The Boat House

Free The Boat House by Stephen Gallagher Page A

Book: The Boat House by Stephen Gallagher Read Free Book Online
Authors: Stephen Gallagher
breakdown wagon thundering by and raising up dust in the square. Without warning, it suddenly let out a blast of the first line of Dixie on a five tone airhorn, so loud and so unexpected that it made Alina take a startled step back.
    "Ten to one that's young Wayne Hammond," Angelica said. "You'll probably get to meet him. He's a regular."
    Alina looked out to where the wagon was already disappearing from sight; and she nodded, barely perceptibly.
    "I'll get to know them all," she said.

NINE
    Even though he was still only sixteen, Wayne had been driving the yard's vehicles around the quiet back roads in the off-season for the past two years. There was nothing unique in this; it wasn't uncommon in the lanes to find oneself stuck behind a slow-moving tractor with a twelve-year-old in the cab, using public highways to get from one piece of a farm to another. Ross Aldridge, the 'newcomer' policeman, must have been pretty well-briefed by his predecessor, because he restricted himself to friendly off-the-record warnings when the practice occasionally became too obvious. He couldn't really complain too much; not after the time that he'd run his patrol car into a ditch only three weeks into his new appointment, and the Middlemass girl (14) had turned up with a chain and towed him out.
    Wayne was driving now as they left the last of the houses behind, following the lake shore for a while until the wooded hillside of the Step rose up and screened it from their sight. Liston Hall was about a mile and a half further on, reached by its own private drive. The gates to this were kept permanently locked but there was a less conspicuous entrance, hardly more than a mud road, amongst the trees a hundred yards along.
    They pulled in onto a white gravel forecourt. The place wasn't huge by country house standards - two storeys, twenty-something rooms - but its main entrance was a covered carriage porch with stone pillars and broad steps leading up to the doors. The house wasn't run-down, either, but there were touches here and there betraying the fact that it hadn't been lived in for a couple of years; the windows that weren't shuttered weren't clean, and there were weeds pushing up through the gravel.
    "Wayne," Pete said as he opened the wagon's door to get out. "You're already driving without a license. Don't you think that the Dixie horn's pushing it a bit?"
    "I know," Wayne said sadly. "The devil makes me do it."
    Pete walked over to the steps. Seen from close-to, the columns were peeling; they were also heavily stained with pigeon crap. It was hard to think of a place like this as somebody's home. It looked more like a public building or a sanatorium. This was mostly a matter of scale; Pete's feeling was that you couldn't own such a place, you could only be owned by it. You could die or go bankrupt and the house would stay basically unchanged, still mouldering slowly and running up a ransom of a heating bill… unless you were so fabulously rich that you could afford not to give a shit, in which case all arguments foundered. The latter category could hardly include Dizzy Liston; otherwise, why would he consent to selling off his toys to cover his expenses?
    Pete found the bellpush, and pressed.
    Nothing seemed to happen, so he pressed again.
    Still no response. He glanced over at Wayne, and Wayne pointed helpfully to the Dixie horn.
    "Do you want me to..?" he said, leaving the offer hanging.
    "No," Pete said quickly. "No, thanks. Wait here, I'll check around the back."
    There was a brick path down the side of the house, and he followed it. There had to be somebody around, although from the state of the path he wouldn't have laid any bets on it being a gardener. The path brought him out into the rest of the grounds.
    This was obviously the side of the house that was meant to be considered as the frontage, with its six-foot windows and its first-floor parapet and views over formal gardens. It was, however, as lifeless as the forecourt

Similar Books

With the Might of Angels

Andrea Davis Pinkney

Naked Cruelty

Colleen McCullough

Past Tense

Freda Vasilopoulos

Phoenix (Kindle Single)

Chuck Palahniuk

Playing with Fire

Tamara Morgan

Executive

Piers Anthony

The Travelers

Chris Pavone