'Seen Andy lately?' he asked.
'Great guy, Max,' Ben said. 'Best thing that could've happened to Dolmen. Been burdened for years with the wispy beard brigade, wimps who reckon you can't be enlightened and make money. Give me the white suit and the chequebook any day. The New Age movement's got to seize the world by the balls.'
'Andy,' Powys said patiently. 'You seen him recently?'
'Andy? Pain in the arse. He wouldn't write me a book either. He's always been an Elitist twat. Hates the New Age movement, thinks earth mysteries are not for the masses… but, there you go, he knows his stuff; I gather he's giving Max good advice.'
'Maybe he's just using Max.'
'Everybody uses everybody, Joe. It's a holistic society.'
'How did Andy get involved?'
Ben shrugged. I know he was teaching art at one of the local secondary schools. Had a house in the area for years, apparently.'
That made sense. Had he really thought Andy was living in a run-down woodland cottage with no sanitation?
But why teaching? Teaching what?
'Andy's hardly short of cash.'
'Maybe he hit on hard times,' said Ben. 'Maybe he felt he had a duty to nurture young minds.'
Young minds. Powys thought of the girl at the stone. And then a man leaned over and tapped him on the shoulder.
'Excuse me, Mr Powys, could I have a word? Peter Jarman, Mr Kettle's solicitor.'
Peter Jarman looked about twenty-five; without his glasses he'd have looked about seventeen. He steered Powys into a corner. 'Uncle Henry,' he said. 'We all called him Uncle Henry. My grandfather was his solicitor for about half a century. Did you get my letter?'
Powys shook his head. 'I've been away.'
'No problem. I can expand on it a little now. Uncle Henry's daughter, as you may have noticed, hasn't come back from Canada for his funeral. He didn't really expect her to, which, I suspect, is why he's left his house to you.'
'Bloody hell. He really did that?'
'Seems she's done quite well for herself, the daughter, over in Canada. And communicated all too rarely with Uncle Henry. He seems to have thought you might value the house more than she would. This is all rather informal, but there
'Yes,' Powys said faintly. 'Sure.'
'In the meantime,' said young Mr Jarman, 'if you want to get into the cottage at any time, Mrs Whitney next door is authorised to let you in. Uncle Henry was very specific that you should have access to any of his books or papers at any time.'
'You told me,' Jocasta Newsome said, suppressing her emotions, but not very well, 'that you hadn't managed to buy much in the West Country, and you proceeded to prove it with that mediocre miniature by Dufort.'
Hereward nervously fingered his beard. Now that it was almost entirely grey, he'd been considering shaving the thing off. As a statement, it was no longer sufficiently emphatic.
The black beard of the dark-eyed figure in the picture seemed to mock him.
'Where did it come from, Hereward?'
'All right,' he snapped, 'it wasn't from the West. A local artist sold it to me.'
Jocasta planted her hands on her hips. 'Girl?'
'Well… young woman.'
'Get rid of it,' Jocasta said, not a request, not a suggestion.
'Don't be ridiculous.'
'Take it back. Now.'
'What the hell's the matter with you? It's a bloody good painting! Worth eight or nine hundred of anybody's money and that's what Max Goff's going to pay!'
'So if Goff's going to pay the money, what's it doing in our window upsetting everybody?'
'One man!' He couldn't believe this.
'The Mayor of this town, Hereward. Who was so distressed he nearly cracked my counter.'
'But.. Hereward clutched his head, 'he's the
'He calmed down after slapping the counter,' Jocasta admitted. 'He apologized. He then appealed to me very sincerely – for the future well-being of the town, he said – not to flaunt a picture which appeared to be heralding the return of someone called Black Michael, who was apparently the man who built Crybbe Court and was very unpopular in his day.'
'He actually said that? In the year nineteen hundred and ninety-three, the first citizen of this town – the most senior
'Words to that effect. And I agreed. I told him it would be removed immediately from the window and off these premises by tonight. I apologised and told him my husband obviously didn't realise when he purchased it – 'in the West Country' – that it might cause offence.'
For a moment, Hereward was speechless. When his voice returned, it was hoarse with outraged incredulity.
'How dare you? How bloody
'Hereward, it's going,' Jocasta said, bored with him. 'I don't like that girl, she's a troublemaker. I don't like her weird paintings,
'Well, I can't help you there,' Hereward said flatly. 'I promised it would stay in the window until tomorrow.'
Jocasta regarded him as she would something she'd scraped from her shoe. It occurred to him seriously, for the first time, that perhaps he
She turned her back on him and as she stalked away, Hereward saw her hook the tip of one shoe behind the leg of the wooden easel on which sat the big, dark picture.
He tried to save it. As he lunged towards the toppling easel, Jocasta half-turned and, seeing his hands clawing out, must have thought they were clawing at her. So she struck first. Hereward felt the nails pierce his cheek, just under his right eye.
It was instinctive. His left hand came back and he hit her so hard with his open palm that she was thrown off her feet and into a corner of the window, where she lay with her nose bleeding, snorting blood splashes on to her cream silk blouse.
There was silence.
A bunch of teenage boys just off the school bus, home early after end-of-term exams, gathered outside the window and grinned in at Jocasta.
The picture of the unsmiling man with the yellow halo in the doorway of Crybbe Court had fallen neatly and squarely in the centre of the floor and was undamaged. Its darkness flooded the gallery and Hereward Newsome knew his marriage and his plans for a successful and fashionable outlet in Crybbe were both as good as over.
Assessing his emotions, much later, he would decide he'd been not so much sad as angry and bitter at the way a seedy little town could turn a civilized man into a savage.
Jocasta didn't get up. She took a tissue from a pocket in the front of her summery skirt and dabbed carefully at her nose.