Time's Echo Read online




  For my parents, with love,

  and for the people of York, past and present.

  Contents

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  I feel no fear, not yet. I am just astounded to find myself in the air, looking down at the murky rush of the river. It is as if time itself has paused, and I am somehow suspended between the sky and the water, between the past and the present, between then and now. Between disbelief and horror.

  It is All Hallows’ Eve, and I am going to die.

  Part of me knows that quite well. But another part refuses to comprehend that it is really happening. Refuses to believe that this is not a dream, that I won’t wake up. That this morning was the last time I would ever feel the floorboards cool and smooth beneath my feet, the last time I would hear the creak of the stairs or the rain pattering on the roof.

  The last time I would smooth my daughter’s hair under her cap.

  ‘I won’t be long,’ I promised her.

  In the distance, a bell is striking. The city is going about its business, the way it always does. The market on Pavement is open. The stallholders will be poking at their sagging awnings to get rid of the rain that has pooled in the morning downpour. They will be grumbling at the mud and the lost business when everyone was huddled indoors.

  I should be there. I have things to do. We need fish, we need salt. Bess is growing fast. I want to buy her some new shoes. I will go this afternoon.

  Except that I won’t. I will die instead.

  It seems odd that it should be the thought of something as ordinary as shoes that bumps time onwards, out of that strange moment when everything stopped, but so it is. It is now after all, and suddenly everything is happening too fast. I plunge into the water and it closes, brown and bitter, over my face. I can feel it rushing into my petticoat, filling my sleeves, dragging me down with the weight of the cloth.

  And I remember him, bending over me, whispering that he is going to take Bess now, he will raise her as his own, and no one will say him nay.

  ‘I will do what I like with her, Hawise,’ he said.

  Now I am afraid, remembering that.

  Now I struggle, as horror clogs my mind, but my thumb is tied to my toe and I can’t swim, even if I knew how. My skirts are too heavy, the water is too cold, and when I open my mouth to scream, to curse him again, the river gushes in through the stocking tied around my face to keep me quiet. It is cold and rank and thick in my throat. It is too late. The river is fast and furious, sweeping me away like a barrel, down towards the sea I have never seen, and never will. I am jetsam, tossed overboard to save the city.

  I sink and rise, then sink deeper, and the more I choke, the more water invades me. There is a terrible pain in my ears, behind my eyes, and my lungs are on fire.

  I am flailing, thrashing in the water, but I sink deeper and deeper. I don’t know which way is up and which is down any more. There is nothing but panic and pain and the water blocking my throat, and the bright, terrifying image of Bess looking up at him trustingly, taking his hand.

  I need to go back. I need to do things differently, so that I can keep my daughter safe.

  ‘Bess,’ I try to say, as if I could reach her, as if she could hear me, as if she could understand my fear and my anguish.

  But I can’t speak and I can’t breathe, I can’t breathe. My lungs are full of water, my throat is clamped shut. The pressure behind my eyes is agonizing, and there is a screaming in my ears, but how can I be screaming when I can’t draw a breath? Sweet Jesù, I have to have air – I have to, or I will die – but I don’t know where the surface is and I fail desperately, uselessly, against the terror as the river, uncaring, sucks me down, down, down and away into the dazzling dark.

  I lurched awake on a desperate, rasping gasp. My eyes snapped open and I stared into the darkness, gripped by anguish for a daughter I had never had, while fear clicked frantically in my throat and my pulse roared with the memory. I could feel the weight of the strange dress I had been wearing, and the stiffness of the linen cap binding my hair. The foul taste of the river was so vivid still that I gagged.

  I’m used to drowning. I’ve drowned so many times in my dreams that you would think my subconscious would learn to stop fighting the terror and the choking and the screaming of my lungs and the pain, the pain of it. You’d think that at some level it would know that eventually I will pop up out of sleep, the way I popped up in the middle of the sea, where the wave spat me out of its maw at last; but it never does.

