Fay felt sick.
'I don't know precisely what happened,' Jean was saying. 'Over this girl of Joe's, Rose, I mean. Whether it was an accident or suicide or…'
'Murder,' Fay said.
Jean put a hand on Fay's arm. Look, my dear, it's over. It's all in the past. Whatever happened, there's nothing we can change now. Nobody we can bring back to life.'
'No,' Fay said numbly.
Something white in places caught her eye, over to the right of the Bottle Stone. Joe Powys's muddy T-shirt. He was standing on the other side if the perimeter wall, watching them silently, like an abandoned scarecrow.
'About Andy,' Jean said. 'Andy's not a bad boy. A little wild, perhaps, in his younger days, a little headstrong. His lineage is not a direct one to Michael, but he developed a very strong interest in the Tradition from his early teens. And, give him his due. he didn't deviate in his resolve to discover things for himself.'
'And the Bottle Stone ritual?'
'Exists not at all,' said Jean sadly, 'outside the head of J. M. Powys.'
'He showed me the field,' Fay said. 'Where it happened.'
'And was there a Bottle Stone there? And a fairy mound? With a fairy on it?'
'What about Henry Kettle? He was there too. There was nothing wrong with Henry Kettle.'
'Oh? Henry told you, did he? He said he was there?'
A police car howled a long way away.
'No,' Fay said bleakly.
'Oh, my dear…'
Fay was bent over, gripping her thighs with both hands. She felt a stabbing stomach-cramp coming on.
'Oh God,' she breathed. 'Oh God.'
And as Andy's breathing, shallow as it was, began to regulate, he looked into the dark sockets and saw within them pinpricks of distant light.
He watched the lights as they came closer – or, rather, as he moved closer to
He felt the familiar tug at the base of his spine, and never before had it felt so good, so strong, so positive, so indicative of freedom. For, while imprisoned within his twisted body, Andy could no longer feel anything at all at the base of his spine.
When it happened – and he'd been far from certain that it would under such conditions – there was an enormous burst of raw energy (O Michael! O Mother!) and he was out of his body and soaring towards the lights.
'It's a shame about Crybbe,' Jean said. 'But it's no different in any of these places. You ask the ordinary man in the street in Glastonbury how he feels about the Holy Grail. How many miracles he's seen. They're not the least bit interested and indeed often quite antagonistic'
Looking beyond the stone. Fay could no longer see Joe. Perhaps he'd crept away.
'So you can imagine how they reacted in Crybbe,' Jean went on. 'A place so remote and yet so conducive to psychic activity. Can one blame the peasantry? I don't know. The knowledge has always been for the Few. Not everyone has the spiritual metabolism to absorb it. Not everyone has the will to see through the dark barriers to the light.'
All at once, as if to illustrate Jean's point, the stone which bore no resemblance at all to a bottle was lit up from its grassy base to its sharp, fanglike tip.
'Goodness,' Jean said. 'Whatever's that?'
Beyond the stone, there was a kind of parapet overlooking the river and to one side, dropping down to the flood-plain, a narrow, muddy track, its entire width now taken up by a crawling, grunting monster with it single bright eye focused on the stone.
Fay saw a wiry figure leap from the creature and advance upon the stone. Jean flashed her torch at it and the light was reflected in a pair of old-fashioned wire-rimmed National Health glasses.
'Evening, ladies. Gomer Parry Plant Hire. I realize it's a bit late, like, but I got official instructions to remove that stone, see.'
Jean stiffened. 'I do beg your pardon.'
'Official council operation.'
'Now why is it,' Jean asked smoothly, 'that I rather doubt that?'
'Madam, I got special authorization yere from the Town Mayor 'isself.'
'Oh, Gomer,' Fay blurted out. 'The Mayor's dead.'
'Miss Morris?'
'Isn't it sad?' said Jean, isn't it primitive? There was once a notorious farmer, you know, in Wiltshire, known as Stonebreaker Robinson, who devoted his energies to eradicating megalithic remains from the face of the countryside. It's been popularly thought that such Philistine ignorance was dead.'
She turned to Gomer Parry. 'Do yourself a big favour, little man. Go home to bed.'
'Do
Jean switched off her torch. Now both Gomer and Powys existed only as wavy silhouettes in the headlight's blast.
But the stone was fully illuminated.
'What are you afraid of, Joe? Afraid of what you'll do to Fay?'
He didn't say anything. He seemed to be shaking his head.
'I shouldn't worry, my dear,' Jean said to Fay. 'You can stay at my house tonight.'
'Flatten it,' Powys said.
'Lay one finger on that stone, little man,' said Jean, 'and, I promise you, you'll regret it for what passes for the rest of your life.'
'It's not an old stone, Gomer,' Powys said, 'if it was a genuine prehistoric monument,
There was a flurrying then in the track of the headlight. It was so fast that Fay thought at first it was an owl until it veered out of the light. At which point it ought to have disappeared, but it didn't. It carried its own luminescence, something of the will-o'-the-wisp.
'Oh my G…' Fay gasped as, with a small, delighted whimper, it landed on her feet. 'Arnold!'
The dog jumped up at her; she felt his tongue on her legs.
'Oh God, Arnold.' She pushed her hands deep into his fur.
Felt him stiffen.
The air above the standing stone seemed to contract, and to draw into it the headlight beam. The headlamp itself grew dim, fading to a bleary yellow.
The yellow of…
Fay felt Arnold's hackles rise under her hands. He growled from so far back in his throat that it seemed to come not from him at all but from somewhere behind him.
'Bloody battery!' Gomer Parry ran for his cab.
… of disease
embalming fluid
Grace Legge.
The stone glowed feebly at its base, rising in intensity until its tip was hit with a magnesium radiance, and Fay felt an intense cold emanating from it, a cold that you could almost see, like steam from a deep-freeze.
The yellow, and the cold. And the aura of steam around the stone formed into an unmistakable shape of a beer-bottle.
But it was the one word that did it.
'Yesssss.' Drawn from Jean Wendle's throat like a pale ribbon of gauze.
And Fay flew at her.