were set by the two old men she had always relied upon to make all her decisions.
Now, until they were safely back in London, the responsibility for everything that happened in the following hours would rest with her.
30
“We have to warn everyone who’s still stranded,” said Bryant. “He could attack anyone.”
“How do you propose we manage to do that?” snapped May. “We don’t even have any proper shoes. I haven’t been this cold since I fell off the pier in Cole Bay when I was twelve. I can’t feel my buttocks. Even my teeth are cold. It’s below zero and the wind is strong enough to knock you off your feet-God knows you’re not steady at the best of times. You think you’re going to wade through the drifts banging on car windows shouting ”There’s a killer loose“? All we can do is report the death and wait for someone to turn up. Have you any idea what’s going on in other parts of the county? There are sixty people trapped in a supermarket in Canterbury because the roof has collapsed under the weight of snow. We’re not going to get priority. This sort of thing happens almost every year on the moor.”
He looked across at his partner and softened. Bryant’s white fringe was now sticking up around his ears in stiffened tufts, like stalagmites. His watery blue eyes peered up at him above his travel blanket. “Try to get some sleep, at least until it’s light. We’ll figure out what to do in the morning.”
They awoke into a strange new world of opalescent whiteness. The sky was a vulgar shade of heliotrope that reminded May of a Maxfield Parrish painting. The undulating snow dunes were as shiny as vinyl, and extended to the tips of the lowest trees. The road had been transformed into a sparkling white canyon. Some vehicles had been twisted and tipped by the snowpack that had shifted down from the surrounding moors.
Bryant peered sleepily out from his blanket. “What time is it? My back’s killing me. I feel like I slept on a bag of spanners.”
“Seven-fifteen,” said May. “I’ve just spoken to the Highways Authority emergency services. They’re hoping to get a supply helicopter out this morning if the wind speed stays low. Do you want something to eat?”
“No. I need to venture outside and perform my ablutions, but the thought of lowering my trousers in these temperatures is a trifle unappealing. Give me a minute, then let’s get into the back of the van and see if there’s anything in there that can help us.”
When he returned, they dragged open the great canvas bags that Alma and Arthur had wedged behind the props and flats for the convention performance, and checked their contents.
“What kind of a show were you planning to stage?” asked May, pulling out a grotesque crimson papier-mache devil’s head with an ax in its skull and bloody eyeballs on springs.
“They’re not just our props. There are all kinds of activities taking place throughout the convention. I agreed to take down equipment for other attendees. There are lots of indoor and outdoor events planned, ceramics, divination and crystal healing, bungee jumps, potholing, all kinds of extreme-‘
“Don’t tell me you’ve got equipment bags for potholers here. Where are they?” May pulled at an immense backpack covered in Hello Kitty stickers and opened it, releasing a pile of blue nylon all-weather suits covered in pockets.
“They belong to the Women’s North Wales Adventure Team,” said Bryant, “but they’re pretty big lasses, so we could probably fit them, although the flies do up on the wrong side.”
In minutes, the pair had zipped themselves into ungainly but practical outfits, although they had been forced to roll up the legs and stuff spare socks into the toes of the boots. They clambered from the truck like spacemen, and stopped to examine the road. Snow was still falling, but now the flurries were light and manageable. The exact number of stranded vehicles was hard to determine, but the jewelled spine of traffic snaked around the next bend in the valley like the bones of a great dinosaur.
“Let’s start with the cars nearest the spot where we found the dead Bentick’s driver,” said May, hauling his floundering partner out of a deep drift. They reached the abandoned truck, but were unable to open the frozen door. Scraping ice from the window, May saw that the body had frozen solid. “At least the temperature will preserve it until we can get it to a morgue,” he said. “I think our murderer must have gone back. I haven’t seen anyone pass us. No sign of the witness either, and we’ll need his statement. Let’s start with the cars behind.”
They approached a blue Nissan and scraped at the window. “Empty,” said Bryant. “Next one.”
A black BMW and a red Fiat were both abandoned, but in a silver Mercedes saloon they found a young couple fast asleep, warm and safe beneath all-weather jackets. A straggle-haired businessman still dressed in a tightly knotted tie mouthed at them through the window of his Vauxhall Signum, indicating that he could not open the door. May ran the edge of his penknife around the edges, but it made no difference. Ice had frozen the wet seals as firmly as if they had been welded shut.
“What’s he saying?” asked May, trying to read the driver’s lips.
“He’s from Kettering,” said Bryant.
“I’m in catering,” said the driver, opening the window an inch before it stuck. “I’ve got plenty of food to last, so don’t worry about me. The same thing happened two years ago. To be honest, it made a nice break from the wife. You might take an Eccles cake back to the lady behind me. It’s all I can pass through the window.” He slid the cake through the gap. “She looks very upset.”
The detectives trudged farther back. A grey-faced woman in a green Barbour jacket watched them anxiously. The door of her Volvo saloon was iced shut, but she could open one of the rear passenger windows. “We’re police officers,” Bryant explained, tapping the glass. “Don’t open this to anyone else. Have an Eccles cake. Do you need anything else?”
She shook her head miserably. “I’ve been listening to the radio. There are people much worse off than me. I manage a farm outside Holbeton. My husband knows I’m here. There was a man outside a while ago, just after dawn. He tried to get in, but couldn’t open the door.”
“What did he look like?”
“I’m sorry, it was dark and snowing, I really didn’t see.”
“At least the ice is preventing him from entering other cars,” said Bryant as they made slow progress up the hill.
“He’ll be able to get into trucks, though. Their cabins are built to withstand extreme weather.”
“If this fellow knows there was a witness, that Chinese chap will be at risk. I wish he’d stayed with us. Any one of these stranded motorists could be the person we’re looking for.”
“Given the circumstances, he’ll be hiding in plain sight. My concern is over our situation here. There’s no backup, no threat of legal retribution we can invoke. The man we seek will probably be younger and fitter than us.”
“My dear chap,” said Bryant,
May eyed him warily. “Thanks for the warning.”
“Now, we need to enlist some aid and organise a search. There are plenty of others trapped out here. It’s no use just waiting for the authorities to turn up. Let’s do what we’ve always done at the PCU, and get some civilians to help us.”
A quarter of a mile from the detectives, in the half-buried Vauxhall van, Madeline’s thoughts were also turning to her nemesis.
“Can’t I play for a while?” Ryan peered up at her over the folds of his scarf.
“No, it’s not safe. In you go.”