through his unbalanced eyes, wondering if there might be a chocolate biscuit in this. Come waddling towards him, a dog that wouldn’t go in his basket at night without his teddy bear, but unfortunately looked like a complete psycho, an animal you wouldn’t ever argue with. Especially if you happened to be tooled-up and nervous.
Meanwhile, Bez, the one with no fear of spooky old buildings, would probably be unable to resist investigating the one stone, spiral staircase in the ruins.
Bez was prowling the buildings and he was tooled-up.
He was supposed to do … what? Stand up on the battlements, boom out, You,
Could’ve been out of here two hours ago, the dog too. And why hadn’t he gone? Because he didn’t really believe it? Not precisely. It was because Maiden and Cindy had buggered off to face up the delightful Falconer with evidence that his ideas had inspired a madman. Leaving old man Bacton to hold the fort, make the tea, attend to a few senior citizen’s chores.
Marcus looked round for his eroded pitchfork.
‘OK, we had a breakdown,’ Grayle said. ‘Adrian organized a ride for me into Chipping Norton, and he said he’d call up the AA and wait for them and then he’d bring the car later. Why do you need to know this?’
They were standing out in the lane, across from a big, twirly-shaped outlying stone surrounded by railings. Cindy — looking even more bizarre, somehow, in men’s clothes — had with him Bobby Maiden,
‘What’s the car?’
‘It’s a Rover. A small, red Rover something.’
‘And you haven’t seen him since you left him at the roadside, with the car?’
‘No.’
‘You’re sure he’s not here?’
‘He’s not here. Where could he be? Hiding out behind the pines?’
Still suspicious of these guys. All this shamanic stuff, the way Cindy found a supernatural dimension to everything. She hadn’t needed it last night after her experience at the stones; it had surely caused that awful dream of Ersula. And she sure as hell didn’t need it at the Rollright Stones on the edge of a thunderstorm.
Except that Bobby’s questions were clipped and urgent and entirely prosaic.
‘When you picked him up, he have anything with him?’
‘Change of clothes was all.’
‘In what? A case? A bag?’
‘Yeah, he had … he called it a cricket bag.’
‘Big, long, leather bag, two handles?’
‘We couldn’t fit it in the trunk, had to stash it across the back seat.’
‘Did you feel there was anything in it, apart from clothes? Did it seem heavy when he picked it up? Was it bulging out anywhere?’
‘I don’t know! What else could be in there?’
Cindy said, ‘Perhaps a crossbow?’
‘Jesus, what’s all this about?’
‘When you broke down,’ Bobby said, ‘what do you think was wrong? What happened?’
‘I don’t know cars. We started losing power, the engine kind of whined.’
‘Fan belt? Could it have been that?’
Grayle shrugged. Cindy said, ‘What would be the significance of that?’
‘Was there any time Adrian was with the car and you weren’t there?’
‘Not really. I was driving. Oh. After we ate, I, uh, went to the bathroom and when I came out he was waiting in the parking lot. At the car.’
‘And you were in, what, five minutes?’
‘Jeez, you wanna know what I did in there? Well, I took a pee, I washed my hands, tried to make my hair look normal …’
‘And how long after the pub did the car start playing up?’
‘Not long. Half a mile?’
‘Right. See, while you were in the bog, he could’ve slashed the fan belt, so it’d snap soon after you drove away.’
‘Why?’
‘I don’t know. Most likely to get you out of the way and get himself some wheels. We should all be bloody glad it worked. He might have done something more drastic.’
Cindy said, ‘He would never do that unless it was a sacrifice. Where killing is concerned, he has his rules.’
Grayle said, voice faltering, ‘What is this? Just what is this about?’
‘All right,’ Cindy said. He held her shoulders, looked into her eyes. ‘You remember when we spoke the other night, in my room at the inn, of the contrasting aspects of the Knoll, male and female? And the male element linked to blood, slaughter …’
Grayle shook herself away. ‘Before you go any further, what’s your angle? Who are you?’
Bobby brought out his wallet. Grayle had never seen British police ID, but it looked straight. Also, he sounded right. He looked all wrong, but an undercover cop, the whole point was he should look all wrong.
‘And you?’
‘Me?’ Cindy said. ‘A concerned member of the public.’
‘And Adrian?’
‘Someone who kills people,’ Bobby said.
It was kind of a hollow moment, the words repeating themselves in her head.
‘And why?’ Grayle asked, her head somewhere up there in the curdling sky but her voice down here and surprisingly calm. ‘Why is he killing people?’
‘Because he believes that’s how we should be living,’ Bobby said. ‘Hunting and hunted and feeding the earth with blood. We think he’s killed about half a dozen people.’
‘Including my sister, Ersula, right?’ That scarily calm voice giving verbal substance to what she’d instinctively known before she even left New York, that Ersula was dead and had been dead for weeks.
‘We think that’s possible. I’m sorry.’
‘How did he kill her?’
‘We don’t know,’ Cindy said. Too quickly.
‘We think …’ Bobby said ‘… we think he may be planning to do something today.’
‘Here?’ Her voice still calm, still grounded. How was she doing this?
‘Here seems the obvious place.’
‘Why would he want to take my car? Why not just stick along with me?’
‘We don’t know. Maybe he needed the car for something and he didn’t want you around. He’d replace the fan belt, no problem …’
‘Practical guy,’ Grayle said bitterly. ‘Comes from a long line of
She saw Cindy wince. Ersula’s death hung in the air between them. Either she could haul it down and go some place to weep or she could leave it suspended there until this was over. If it would ever be over.
‘I think … maybe …’ Something dawning on her. ‘… he didn’t want to be seen to
‘When was this?’
‘Early morning. I’d just checked out of the inn, he pulled up in the street. Seemed … surprised. Yeah. Real surprised to see me there.’
‘He would be,’ Bobby said. ‘He thought he’d killed you last night.’
Grayle drew breath, felt a weakness behind her knees. Fifteen, twenty yards away, a metallic blue Jaguar