Friday, 2 May 2014

HARRY IN THE LOOKING GLASS - BADGER'S HOLT REVISITED

  An old, high brick wall, topped with broken glass, seems endless until the massive ornamental wrought iron gates appear.
 I stop, more out of mild curiosity than anything else to read the nameplate and plaque. I wasn’t  expecting to find anything here at all, except perhaps a village in the Sussex countryside, with the improbable name of Palastow.
The name sends a mild shock wave through me, but it quickly passes. My first reaction is to think it’s just coincidence, it has to be. I read the sign again - Badger’s Holt, not Badger’s Sett but Badger’s Holt - just as I’d written it. Then I read the plaque and the sense of déjà-vu becomes almost overwhelming. This is how it always begins.
I try to recall that November night, when it all started - the search for the truth, facts, motives and identity of the perpetrators of that tragic death – before and after I started to write about it. A search that somehow I’ve become lost in. Facts that are now hopelessly entwined with fantasy.
For a moment I imagine I know what the buildings look  like inside the grounds, past the screening trees, too quickly dismissing the thought as ridiculous, because surely I want to believe otherwise, that it was all true, that I’ve been here before and it’s not just in my imagination. Isn’t that why I’m here?  Drawn by an invisible hand or perhaps that phantom phone call. To finish my manuscript,  find out how it ends, whether it’s  real or not?
Could it all be just a dream?  I look at the dashboard of the old Volkswagon, and read the trip milometer, which registers over two hundred miles. Caressing the familiar old steering wheel I feel reassured.  Nobody dreams about old Volkswagons or driving two hundred miles from Somerset to Sussex via SE London.
 In my pocket the key to Clare’s Ferton place is reassuringly still there.
It’s hot for so early in the year, more like midsummer There’s an enigmatic feel about the place, oppressive, threatening but beautiful. Perhaps it’s  the wall or the surrounding woodland that gives it that air of foreboding. The heat haze shimmering above the tarmac of the narrow country lane, adds to the eerie mystique.
I pull onto the grass verge and get out to stretch my legs, let the old girl cool down for a bit. Good place for a sandwich and coffee. Clouds of insects dance beneath the trees. I try to regain some sense of rationale by a few moments quiet reflection.
A car approaches in the distance. I feel uneasy - that this interruption is also going to be a part of my manuscript rewriting itself again. New chapters in another world, another dimension - that what happens next won’t be a surprise.
 The car is a black Mercedes. I should have known. As it gets closer, I try to look unconcerned, sandwich in one hand coffee in the other.  It slows down and I already know it will turn into Badger’s Holt. There are five occupants, four men and a girl. Clare is sitting in the back seat between two of them. She looks frightened but otherwise just as I knew her; the pale, fine featured face framed by her shoulder length dark hair; the brown eyes that haunt my dreams and always will.
  For a moment I imagine she sees me, recognises me. Then she’s  hidden from view. The offside rear passenger and driver stare at me with baleful, suspicious glares as the gates open. The car disappears almost silently into the grounds, gates closing behind it.
I know they are John Steier’s hired thugs, and wonder if they’ve been forewarned to expect me to show up somewhere along the line. For the moment it doesn’t matter. They’ve unwittingly brought Clare back to me, or closer at least. It’s a start.
I convince myself again that they’re not just creations of my imagination - Carl’s sister Clare, John Steier, known as The Godfather and all the others. That we really were here before, Clare and me - the last place we came to, before she disappeared from my life.
 Only Carl himself, whose coldness I can still feel is my bedrock in reality - a cruel irony, that the dead can be so alive but the living shrouded in such mystery. The truth is somewhere on the other side of this wall. Somehow, if not through these gates then there lies another way to get there.  
There was a time once when life seemed much simpler, before I’d  been drawn into this strange twilight world, neither author nor subject and yet somehow both - together but inseparable like Siamese twins.

to be cont...

Copyright Harry Hunt 2013

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