Walking by Night

Walking by Night

by Kate Ellis
Walking by Night

Walking by Night

by Kate Ellis

Hardcover(First World Publication)

$28.95 
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Overview

Fifth intriguing mystery in the atmospheric Joe Plantagenet police procedural series
Taking a short cut home beneath the ruined abbey in the centre of the city, a teenage girl reports stumbling across a body. She also claims to have seen a mysterious nun-like figure watching her from the shadows. But during the subsequent search, no body is found. The girl’s inebriated state and her troubled history make the police sceptical of her story, and only Detective Inspector Joe Plantagenet is inclined to believe her.

Then a woman is reported missing, and Joe finds himself caught up in a complex investigation involving a production of The Devils at the local Playhouse. Could the play, with its shocking religious and sexual violence, have something to do with the woman’s disappearance? And is there really a connection with the tragic death of a young nun at the site many centuries before? Nothing is as it first appears.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781780290737
Publisher: Severn House
Publication date: 07/01/2015
Series: A Joe Plantagenet Mystery , #5
Edition description: First World Publication
Pages: 224
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.60(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Kate Ellis was born and brought up in Liverpool and she studied drama in Manchester. She worked in teaching, marketing and accountancy before first enjoying writing success as a winner of the North West Playwrights competition. Crime and mystery stories have always fascinated her, as have medieval history and archaeology which she likes to incorporate in her books. She lives in North Cheshire, England, with her husband, two sons and an overweight cat called Vivaldi!

Read an Excerpt

Walking by Night


By Kate Ellis

Severn House Publishers Limited

Copyright © 2015 Kate Ellis
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-78029-556-5


CHAPTER 1

Debby Telerhaye's footsteps echoed in the fog like hammer blows as her tottering heels hit the stone pavement. She shuddered, hugged the thin jacket she'd bought in the sales the previous Saturday around her body and walked on, hurrying like a mouse who fears a cat is watching from the shadows.

The city was shrouded in fog, milky white and yellow where it blended with the sickly glow of the street lights. She could only see six feet ahead, and every so often she heard voices that sounded as if they were coming from some distant world. Debby hated fog. Fog conceals all kinds of wickedness.

She'd had a good time at the Abbott's Head that evening: the music had been loud and the company raucous, up for anything. It had probably been a mistake to consume so many vodka shots, but she'd been caught up by the moment and the desire to follow her friends' example. They'd urged her on. Come on, let's have another. Let's get hammered.

They'd been in a far worse state than she was, but they'd taken a minicab home. As she'd watched them clamber in, giggling, she'd wished she was with them. But they lived in the opposite direction so there was no chance of her sharing the ride, and she had no money left for a cab of her own because she'd put her last tenner into the kitty for the final round of drinks. She had to walk. There was no choice.

She'd just reached the corner of Marketgate when she stumbled on her vertiginous heels. She carried on walking, but by the time she reached the main road her ankle had started to throb so she stopped. As she came to a halt she heard a soft footstep echoing the sharp click of her stilettos. She turned her head, but when she saw nothing behind the blanket of mist she told herself that it had probably been her imagination and limped on.


He'd been watching her all night, sitting in the corner of the bar at the Abbott's Head while she laughed with her friends. He'd heard their chatter growing louder with each drink they'd downed – and they had downed a lot over the course of the evening.

He'd been trying to make his pint last because he wanted to keep a clear head, and when she'd stood up to leave he'd drained the glass and followed her, careful to keep his distance. He'd seen her friends get into the minicab while she set off home alone. Vulnerable.

Some things were meant to be.


Debby crossed the road to the Museum Gardens, trying to ignore the pain in her ankle, and she felt her heart thumping as she braced herself to flee if she saw some silent vehicle bearing down on her. But the street was empty of traffic. Nobody in their right mind would drive on a night like this. She turned right and walked parallel with the railings, putting out a cold hand to touch them and finding the solid feel of the metal reassuring. The fog was denser now, and fear of getting lost in its enveloping embrace crept into her mind like mist seeping through an open window.

Her heels were slowing her down and her ankle was getting worse. She stopped to take off her shoes, feeling a sudden urge to run for home and flee this unearthly landscape where the familiar had turned frighteningly unfamiliar. But she wondered whether home was any safer, now that her mother had moved Sinclair in. He made her flesh creep. But her mother didn't see it: she'd let him into her life because she feared being alone. There's none so blind as the desperate.

As she bent to slip off her shiny beige stilettos, she heard the sound again. Footsteps that stopped a few seconds after hers, like a delayed echo. She was scared now, so scared that she ignored the pain when her unprotected feet met a patch of gravel. Someone had stopped when she had stopped. Someone was out there in that dense wall of mist. Following her; watching each move she made and assessing her vulnerability.

She saw Eborby's main library looming up on her left, and she knew it wasn't far to the undercroft, the only part of the medieval monastery of St Peter still standing after centuries of destruction and neglect. In its sheltering covered passageway lovers met and tourists wandered, but at this time the night people took over – the drug dealers and the up-to-no-good hangers about. But if she could slip inside and wait till her pursuer had passed, she might throw him off. To her vodka-fuddled brain it seemed like the perfect solution to her problem.

