This
story is largely autobiographical up to the point of the disappearance, while
the denouement amounts to an allegory. The location exists and is accurately
described. Matthew existed, too, and is accurately represented. And I’m still
looking for the key to the other world.
It
was first published by SQ Magazine in
December 2011.
Approximate
reading time: 30 minutes.
-------------------------------------------------
Jamie Green had a problem. He was
no longer sure which world he wanted to live in.
The one he occupied in his everyday
life was comfortable and functional, and that suited him – but only up to a
point. He had what we are trained to believe are the essentials for a happy life:
a secure office job, a decent salary, and all the material accoutrements
consistent with the conventional expectations of modern society.
He was married to a wife who was
perceptive enough to understand his nature, shrewd enough to recognise his need
for solitary pursuits, and wise enough to allow him to indulge it. And he lived
in a fully modernised, Victorian cottage in a relatively unspoiled country village,
several miles from the nearest small town.
His living space was laid out and
decorated entirely according to his exacting tastes and functioned like a well
oiled machine. One side of Jamie’s nature was organised and authoritarian. He needed
things to be the way he wanted them, and he wanted every facet of his life to
be functional.
But it was the house that was
giving him the problem. Or rather, it was the fact that it was located in the
country where the relentless ebb and flow of the seasons demonstrated what he
had long been coming to suspect: that something bigger and wiser than meddling
mankind is in charge of the things that really matter. It was causing him to
have increasing doubts about the completeness, even the value, of the life he
was living. As I said, his lifestyle suited him – but it didn’t satisfy him.
For there was another side to Jamie
that was coming to recognise order and authority as mere devices for keeping
the material world ticking over. Living in the country put him in touch with a
yearning for something deeper, something just slightly out of reach, something
real, yet subtle and indefinable - the other world that he might, just
possibly, want to live in.
Jamie Green was one of those people
who might be called perceptive, sensitive, imaginative or fanciful depending on
the commentator’s point of view. From an early age he had felt stirrings of
doubt that what he saw was all there was. And he had always been intensely fond
of music, believing that some pieces have the power to reach into a deep part of
the human psyche, offering glimpses of another reality beyond the material one
in which we are all trapped.
They were usually passages from the
classical works of the great composers, or certain quiet, slow airs from the
Celtic fringes. But not always. As a child he had been fascinated with a
popular song of the time, a song with the engaging and evocative title: “The
Gypsy Rover.” He remembered the melody well, but he only recalled a few words
of the chorus. The first line ran
The gypsy rover came over the
hill
And it ended with
And he whistled and he sang ’til
the green woods rang,
And he won the heart of a lady.
He remembered no more of the words,
just the impression the song had left with him. As a boy he had thought it nothing
more than a romantic tale of a free-living gypsy who wanders briefly into some
rustic and restrained community, woos the prettiest of the local maidens and
then moves on. As he grew older, however, the memory of the song continued to
fascinate him and he began to doubt its apparently simplistic scenario.
The melody had a wistful quality
about it and seemed to be one of those that held the key to a higher dimension,
if only the means of grasping it could be understood. And the image of the free
spirit living an untrammelled existence - tramping the airy uplands, lazing in
the lush lowlands, and concealing himself at will beneath the leafy canopy of
the wildwood - was too powerful to belong to the ordinary world.
He began to question the true
meaning of the song. Who was this enigmatic rover? Was he a real, human gypsy, or
something from another realm? And who was the “lady?” Was she simply flesh and
blood, something like the frustrated minister’s daughter of Lawrence’s The
Virgin and the Gypsy perhaps? Or was she of otherworldly origin too?
He developed vague impressions of a
mysterious, sallow skinned young man striding freely across the green landscape
of Old England, whistling a magical tune that no one could ever quite remember.
He would appear from over the hill one day and be gone before the early risers
stirred from their beds the next morning. No one knew who he was or where he
came from, and no one ever saw him leave.
One day, perhaps, his captivating
refrain floated ahead of him, carried on a gentle breeze that stroked the wild
garlic growing alongside some quiet woodland path. It caught the attention of
the mystical maiden of the woods, a woman whom the locals knew only by
reputation, for no one alive had ever seen her. But stories handed down from
long-dead grandfathers told how she was long haired, lonely and intensely beautiful.