  My usual nightmares are so tangled up with memories of the tsunami that it’s hard sometimes to distinguish one from the other, but that night in York the dream was different. That night, there were no palm trees stirring languidly above my head, the way there usually were in my nightmare. I wasn’t standing on the hot sand, and Lucas wasn’t digging on the beach, his thin little back bent over his spade. There was no decision: to turn back or go on. No mistake. That night, the sea didn’t rush out of nowhere and gobble me up.

  Instead, I dreamt of a river, brown and sullen. I dreamt of wearing heavy skirts instead of a sarong over my bikini. I dreamt of a daughter, not a little Swedish boy I barely knew.

  Only the drowning was the same.

  Slowly, slowly, the agonizing pain in my lungs eased and I could breathe properly. As my heart stopped jerking, my eyes adjusted to the darkness and I blinked, puzzled by the strange light and the muffled quality of the night.

  I strained my ears for the slow slap of the overhead fan, the mournful cry of the satay-seller pushing his cart along the gang, even the rasp of insects in the tropical night, but instead all I heard was the swish of tyres on wet tarmac and the faint clunk of a car changing gear.

  That odd, orange light through the curtains was from a street lamp. I struggled towards full consciousness. I wasn’t drowning in a cold river. I was in my dead godmother’s bed in York.

  It was the smell I’d noticed first. Sweet, putrid, faintly disquieting. I wrinkled my nose as I pushed the door open into a pile of accumulated junk mail and unpaid bills. Grunting, I lugged in my suitcase and swung my backpack off my shoulder and onto the tiled floor, before shoving the door shut with my foot. The click of the Yale lock was loud in the silence.

  The house was dark, the air thick and unfriendly, but that was only to be expected. It had been closed up since Lucy’s death, more than a month earlier. I felt around for a switch and stood, blinking in the sudden light, taking stock of my surroundings. I was in a narrow hallway with two doors on the left. Straight ahead was a steep staircase rising into shadows. It was a small, unpretentious Victorian terraced house, and the only thing that surprised me about that first evening was how very ordinary it was. Lucy had always prided herself on being unconventional.

  ‘Bess.’

  The voice sounded so close that I jumped. ‘Hello?’ I said uncertainly.

  Silence.

  ‘Hello?’ I said again, feeling a bit silly. ‘Is there anybody there?’

  But of course there wasn’t anybody there. The house had been locked up. On either side people were watching television, curtains drawn against the wet April night. All I’d heard was someone talking in the street outside.

&
nbsp; Embarrassed by the way my heart was thudding, I switched on the overhead light in the front room. This was more like the Lucy I remembered, I thought. The walls were painted a stifling red and decorated with strange, symbolic pictures. A dream-catcher hung in the window, and everywhere there were crystals and dusty bowls of herbs.

  I wandered over to the fireplace and poked through the jumble of candles and figurines on the mantelpiece. There, lurking amongst all the knick-knacks, I identified the source of the smell that had been nagging at me: a rotting apple. It was brown and puckered with mould, and something in me jerked at the sight of it.

  ‘Bess.’

  The name rippled in the air, like a breath against my cheek, and I looked up, startled, to catch a glimpse of myself in the dusty mirror above the mantelpiece. For a moment it was as if another woman was looking back at me, a stranger with dark hair and pale-grey eyes like mine, but such an expression of horror on her face that I gasped and recoiled.

  But it was only me. A pulse was hammering in my throat, and I put a hand up to still it.

  God, I looked awful, I realized. It wasn’t surprising I hadn’t recognized myself for a moment. I’d spent the past thirty-six hours on the move, from check-in desk to departure gate, from baggage carousels to station platforms, shuffling along in endless queues and through interminable security checks. Trapped in planes and trains and artificial lighting, my body clock was so confused that I’d lost track of time completely.

  I stuck out my tongue at my reflection and turned away.

  The second door led to a parlour, similarly decorated in oppressive reds and purples, and beyond it a galley kitchen, where I found another apple on the worktop. No wonder the house smelt of rotting fruit. Lucy must have had a thing about apples, I decided. This one was yellowish-brown with sagging skin. Repelled, I threw it in the bin and let the lid clang shut.