She limped into the undercroft's dank passageway on tiptoe, her shoes dangling from her left hand and the cold numbing her feet, and to her surprise and relief the place was empty. As she flattened herself against the wall, her fingers came into contact with something soft and damp. Moss which felt like dead men's flesh. She breathed in deeply, and when the chill, moist air hit her lungs she started to splutter, the noise sounding like gunshots in the silence. She covered her mouth with her free hand and waited, half expecting to see a figure looming at the end of the passageway but nothing happened. Perhaps the footsteps had been in her imagination. Or a trick of the fog.

Both ends of the tunnel-like undercroft were blocked by a wall of grey-white mist. But, even in the darkness, she could make out the shape of a huge stone Roman sarcophagus which stood against the stone wall, its mass looking vaguely industrial against the barrier of fog. As her eyes grew accustomed to the gloom, she opened the little denim bag she'd slung across her body to foil any passing muggers and, inside it, her fingers came into contact with the comforting shape of her mobile phone. But who would she call? Not her mother; telling her mother would be like telling Sinclair and that was a prospect she couldn't face. Not the friends who'd abandoned her so blithely. Calling the police would be an overreaction, and she'd probably be charged with wasting their time. She felt tears welling in her eyes and a warm trickle of moisture running down her cheek. She'd read about people who'd died of exposure. But was being attacked, maybe raped and strangled, any better?

If she waited another five minutes, she reckoned it would be safe to leave her shelter. Hopefully, he'd think he'd lost her and give up, turn his evil attentions to some other unsuspecting girl on her way home after a night out. She crept further into the tunnel, fingering the phone that could be her lifeline if events took a turn for the worse.

Her ankle was aching now, and she was as sure as she could be that it was swollen. As she bent to rub it, her eyes were drawn to something lying on the ground near the other end of the passage, outlined against the ghostly light seeping in through the far entrance. At first it looked like a bundle of old clothes that someone had discarded, and she stared at it for a while before curiosity made her take a few halting steps towards it, glancing behind her to make sure her follower hadn't appeared, looming against the fog. As her courage grew she took another step, then another, gasping as her bare foot came into contact with a tiny stone.

There was no sound in the blanketed silence apart from her own breathing. She was alone with the thing on the ground, and when she heard a soft sigh, she didn't know whether she'd made the sound or whether it came from someone or something else. The thing on the ground, perhaps.

As she drew closer, she thought the shape looked human, but it was too dark to be sure. Someone asleep, maybe. A vagrant, sleeping rough. As her eyes adjusted she thought she could make out long dark hair falling like a mask where the face should be. And clothes; something long and dark which showed no flesh.

She suspected it was a woman, but she couldn't bring herself to touch her; to feel cold cloth wrapped around dead flesh. Because her senses told her that this woman had become a corpse – a still, cold cadaver – and the sigh had come from somewhere else. Perhaps whoever had ended the woman's life.

She looked round, fighting the panic that had started to overwhelm her, and out of the corner of her eye she caught sight of a shape, half-formed in the swirling mist. It looked like a figure in long black robes. A thing with no face, there for a split second before the fog reformed itself into a white wall, and then it was gone, leaving only fear behind. She let out an involuntary scream and clamped her hand over her mouth. If it was a killer, the last thing she wanted was to draw attention to herself. When nothing happened she told herself she must have imagined the figure. But those following footsteps and the body lying there on the ground were all too real.

Terror made her forget her pain as she tore through the undercroft entrance and out into the fog. She opened her mouth to shout for help but thought better of it. Instead, she fumbled for her phone with clumsy, panicked fingers, and when she dropped it she squatted down and felt around for it in the shadows.

There was no sign of the phone. But she needed to get away, so she abandoned her search and ran out, hardly aware that one of her shoes had slipped from her hand. It wasn't far to the centre of the city, and the pubs would be throwing out now. There was safety in crowds, and she could summon help. As she crossed the road by the art gallery she narrowly avoided a bus that was driving too fast for the lack of visibility, but panic blinded her to danger as Boothgate Bar reared up in front of her out of the fog. She knew there was a pub at the other side of the city gate. If she could get there everything would be fine.

She staggered under the great stone gate, ignoring a small group of jeering men relieving themselves in the shelter of the archway, and spotted the welcoming golden glow from the Mitre's leaded windows to her left.

She stumbled in through the open door, and when she screamed, the bar fell silent.


He knew she hadn't seen him. How could she? But something had spooked her.

She'd tried to hide from him in the undercroft, thinking he'd be fooled. With all that drink, she hadn't been thinking straight, and her fuddled brain had underestimated him. She'd almost made it too easy for him – until she'd torn out of there and made for the city centre.

But there'd be another time. He could find her whenever he wanted.

CHAPTER 2

Over the years Joe Plantagenet had become used to drinking alone, to sitting in the corner watching his fellow drinkers and imagining their lives. The passivity of enjoying a quiet pint of Black Sheep made a welcome change from police work. In his local he didn't have to solve anybody's problems.