She was so taken with the tune that
she revealed herself to the gypsy as she never would to a mortal man. Their
liaison was brief and spectacular; and then they both faded like mists on a
summer’s morning, he moving on to some other greenwood over the hill, and she
returning to her solitary watch over the oaks and elms of her narrow domain.
For most of his life Jamie had
lived in the town and his fascination with the song had been a matter of minor
escapism. It had been difficult to relate personally to gypsy rovers and
mystical maidens in a world dominated by red brick, tarmac and ornamental
shrubs. But his move to Helvaston, a village of some three hundred inhabitants
in a rural part of the English Midlands, had brought it back strongly and
provided a credible context. His fascination with it grew as his senses became
attuned to the rhythms and harmonies of nature’s grand opera.
The landscape in which Helvaston
nestles undulates gently, and the lanes that run for a combined distance of
many miles in circuits around the village rise and fall with it. The higher
parts of them, those that cross or run along the tops of the ridges, provide far
reaching views across light green meadows and dark green woods. From one point
there is a view west across the Trent valley towards Shropshire in the far
distance. From another, the uplands of Derbyshire to the east can just be
glimpsed on a clear day.
Jamie took to walking the lanes
often and he carried the song with him, ready to fill his thoughts every time
he strode past one of the many woods in the vicinity or looked out across the
panorama of a distant landscape. He also came to realise that one month of the
year had a special quality that caught his imagination more than the others. April,
he discovered, was the true month of transition between winter and spring.
Its predecessor, March, still has
the dregs of the dark season hanging onto the frequent, chill winds that make
the daffodils shiver in premature discomfort. The waking figure of youthful
nature is still half asleep, drowsily gathering her cloak about her neck
against the blast.
When May comes it is the harbinger
of summer, rich in new growth and overwhelmingly vibrant in the multitude of colours
bursting forth triumphantly. In May, nature stands regaled in all-enveloping
finery, free and wide awake, and trumpeting her presence loudly from every burgeoning
hedgerow and tree top.
April is the tender link between
the two. In April nature is rousing herself, walking soft and lightly clad. She
has left the safety of her hibernation in the den of winter, but has yet to
take on the full armour of summer’s rich mantle. It is then that she is at her
most vulnerable and holds open the door to the esoteric mysteries that lie deep
beneath her physical exterior. Jamie recognised that fact the first April he
lived in the village.
He sensed a special quality in the
air, an elusive, ethereal quality that spoke of subtle energies stirring all of
nature’s domain into new growth and the production of new life. His instinct
told him that it was the raw stuff of nature’s relentless imperative and was
far beyond what the scientists would be able to record and measure.
He tried to pin it down, to isolate
and identify it, but without success. The physical manifestations were plain
enough: the bluebells and the wood anemones carpeting the hedgerows and the
woodland floor, the smells of revitalised earth and fresh new growth, the feel
of warm, moist air brought in by the south and westerly breezes.
But they were just the progeny. The
nature of the energy that gave them life and orchestrated their collective ensemble
remained tantalisingly out of reach. Just as a baby growing inside its mother’s
womb cannot see the greater reality of which it is a tiny part, so the five
senses are confined within the womb of nature and cannot recognise the source
from which they stem.
It was during that first April at
Helvaston that Jamie began to walk the local landscape with a restless
intensity, hoping to find some clue to discovering the deeper world from which
nature was calling him. During those months when the long hours of daylight
permitted, he would walk every evening after work. On Saturdays and Sundays he
would go out twice or even three times. And even through the winter, when the
land fell into temporary decay and became torpid, he would venture forth at
least once on every day that provided an opportunity.
Sometimes he would confine himself
to one of the circuits of lanes that took him in a wide sweep of hill and dale,
then brought him home again from the opposite direction. Sometimes he would
make for one of the woods in the vicinity and sit for an hour by a familiar
tree. He had one favourite wood where he often felt a sense of being watched,
although the impression was always of some disinterested observer and there was
never any suggestion of threat.
Occasionally he took a route
alongside an alder-fringed stream that ran away from a narrow lane and through
several quiet meadows, one of which had a high embankment on one side covered
with untrimmed shrubs and wild flowers. He spent many an hour there in the
company of bees and butterflies, looking across the narrow valley to the
village on the hill.
