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Authors: Rebecca Bryn

Tags: #Mystery, #Historical, #Thriller, #Suspense

Touching the Wire (26 page)

BOOK: Touching the Wire
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‘I worked for our future…
I’m not ashamed of my roots. Grandpa…’

‘You and your precious
fucking Grandpa…’ His eyes had gone blank, withdrawn: pools with a layer of
film, no way to see what lay beneath. ‘Do you really think I have nightmares?’

Anyone would have nightmares
about losing their mother and brother like that, surely? Realisation hit her;
Robin was quite capable of using it as a ploy to get his own way. ‘Oh, you knew
which buttons to push, didn’t you? Guilt… nightmares… I never know when you’re
telling the truth. You twist it to suit your ends.’

He leaned in close. ‘And you
don’t?’

‘You can’t begin to come
close to what Grandpa meant to me. He was kind, loving. He
protected
those who loved him.’

Robin’s hand gripped her
throat. He forced her to the floor, on her knees, and stood before her. A hand
fisted in her hair and he released her throat. ‘I could kill you.’

He’d got a hard-on. He was
getting off on this? A tremor ran through her; he was between her and the
stairs. Show fear now and she was finished. ‘I never wanted your money. I
earned my own. Invested it in us.’

He twisted her hair tighter.
‘You’ll get everything you deserve. I shall make sure of that. Now earn what
I’ve already paid you.’

She wouldn’t cry out.
‘What?’

‘Pleasure me, like the whore
you are… and do it right or it will be the last thing you do.’ He yanked her
head back. Muscles twitched in his forearm.

What he wanted filled her
with revulsion, now, but he was strong. She smothered an urge to tell him to go
to hell. He’d hit her before, and she was alone with him. ‘Please, no…’

He moved closer, his musky
scent strong. His hand in her hair prevented her from pulling away. She would
rather die after one brief flight as a butterfly than live as a caterpillar.
Her hand gripped his scrotum and twisted.

Robin screamed in agony as
he thrust her away; bending double he clutched himself with both hands. She ran
into the bathroom and bolted the door. Something crashed against it. Sounds of
destruction mingled with moans and obscenities before silence eventually filled
the void.

She pressed an ear to the door.
Silence stretched to breaking. He’d gone? She drew back the bolt, and raised
her hand to the latch. It rattled.

‘Charlotte…’

She jammed the bolt across
and shrank back against the wall, shaking. ‘Go away.’

‘I haven’t finished with
you, yet.’

His feet thudded on the
stairs and another crash came from downstairs. He was leaving, or finding
something heavy to break down the door.  She waited a lifetime before the
roar of the Porsche, and the screech of rubber, faded into the distance.

I haven’t finished with
you, yet
.

She slumped to the floor,
head in her hands. She was no better than a whore. Self-pity would get her
nowhere: she splashed water over her face and straightened. In the mirror her
throat bore red thumb marks. They weren’t the first marks Robin had inflicted.
He’d begun this: excusing his behaviour had made her a victim, an abused wife.

She opened the bathroom door
cautiously. Glass from her bedside lamp and the mirror on her chest drawers
sparkled on the floorboards: she picked her way through it on bare feet.
Dressed, she went downstairs, determined to put Robin behind her and get on
with her life. Dobbin lay on his side: the sofa and coffee table were upended,
The Flames of Death lay on the floor among shards of wine glass. Shoah… calamity.

Actions have
consequences, Charlotte.

The full shame of what she’d
done sent a wrenching pain through her chest. Robin had forfeited the right to
her love, but it wasn’t only him she’d been unfaithful to. Adam loved her and
trusted her. She’d let him believe she’d chosen a future with him, and had gone
straight from his bed to Robin’s. She’d betrayed Adam, the only man since
Grandpa who had made her feel truly loved, the only man but Grandpa she had
ever truly loved.

