amazing?’
‘It’s very nice.’
‘Sorry.’
‘You think I’m mad, don’t you? I mean, come on, if you think I’m out of it, you bloody well say so.’
‘I think you’re an optimist,’ he said.
‘Let’s just try it, huh? You stand on the Knoll and you let the sun rise over you, and if you think it’s still February … Just try it, huh?’
Ahead of them, in the west, the land rose steeply towards what were either high hills or low mountains, hard to separate them from the still-night sky. Andy tugged at the sprung bar on a metal gate.
‘Not far. Just we’ll need to go careful. Don’t wanny get arrested for trespass. Guy who owns the land — this TV archaeologist, Falconer?’
‘
‘He does now. He and Marcus are, ah …’ Andy dragged the gate across the tufted grass. ‘… not over-friendly. He’s apparently fenced off the Knoll. If he found Marcus climbing over the wire, he’d be pressing charges. We’d probably get off wi’ a warning, but he’s no gonny see us anyway, this early.’ She lowered her voice. With any luck.’
Andy closed the gate behind them and crackled confidently through a patch of dry bracken. Did she really imagine she was going to have him skipping back down the hillside, praising God, the Virgin Mary, the Mother Goddess?
‘What happened to the girl who had the vision?’
‘Aw, it becomes less inspiring. Child tells her mother, gets the strap for being late to school. And lying. When she keeps on about it, Ma summons the vicar. No friend of the Roman Church. Plus the local people are saying any vision at a pagan site has got to be the work of the evil one. They kind of ostracized her.’
‘Christians,’ Maiden said.
‘Cause celebre for
She stopped, took his arm. About a hundred yards away, at the summit of the slope, something squatted like a massive, stone toad.
‘Most people find them kind of weird, these old sites, wouldnae want to go up alone. Now it’s like … approaching a cathedral.’
She turned her face into the dawn. There were channels of crimson under the lightening sandscape in the sky, chips of glittering cloud. Andy’s skin was ambered in the morning glow, her eyes shining, red hair alight.
‘Supposed to be a chambered tomb, that’s what the books say, but this … this is no to do with
Maiden looked down at the dirty yellow grass. He felt cold.
‘These people,’ Andy said. ‘The old guys. They positioned it to grab the earliest daylight. So it’s all about rebirth. New life, healing the body, healing the mind, healing the spirit. It’s everything we’ve forgotten. As a race, y’know? Like … Hey … you OK?’
‘Nothing.’ His mouth dry. ‘Someone walking over my grave.’
He looked down at his hands, saw they were trembling. Never before, in his whole life, could he remember his hands trembling.
‘You’ve gone pale, Bobby.’
The stone toad crouched over him.
‘OK, listen to me.’ Andy put her hands on his shoulders. ‘C’mon now, what are you feeling? Right this second.’
‘I don’t know.’
‘Yes you do. Give me a word.’
‘All right, dread.’
‘You saved my life.’
‘Aw.’ Andy dropped her arms, walked away from him, shaking her head.
‘Sorry. Wrong thing to say, huh?’
‘Bobby,
‘You’re taking it personally.’
‘Damn right I am. All the way down here I’m thinking this was gonny bring you out of it. Out of all this grey stuff, this fear of death, all this
‘It doesn’t change what you did. You wanted to think it was linked to your own recovery and whatever happened to you up here. I don’t know why you don’t just accept that it was you …
He risked another look up at the stone toad on the mound, vaguely hoping it might have acquired a halo, turned to gold.
He shuddered. He could almost smell it. Like the worst smell he’d ever known: when he was with the Met, called out to this house in Islington, this well-to-do suicide couple sitting naked on the sofa, holding hands, dead for three weeks, their heads fallen together. Pills and whisky and hundreds of flies and, on the coffee table, a photo album full of pictures of naked children.
He turned his back on High Knoll. The colours of the eastern sky were flat as a fresco; the dawn didn’t want him.
‘All seemed so
Maiden hated himself. For her, the place was sacred. Why couldn’t he feel it?
But she wasn’t even looking at him any more.
‘Jesus God.’
A short, plump man was shambling and flapping towards them, down the Knoll.
‘Anderson?’ The man slipped and stumbled to his knees. ‘Is it
Andy reached for his hand and he stood up shakily. He was wearing baggy trousers and, bizarrely, a string vest. He clasped her hand to his chest, as if to make sure she was flesh and blood.
‘I’m sorry, Marcus. Unforeseen circumstances. Everything OK?’
‘No.’ Pulling from his trouser pocket a chequered handkerchief the size of a small pillowcase. ‘No, it’s fucking not.’
‘What’s happened? Marcus?’
‘I’m sorry, it …’ Snatching off his glasses, wiping his eyes. ‘Andy, oh God, I think she’s dying on me.’
They heard the noise before they saw her. It was suddenly sickeningly familiar to Andy. Like very loud snoring.
She ran ahead. About six feet back from the monument, there was a low, wooden stockade-type fence, several rows of barbed wire strung over the top. But the wire was cut and hanging like briars. They climbed over the fence.
‘You brought her up here, Marcus?’
‘Course not. She bloody well brought herself up. Oh God, can you do something?’
‘OK. Just … you know … keep calm.’
‘Woke up early, knew something was wrong. She’d come down in the night, let herself into the barn and pinched these … look.’ Holding up a pair of rubber-handled wire-cutters. ‘She cut the fence. Can you believe it?’
Close up, the burial chamber looked like a huge, collapsed crab, the shell split as if someone had stood on it. The old woman was laid out along the damaged capstone like …
…