And throughout all the countless
miles of perambulations, music was ever in his mind. Often it was some passage
that he had heard recently, but most often it was The Gypsy Rover. He whistled
and hummed the melody without thinking as he strode along or sat among the
trees and wild flowers. Inevitably, he saw a parallel between himself and the
eponymous subject of the song. He was aware, however, of one big difference.
The Rover seemed to have accessed the land beyond the physical already. Jamie
had yet to find it.
At the end of his first year of
discovery he had seen the cycle of the seasons turn one full revolution. It was
April again and the sense of nature’s energising presence came with it. He felt
positive and optimistic, and looked forward to another year in which the full
expression of the cycle would be better manifested by its repetition.
But his sense of dissatisfaction
with the daily round of practical matters was growing in direct proportion to
his new-found regard for nature. Most noticeably, he was becoming increasingly
intolerant of his job. The routines and business of his office seemed shallow,
staid and lacking any meaningful purpose. Even his colleagues, good friends
though some of them were, seemed blind to the greater meaning of life to which
he was becoming attuned. He was unable to discuss with them his radical new
awareness because they didn’t speak the language or understand the context to
which it referred.
Sometimes on his evening walks he
would think about the incidents of the day, and a growing sense of entrapment
began to gather about him. The time he spent in the office seemed akin to being
locked in a dusty crypt, surrounded by lifeless bones. His working life was
becoming a pointless and frustrating chore. He felt trapped and claustrophobic.
And it wasn’t just the office that
he felt like that about. Wherever he went in the mundane world created by
people for their own convenience, he felt the same way. Shops, restaurants,
theatres, cinemas – even public parks with their manicured spaces and tame
flowers – produced in him the same sense of worthlessness. Somehow, they just
weren’t real enough. What little nods were made towards nature – the domestic
gardens, the floral displays, the window boxes and the concrete-encased trees
in the town centre – were too tidy and rigidly controlled. Being in control of
your house and office is one thing, he thought. Nature is too primal to be kept
on a short leash.
He began to think that man’s
obsession with taming her was nothing more than a sign of his juvenile incomprehension
of the true reality of life. And he began to find the whole thing repellent. A
desperate urge was gathering strength inside him, an urge to stretch out,
spread his wings and fly away.
His home life was beginning to
suffer too. His wife appeared to understand what he tried to explain to her
about his changing view of life, but she didn’t feel it herself. He was
spending increasing amounts of time alone on his walks and she was finding
pursuits of her own to fill the growing void.
As the spring moved into summer he
was spending little more than the hours of darkness at home. Evenings, weekends
and holidays took on a familiar routine. He would get up or return from work,
don some stout shoes and be off. He would return some time around dusk, make a
simple meal for himself and eat it alone.
His wife was becoming increasingly
frustrated by his growing alienation and tried to talk to him about it. She
hardly ever saw him and had no idea where he was spending his time. It had no
effect. His obsession with the land and the deep mystery of nature had made him
supremely uninterested in her concerns. He knew now which world he wanted to
live in; the problem of uncertainty was past. The new problem was how to find
the hidden door that would lead him on his way.
Throughout the summer, those
closest to him at work watched the growing changes and became concerned for his
welfare. Furthermore, his lack of communication, professional apathy and sourness
of temperament were alienating him from his colleagues. His attitude was
becoming a problem and a major talking point among the staff.
In September his manager and some
of his friends followed his wife in trying to discuss the matter with him. They
got no further than she had. He only wanted to commune with nature; people and
their petty concerns meant nothing to him any more. When his manager suggested
that he go off sick and seek the advice of a doctor, he willingly agreed. It
would give him more time to spend out among the land searching for his answer.
A visit to his GP to get a sick note would be a small price to pay for the
freedom to roam his beloved countryside more often.
He left his office that evening and
visited the surgery the next day. When the doctor predictably diagnosed his
condition as simple depression, he concealed his feelings of contempt and
happily accepted the month’s certificate. He looked forward eagerly to the
prospect of spending at least four precious weeks freely pursuing his goal.
And he had found a spot,
surprisingly close to his house, where the energies of nature seemed to be at
their strongest. A hope was growing in him that he might find there the
knowledge that he sought so keenly. He had taken to visiting it more often than
any of his other favoured sites and was beginning to hope that it might even
provide an entrance to that elusive other world.
