They stood awkwardly for a moment, and she said, ‘Do you want to join me for a drink in the bar?’ She registered his embarrassment again, and wondered if he saw her as attractive. She didn’t feel attractive. No make-up, hair drawn back severely in a ponytail. And why would she care? He was at least ten years her senior, carrying more weight than was good for him, and judging by the ring on his finger, a married man.
He looked at his watch self-consciously. ‘I can’t really stay, Ma’am.’
‘It’s Sylvie.’
He nodded and confirmed his marital status. ‘My wife will have my tea waiting for me.’
She had an image of his wife at home with a cup of tea, piping hot and ready for him coming through the door.
He must have seen her confusion. ‘My dinner,’ he clarified. And suddenly it occurred to him to ask her if she would like to eat with them. ‘I’m sure whatever we’re having would stretch to three...’
She smiled wearily. ‘Thank you, but no thank you.’ She had no desire to pass an awkward evening with this prosaic island policeman and his wife. ‘I should probably get an early night.’
He seemed relieved. ‘Righty-ho, then. I’ll drop by to pick you up in the morning. About eight?’
She nodded. ‘Thank you. Bonne soirée, Detective Sergeant.’
‘You, too, Ma’am.’
When he was gone she carried her case up to her room with leaden legs and a heavy heart. The room was clean and tidy and modern, with a view across the harbour which, on a good day, might be stunning. But now, with the wind ridging the water and rain marbling the window pane, was just depressing. On the far side of the harbour a castle of some kind stood sentinel on the hill. Grey and red sandstone with crenellated towers. It seemed oddly out of place in this weather-lashed fishing port on the very edge of Europe. And she wondered what sort of people lived here, and what kind of lives they led.
She sat on the end of the bed feeling sorry for herself and took out her mobile phone to call Gilles and speak to the twins. But there was no reply, and she hung up feeling emptier and lonelier than she could ever have imagined.
Chapter Twenty-One
It was only as she approached the house that Niamh noticed Seonag’s red SUV parked next to the Jeep. She hadn’t seen it arrive, and her heart sank. She really had wanted this time to herself. To mourn, to grieve, to deal with her demons on her own.
When she stepped into the house she could smell cooking. She kicked off her wellies and hung up her parka and padded through to the living room. Seonag was busy at the stove, steam rising from a large pan of boiling water filled with spaghetti. A meat sauce bubbled in another. Discarded food wrappings and the remains of ingredients lay scattered across the worktop. A bottle of Amarone stood open on the counter next to a couple of glasses, one of which contained a good two inches of ruby-red wine and displayed Seonag’s lipstick all around the rim. Seonag looked entirely at home, as if it were she who lived here and not Niamh.
She turned, smiling, as she heard Niamh come in. ‘Hello a ghràidh. Hope you don’t mind pasta two days running. But bolognese is a wee bit different from lasagne. And I brought some more Italian wine to go with it.’
Niamh supposed she meant well and forced a smile. ‘Great. But I’ll stick with the fizzy water, if you don’t mind.’ She took a fresh bottle from the fridge and poured some into the empty glass. ‘I’ve got to get an email out to my list before I eat. Just to let everyone know when and where the funeral’s going to be.’
‘No problem. The pasta’s got a way to go yet. I’ll just keep the sauce warm.’
Niamh took her glass with her through to the office and shut the door behind her. She slumped into her chair and took a sip of water, gazing out across the Minch in the dying light. She had sent an email to her list as soon as she got back from Stornoway, and was annoyed at having to lie to steal a moment to herself in her own house.
She let her head fall back and closed her eyes. So many things to think about, so many things to do. And she had no will to think or do any of them. She had an overwhelming urge to sleep, but knew that if she went to bed she would probably just lie awake.
She resented Seonag’s uninvited presence, and yet there was a comfort in the sounds of domesticity coming from the kitchen. Of life in this house that had been deprived of it. How could she ever live here on her own? The only point of it had been to be with Ruairidh.
She had finished her water before she knew it, bubbles fizzing around her lips, and realized she would have to go back through. Seonag had the table set and was transferring spaghetti with pasta tongs from the pan into deep plates. ‘Perfect timing,’ she said. And began spooning minced beef and tomato sauce over the pasta before grating big flakes of parmesan over the top of it. She carried the plates to the table and they both sat on the round, facing the view. Just as Niamh and Ruairidh had always done. Seonag refilled her glass. ‘So how did you get on with the Macfarlanes?’
Niamh flicked her a glance and was sure she already knew, but told her anyway.
Seonag listened in grave silence then said, ‘I suppose it’s best that the coffin is on display at the croft rather than up here. Folk would never make it out on that road.’ She canted her head in the direction of the track that snaked its way across the moor from Ness.
Niamh nodded. ‘No.’
‘What were you doing up on the cliffs? I saw you in the distance when I arrived.’
Niamh shrugged and spooned pasta into her mouth. It tasted good and she realized just how hungry she was. ‘Walking, thinking, remembering. It was out there above the bothy that we released Roísín’s ashes.’
Seonag said, ‘I’ve never been out to the bothy. What possessed you to build it in the first place?’
Niamh washed down her bolognese with a mouthful of clear sparkling water. ‘Years ago Ruairidh took me out on to the cliffs at Mangersta. You know how exposed it is down there. Those amazing sheer rock faces, stacked up in layers, as if they were God’s archives, a geological history of the Hebrides. Seams of rock like the rings of a tree, but taking you right back to the very beginnings of time.’
‘Hard to believe, but I’ve never been as far south as Mangersta. Uig Beach is about my limit.’ Seonag sipped her wine.
‘Really?’ Niamh was surprised. ‘I must take you some time. There are rock stacks in the ocean all around the cliffs. The sea just breaks white all along that stretch of coast. Anyway, there’s a bothy there, built just below the lip of one of the cliffs about thirty years ago by a couple living in the area. It was their daughter that died in Afghanistan, remember? She was an aid worker kidnapped by the Taliban, and then killed during an attempt by American marines to rescue her.’
‘Linda Norgrove,’ Seonag said. I remember the funeral. The procession was miles long.’
‘Well, it was her folks who built the bothy. No idea why, but Ruairidh knew about it. He’d been out there a few times and wanted to show me it.’ She smiled, remembering the trek across the cliffs, almost getting lost before finding it, suddenly, tucked away on a hidden shelf below a tumble of broken rock. ‘It sits perched up there, almost invisible, built right into the wall of the cliff. There’s a couple of windows, with the most amazing views, and skylights. In clear weather you can see all the way out to the Flannan Isles, and St Kilda. We got there at sunset, and honest to God, Seonag, I’m not sure I’ve ever seen anything so beautiful. Like looking out from the roof of the world. We set a fire and made love, and spent the night.’ A tear came with the memory and rolled slowly down her cheek. She wiped it away and forced a laugh. ‘It wasn’t the most comfortable place I’ve ever been made love to, or slept in. But it was magical.’