The relationship she wanted with
Adam couldn’t be built on deception. This wasn’t a secret she could keep from
him: she would always know what she’d done and it would kill her joy in his
love. He wouldn’t hit her, or shout at her, or accuse her of whoring: he
wouldn’t even blame her. He’d look at her with his grey eyes full of pain and
walk away with a broken heart, like he had from Effie… because she hadn’t loved
him enough.

Her life was nothing without
Adam: it was over, ruined, finished, and it was her fault. She snatched the
Flames of Calamity from the floor and hurled them across the room.

Chapter
Twenty-Four

 

Adam jumped from the train and hurried along
the platform and into Charlotte’s arms. ‘I’ve missed you, Hellcat.’ She
silenced him with a kiss. When he drew away her cheeks were streaked with
tears. ‘You okay? Has something happened?’

‘I’m fine… really.’

He picked up the bag he’d
dropped on the platform and walked her towards her car. ‘Come on, out with it.’

‘I’ve had a visit from
Robin. We… talked.’

His heart missed a beat.
Sweat beaded on his neck. ‘And?’

‘He… said he wanted me to go
home.’

‘And are you going to?’

‘I love you, Adam… you do
believe that?’

‘But you love Robin more. I
never really stood a chance, did I?’ He squeezed her hand and struggled to keep
his voice steady. ‘You have to do what’s right for you.’

Charlotte wiped the back of
her hand across her cheek. ‘I don’t know what that is, anymore.’

They’d reached the car. He
wanted to hold her and never let go, but she wasn’t his. She had to make this decision
herself. He had to stay strong or she’d fall apart, and then he’d fall apart as
well. He took a deep breath, held out his hand for the keys and unlocked the
door. ‘Did you get the Flames of Death open?’

She nodded. ‘It’s at home,
in a bag. I haven’t looked at what’s inside. I wanted you to be here.’

She’d wanted him to be here.
He slid into the passenger seat beside her and looked out of the window so she
wouldn’t see his pain. ‘Let’s go and see what’s in it, then.’

***

Charlotte put the Flames of Death on the coffee
table. Adam leaned forward, his hand brushed hers. She concentrated on the
carving. It was stuffed with something: a piece of material that looked and
smelled vaguely familiar. She unfolded the fabric and smoothed it out on the
table. A small, ornate brass key lay in the centre. ‘The key to the truth… I
wonder what it unlocks.’ She rotated it in her fingers. It too was familiar. ‘I
think Grandpa used to keep this on a chain in his pocket. I’m almost sure he
did.’

Adam held the fabric to her
nose. ‘Beeswax and turpentine… polish. Smell it.’ 

It wasn’t so much a smell as
a time and place filled with love and laughter. ‘This is a bit of one of
Grandpa’s winter vests. He wore them until they were in holes then used them
for polishing cloths. Gran complained that if he had an accident she’d be
ashamed to visit him in hospital.’

Her brief smile faded.
Grandpa
had
met with an accident but Gran had never had the opportunity
to visit him. She shook off the memory and delved inside the carving, pulling
out the expected assorted scraps of paper. ‘Perhaps this will tell us what the
key fits.’ She flattened out the first piece of paper. ‘
Hell is not enough.
Stripped of the veneer: Magna
est
veritas et
praevalelit
. What does the Latin mean?’

Adam’s arm touched her
shoulder. ‘Truth is great and will prevail. The Latin is easier to understand
than the English.’

Grandpa’s Latin words
pierced her heart. Adam deserved better than her truth. She must end this
without breaking his heart: without hurting him more than she had already and
leaving him feeling used. ‘There’s more.’ She unfolded another larger piece of
paper. ‘
Six, six, six is the number of the beast and I live with the horror
of his evil. Follow the instructions. For truth, one must only look at what is
not there.
Instructions?’

‘There’s nothing else in
here.’

‘Look at what is not there?
How are we supposed to know what’s not there? And where
is
there?’

 ‘Let me look. I like a
puzzle.’ Adam’s enthusiasm sounded forced. He reread the slips of paper. ‘Let’s
start with what we have, your grandfather’s words.’ His brow furrowed, hooding
his grey eyes. ‘Look at what is not there?’