It was about half a mile away at
the far end of the quaintly named Dingle Lane,
the entrance to which was opposite his house. It climbed abruptly up a short
rise and then wound slowly down the slope of the hill, crossing a narrow bridge
over a stream before rising gently again to a junction with another little-used
lane.
The hedgerows on either side
contained a large variety of shrubs, and Jamie knew what that meant. They were
unlikely to have been planted according to the dictates of the Enclosure Acts,
but were almost certainly the remnants of an old woodland margin. It was
likely, therefore, that the fields which they now bordered were probably of
recent origin, formed from the clearance of ancient woodland that been there
for thousands of years.
Jamie had always thought that there
was something special about the lane and it had become the favourite starting
point for his walks. It had taken nearly a year, however, to discover his
magical spot.
The field on the right at the far
end of the lane looked flat to the casual observer, but he had walked across it
one day and discovered a large depression in the ground that was hidden from
either of the lanes that formed two sides of the field boundary. The bottom of
the depression was boggy, fairly dry in the summer but collecting enough water to
become a small pond during the winter months. A line of gnarled old trees grew
along the top of it on one side, and a fallen, long-dead one lay broken and rotting
at the bottom. In spring the sides were awash with wild primroses, and Jamie
had taken to sitting on the steep bank more and more often, hidden from the
ignorant eyes of the outside world.
He hadn’t told anyone of his
discovery. There was no one whom he considered worth telling and, besides, he
wanted to keep the knowledge of this place to himself. During the second April
at Helvaston he had spent some time there nearly every day and never grown
tired of it. The tingle of the earth energies that seemed to be concentrated
within the confined space was seductive.
Even during the summer months, when
nature was more given to opulent self aggrandisement, he went there often. He
became convinced that Atkins’ Meadow would provide the passage from the mundane
and meaningless world of twenty first century man into the deep and peaceful
world lying beyond the mantle of nature’s physical exterior. Anyone who had
known this might have considered it a possible explanation when Jamie Green
disappeared, one Sunday in late September.
He had risen early, thrown some
fruit, nuts and bread into his rucksack and been out of the house before his
wife was dressed. He hadn’t bothered to take his leave of her, but that had
become normal and she had grown used to it. She had stood at the bedroom window
and watched him walk around the corner of the house, cross the road, climb the
short incline at the start of Dingle Lane and disappear over the crest.
“When is this all going to end?”
she had thought to herself.
The thought came back to her later
that day when Jamie failed to return home. She expected him between six and
seven as the twilight was gathering, and became increasingly concerned as the
night wore on. By ten o’clock her anxiety was becoming acute, but she decided
to shrug it off. Although Jamie had never stayed out on his walks much beyond
nightfall, there was no reason for him not to do so if he wished.
She reasoned that there were no
obvious hazards in the local landscape and that he was in perfectly good
physical health. Despite his growing distance and sour moods, he had shown no
inclination towards suicide and she would have been informed by now if he had
been involved in a road accident. She thought it likely that this was just the
latest stage in his growing obsession with nature. He was probably going to
start staying out overnight now. He would be back in the morning, no doubt, if
only for a change of clothes and something to eat.
She went to bed leaving the door
unlatched, so that he could let himself in if he returned before she awoke. She
did wake up, briefly, earlier than expected. She was sure that she’d heard
someone walking down the road outside the house, whistling The Gypsy Rover. She
was convinced that it was Jamie.
“Only he ever whistles that
old tune,” she thought drowsily.
It was still dark and she had no
idea of the time. Neither did she bother to find out. Jamie’s strange habits
were his business she decided, and fell asleep again.
The following morning she expected
to find him lying on the sofa, but there was no sign of him. She checked for
evidence that he might have come in and gone out again. She looked in the
fridge, the cupboards and his wardrobe. There was no sign that he had taken
more food or changed his clothes. His car keys were still where they had been
the previous day and the door was still unlatched. It seemed that he had not
come home after all. That evening she called the police.
A detective constable and a WPC
came out to the house and took some details. When they heard of Jamie’s odd behaviour
over the previous year they suggested that his wife’s initial assessment had been
correct: this was probably just the latest development. They said that a full
missing persons enquiry would be premature at that time, and that her husband
was likely to turn up over the next day or two. She would be surprised, they
said, at the number of people who went missing every week and then turned up
after a few days with a variety of interesting excuses. They made the tentative
suggestion that he might even have a mistress.
