Part 17 (1/2)

”If you say so, Robert,” she said meekly. ”Now, Dad. Time for bed.”

Robert Gregory glanced at his watch in a bored way, then added. ”Oh, I might as well slip to the pub for the last one. Fancy a walk down with me?”

”Oh, not me, Robert. You know I don't like going into bars late at night.”

He kissed her on the cheek. ”Right-oh, dear. You help yourself to a gla.s.s or two of sherry. I'll be half an hour, tops.”

”Bye, dear.”

”Good night, Dad,” he boomed.

Five minutes later Robert Gregory stooped down by the bush near the garden gate, picked up the carrier bag of sandwiches, cake and unopened bag of bacon snacks and carried them down the street as far as the trash can. Casually he dropped in the bag, then pushed it down with his fist. Cynthia wouldn't have seen. The walls around the garden were far too high to see into the road. And she'd never come outside after dark by herself. Whistling, his hands in his pocket running loose coins through his fingers, he headed in the direction of the inn's lights that shone across the green.

In the bedroom at Ezy View Stan Price waited until his daughter had returned downstairs to her sherry and the Friday night movie. Then he picked up the toilet roll that stood on his bedside table-the one that they used to wipe his chin after his drinks and medicine.

He tore off one square. Fed it into his mouth.

Chewed. Swallowed. Then tore off another piece of toilet tissue. As he ate, his mind, no longer distracted by the ache of hunger, cleared a little.

”John Newton.” he murmured, remembering the name. ”John Newtona I've something to tell you.”

3.

Paul lay on his bed. His fingers were knitted behind the back of his head (that still felt hot enough to scorch the pillowcase). He gazed up at the ceiling, not seeing the posters bluetacked there but picturing Miranda's smiling eyes.

Smiling eyesa he liked the phrase and rolled it round inside his head. Smiling Spanish eyes she had.

Those b.r.e.a.s.t.s, too, all dusted with freckles. Nipples. Dark. Deliciously dark. His mind swam, dizzy as a kitten chasing its tail.

Time had stopped obeying the rules of physics. Forget relativity, Einstein. Paul found himself slipping back in time to when Miranda lay as near naked as you could possibly get.

Her skirt slipped higher. She wanted him as much as he wanted her. Forget the laws of gravity, too, Newton.

There was an irresistible gravitational pull between them. That welded them tighter than glue. G.o.da her eyesa those sparkling, erotic, s.e.x-charged eyesa But just as he was getting to break through one of those key boundaries of his life, a bunch of kids had appeared, mooching amongst the headstones not more than thirty paces away. Armed with air rifles, they were more interested in birds in the treetops than what was happening on the ground.

Luckily, the naked pair hadn't been seen. They'd gathered up their clothes and run like soldiers moving through sniper territory. Laughing with excitement and incredulity, they'd found themselves at the old railway station that once served the Necropolis. Time had raced by. Miranda was due home in fifteen minutes.

”G.o.d,” she said out of the blue. ”I really wanted you back there, Paul.”

”Me, too.” He smiled. ”It looks as if we're going to have to hit the pause b.u.t.ton until next week.”

”Not quite,” she said. Then she did something for him that made Paul realize she'd lived a little longer in the adult world than he had.

Paul gazed up at the ceiling, certain the grin on his face would never disappear in a million years.

4.

At a little after midnight John Newton opened the back door of the house. The dog had an urgent need for the yard by this time. He ran sniffing amongst tree trunks. Soon he'd disappeared into darkness where John heard liquid splashes as Sam relieved himself.

Clouds slipped across the sky, leaving the moon a nebulous smudge of white above Skelbrooke. Even so, he could still make out the path leading up the hillside toward the lake, and although pleasantly drowsy, strolled up there, enjoying the cooler evening air. As Val got ready for bed he'd spend a few minutes out here, while the dog did what a dog's gotta do.

On the lake, which was as smooth as a vast dark mirror, the boat stood motionless. To his right he heard the hiss of the water running down its channel to the millrace beneath the house. This was a nice time of day. Paul and Elizabeth were asleep. The house, with the exception of a single light, lay in darkness. There was a sense it was ready to slumber, too. He yawned. Tomorrow he'd write a few pages of the first chapter of Without Trace, then later he'd fire up the big barbecue on the patio and sizzle up some hamburgers and pork chops. In the back of the refrigerator there was the bottle of barbecue sauce he'd brought back from his book promotion tour in Australia. That stuff was to die for-rich, dark, savorya maybe he'd ask Paul to pick some fresh strawberries from the market garden down the road, too.

Sam snuffled by, his noose hoovering the gra.s.s, as he followed the trail of some mouse or hedgehog.

John stretched, enjoying a mighty yawn. After he'd finished, he moved downhill toward the house. There the bedroom light burned. He caught a glimpse of Val's naked silhouette cast against the curtain.

”Sama Sam?” he called softly. Then listened. He couldn't hear the dog. No panting. No sc.r.a.pe of his claws against the gra.s.s as he marked his territory. No nothing.

”Sam? Where are you, boy?”

Like a cannonball Sam shot out of the darkness, his tail tucked in tight between his back legs, the way he did when he was frightened or hurt.

”Sam,” John said gently. ”Come here. What on earth's the matter?” He stroked the dog who gave a twitchy shake of the tail. ”Has something given you a fright, then? Come on, boy. Let's go inside.”

In the dead center of the patio, in the light spilled from the bedroom window, John saw a chunk of stone. He watched as the dog went forward to sniff at the unfamiliar object. Sam was still a good three paces from it when his body locked up like a statue, the hair on his back bristled. Then he shuffled backwards away from it, ears flattening.

”Don't worry, Sam. It can't hurt us.” He picked up the stone. His eye caught something that had been beneath it. ”Oh noa”

Inexplicably his heart sank. And for a second it seemed more like winter than summera he s.h.i.+vered.

”Sam. It looks as if we've got another one.”

He bent down, his fingers hovering over the oblong of folded paper on the patio, momentarily reluctant to pick it up. The thing could have oozed some contamination the way he was suddenly repelled by it.

”Come on, Newtona it won't bite you.”

As if plucking it from a fire, he grabbed the letter, his teeth gritted. Sam watched him.

”You didn't want me to pick it up either, did you, boy? Don't worry, it's only a letter.”

He looked from the folded paper to the hunk of stone in his other hand. Like the first time it was a piece of smashed tombstone. Engraved on it, a single word: suffer that had probably been chiseled there a hundred years before. It certainly wasn't new. But he didn't doubt that whoever had chosen it as a paperweight had also made sure it bore a suitably resonant message. All part of the sick little game.

The pathetic freaka Whoever it was needed therapy. Or (even better) a good hard kick in the backside. He leaned over the patio wall, then dropped the stone behind a line of bedding plants where it wouldn't be noticed.

The last thing he wanted was to upset the rest of the family needlessly. This was the kind of thing that would prey on Val's mind. So with her up to her eyeb.a.l.l.s in work he intended keeping this secret. Walking toward the door, he unfolded the letter. Same heavy paper. Same antique feel to it. As if it had been torn from a two hundred-year-old ledger. He turned it to the light. Same handwriting, too. An old-fas.h.i.+oned Gothic style.

Dear Messr. John Newt'n, I should- ”Christ!” He jerked backwards. ”Val. I didn't see youa h.e.l.l, you scared me half to death.”

She stood in the doorway. He saw the glint of her eyes. He sensed she was smiling. ”I was just beginning to wonder if some man-hungry goblins had spirited you away.”