She tried to concentrate.
‘Let’s see if we can work out what’s missing.’

Adam leaned closer. ‘Ignore
the Latin for the moment. Let’s see if we can make sense of the rest.’

Her sight blurred with
tears. She could hardly see the words to read them. ‘
The truth shall be
uncovered and I pray for those I love… of civilisation and humanity, fear
bought my silence and love… There is no atonement too great, eternal… I do not
ask your forgiveness, there is none. I ask only that… hell is not enough.
Stripped of the veneer…

Adam moved one of the pieces
of paper. ‘
There is no atonement too great, eternal…
Here, look…
hell
is not enough. Stripped of the veneer
…’

‘The veneer of what?’

Adam stabbed at a quotation.
‘…
of civilisation and humanity, fear bought my silence and love
…’

She fiddled with the two
quotations that were left. ‘
I do not ask your forgiveness, there is none. I
ask only that… the truth shall be uncovered and I pray for those I love.
Something
is
missing, something after
silence and love
. Fear
can’t buy love.’

Adam glanced at her, his
expression unreadable. ‘So what is it? If we need it to discover what the key unlocks,
where
is it?’

‘Look for what is not
there.’

‘The missing words? They
contain the location?’

‘I guess they must. What
else could it mean? I wish we had these instructions, whatever they are.’

Adam re-read the words. ‘Look
at what is not there… How can we look
at
something that’s not there?’

‘At?
At
not
for
?’

‘Yes.’

She rested her chin in one
hand, her elbow on her knee. Something Mum had said came back to her:
Dad
did nothing without a reason
. Grandpa had promised the truth would be told.
He would leave nothing to chance. He’d have made arrangements beyond an
accidental breaking of a carving… but… the distinction between
at
and
for
was still important. She reached out a finger to stroke the Flames of Death,
her finger brushed the chip she’d caused when she hurled it across the room in
temper. Was she really any different to Robin?

‘Charlotte?’

‘What?’

‘What do you think?’

‘I’m not sure…’ Like the
others the carving was smooth, polished, and vibrantly alive, yet it was different.
They were all different.

She turned the carving round
and leaned forward. Viewed from above, one side looked a bit like half a heart.
In fact it looked like a heart with two huge bites out of it. One or two of the
others had looked as if they had bites out of them. Why?  ‘Why is it this
shape? Why are they all alike and yet precisely different?’

 Adam’s index finger
tapped the curve in his top lip. ‘Where are the Flames of Hope?’

She took the carving from a
carrier bag. ‘This has two bites out of it, too.’

‘They’re like pieces of a
bizarre jigsaw puzzle.’

‘Yet none of them fit
together. I tried.’

‘But we didn’t have these
two then. Have you got the photos of the three I took to Duxford?’

She dealt them like cards.
‘The original Flames of Hell from Gran, the one from Mason and Hargreaves, and
the Duxford Wolf. They’re all peculiar shapes.’

He twisted the Flames of
Hope round idly and placed the bitten sides together. He tried a different way.
‘The shapes could be determined by different pieces of timber.’

‘Too precise. It must have
taken a lot of work and planning. Grandpa went to all that trouble for a
reason
,
Adam.’

‘Look at what is not there.’

‘The bites?’

Adam stared at her as if
she’d switched on a lamp in a coalmine. He stood up and turned the carvings
around, bitten sides together. Two circles, side by side… He rotated them,
lining the circles one above the other. ‘What does that look like?’ He fetched
a salt pot and a pepper grinder from the kitchen and stood one in the top
circle, and the other in the bottom one.

She looked at him blankly.
‘What are you doing?’

‘Imagine it with the two
little carved candles in the circles instead of salt and pepper. What does it
remind you of?’

She stared at the two
carvings he’d pushed together. ‘A strange set of condiments.’

‘No, think of it with the
candles.’

‘The Chapel of Unity had
candles.’

 ‘Forget the candles
then. Think of them as shapes.’