Of course he had a mistress;
Jamie’s wife knew that only too well. But she was not flesh and blood. No
sultry Latin senorita or cool Nordic blonde could match Mother Nature in the
art of seduction. At least, not to the likes of Jamie. For the time being his
wife would have to live with her anxiety and await his return. And that she
did, for the next three days. By Thursday he had still not turned up and she
called the police again. They sent in a search team the following day.
Given the extensive geographical
spread of Jamie’s ramblings, they felt it necessary to concentrate their
efforts on the various lanes around the village and the places that he had
mentioned to his wife – the meadow by the stream, Whitebell Wood, and a few
other locations. They didn’t search Atkins’ Meadow, apart from scouring the
hedgerow that ran alongside it. Jamie’s wife didn’t know about his favourite
spot as he had never told her about it. They also conducted house-to-house
enquiries in the village, but no one had seen him since some days before the
Sunday when he had last left the house.
After a couple of fruitless days
they called off the exercise and told Jamie’s wife that in the absence of any
evidence offering a starting point for a wider search, there was little they could
do except keep an open file. They would put his details on the national
database and let her know if anything came of it.
She felt frustrated at the lack of
resolution and at a loss to know what to think or how to conduct the affairs of
her immediate future. She had grown used to the distance between herself and
her husband, and so her sense of loss was less acute than it might have been.
Nevertheless, she found his sudden and mysterious disappearance predictably unsettling
and truly hoped that no harm had come to him. She even wondered whether he
might possibly have got his wish and moved into that “other world” that he had
often talked about. Perhaps he really had walked past the house whistling his
tune that night. Perhaps it was his way of saying goodbye. She decided that she
was being fanciful. People don’t really walk off into other worlds, do they?
There was a lot of talk in the village
about Jamie’s disappearance, but little serious concern. Hardly anyone knew him
that well and he had a reputation for being “a bit strange.” There was,
however, one person who considered himself a friend of Jamie’s, and he was a
bit strange too.
His name was Matthew McNealy and he
was known to everyone in the village as the local character. He was also universally
regarded as a hopeless simpleton. Everyone patronised him and no one took him seriously.
He was in his early seventies and
had lived in the locality for nearly sixty years, ever since a local farmer had
adopted him from an orphanage in the nearby town. The farmer’s interest in
Matthew had not stemmed from any genuine concern for his welfare, but a selfish
desire for cheap labour. He had set the fourteen-year-old boy to a life of
grinding toil, and had given him nothing in return except minimal food and
lodging.
Matthew had taken to petty crime
and had been in trouble with the police several times in his later teens. The
local bobby, for villages like Helvaston had such things in those days, had
taken a more enlightened view of Matthew’s behaviour and had used his influence
to get him a properly, if poorly, paid job as a labourer with the district
council. He had also prevailed upon another farmer to let the young man live in
an old caravan that he had standing idle in a field near his farmhouse. The
grateful Matthew had thought his meagre income equivalent to a king’s ransom,
and had followed a life of honest hard work until he’d retired.
Since then he had continued to live
in the caravan and occupied his time with a simple routine. He slept late,
walked to the local pub at lunchtime, slept again in the afternoon, went back
to the pub in the evening, and then staggered home to bed.
He spent his drinking time wandering
between the tables and talking to anyone who would spare him an ear. Most of them
did and he was perfectly content. He didn’t even have to buy most of his
drinks. The regulars were in the habit of getting one in for him when they
bought their own, and the landlord kept a running tally on a blackboard behind
the bar.
On the Sunday lunchtime following
Jamie’s disappearance, Matthew sauntered slowly up to the bar and placed his
empty mug on the counter. The landlord’s wife erased one of the ticks on the board
and proceeded to fill it.
“’Aven’t seen Jamie for a while,”
said Matthew lazily.
The landlady rolled her eyes
impatiently.
“Where’ve you been all week,
Matthew? Don’t you know he’s gone missing? Haven’t you seen the police around?”
“Yup,” said Matthew. “Didn’t know
what they wanted though.”
“Didn’t they come and ask you questions,
then?”
“Nope.”
“Wonder why not, they’ve been to
see the rest of us.”
Matthew chuckled, exposing the bank
of rotting teeth that had never seen the inside of a dentist’s surgery.
“’Cos I ’id.”
“What do you mean, you hid?”