  I was buzzing with exhaustion, but too wired to sleep. I put the kettle on and decided to take my bags upstairs while it boiled, but when I picked up my backpack and put a foot on the bottom step, I found myself hesitating. It did look dark up there.

  ‘Don’t go,’ Mel had said when I rang her. ‘York’ll be boring and cold. Come to Mexico, Grace. I can get you a job at the school. You’d love it here,’ she said. ‘Think jugs of margaritas.’ She lowered her voice enticingly. ‘Think hot beaches and hot chilli and hot Mexican men. What more could you want?’

  I laughed. ‘Nothing,’ I said. ‘I’d love to come. I just need to sort out my godmother’s stuff first.’

  ‘Get the solicitor to do it all,’ Mel advised. ‘You should be out here having a good time, not poking around in an old person’s house.’

  ‘Lucy wasn’t that old,’ I protested, ‘and the solicitor did say he’d arrange everything for me.’

  ‘Well, then.’

  ‘It’s just . . . I feel I owe it to Lucy to do it myself,’ I tried to explain. ‘It’s a question of trust.’

  I’d been shocked when John Burnand rang me in Jakarta to tell me that my godmother had died. ‘Preliminary enquiries suggest that she drowned,’ he said.

  Drowned. The word closed around my throat like a fist, and I was back in the water, eardrums screaming, lungs on fire, while the wave tumbled me round and round and round. It was a moment before I could speak.

  ‘What happened?’

  ‘There’ll be an inquest, of course,’ he said, ‘but there’s no evidence to suggest that it was anything other than an accident.’

  Then he astounded me by saying that she had made me joint executor with him. I hadn’t seen Lucy for years, and was sure it had to be a mistake, but John Burnand was very precise.

  ‘Miss Cartmell made a number of pecuniary legacies, and it’s likely that her house will need to be sold in order to fulfil them, but the residue of the estate will come to you.’

  For a fee, he said, he would deal with everything for me. ‘Or would you prefer to make arrangements to come to York and sort things out yourself?’

  I could have said no, but I didn’t. I’d been in Indonesia two years, and I was restless and ready to move on. Mel was in Mexico. We’d taught English together in Japan, and had a wild time, and she’d been lobbying for me to join her for months. I gathered from John Burnand that by the time the house was sold and the legacies paid, I wouldn’t come into a fortune, but when he mentioned a possible sum, I nearly dropped the phone. It sounded an awful lot of money to me. It would certainly buy me a ticket to Mexico City and mean that I could travel for a while before finding a job.

  So I said yes without really thinking about it. The smallest of choices have consequences. It’s easy to forget that.

  But standing there at the bottom of the stairs, I wished for a moment I’d taken Mel’s advice. Then I told myself not to be so wet. I was just tired. If it was dark up on the landing, all I needed to do was switch on a light.

  Putting down my backpack, I searched around, found a likely-looking switch and pressed it. All the lights promptly went out with a huge crack that sent my heart lurching into my throat.

  ‘Shit!’

  There was a horrible banging in my chest and my ears rang. I made myself take a deep breath. A fuse had gone, that was all. I had to find a torch, find the fuse box. No need to panic.

  Turning to grope my way back to the kitchen, I fell over the backpack.

  ‘Shit,’ I said again as I knocked over the suitcase in my struggle to get up. ‘Shit, shit, shit!’

  No sooner was I up than I tripped over the backpack again, and I spent the next few minutes blundering around in the dark, getting more and more disorientated. The last time I fell, I cracked my knee on the tiled floor, which was painful, but at least did the job of making me stop and pull myself together.

  Rubbing my knee furiously, I scowled into the dark. Now I’d stopped crashing around, I could hear the faint sound of classical music through the dividing wall. One of my neighbours at least was awake. And then I saw that it wasn’t completely dark after all. Dim orange light from the street outside filtered through the stained glass above the front door and I could orientate myself. I used the case to haul myself to my feet and limped towards the light. Stubborn independence was my normal mode, as more than one ex-boyfriend had complained, but on that dark evening I was prepared to make an exception.