He looked at his watch. It was time to go. If he had any more he'd wake up with a hangover and be plagued with a headache all day which was the last thing he needed. Besides, he'd promised his boss, DCI Emily Thwaite, that he'd be at the police station early because she had a meeting with the superintendent and she needed him to deal with the morning briefing. He drained his glass and stood up.

He took his glass back to the bar, earning himself a nod of thanks from the landlord. Then he zipped his leather jacket and walked out into the night. The fog outside hit his lungs as soon as he stepped out of the pub doorway, and he began to cough. Eborby was prone to fog, always had been since the Roman invaders decided it was the perfect location for their military headquarters in the north of England. He wondered what those soldiers from Italy and the warmer parts of the Empire had made of the Yorkshire weather. Probably not a lot.

The wall of white cloud was so thick this time that a stranger to the city would have had difficulty finding their way around. But this was terra cognita to Joe. He could find his way back home to his flat in the shadow of the city walls blindfold. It had been built in the 1990s, but he'd always felt that the proximity of history more than made up for the soulless architecture.

Fog plays strange tricks with sound, and the shouts and screams seemed to be feet away. Without a second thought he moved towards the sounds. Even off duty his policeman's instincts drew him to trouble. After a few moments he realized that the noise was coming from a pub a few doors down the street: from the Mitre, a cosy place he'd almost chosen for his evening drink, but when he'd poked his head round the door he'd found that his favourite corner had been taken so he'd walked down to the Cathedral Vault instead.

The entrance to the Mitre stood out, bright and welcoming in the mist, but Joe knew from the sounds drifting out of the pub that something was amiss. His first assumption was that there'd been some kind of drunken altercation, although the Mitre's landlord, in Joe's experience, ran a tight and law-abiding operation. But it was a female voice that rose above the rest, terrified and close to hysteria.

Joe straightened his back and strode into the pub. Inside, the drinkers, a mixture of regulars he recognized and tourists in search of Eborby's quieter night life, sat staring at the main event – a motherly barmaid and the landlord ministering to a girl who was sitting between them on a bar stool with a glass of something comforting in her shaking hand.

'What's happened? Is she OK?' Joe asked as he approached the little group.

The landlord, a small, wiry man with a hairstyle that reminded Joe of a monks' tonsure, turned towards Joe, a 'what's it to you?' expression on his round face. Joe, realizing that although he'd been in there countless times the landlord had no idea what he did for a living, pulled his warrant card from his pocket and showed it discreetly to the man.

The landlord's attitude changed in an instant. He looked round the bar and lowered his voice. 'She came rushing in here as if the devil himself was after her. She says she's found a body. My wife's already called your lot, but they've not arrived yet. That was over ten minutes ago,' he added reproachfully.

Joe squatted down and brought his face level with the girl's. She was in her late teens, he guessed. Slightly overweight, with long brown hair that had frizzed in the damp air. She had a small nose and a rosebud mouth, and she looked a wreck. Her thick make-up had smeared, leaving dark tracks of eyeliner and mascara running down her cheeks. Her clothes, inadequate for the chill of the night, had bunched up, showing a long expanse of thigh. Her tights were intact up to her ankles, but the feet were torn, revealing filthy, bleeding flesh beneath. A single beige stiletto lay discarded on the floor.

'Hi, love. My name's Joe. I'm a policeman. What's your name?'

She took a deep, shuddering breath. 'Debby. Debby Telerhaye.' She sipped her drink, and Joe saw her hand was still trembling.

'Debby, can you tell me what happened?'

It took a few moments for the answer to come. 'I went for a drink with my mates in the Abbott's Head, and while I was walking home I got the feeling I was being followed.' She paused to take another drink. 'Anyway, I was scared so I nipped into the undercroft; you know, the old building by the library.'

'I know it. Go on.'

'Well, I thought I'd shaken him off, and I was going to carry on walking home when ...'

She stopped speaking, as though what she was about to say was too painful to contemplate. Joe knew that if he tried to rush her, she'd clam up altogether. This needed patience.

After a long silence she began to whisper. 'It was dark and with the fog ... I thought I saw something on the ground.'

'What?'

'I thought it was a bundle of clothes at first, but then I saw it was a woman. I didn't touch her.'

'So you don't know if she was dead or just unconscious?'

'I was sure she was dead but ...' Her eyes met his. 'Do you think she might have been alive?'

Joe didn't answer. He didn't want to make the girl feel bad about fleeing the scene rather than calling an ambulance right away. He touched her hand, a gesture of reassurance, and retraced his steps to the doorway. Standing in the entrance, he took his mobile phone from his pocket to make the call that would, hopefully, hurry things along. Although, on such a foggy night, the patrols on duty would undoubtedly have their hands full.

He got through to the control room and explained who he was and what had happened. A couple of minutes later he had a call from the patrol who'd just arrived at the undercroft. They were about to conduct a search.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Walking by Night by Kate Ellis. Copyright © 2015 Kate Ellis. Excerpted by permission of Severn House Publishers Limited.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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