on the wall, and an

83

ice cream had melted into a raspberry- coloured puddle on JP[

the ground. 31

& i*

‘Hello, girls,’ he said. ’” I

‘Hi, Uncle Ben.’ fj

Amy looked at him sadlv, with big eves that showed hurt … I

I

but no real comprehension of what was hurting. She glanced ;

apprehensively over her shoulder at the farmhouse. The front .-.- i

dour stood open, but there was silence from within. A black arid white cat emerged from the garden, walked to the doorstep and paused, sniffing the air of the hallway. Then it seemed to change its mind and trotted quickly away towards the Dutch barn. ,

‘Mum’s in the kitchen,’ said Amy, anticipating the question. ‘And where’s your dad?’

‘He had to go up to Burnt Wood straight after milking. To mend some gates.’

o

‘I see.’ |

Cooper smiled at the girls, but got no response. They were f

totally unlike the two children who would normally have come i

running to greet him. But he didn’t have to ask them any more

questions to guess why they were so subdued.

In the big kitchen he found his sister-in-law, Kate. She was moving about from table to stove stiffly, like a woman with arthritis, or one whose limbs were badly bruised. Her short fair hair was dishevelled and the sheen of sweat on her forehead looked as though it was caused by something more than the heat of the day or the steam from a pan which was simmering on the hotplate with nothing in it. She. too, had been crying.

1 O J O

When she saw him, she let go of the carving knife she was carrying as if it was a relief to part with it. The kitchen normally

J O I J

smelled of herbs and freshly baked bread, and sometimes of garlic and olive oil. Tonight, though, it smelled of none of those. The smell was of disinfectant and several less pleasant odours that made Cooper’s stomach muscles tighten with apprehension.

‘What’s wrong, Kate?’

His sister-in-law shook her head, sagging against the pine table, weary with the effort of trying to keep up an appearance of normality for the girls. Cooper could have told her, even from his brief glimpse of them outside, that it had not worked.

84

‘See for yourself,’ she said. ‘I can’t bear it any more, Ben.’ He put his hand on her shoulder and saw the tears begin to squeeze from her eyes once more.

‘Leave it to me,’ he said. ‘You look after the girls.’ He went out into the passage that ran through the centre of the house and looked up the stairs. When he was a child, the passage and the stairs had been gloomy places. The walls and most of the woodwork had been covered in some sort of dark-brown varnish, and the floorboards had been painted black on either side of narrow strips of carpet. The carpet itself had long since lost its colour under a layer of dirt which no amount of cleaning could prevent from being tramped into the house by his father, his uncle, their children, three does, a number of cats of varying

‘ ‘ O ‘ J O

habits and even, at times, other animals that had been brought in from the fields for special attention. Now, though, things were different. There were deep-pile fitted carpets on the floor and the walls were painted white. The wood had been stripped to its original golden pine and there were mirrors and pictures to catch and emphasize what light there was from the small crescent shaped windows in the doors at either end of the passage.

Yet he found that the stairs, light and airy and comfortable as they were, held more terrors for him now than they ever had as a child. The immediate cause of his fear lay on a step halfway up. It was a pink, furry carpet slipper, smeared with excrement.

The slipper lay on its side, shocking and obscene in its ordinariness, its gaudy colour clashing with the carpet. It turned his stomach as effectively as if it had been a freshly extracted internal organ left dripping on the stairs.

Slowly, he climbed the steps, pausing to pick up the slipper gingerly between finger and thumb as he would have done a vital

O & J O

piece of evidence. On the first landing, he paused outside a door, cocking his head for a moment to listen to the desperate, high pitched whimper that came from inside. It was an inhuman noise, a mumbled keening like an animal in pain, forming no words. Then Cooper opened the door, pushing it hard as it stuck on some obstruction on the floor. When he walked into the room, he entered a scene of devastation worse than any crime scene he had ever encountered.

85

8

f ”””

round by a man walking a Jog.’

There was a warv silence. Diane Fry tried to look efficient and attentive, with her notebook open on her knee.

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