  His name was Drew Dyer. He opened the door looking distracted, a middle-aged man with glasses and hair that was beginning to recede. Feature by feature, he wasn’t attractive, but he had a good-humoured expression that meant that somehow he was, and something in me jumped oddly at the sight of him.

  ‘You must be a relative of Lucy’s,’ he said when I apologized for interrupting and explained that I had just arrived next door.

  ‘Her god-daughter. I’m Grace Trewe.’

  We shook hands. His palm was warm, and I felt a little jolt of recognition as my flesh touched his. Probably just because I was so cold. The night was spitting an unfriendly mixture of sleet and rain at me, and I was shivering in a T-shirt and a thin hooded cardigan. I hadn’t been in England for seven years and I was ill-equipped for the vagaries of a northern spring.

  ‘I really just came to ask if I could borrow a torch,’ I said, tucking my hands back in my armpits and trying not to look too longingly at the bright warmth of the hall behind Drew. ‘A fuse has blown, and I can’t see what I’m doing.’

  I’m not sure if he picked up on the shivering or the yearning looks, but he stood back and held the door open. ‘Come in,’ he said, and I limped gratefully inside.

  ‘Thanks.’

  He showed me into the front room and waved me to a faded armchair. It was a much more inviting room than Lucy’s. The walls were lined from ceiling to floor with bookshelves, and on the desk opposite the mantelpiece a computer glowed blue. Bending my knee hurt, and I winced as I sat down.

  ‘You’ve hurt yourself.’ Drew looked at me rubbing my knee, and I took my hand away self-consciously.

  ‘It’s nothing. I fell
over my case, that’s all. I hope I didn’t disturb you with all the shouting and swearing,’ I added. ‘I’m afraid I had a bit of a lapse on the stiff-upper-lip front.’

  ‘I didn’t hear you,’ Drew assured me. ‘I’ve been in sixteenth-century York.’

  I gaped at him. ‘What?’

  ‘I’m a historian.’ He had one of those smiles that aren’t really smiles at all, hardly more than a deepening of the crease in one cheek and a crinkling of the eyes. ‘I’ve been absorbed in my records,’ he explained. ‘I’m writing a paper for a conference, or trying to.’

  ‘Oh, I’m sorry. I’ve interrupted you,’ I said a little stiffly, embarrassed at having made it so obvious that for a second there I’d actually thought he was talking about time-travelling. I was usually quicker on the uptake.

  ‘To be honest, I’m glad of the distraction,’ he said, taking pity on me. ‘It’s not going very well. It’s not going at all, in fact.’

  I sat back and made myself more comfortable, not sorry to put off the moment of going back to Lucy’s dark, empty house. ‘What’s it about?’ I asked, noting regretfully that Drew Dyer had chosen to lean against the edge of his desk rather than take the other armchair. He might say that he welcomed the distraction, but it didn’t look to me as if he was settling down for a chat. He answered readily enough, though.

  ‘I’m looking at neighbourliness in Elizabethan York.’

  ‘Did they disturb each other by knocking on the door and asking to borrow torches in the middle of the night?’

  Behind his glasses his eyes were starred with laughter lines. ‘They were more likely to eavesdrop on each other’s dirty secrets at night.’

  ‘Sounds like fun.’

  ‘Actually, they spent most of their time fretting about the state of the roads and rubbish disposal. Not so different from today, as you’ll discover if you ever meet Ann Parsons in number four. She runs a one-woman campaign about the communal bins, and will try and get you roped in to writing to the council, so make sure you’re always in a hurry when you go past that gate.’

  ‘Thanks for the warning,’ I said. I’d never given waste disposal much thought before. I rented accommodation six months at a time, so I was never tied to a place for too long, and although I wasn’t normally short of opinions, rubbish collection wasn’t something I could talk about for very long. I wouldn’t have minded being able to prolong the conversation, though.