“Saw ’em comin’. I always ’ide when
I see the police. Don’t like ’em,” he said.
“Oh, Matthew, that was very naughty
of you. Nobody’s seen Jamie since last Sunday morning and the police were just
trying to find out what’s happened to him.”
Matthew thought for a few seconds.
“I ’ave,” he said positively.
“You have what?”
“Seen ’im, since last Sunday
morning.”
“When?” asked the landlady with a
note of surprise.
“Sunday night.”
“Where?”
“In Atkins’ Meadow.”
“Are you sure?”
“Yup,” said Matthew with a
childlike look of pride, and then added knowingly “I know it was Sunday night,
’cos I was on my way ’ere and the church bell was ringin’.”
The church clock had not chimed for
many a year, but the vicar was a traditionalist who still had the single bell
rung for five minutes, half an hour before evensong. That was at six thirty, so
Matthew must have heard the bell at about six.
“Matthew, you’ve got to tell the
police about this. I’m going to ring them now. Don’t worry, they won’t take you
away or anything, just ask you a few questions. OK?”
She went to the phone and dialled
the number that had been left with everyone in the village. The detective
constable was on duty that day and agreed to come straight over. She returned
to the bar.
“They’re on their way now,” she
said. “No more drinks for you, my lad, until you’ve spoken to them.”
Matthew chuckled again. He like
being called “my lad” by a woman thirty years his junior. He had the new pint
that the landlady had just poured for him and that would keep him going until
the police arrived.
He moved among the tables again,
boasting that the police were coming all the way from Stafford especially to
see him. The detective constable arrived fifteen minutes later and took Matthew
into a back room to interview him, accompanied by the landlady. He took out his
notebook and Matthew lit his pipe. After taking some personal details he began
the questions.
“Now Matthew, I understand that you
saw Mr Green – Jamie – last Sunday evening.”
“Yup.”
“Can you be sure it was him?”
Matthew frowned, looked at the
landlady and then back at the policeman.
“’Course I can.”
“OK. What time was it?”
“Six o’clock.”
“How can you be sure it was six
o’clock?”
“She said so,” replied Matthew,
nodding in the direction of the landlady who promptly interjected.
“Matthew told me he heard the
church bell ringing, didn’t you Matthew? So it must have been about six o’clock.”
“Oh I see,” said the policeman.
“And where did you see Mr Green?”
“In Atkins’ Meadow.”
“What was he doing?”
“Walkin’ across the field.”
“In which direction?”
“Towards the stile.”
“Which stile? The one in the hedge
that goes down to the village or the one that goes to the main road?”
“The one that goes to the village.”
“And where were you at the time?”
“In the lane.”
“So Mr Green was walking towards
you?”
“Yup.”
“Did he see you?”
“Yup.”
“How do you know?”
“’Cos I waved to ’im and ’e waved
back.”
“And he was alone, I take it?”
“Nope.”
The policeman and the landlady
exchanged glances.
“You never told me that Matthew,”
said the landlady.
“Ya didn’t ask,” replied Matthew
with another grin.
“So he was with someone?” continued
the detective.
Matthew shrugged his shoulders.
“What do you mean? Was he with
someone or not?”
“Well, the other bloke was more,
like, followin’ ’im. Jamie didn’t seem to know ’e was there. Don’t know why.
The bloke was whistlin’ loud enough.”
“Was there just the one man
following Mr Green?”
“Yup.”
“Nobody else?”
“Nope.”
“Can you describe this man? What
did he look like?”
“Big bloke. Foreign.”
“How do you know he was foreign?”
“’Cos ’e ’ad
a brown face and black ’air. Long ’air. ’Ung down on ’is shoulders. And ’e ’ad
somethin’ on ’is ’ead.”
“What sort of something?”
“Like a big ’andkerchief, tied at
the back. Like one o’ them gypsies. Didn’t like the look on ’im. Don’t like
gypsies. That’s why I didn’t wait for ’em to catch me up.”
“Can you tell me what else this man
was wearing?” asked the policeman.
“Funny clothes. Old fashioned,
like.”
“Can you describe them?”
“Baggy shirt and them funny
trousers as only go as far as the knees.”
“What colour were they?”
“Dunno. Didn’t notice.”
