“Bullet, I like that. Hey, Bullet! How are you doing, boy?”
Bullet turned to me and gave a single contemptuous bark.
“Hey! I think he likes me already.”
Jill said, “I’m sorry. He’s very loyal, once he gets to know people. But he’s been trained to be suspicious of strangers.”
“Well, that’s what we need, suspicious. In fact we need
“Yes. They gave me a general idea. They said that if I needed to know anything more, I should ask you about it. Apparently you’re the world’s greatest expert.”
“And? What do you think?”
She pulled a face. “I’m not at all sure. At first I thought they were having me on toast. But I’ve always liked unusual work. Bullet and I spent the last six months tracking down heroin smugglers in Limehouse. That was fascinating. You know, all that Chinese culture and everything.”
“You understand what these Screechers are, don’t you?”
“Well, yes.” She seemed embarrassed. “Vampires, sort of.”
“Exactly. We’re not dealing with human beings here. They don’t have a soul and they don’t have a conscience. They don’t have any compunction about killing anybody of any age, with no warning at all.”
“Like wild animals, then, really?”
“Unh-hunh. They’re not like animals. They’re intelligent, and they’re so damn quick you can’t even see them, and they won’t give you any second chances.”
“I understand.” She had an alluring way of tilting her head sideways and looking at me out of the corner of her eyes.
“Well,” I said, trying to sound brusque and professional, “you’d better bring Bullet inside. You’ve visited a homicide scene before? It’s not too salubrious in there.” The language I was using, I was starting to sound quite British. I would probably start saying “constabulary” next, instead of “cops.”
“Don’t worry,” said Jill. “I’ve been called to quite a few murders. The last one was a husband who beat his wife and their seven-year-old daughter to death with a hammer, and then cut his own throat with a bread knife. That was quite yucky.”
“Quite yucky? Yes, I guess it must have been.”
Out of her navy blue pocketbook, Jill pulled a strip of brownish fabric about the length of a woman’s scarf. She held it up against Bullet’s snout so that he could sniff it and lick it. “This is a piece of the linen shroud they found in the casket,” she explained. “If the same Screecher has been here, then Bullet will be able to tell.”
“Good for Bullet. Let’s take a look, shall we?”
I led her through the hallway into the dining room, with Bullet trotting obediently beside her. I think she was determined not to show that she was nauseated, but as soon as she entered the door she clamped her hand over her mouth and couldn’t stop herself from letting out a high, cackling retch. “Oh my God, it’s disgusting.”
“Do you want to go back outside?”
She shook her head. “I can manage, thanks. It’s the flies, more than anything else. I can’t stand flies.”
“Join the club. But this is fairly typical of a Screecher attack. The
Bullet was snuffling around the carpet, occasionally licking it with his thick crimson tongue.
“How many victims were there?” asked Jill.
“Seven. The Screechers would have sliced their stomachs open first, and cut the Achilles tendons in their heels so that they couldn’t get away. Then they would have gone from one to the other, cutting them open even wider, pulling out their hearts, and drinking their blood directly from their aortas.”
“That’s so horrible.”
“Yes, it is. But if you and I don’t stop them, the Screechers are going to multiply. I don’t know how much they told you when they briefed you, but there are two kinds of Screechers — the infected ones who are still alive, the
“I didn’t completely understand that when they briefed us. The
“Dead in the sense that they’re not human any more, and never will be. They can be
“They said that the dead ones spread the infection.”
“That’s right. by sharing their blood or other bodily fluids with human beings who attract them. They call it ‘the Embrace’ or ‘the Witch’s Kiss.’ ”
“There must be a cure for it, surely?”
I shook my head. “Once you’ve caught the infection, that’s it. You have a raging thirst for blood and you can never get enough of it. It’s like being a drug addict, only a thousand times worse.”
“So what happens to you?”
“In the end, you can’t stand it any longer and you go looking for the
Bullet came up to Jill and let out another bark. His tail was beating furiously against the table leg.
“He’s picked up the scent. He wants to go after it.”
“In that case, we’ll let him, shall we?”
“Of course. I hope you’re fit.”
“Are you kidding me? I swim, I play tennis. I paint fences. Painting fences. you’d be surprised what good exercise that is.”
Bullet was already heading for the door. Jill looked at me and shrugged, and so we followed him.
I went to the car and heaved out the battered metal case containing my Kit. “I think we have a trail,” I told Terence.
“Oh.” He didn’t look very pleased about it. It was one thing to talk about
Bullet made his way out of the house and up the street, with Jill and Terence and me trying to keep up with him. Unlike Frank, he didn’t turn back once to see if we were following. At the top of the hill we reached a small public park called Haling Grove. There was a brick-and-concrete air-raid shelter by the front gates, which could have made a good hiding place for
We walked through the shadow of some horse-chestnut trees until we reached an open space. The park was strangely deserted, even though it was such a hot day, in the middle of the summer vacation period. In those days, the British didn’t fly to Spain or France or Florida during the summer. They couldn’t afford to. They went to the seaside for a week, and then they spent the rest of the time at home, tending their gardens or building shelves.
The park was probably no more than three or four acres, surrounded by mature oaks and beech trees. Bullet loped across the bright green grass ahead of us. On the other side of the grass stood a large stained-oak summerhouse with a dark thatched roof, where an elderly woman sat, wearing a black dress and tiny green sunglasses. She was so white-faced that I could have believed she was dead.
“They would have been long gone by now, wouldn’t they?” panted Terence. Perspiration was trickling down the sides of his cheeks.
“Oh for sure. This will probably come to nothing. But if we can pick up more than one trail, we can begin to