Gemma complied and, when the number began to ring, handed the phone to Kincaid.
“Buddy? It’s Duncan Kincaid. You know the spring on Garnet’s property? Is there any standing water? A pool above the house. Right. Oh, and Buddy, one more thing: On the night Sarah Kinnersley was killed, do you know where Garnet was? Did she have a car?” He listened a moment longer, then said, “Okay, thanks. I’ll explain later,” and disconnected.
“She was with Bram Allen,” stated Gemma.
“And he would have been driving. Garnet had no car at the time.”
“I still don’t understand why you’re worried about Fiona …”
“Because I think that, like Andrew with his sister, there’s one person Bram would do anything to protect from the knowledge of his crime.”
The lights still shone in the Allens’ house, and when Kincaid rang the bell, Fiona opened the door immediately. “Bram,” she said, “—have you seen him?”
“He’s not here?”
Fiona shook her head. “When I came back from Jack’s, I found him in the studio. He was—I’ve never seen him like that. My painting—he had my painting, the one of the Abbey, with the child. He’d cut it with his knife. And then he—he—”
“Slow down,” Kincaid said gently. “What happened then?”
“He said things I didn’t understand, something about stopping it once and for all, and he took the painting.”
“Bram left with the painting?”
Fiona nodded. “Stop what? What did he mean? Where has he gone? Bram—”
Kincaid took the north path. More treacherous, yes, but faster, and if Gemma had done it, so could he. The setting moon provided enough illumination that he climbed without mishap, driven by fear of what he would find at the top.
Once at the summit he stopped, letting his breathing ease. Then he went forward quietly, scanning the silvered turf for a shadow of movement.
He found Bram Allen on the far side of St. Michael’s Tower, in the spot where Faith had lain. Bram sat huddled against the wall, Fiona’s painting clutched to his chest, the knife in his right hand visible against the canvas.
“Bram,” Kincaid called softly, coming to a halt a few feet away.
Bram stood, looking at him without surprise. “I’ll give them blood, if that’s what they want,” he said clearly. “But not that girl and her baby. Not again.”
“Who wants blood?” Kincaid stood motionless.
“Old Ones. Garnet knew. Garnet always knew about them. That night we danced, here, in the grass. It was Samhain, the time when the veil is thinnest. We called them and they came. We were wild with it, invincible, we possessed the world. But they wanted more—a life—and we were just the instruments.”
“Sarah.”
“I saw her face, for only an instant, above the windscreen. I’ve seen it every day of my life since. How did Fiona know?”
“The child in the painting.” Kincaid inched closer, aware of the glimmer of the knife.
“Why? Why did she come to Fiona?”
“That must have been terrible for you, when Fiona began to paint little Sarah.”
“Fiona didn’t understand why I couldn’t bear the sight of them. Then when she wanted to hang them in the gallery, I couldn’t refuse.”
“But why kill Garnet, Bram?”
“It was building again, the old power. Garnet believed she could stop it—that we could stop it if I told. She came into the gallery. When she saw Fiona’s paintings she said it was a divine judgment, that
“Did you agree to meet Garnet that night in the lane?”
“A customer came into the gallery. I had to get rid of her somehow. And then, waiting in the darkness, I thought how easy it would be.… I didn’t know it was Winnie until it was too late.”
“But Garnet knew, didn’t she? So the next night you went to her house, and you convinced her to walk up to the spring.”
“I think she knew what was going to happen, at the last. Perhaps she thought her life would finish it. But it wasn’t enough.”
“Bram, let’s go home. It’s over now. Your wife is frantic with worry about you.”
“You don’t understand.”
“I know that Fiona will love you no matter what you’ve done—”
“No. I won’t have her stained with this … this evil—” His gesture with the knife took in the Tor. “Can’t you feel it? Once it begins, only blood will satisfy their hunger.”