The policemen wrote “handkerchief
on head,” “baggy shirt,” “knee length breeches,” “swarthy,” and “gypsy type” in
his notebook. He wondered whether Matthew was making it all up. The character
sounded like something out of a children’s story book, but he continued.
“Could you see how old this man
was?”
“Not really. Youngish bloke.
Thirties, forties, I dunno.”
“And did they follow you down the
lane?”
“Nope.”
“How do you know?”
“I looked back when I was ’alf way
down. There was no sign on ’em.”
“Could you still hear the man
whistling?”
“Nope.”
“Do you know what tune it was?”
“Nope. Never ’eard it before.”
The policeman could think of no
more questions for the present and decided that he ought to go and have a look
at Atkins’ Meadow.
“OK Matthew, I’d like you to come
with me in the car. Show me exactly where all this happened, OK?”
Matthew nodded. He seldom got the
opportunity to travel in cars, and the policeman wasn’t wearing a uniform so he
didn’t feel threatened. This was beginning to seem like fun.
He directed the policeman down the
road from the pub, left into Dingle Lane, across the stream at the bottom of
the hill and then up the other side. The officer didn’t need directions but he
was happy to indulge the old man’s rare moment of influence. Matthew pointed
out the stile in the hedgerow when they came close to the far end. The
policeman continued to the junction and parked the car in a nearby gateway.
They walked back down the lane to the stile.
“So where were you when you saw Mr
Green?” asked the policeman.
“Right ’ere.”
“And where was Mr Green?”
“About fifty yards, that way,” said
Matthew, pointing.
He lacked the sort of academic knowledge
that most people take for granted, but he was accurate with distances.
“And he was walking this way?”
“Yup.”
“How close was the other man?”
“Spittin’ distance. Few yards.”
“And why did you say that you
thought Mr Green wasn’t aware of the other man?”
“’Cos ’e stopped and looked round.
And the other bloke stopped as well. Just stood there. And Jamie didn’t look at
’im. He kept looking round, like ’e was looking for somethin’. Queer, that
was.”
“Well,” said the policeman, “let’s
go and take a look, shall we? I can get a SOCO team in tomorrow, but I might as
well see if there’s anything obvious.”
Matthew didn’t know what a SOCO
team was, but he was happy to follow the policeman over the stile and across
the field.
“I suppose he must have been about
here when you saw him,” said the policeman when they had walked about fifty
yards.
Matthew nodded. The policeman
walked around the spot but failed to find anything.
“What’s that over there, that
depression in the ground?”
“Dunno,” said Matthew. “It’s always
bin there.”
“You can’t see it from the road can
you? Looks like an old marl quarry or something. Let’s go and have a look.”
They crossed the field and walked
down into the hollow via the shallow slope at one end. Suddenly, the policeman
stopped and held up his arm to prevent Matthew going any further. He could see
what looked like a human hand sticking out through one of the lifeless branches
of the fallen tree.
“Go back up to the top, will you
Matthew. And stay still. I don’t want any more pairs of feet than are necessary
tramping over here.”
Matthew did as he was told and the
policeman walked over to the dead tree. There, half concealed beneath the stark
branches, was the body of a man. It was lying face down and the clothes fitted
the description of what Jamie Green had been wearing the previous Sunday
morning. The policeman called the station.
An investigation was started but,
as the facts unfolded, the police were at a loss to know whether to treat the
case as murder or not. The results of the post mortem had the pathologist
baffled. He confirmed that the body had lain in the hollow for about a week, but
the only thing he could find to explain the death was evidence of an injury to
the brain consistent with a heavy blow to the head. Yet there was not the
slightest sign of such a blow externally.
It was probably fortunate for
Matthew that there wasn’t, for his unlikely tale of some comic book gypsy
character - and one that only he could see, apparently - could have led to him to
being the prime suspect.
Further investigations in the
locality failed to produce any other sighting of the mysterious Romany. A
thorough examination of the scene produced nothing to indicate a struggle or
the presence of another person. And then there was the position of the body. In
order to recover it, mechanical lifting equipment had been needed to remove the
tree. It would not have been possible for a single person to have placed the
body there, and neither could the police see any way in which Jamie could have
crawled into such a position himself.
Consideration was given to the
possibility of an attack by several strong men, but that raised its own
question. Why go to such trouble to conceal a body so inadequately when there
were easier and more comprehensive options? And, in any case, such an attack
would certainly have left external injuries.
