Page 75 of Enticement

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The clang of the hammer driving the chisel into the old plaster momentarily stopped Lillianna’s jiggling, but his refutation failed to quell her exuberance. “It’s her. It’s her. It’s her-er-er! What’s it gonna cost you to have a little faith,” she sang.

Evie remained by the window watching their awkward dance. It reminded her of a flamenco performance, full of passionate flurries, attacks and retreats, Kit so reluctant and Lillianna at once enticing and berating him for his disbelief. For her own part, she wished Kit’s scepticism didn’t make her hackles rise over what had happened all over again. She had doubts of her own about this sudden reappearance; it was hardly surprising he felt the same way. Anxiously, she bit her thumbnail, causing the acrylic overlay to fall off.

“Lilli,” she coaxed, seeing exasperation creep into Kit’s expression alongside the fear. “Why don’t you go over to the pub and let the folks there know? I’m sure they’ll all be thrilled to hear, and we could join you in a bit.”

“Well…” Lillianna gave her dubious frown.

“Lil.”

“Yeah. Yeah, okay. You’re right. We do need to spread the word. I’ll catch up with you in a bit.”

Back outside, Evie escorted Lillianna all the way to the gate that adjoined the lane. “Don’t worry about telling Ross, I’ll let him know. But I’ll let you have the joy of telling Tony.”

When she returned to Kit, she found him standing in exactly the same position as when she’d left. Only now there were tears poised ready to spill down his cheeks and his black hair lay spiked up off his head, where he’d clearly raked his hands through it and the dust had held it in place. They stared at one another, not sure what to say.

“I didn’t know her, Kit. I can’t be sure. All I’ve seen are a few old photographs.”

“It doesn’t feel right.” He surreptitiously wiped the tears from his eyes. “Why would she suddenly just appear like this? If she ran off to get away from everything, surely she’d avoid advertising herself. She had to realize there’d be a chance of someone recognizing her and making a fuss.”

“Maybe things have changed enough so that whatever drove her away then doesn’t matter anymore,” Evie suggested. “Molly’s the only one of her family still around.” She shook her head trying to figure it out. “Maybe it was something with her parents. Haven’t they gone abroad? So, there’d be no chance of them seeing it.” If only there were an obvious culprit to point a finger at to explain why she no longer felt the need to stay hidden. The problem was no one had ever identified a reason for her disappearance, which is why so much of the blame had fallen on Kit’s shoulders. Outsider. Last to see her, and a known sexual deviant, at least amongst Kirkley’s quiet community. He’d been an altogether easy target.

“It still doesn’t make sense.” Kit scrunched more spikes in his hair. “I daren’t believe it, Evie. I can’t face the prospect of getting excited only for Lillianna and Molly to be wrong.”

Ross arrived forty minutes later, following a text from Evie and having off loaded his afternoon patients onto his partners at the practice. He wrapped his big arms around her and lifted her off her feet. “Thank god.” His relief was short lived. One look at Kit confirmed all still wasn’t right. Their embrace was much briefer, more of a solemn patting of backs.

“He’s been like this since he heard,” Evie explained once they were out of earshot of Kit. Ross had insisted on boiling the kettle. Apparently, it was recommended medicine for any trauma. “He’s afraid it’s all going to amount to nothing and that there’s going to be another backlash against him. You don’t think Molly’s making this all up just to cause trouble, do you?”

Ross shook his head. “No. You’ve spoken to her. You’ve seen how choked up she still gets over it. I don’t think she’d resort to that sort of deception.”

“But Kit hasn’t been around before. I know some people are still being funny with him, but there’s plenty who are accepting him too.”

“Nah, Evie.” He accepted the offered over glove to lift the whistling kettle from the hob, and began pouring their drinks. “If it turns out it’s not her, I reckon it’s just a genuine mistake. Either way, I think we should head home after these and wait for news there. I don’t fancy being here if it’s bad news.”

She was about to ask why, when she recalled that the police had originally come here looking for Kit when Sammie had first disappeared.

“I’ve already tried to get him to come home, but he just keeps saying that he has work to do and that he’s not wasting the evening sitting around twiddling his thumbs, not even if the twiddling involves sex or video games.”

Ross’s jaw dropped. “You’re telling me he said no to sex. Jeezus! He really is worked up.”

“Well, I didn’t actually… Oh, never mind. How is it you’re a whole lot less doubtful?”

Ross loaded the mugs onto an empty paint tray and nodded her ahead to open the doors. “If it was just Lillianna spouting off, I’d dismiss it, but I don’t think Molly would go tearing off without getting an address or something else concrete first. She saw her parents zipping off too many times, whenever there was a suspected sighting, and coming back disappointed. It never did them any good.”

“They moved away now, haven’t they?” Although, maybe Molly had rung them and they too were racing towards York to claim their missing daughter.

“They went to Spain about eighteen months back. Molly refused to go, accused them all of abandoning her sister. Truthfully, I think they did the only thing they could to maintain their sanity. Kirkley held too many bitter memories, and there wasn’t any prospect of a proper resolution.”

Kit drank the tea, but he refused to come home with them. “I’ve told Evie. I’m not sitting around. I’d rather work. It’s better than drinking myself into a stupor.”

Maybe there were other things troubling him too, like finally finding out why Sammie had run off all those years ago.

“Tell you what. Let’s Evie and I go and get fish and chips for us all,” Ross suggested, something that at least gained a nod of approval. “We can bring them back here and maybe by then we’ll have heard something.”

The fish and chips, wrapped in numerous layers of paper, were burning Evie’s lap when they were stopped from entering the lane to Rose Cottage by a row of cones and a police vehicle parked width ways across the road. They both got out, leaving the meal to cool on the seat. “What’s going on?” Ross called to the officer sitting in the car, who signalled one minute. He appeared to be on the radio.

“Oh, thank god!” Lillianna came tearing out of the concealed entryway on the right that led to one of the farms. She threw herself at Evie and Ross, squeezing them both tight. “I thought you might still be in there. But you’re safe.” She backed away a little, bent over and took several laborious breaths, before resorting to an inhaler.

“What’s going on?” Evie asked.