don’t they? Bram set his sights on Fiona, and Garnet and I … Well, we made the best of things. Garnet bought the old Kinnersley place for a song, and I suppose I thought we’d just go on forever.…” He lapsed into silence.
“Why did Garnet never have the old farmhouse modernized?”
“Habit, mostly,” Buddy said fondly. “At first she couldn’t afford it, then she just got used to it, I reckon. And I think she liked the reputation it earned her.”
“It can’t have been easy for her, living there alone.”
“Not as hard as you might think. She had indoor plumbing, fed from the spring above the house, and the woodstove heated the water. And I don’t think she missed things like television all that much. Garnet never had any trouble keeping herself occupied.”
“I expect she was.” Buddy said it quietly. His glance in Faith’s direction made it clear that the girl’s presence had filled more than one void.
There was no sign of Nick’s motorbike outside his caravan, and no answer to Kincaid’s knock.
Making the return journey to Glastonbury, Kincaid found a parking spot on the High Street. He and Gemma had lunched in the Cafe Galatea the previous day, and the pretty dark-haired waitress smiled in recognition as he came in.
He waited until she’d finished serving the nearest table, then asked her quietly if she knew Nick Carlisle.
“Nick who works in the bookshop down Magdalene Street? Yeah, sure.”
“Has he been in today?”
“No. Yesterday, though. Late. Moped over his coffee like he’d just lost his best friend,” she added, with an air of disappointment.
Thanking her, Kincaid crossed the street and ducked into the stone passageway that led to the Glastonbury Assembly Rooms. The doors stood open and he climbed the stairs to the cafe on the first floor. It was only semi- partitioned from the corridor and the meeting room, but it was an inviting, comfortable-looking space, if a wee bit scruffy. Ella Fitzgerald crooned Cole Porter over the sound system, and several tables were occupied by customers bent over books or newspapers, enjoying the Sunday-afternoon lull. He went through the buffet queue and, when he reached the register, struck up a conversation with the cashier, a pleasant woman wearing a baseball cap. When they’d discussed the cake and the weather, he asked her if she knew Nick. “Tall, slender chap, with dark curly hair?”
“Who could forget Nick?” she said, laughing. “Comes in all the time.”
“Has he been in today?”
“As a matter of fact, he has.”
Kincaid pounced on the slight hesitation. “Was there something odd today?”
“Nick usually comes in on his own, has a meal or a coffee—always chats me up—but today he was deep into it with a strange bunch, at the table in the corner there.” She nodded towards a table beside the worn sofa.
“Strange, how?”
The woman shrugged. “Well, you know Glastonbury—you see all kinds. I’ve been here twenty years and nothing surprises me. But this bunch, they’re
“Just a friend passing through, wanted to say hello. He’s not on the telephone, so he can be the devil to get in touch with.” Giving her a reassuring smile, he took his coffee and gingerbread to a table beside the disused fireplace, mulling over this latest bit of information. Who were these people? Druids? Witches? And just what was handsome young Nick up to now?
“Any joy?” Kincaid asked, sitting down on a tufted ottoman.
Winnie looked up from a thick batch of papers. “No, but it’s interesting reading. These are estate documents—it seems the Montforts have owned property in this area practically forever.”
“I suppose that follows. But Uncle John never talked much about his family.”
“What was he like?” Winnie nodded towards the silver-framed photos on the bookcase. “I can see that Jack resembles him.”
“In looks, yes, but Jack’s much more like his mother in temperament. Uncle John was terribly reserved”—he pulled a long face—“and I always wondered how he and Aunt Olivia ended up together. When we went on holiday, he never joined any of our activities. He always had more important things to do.”
“Was it just you and Jack and your mothers, then?”
“And my pesky sister. And sometimes my dad, when he could get away.”
“It sounds lovely,” Winnie said a little wistfully, then looked back at the papers in her hand. “Do you think Jack’s father felt that family history and stories were frivolous?”
“A waste of valuable time, I’d guess. Uncle John read
“And your dad was?”
“Always ready for an adventure, my dad. And speaking of adventures—I think it’s time I see what Jack’s got himself into in the attic. Can I get you anything else?”