The police were baffled. In the end
they decided that there was insufficient evidence to treat the case as murder
and it remained unsolved. An open verdict was recorded and Jamie’s body
released for disposal.
A funeral service was held in the
village church prior to removal for cremation. A number of Jamie’s colleagues
were there as well as several of the locals, and it was they whom Jamie’s widow
studied most closely. She was looking for signs of guilty knowledge, for she
was still disturbed by something that had happened on the day that Jamie’s body
had been found.
It had taken some time to arrange
the equipment necessary to remove the tree, and it had been late in the evening
when she had been called to identify her husband and take possession of his
effects. On returning home she had spent several sombre hours mulling over the
change in Jamie and the decline of her marriage during the previous year. The
tragic conclusion had been a blow that would take some time to come to terms
with, and the mysterious circumstances left unanswerable questions that only compounded
the issue.
It was long past midnight when
she’d gone to bed and she’d still been awake half an hour later when she’d heard
the whistling again. It was the same tune, The Gypsy Rover.
She’d left the bedroom light off
and hurried to the window, throwing the curtains back and peering out onto the
dimly lit street below. At that point the melody had changed to something
haunting and unfamiliar. She’d opened the window and put her head out, looking
in all directions to try and locate the sound of the music. The street had been
empty, but she’d had a vague impression of a dark figure standing in the shadow
of the village shop opposite. The shadow had been too deep to allow any degree
of certainty. And then the sound had faded, seeming to move over the rise in
Dingle Lane until it ceased altogether.
She’d returned to bed feeling
confused, upset and angry. Had one of the locals, knowing of Jamie’s peculiar
habits and his preoccupation with the tune, been playing a cruel trick on her?
She had got to know them well and couldn’t think of anyone who would do such a thing,
but it seemed the only credible explanation.
As she lay in bed, the faces of her
neighbours had flashed before her and she had dismissed each of them in turn.
And then she’d thought of the many things that Jamie had said when he was still
bothering to take the trouble. Briefly, she’d considered the incredible.
Could the whistling have come from
Jamie’s ghost, giving her some evidence of his continued existence? Or could
he, as she had thought a week earlier, really have entered the other world he so
craved and be taking his last farewell?
She’d been half inclined to accept
either possibility, but neither of them explained the curious nature of his physical
death. Whatever world he was now residing in, the question of how he got there
remained a mystery.
She’d wondered whether the mythical
gypsy character actually existed. Suppose Matthew really had seen him walking
behind Jamie that Sunday evening in Atkins’ Meadow. Maybe the errant Romany was
lonely and welcomed the advent of a companion on his travels. Maybe he had
brought about Jamie’s death in order to take him through the doorway into his
world. Maybe that was the only way of entering it.
Then again, the opposite might be
true. Jamie might have been getting too close. The gypsy might be highly
territorial, and might have been getting jealous at the prospect of someone entering
his realm as a rival. Would he not have wanted to prevent him doing so by
consigning him to a conventional death in this world? And might he not have wished
to proclaim his triumph to the widow of the vanquished?
More disturbing still, she’d
wondered whether Jamie’s obsession had been so persistent and all-consuming
that it had somehow brought the gypsy into existence. She’d known that there
were people who believed such a thing to be possible. Who knows what the
attitude of such a being might be to its creator? She’d thought of Mary
Shelly’s creature and its act of revenge on the hapless Frankenstein.
Eventually she’d dismissed all the
supernatural possibilities as silly and fanciful. The simpler explanation held
sway and she’d decided to hold onto it. She’d fallen uneasily into a troubled
sleep, convinced of the need to identify the one responsible for such a callous
act.
And that was why she scanned the faces
of the congregation at the funeral, looking for some sign of nervousness or a
sly glance that would betray the person responsible for that eerie whistling
outside her window. She saw nothing then, nor at the brief wake that was held
in the village hall. She went home feeling deflated and disappointed, knowing
that the identity of the phantom whistler added a further mystery to the one
surrounding Jamie’s death.
And she was unable to ignore
totally the image conjured up by Matthew’s description of the scene in the
field. As the evening wore on and she became drowsy, a picture kept floating
into her mind, a picture of a swarthy, powerful man with a melancholy tune on
his lips and murder in his eyes. She went to bed with a furrowed brow and a deep
sense of unease in her heart.
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