Merrily would be glad to leave.
Yesterday, they’d been addressed by their second psychiatrist, on the problem of confusing demonic possession with forms of schizophrenia. They’d have to work closely with psychiatrists – part of the local support-mechanism they would each need to assemble.
Best to choose your shrink with care, Huw had said after the doctor had gone, because you’d almost certainly, at some time, need to consult him or her on a personal level.
And then, noticing Clive Wells failing to smother his scorn, he’d spent just over an hour relating case histories of ministers who had gone mad or become alcoholic or disappeared for long periods, or battered their wives or mutilated themselves. When a Deliverance priest in Middlesbrough was eventually taken into hospital, they’d found forty-seven crosses razored into his arms.
An extreme case, mind. Mostly the Deliverance ministry was consultative: local clergy with problems of a psychic nature on their patch would phone you for advice on how best to handle it. Only in severe or persistent cases were you obliged to go in personally. Also, genuine demonic possession was very rare. And although most of the work would involve hauntings, real ghosts – unquiet spirits or insomniacs – were also relatively infrequent. Ninety per cent were basic volatiles or imprints .
Like the monk.
Ah, yes… monks. What you needed to understand about these ubiquitous spectral clerics, Huw said, was that they were a very convenient shape. Robed and cowled and faceless, a monk lacked definition. In fact, anyone’s aura – the electromagnetic haze around a lifeform – might look vaguely like a monk’s cowl. So could an imprint , a residue. So that was why there were so many ghostly monks around, see?
‘Oh, just bugger… off !’ Merrily crumpled the paper towel, tossed it at the wall where the smudge had been and went over to investigate.
The smudge turned out to be not something in the air but in the wall itself: an imprint of an old doorway. The ghost of a doorway.
Three days of this and you were seeing them everywhere.
Merrily sighed, retrieved the towel, binned it. Picked up her cigarette from the edge of the washbasin. There you go… it was probably the combination of poor light and the smoke in the mirror which had made the outline appear to move.
It was rare, apparently, for Deliverance ministers or counsellors actually to experience the phenomena they were trying to divert . And anyway, as Huw had just pointed out, a perceived experience should not be trusted.
Trust nothing, least of all your own senses.
Merrily took a last look at herself in the mirror: a small darkhaired person in a sloppy sweater. The only woman among nine ministers on this course.
Little dolly of a clergyperson… nice legs, dinky titties .
Dermot, her church organist, had said that the day he exposed to her his own organ. She shuddered. Dermot had worn a monkish robe that morning, and no underpants. So naturally she no longer trusted monks. Or, for that matter, priests like Charlie Headland who looked as if they wouldn’t mind spanking you. But she was inclined to trust the Reverend Huw Owen, faded and weary on the outside but tough and flexible as old leather. Something of the monk about Huw, also – the Celtic hermit-monk in his lonely cell.
She dropped her cigarette down the loo.
Oh well, back into the twilight zone.
The passage still had lockers and iron hooks on the wall, from when the chapel had been an Outward Bound centre owned by some Midland education authority. It had changed hands discreetly a couple of years ago, was now jointly owned by the Church of England and the Church in Wales, although it seemed few people, even inside the Church, knew it was currently used as a training centre for exorcists.
The door to the big stone room was open; she heard muted discussion from inside, a shrill, affected laugh. Charlie Headland was wedged against the jamb, crunching crisps. He shook the packet at Merrily.
‘Prawn mayonnaise flavour.’
Merrily helped herself to a crisp. Charlie looked down at her with affection.
‘You’ve got a lot of bottle, Mrs Watkins.’
‘What? Just for going for a wee in a haunted loo?’
Charlie chuckled. On occasion, he would fling an arm around Merrily and squeeze her. Twice he’d patted her bottom.
‘You wouldn’t be laughing,’ Merrily said, ‘if that thing was in the Gents’ instead.’
Charlie grimaced and nodded, munched meditatively for a while, then patted her arm lightly. ‘Got a little girl, I hear.’
‘Not any more. A woman, she tells me. She’s sixteen – just.’
‘Oh, blimey. Where’d you leave her? Suitably caged, one hopes.’
‘She’s staying with friends in the village. Not this village – back home.’
Charlie balled his crisp packet, tossed it in the air and caught it. ‘I reckon he made that up, you know.’
‘Who?’
‘Huw. That story about the hellfire preacher-man who died in the ladies’ bogs. It’s too pat.’
Merrily pulled the door to, cutting off the voices from the stone room. ‘Why would he do that?’
‘Giving us all little tests, isn’t he? You particularly. You’re the only woman amongst us, so there’s one place you need to visit alone . If you’d suddenly started crossing your legs and holding it till you got back to the hotel, he’d know you were a little timid. Or if you came back rubbing your hands and saying you’d detected a cold patch, you’d be revealing how impressionable you were.’
‘Be difficult to spot a cold patch in this place.’
‘You’re not wrong,’ said Charlie. ‘Talk about Spartan. Not what most of them were expecting. Neither’s Huw. Awfully downmarket, isn’t he? Clive’s quite insulted – expected someone solemn and erudite like his old classics master at Eton.’
‘What about you?’
‘After fifteen years with the military? No problem at all for me. Funny chap, though, old Huw. Been through the mill, you can tell that. Wears the scar tissue like a badge.’ Charlie dug his hands into his jacket pockets. ‘I think Huw’s here to show us where we stand as of now.’
‘Which is?’
He nodded at the closed door. ‘Out in the cold – lunatic fringe. Half the clergy quite openly don’t believe in God as we know Him any more, and here we all are, spooking each other with talk of breathers and hitchhikers and insomniacs .’
Not for the first time since her arrival, Merrily shivered. ‘What exactly is a hitchhiker , Charlie?’
‘What’s it sound like to you?’
‘Something that wants a free ride?’
‘All the way to hell, presumably,’ said Charlie.
‘Mustn’t overdramatize,’ Merrily reminded him as the door opened and Huw stood there, unkempt, his dog-collar yellowing at the rim.
‘Putting the telly on now,’ Huw said hesitantly. ‘If that’s all right?’
Merrily said cheerfully, ‘I didn’t notice anything at all in the lavatory, Huw.’
Huw nodded.
There was a clear dent in the woman’s forehead. Also a halfknitted V-shaped scab over her left eye, the bruised one.
Merrily had seen several women in this condition before, although not recently. And not under these circumstances, obviously. Mostly in the hostel in Liverpool, when she was a curate.
‘This was what done it.’ The woman was holding out a green pottery ashtray. An old-fashioned pub ashtray like a dog bowl. ‘See? Chipped all down the side. Not from when it hit me, like. When it fell on the floor afterwards.’
‘I see.’ The man’s voice was calm and gentle and unsurprised. Not Huw – too deep, too posh. ‘So it came flying—’
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