“I can’t believe we’ve got this far.” Church closed his eyes so he could appreciate the early evening sun on his face as he inhaled the salty aroma of the sea caught in the cooling breeze. There on the beach, he could almost forget everything. The sensations reminded him of childhood holidays before the burdens of responsibility had been thrust on his shoulders, and happy summer days with Marianne before life had truly soured. The womb noises of the ocean and the breaking surf calmed him enough to realise how stressed he had become, his shoulders hunched, neck muscles knotted. Opening his eyes, he watched Veitch trudging beside him, oblivious to the seaside joys. “When I went to the Watchtower and heard about the four talismans, I thought it was only a matter of time before it went pear-shaped. But finding them has been easy,” he continued, and, after a pause, “Relatively easy.”
“That’s because they were waiting for us, so Tom says,” Witch said unenthusiastically. “We were meant to get them, at this time, and we did. No mystery there.”
Church shook his head. “I don’t believe it works like that. Even if the stars were aligned, it wasn’t fated that these things would fall into our hands. We did this and I’m not going to have it taken away from us.” Caldey Island caught his eye and he brought himself up sharp. “But we haven’t got them all yet. There’s still time for things to go wrong.”
“Now you’re talking my kind of language.”
Church stopped and rounded on him. “Come on, Veitch, stop being so bloody pessimistic. You’re not the only one who’s had a miserable time-“
“Miserable time! I killed somebody! That’s not miserable, that’s a fucking catastrophe! I have to live with it every bleedin’ day and now I can’t forget it for a minute because I’m spending time with the poor bastard’s niece, just so I can see on a regular basis how my stupidity fucked up a whole family’s life!”
He made to walk on, but Church grabbed at his shoulder roughly. Instinctively Witch’s fists bunched and he adopted a threatening posture. “So you screwed up and you’re feeling guilty about it. Fine. That’s how it should be. But self-pity is just you being selfish. You’ve got a job to do now that’s more important than your feelings. If you want to tear yourself apart, you can do it after this is over.”
“Fuck off.” Veitch made another attempt to walk off and Church grabbed him roughly once more. This time Veitch’s response was instant. He swung his fist hard into Church’s jaw, knocking him to the sand.
For a moment, Church was dazzled by flashes of black and purple. Then he jumped up, lowered his head and rammed Veitch in the stomach. They both fell, rolling around in the sand, wrestling and punching. Eventually Church hauled himself on top and locked his arms on Veitch’s shoulders so the Londoner couldn’t move.
“I’m no hero,” Church said through gritted teeth. “I didn’t choose to be here. I’ve got my own agenda going on too. But I know I can’t let all this misery and suffering happen if I can do something about it. I mean, who could?”
Witch’s eyes narrowed. “Lots of people could.” He searched Church’s face for a moment longer, then threw him off with an easy shrug. After he’d dusted himself down, he said, “Don’t worry, I’m not giving up on my bleedin’ responsibilities. But I want to do something to make it up to Ruth. I know I’ll never actually make amends, but I’ve got to try.” He paused. “I’m not a bad bloke, you know. Just stupid.”
Church rubbed his jaw, which ached mercilessly, but he’d known what he was doing. “Ruth’s a smart person. If you’ve got any good in you, she’ll see it eventually. You’ve just got to give it time.”
“Yeah, best behaviour and all that. Listen, sorry about smacking you. I’ve got a bleedin’ awful temper.”
“Don’t worry. I’ll point you in the right direction before I activate you next time.” He shook sand out of his hair and added, “Come on, let’s find a pub. It’s ages since I’ve had a pint.”
“What a great place.” Ruth sat on the steps of a statue of Prince Albert and looked out across the harbour. “Everybody here’s on holiday, so happy … I can’t believe it might all get swept away.”
Laura crawled out to the end of the barrel of a cannon and sat back, basking in the sun. “Talk about something important for a change. Like isn’t our working class London boy a babe. I wonder how low his tattoos go?”
“If you’re trying to wind me up, you’ve picked the wrong subject,” Ruth snapped.
“What about you, Mr. Bi?” Laura said to Shavi. “Does he get your sap rising?”
“He is not unattractive.” Shavi smiled, but continued to lie on the grass with his eyes closed.
“You know, I’m noticing a distinct pathology to your sexual obsession.” Ruth glared at Laura, who ignored her.
“That’s just what I’d expect from you, Frosty. But I’m not a one-obsession woman. I like drugs, music and technology too.”
“Well, I never realised you were so deep.” Ruth stood up and wandered around the base of the statue. “What do you think we’ve got to do once we get this last talisman?”
Shavi hauled himself into a sitting position. “Perhaps everything will become obvious once we have all the pieces together.”
“Having seen just a glimpse of what’s out there, it makes me feel what we’re doing is so ineffectual. Do you think these other gods can really oppose the Fomorii?”
“For me, there are more profound concerns,” Shavi said. “The Danann are supposed to look like angels. Was the Christian mythology based upon them? Are all the world’s religions a reflection of the time when the Tuatha De Danann and the Fomorii ruled over humanity? This may be an opportunity for us all to meet our Maker.”
“Opportunity. I like your optimism,” Ruth said sardonically.
“That’s too heavy,” Laura noted uneasily. “It’s bad enough as it is without thinking about things like that.”
