real, but still made him want to avoid the shadows. He looked over to Laine Boye. She was watching him intently, as if gauging his reaction.
‘And, of course,’ said Nicholas, ‘a credible witness who could have confirmed that Quill and Bretherton were, forgive the pun, birds of a feather is dead. John Hird.’
‘True,’ said Pritam, and was surprised how quiet his voice was. ‘But there is this.’
He went to his desk drawer and returned with the photo of Mrs Quill at the church fete thirty-two years ago. Nicholas put out his hand, but Pritam stepped past him and handed it to Laine.
When Laine saw it, her lips tightened but her face betrayed no emotion. She stood and went to the hanging photograph of Eleanor Bretherton and compared the two for a full minute.
‘Could Quill be her grand-daughter?’ she finally asked.
‘Yes,’ replied Nicholas. ‘But there was no record of Eleanor Bretherton marrying or having children. She was a spinster.’
‘You tell me, Mrs Boye,’ said Pritam. ‘Are they the same person?’
Laine held the photographs side by side, comparing Quill’s and Bretherton’s scowls, their chins, their frosty alarm at being photographed. After a long minute, she returned the photograph to Pritam.
‘Similar,’ she said.
The rain outside roared.
‘So?’ asked Nicholas, looking from Pritam to Laine.
Laine looked at Pritam. He nodded — you speak first.
‘So,’ said Laine, ‘we have two photographs a hundred years apart with two women who look alike, but that means nothing of itself. A list of deaths and murders, but they were all explained away or confessed to. As for the bird, you could have mutilated it. We only have your word, Mr Close, that you found it. But. .’
‘But?’
‘But you say you can see ghosts.’
Laine kept her cool gaze on Nicholas. For a long moment, he was silent. Then he spoke quietly.
‘True. The only thing it doesn’t explain is why your husband was talking in his sleep about a dead bird before he left your bed and shot himself.’
Pritam saw a shiver of something behind Laine’s eyes. Was it fear? Anger? It was gone so quickly, he wondered if he’d seen it at all.
Nicholas turned and looked at him. ‘Well, Reverend, what do you think? A coincidence with Bretherton and Quill? Secret relatives?’ He smiled grimly. ‘And what about me? Crazy guy who thinks he sees ghosts?’
Pritam could see that Nicholas was fighting to seem contained, but was ready to snap.
‘My religion,’ he answered slowly, ‘says that one of the three aspects of my God is a ghost.’
Nicholas smiled grimly. ‘However?’
‘However, I need to ask. . Are you afraid of spiders?’
Nicholas blinked, suddenly caught off guard. ‘Yes, I’m afraid of spiders.’
‘Were you always?’
‘What are you, a psychiatrist?’
Pritam took a breath. He could feel Laine’s eyes on him, appraising his line of questioning.
‘Is it possible that the trauma of losing your best friend as a child, and the trauma of losing your wife as an adult, and the trauma of seeing Laine’s husband take his life in front of you just recently. .’ Pritam shrugged and raised his palms. ‘You see where I’m going?’
Nicholas looked at Laine. She watched back. Her grey eyes missed nothing.
‘Sure,’ agreed Nicholas, standing. ‘And my sister’s nuts, too, and we both like imagining that little white dogs are big nasty spiders because our daddy died and we never got enough cuddles.’
‘Your father died?’ asked Laine. ‘When?’
‘Who cares?’
Pritam sighed. ‘You must see this from our point of-’
‘I’d love to!’ snapped Nicholas. ‘I’d love to see it from your point of view, because mine’s not that much fun! It’s insane! It’s insane that I see dead people, Pritam! It’s insane that this,’ he flicked out the sardonyx necklace, ‘stopped me kidnapping a little girl!’
‘That’s what you believe,’ said Pritam carefully.
‘
Pritam’s jaw tightened. ‘Please don’t swear in my church.’
‘IT’S
The air in the presbytery was as sharp and fragile as crystal. Pritam felt as incensed as the first time Nicholas Close was in here. What was it about the man that infuriated him so?
Pritam licked his lips and said softly, ‘I think perhaps we should continue this another night when you’re a little calmer.’
Nicholas glared at him, then jerked his gaze to Laine.
She looked back evenly, her hands in her lap, expression indecipherable.
‘Jesus Christ,’ he whispered.
‘And don’t blaspheme, please,’ Pritam said curtly.
Nicholas stood and opened the front door. The roar of rain filled the room.
‘I’m sorry. I don’t expect you to put aside the real world for this stuff. I’d give my right arm to not believe it.’ He looked at Pritam. ‘But if you’re going to be offended by a couple of words, I don’t think you’re up for what this is all about. This is murder and black magic. You don’t believe in magic? That’s fine. I didn’t until a few days ago. But if you two have any sense, don’t take the risk. Get out of here.’
He closed the door behind him, and the room again fell almost silent.
Anyone outside the church would have seen a tall man striding to his car, not caring that his unruly hair was slicked down by the heavy rain, throwing open his car door and angrily wrenching the engine alive. As the car drove away, its tinny burble faded, leaving only the hot skittle spatter of rain on the road. And a small, careful slide of footsteps from the pitch black eaves of the cold stone church.
Were there anyone to see, they’d have watched a small, hunched form step into the rain and look behind itself. Were they close enough, they’d have heard a dry whisper that defied the downpour.
‘Go.’
A small white thing the size of a cat stepped from the same shadows with movement too fluid, too wily, for its squat form, before hurrying silently away through the rain.
Anyone watching would have seen the dark, stooped figure stare at the presbytery for a long, long moment, before she turned and hurried away in the direction of Carmichael Road.
Only no one was there to see, and she knew that well.
Pritam could hear the ticking of the mantel clock. He settled in his chair with a sigh. ‘I shouldn’t have let him go.’
Apart from rising to inspect the photograph of Eleanor Bretherton, Laine Boye had hardly moved since she first arrived. Her back was straight, her hands neatly folded in her lap. She watched Pritam.
‘Do you believe in magic, Reverend?’
Pritam nodded over at his desk. It was, of course, very tidy: his laptop folded away, his pens capped and sitting in a Daylesford Singers Festival ’04 mug. Beside his diary were his Bibles. ‘In Act Eight, Philip goes to the city of Samaria,’ he said, ‘where a man named Simon was supposedly using sorcery and bewitching the city folk. So, my faith acknowledges magic.’