"Spare over here," someone yelled. A trowel flew spinning from hand to hand, light spiking off the blade, and Sean caught it and settled down to work, still grumbling.
"If you were twelve," Cassie said, "what would get you out here in the middle of the night?"
I thought of the faint gold circle of light, bobbing like a will-o'-the-wisp among the severed tree roots and the shards of ancient walls; the silent watcher in the wood. "We did it a couple of times," I said. "Spent the night in our tree house. This was all wood back then, right up to the road." Sleeping bags on rough boards, torch-beams close against comic books. A rustle, and the beams skidding up to cross on a pair of golden eyes, rocking wild and luminous only a few trees away; all of us yelling, and Jamie leaping up to fire a spare satsuma as the thing bounded away with a crash of leaves-
Cassie glanced at me over her juice carton. "Yeah, but you were with your mates. What would get you out here on your own?"
"Meeting someone. A dare. Possibly getting something important that I'd forgotten here. We'll talk to her friends, see if she said anything to them."
"This wasn't a random thing," Cassie said. The archaeologists had put the Scissor Sisters back on and one of her feet swung, absently, in time with the beat. "Even if it wasn't the parents. This guy didn't go out and pick up the first vulnerable kid he saw. He put a lot of planning into this. He wasn't just looking to kill a kid; he was after Katy."
"And he knew the place pretty well," I said, "if he could find the altar stone in the dark, carrying a body. It's looking more and more like a local boy." The wood was gay and sparkly in the sunlight, all birdsong and flirting leaves; I could feel the rows upon rows of identical, trim, innocuous houses ranged behind me.
After the sandwiches we went looking for Auntie Vera and the cousins. It was a hot, still afternoon, but the estate had an eerie
The Foleys were an unprepossessing bunch. The fifteen-year-old settled into an armchair and folded her arms, hitching up her bust like someone's mammy, and gave us a pale, bored, supercilious stare; the ten-year-old looked like a cartoon pig and chewed gum with her mouth open, wriggling her rump on the sofa and occasionally flicking the gum out on her tongue and then back into her mouth again. Even the youngest was one of those deeply unnerving toddlers who look like bonsai adults: it had a prim, pudgy face with a beaky nose, and it stared at me from Vera's lap, its lips pursing, and then retracted its chin disapprovingly into the folds of its neck. I had a nasty conviction that, if it said anything, its voice would be a deep, forty-a-day rasp. The house smelled of cabbage. I could not fathom why on earth Rosalind and Jessica would choose to spend any time there, and the fact that they had bothered me.
With the exception of the toddler, though, they all told the same story. Rosalind and Jessica, and sometimes Katy, spent the night there every few weeks or so ("I'd love to have them more often, of course I would," said Vera, pinching tensely at a corner of a slipcover, "but I simply can't, not with my nerves, you know"); less often, Valerie and Sharon stayed with the Devlins. Nobody was sure whose idea this particular sleepover had been, although Vera thought vaguely that it might have been Margaret who suggested it. On Monday night Rosalind and Jessica had come over somewhere around half past eight, watched television and played with the baby (I couldn't imagine how; the kid had barely moved all the time we were there, it must have been like playing with a large potato), and gone to bed around eleven, sharing a camp bed in Valerie and Sharon's room.