unbelievable, to people of entirely mundane persuasions. But of course Paxton wasn't one of them. On the far bank of the river, he watched Harry through a pair of binoculars and thought:
Harry 'heard' him and knew that he'd been eavesdropping on his conversation with his mother; on Harry's part of it, anyway. And suddenly he was furious, but coldly furious, not like the other night. And again Faethor's words of advice sprang to memory: 'He would enter your mind. Enter his!'
Paxton saw the Necroscope step behind a bush and waited for him to come out on the other side. But he didn't.
'Actually, no,' said Harry softly, from directly behind him. 'But when I do I'd like to think it's in private.'
'Paxton,' Harry said, his voice still dangerously soft, a hot breath squeezed out of burning bellows lungs, 'you're a scum-sucking little mind-flea. I reckon that when your father made you the best part leaked from a ruptured rubber down your Ma's leg onto the floor of the brothel. You're a scumbag bastard who has invaded my territory, stepped on my toes and is making me itch. And I have every right to do something about you. Don't you agree?'
Paxton flapped his mouth like a landed fish, finally got his breath and his nerve back. 'I… I'm doing my job, that's all,' he gasped, trying to free himself from Harry's grip. But the Necroscope just held him there at arm's length — held him that much tighter — with no real expenditure of energy at all.
'Doing your job?' He repeated Paxton's words. 'Who for, scumbag?'
'That's none of your busin — ' Paxton started to say.
Harry shook him, glared at him, and for the first time the esper noticed a flush of red light colouring the Necroscope's gaunt cheeks where it escaped from behind the thick lenses of his dark glasses. An angry red light — from his eyes!
'For E-Branch?' Harry's voice was lower still, a rumble, almost a growl.
'Yes — no!' Paxton blurted the words out. Soft as jelly, all he wanted now was to get away from here; to that end he'd say anything at all, the first thing that came to mind. Harry knew it, could read it in his pale face and trembling lips; but where lips may lie the mind usually tells the truth. He went inside, scanned it all and more, and got out again like squelching from the sucking quag of a sewer. Even through the acrid odour of Paxton's fear, still he'd been able to smell the shit.
It was a relief to know that such minds were in the minority; otherwise the Necroscope might be tempted to declare war on the entire human race, right now!
But Paxton knew he'd been in:
'So now you know for sure,' said Harry. 'And now you'll report to your boss. Well, you go and tell the Minister that his worst nightmare has come true, Paxton. Tell him that, and then quit. Get out and stay out. I know you don't warn too easily, but this time take some good advice and run while you can. I won't be warning you again.'
And while that sank in he released the other, released him violently, tossed him back and over the lip of the riverbank, and down into the gently swirling water.
It was only then that the Necroscope saw Paxton's briefcase lying open on a tree stump close by. Several white junk-mail envelopes — and one large manila envelope — were like magnets to his eyes. They were addressed to Harry Keogh, No. 3 The Riverside, etc,
Harry glared once more at the floundering esper where he gagged, gurgled and splashed in the cold river water beyond his reach — for the moment just out of harm's way — then snatched up his mail and took it home with him.
Paxton could swim, which was as well. For the Necroscope didn't much care one way or the other…
6 Red Alert!
Harry flipped quickly through the murder files, discovered the young prostitute's name, home town and place of interment, and made his way at once to her graveside in a small cemetery on the northern outskirts of Newcastle. And the Necroscope had moved so quickly that as he seated himself in the shade of a tree close by Pamela Trotter's simple headstone, so Paxton was still catching his breath where he'd dragged himself up on to the river bank a hundred miles away.
'Pamela,' said the Necroscope,
Harry nodded, perhaps ruefully. 'My reputation has suffered a bit lately, it's true.'
Harry was silent for a moment, surprised, even a little taken aback. He really didn't know how to answer her.
'Something like that,' he answered, eventually. 'Not that I think it matters a great deal. There have to be a hell of a lot of you down there by now!'
She laughed and Harry liked her even more.
'But one night, nearly eight weeks ago, it caught up with you, right?' He felt that with her he could get right to it.
Her assumed indifference fell away from her at once.
'It was just an assumption,' Harry told her, quickly. 'I meant no offence, and I'm not eager to bring back hurtful memories. But it's hard to see how I can track this bloke down if no one is able to tell me about him.'
'You won't know until you try.'
'First show me how you were, or how you thought you were,' he said. For he knew well enough that the dead retain pictures of themselves as they were in life, and he wanted to try and draw some sort of comparison with Penny Sanderson. In short, he wondered if his necromancer quarry followed a pattern.
From her mind he immediately got back a picture of a tall, dark-eyed, leggy brunette in a mini-skirt, with slightly loose breasts unsupported under a blue silk blouse, and a shapely backside. But there was nothing of character in the picture,