‘Give me a clue.’

‘Think of a number. The
number of the beast, remember?’

‘It’s not a six.’

‘Look at what is not there.
If only we could see the shapes of the other carvings properly.’

‘You think the shapes make
numbers?’

‘The spaces
between
the shapes. Stand up. You’ll see it more clearly.’

She stood. ‘It could be an
eight.’

‘The carvings
are
pieces
of a jigsaw puzzle.’

‘I’m not convinced, Adam.
The shape would be perfect. This isn’t.’

‘We can’t be certain of
anything until we see all the carvings together but it’s the answer, I’m sure
of it, and what’s more… What has a number and a key? We’re looking for a
safety-deposit box. I’ll stake my life on it.’

‘You mean there really is
treasure?’

‘Why don’t we reunite the
Flames of Death and Hope with their sisters at Duxford? We might solve Walt’s
puzzle.’

For a moment, her pain
forgotten, their lips met making her ache with longing. They drew apart, but
the taste and the feel of him lingered.

***

They arrived at Duxford in time for lunch. The
table where they’d sparred when they first met stood unsullied by Charlotte’s
betrayal. She’d found her soul mate, and in her heart she’d promised nothing
would come between them. She’d thrown him away, seduced by lust, pity,
guilt
… marital duty? It would have been better for Adam,
better for all of them, if he’d never found the Duxford Wolf.

‘Penny for them, Charlotte?’

‘It’s nothing…’

‘You think we were a
mistake. Love on the rebound?’

She stared at her feet.
‘It’s not like that.’

‘You’re feeling guilty about
us sleeping together when you’re still married?’

She hesitated, unable to
phrase a truthful answer. ‘Yes and no.’

He took her hand. ‘I don’t
believe you love Robin. You wouldn’t have slept with me if you did. You said it
yourself,
fear can’t buy love.
I understand you worrying about him.
Wanting to be there for him. You wouldn’t be you if you did any less.’

She fabricated a reason, a
way to allow her to distance herself gently from his love. ‘I feel I’ve walked
away when Robin needs me.’

‘Who was it said
need is
a powerful weapon in the armoury of seduction
? You can’t be a slave to
someone else’s desires, Charlotte. Need alone can’t make a marriage happy.’

‘I know you’re right. I
wish…’

‘Your wishes are my
command.’ He kissed her lightly. ‘Let’s just enjoy the day. We’ll see what the
café has to offer. My treat, Hellcat.’

She straightened and smiled.
‘I do love you, Adam.’ They still had five precious days of his holiday left.
Five days to last her a lifetime. When he was back at work ending it would be
easier. They’d known each other such a short time, and long-distance
relationships often failed. She could let him go gradually, causing him least
harm: a holiday romance, a memory to smile about in years to come if he
remembered her at all. ‘I think you’ll find it’s my turn to pay.’ She was
rewarded with a grin, and guilt shattered her heart all over again.

‘You won’t see me arguing. I
don’t come cheap, though.’

She played the game. ‘Why
doesn’t that surprise me?’

‘I am a growing lad.’ He
looked down at his lean stomach.

‘Yes, sideways.’ She laughed
despite her grief. ‘Lunch first or carvings?’

‘Lunch, definitely.’

They took sandwiches and
coffee to a table.  She toyed with her meal.

‘Not hungry?’

She had to talk about
something and maybe her infertility would be Adam’s get out without being hurt
clause. ‘Your daughter… did you never want more children?’

‘Effie didn’t want more.
Gabrielle’s a good kid. Why do you ask?’

‘I can’t have children. It’s
partly what caused Robin and me to split up.’

‘And you think going back to
him will change how he feels about that?’ He put a hand on hers. ‘If we had
hell-kittens, I’d be over the moon, but it’s you I love. It makes no difference
to how I feel about you.’

‘I have an appointment with
the clinic, in case there’s an underlying problem that needs investigating.’
She pushed away thoughts of cancer. ‘Cysts… fibroids…’

BOOK: Touching the Wire
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