet. In the last few years she has stopped dieting, which has had no effect on her weight but has made her feel, if not happier, at least resigned. She is never going to be one of those women who boasts that they can eat what they like and not get fat (âit's just my metabolism; I'd give anything to have curves'). She's never going to look good in a bikini
or vest top. But, by and large, she doesn't care. She wears anonymous, baggy clothes and only looks in the mirror to check that she hasn't got spinach in her teeth. But now, hallelujah, she has an excuse for being fat. She can drink a non-diet Coke without having a chorus of invisible voices berating her: âDid you see the size of her? Shouldn't she be drinking the diet version?'
Has Nelson noticed anything? She doesn't think so. He was fairly abrupt but that is what Nelson is like when he is on an investigation. And he had deferred to her, asked her how long the excavations would take, much to the annoyance of Trace and the foreman. She wishes she hadn't been sick though. Irish Ted had been nice but she doesn't trust Trace not to tell all her field archaeology friends. Had it been the car journey and the exertion of clambering over the site? Or had it been the skeleton, the foetal position, the thought of the head separated from the body? She remembers Max's talk of head rituals in Celtic mythology. Celts were head hunters. Celtic warriors would cut off their opponents' heads in battle and hang them from their horses' necks. After battle, the heads would be displayed at the entrance to the temple. The severed head is a recurring theme in Celtic art.
Is the building-site body Celtic or Roman? Is it medieval, a relic from the long vanished churchyard? Maybe, but Ruth is still convinced that it was buried fairly recently, in the last couple of hundred years. The disturbance of the earth under the door suggests that it was buried when the door was put in place. How old was the children's home? She will have to ask Nelson to look at the title deeds and planning history.