“But we should think about it,” Shavi pressed. “For millennia our lives have been based around religion. If our entire system of belief and morality rests upon a lie, we are truly adrift. It would be difficult to comprehend how our society could recover from a blow like that.”
“We lose our faith in science and religion at the same time. That doesn’t leave any refuge for most people,” Ruth said thoughtfully.
“Most people don’t believe in anything anyway,” Laura said. “Religion is just a place for sad bastards to go to hide, and scientists can’t agree on anything, so why should anyone else believe them?”
“And I thought I was cynical.” Ruth looked down at the jumbled streets of the old town; from that vantage point they could almost have been in the Middle Ages. Briefly a cloud shadow swept across the rooftops and she shuddered involuntarily; unconsciously she wrapped her arms tightly around her. From nowhere the thought sprang; a portent: things were going to get worse from that moment on.
Amidst a large group of garrulous tourists, Church and Witch spent the rest of the evening in a pub on Tudor Square finding the common ground that lay between their different backgrounds. Veitch had a dangerous edge to his character which made Church feel uneasy, but it was tempered by an encouraging sense of loyalty; and for someone who had dabbled for so long in petty crime, he seemed to have a strict moral code. Ultimately it was those contradictions which made his character so winning. Veitch showed a respect for Church which the latter hadn’t experienced before.
“I can’t get my head round it.” Witch’s brow furrowed as he swigged down a mouthful of lager. “We were being set up for this from the moment we were born? Those dreams that gave me all that bleedin’ misery?”
“I had the dreams too, though not as bad as you. I mean, we call them dreams, but they weren’t really. It was the Otherworld contacting us-though that makes it sound like they were getting us on the phone. I think it was more like we were in some way closer to their world, so bits of it kept seeping through when we were most receptive to it.”
“Bastards. I owe them for messin’ with my head, w
hether they did it on purpose or not. But you said that woman from the Watchtower kept visiting you when you were a kid. What was she, your sponsor?”
Church had wrestled with that thought before and he still hadn’t reached a satisfactory conclusion. “I think, maybe, because the Danann knew how important we were supposed to be, they wanted to keep an eye on us.”
“Watched over by angels, eh? You lucky bastard.” Veitch’s words gave him pause, and after a moment he said, “I wonder what they feel about us, really. I know they look like us a bit, the Danann anyway, but they’re, like, God, aren’t they? God and his angels. And the other lot are the Devil and his crew.”
Church felt uncomfortable at this description; old teachings had dug their way in deep and he couldn’t help a shudder at the blasphemy. “We should be getting back,” he said, draining his pint. It was already closing time and the number of drinkers in the pub had dwindled rapidly. Through the window he could see them making their way across Tudor Square to their hotels and B&Bs, quite a number for out-of-season, but still too few for him. Increasingly, he felt the desire for the security of large numbers. Wide open spaces were simply too dangerous.
They were halfway across the square when Veitch glanced up suddenly and exclaimed, “What’s that?”
Tiny sparks of light darted overhead, accompanied by a flutter of wings which reminded Church of the sound of bats on a summer evening. But as he peered up into the clear night sky he felt a tingle of wonder. Tiny, full-formed figures, neither men nor women but a little of both, flashed around high above on wings that seemed too flimsy to carry even their slight weight; the light was coming from their skin, which had the faint glow of phosphorus.
“What are they?” Veitch asked curiously.
“I would say the analogue of nature spirits. Whatever made our ancestors think the trees and rivers were alive.”
“No trouble, then?” Veitch’s hand was inside his jacket where he kept his gun. Church wanted to tell him it would be worthless in what lay ahead, but he supposed if it gave Veitch comfort then it had some use. The hand didn’t come out and Church could tell Veitch was weighing up whether he could get away with taking a few potshots.
“They look harmless,” Church warned. “Leave them be. They might even be helpful to us at some time.”
“I don’t want help from any of them,” Veitch said harshly. “I want things back the way they were.”
“It’s not all bad,” Church replied. “We’ve got the magic back. We were missing that in all our lives.”
Veitch didn’t seem convinced. “Why are they flying around like that? Most of these things seem to stay out of the way when people are around.”
Now that he mentioned it, Church did think it was curious. He examined the fleeting trails of the creatures once again, and when one swooped low enough so he could see its face, the answer was unmistakable. “They’re frightened,” he said. “Something has disturbed them.”
Veitch traced their path back across the sky. “They came from over there,” he said, pointing to Castle Hill, where Shavi, Laura and Ruth had lazed earlier.
“We could go back,” Church mused. He was torn between the knowledge of what terrible things now lurked out in the night and the desire to know what might present a problem to them in the future.
Veitch was already striding down St. Julian’s Street. “We’ll be fine if we keep on our toes. We’ve got to check this out.”
The quay was awash with the reflected sodium light from the town dappling the gently lapping waves. Tranquillity lay across the area, in direct opposition to the hubbub of the day. The boat trip booth was shut, as was the ice cream shop and surf store on the ramp down to the beach. A few lights glimmered in the holiday apartments overlooking the harbour, but as they passed the old bath house and joined the path which curved around the headland, all signs of life disappeared. Away to their left, the sea rolled in calmly, the breakers crashing on the rocks under the lifeboat station. On their right the bank rose up, too steep to climb, to the top of Castle Hill.
Church and Veitch advanced along the path cautiously. Although it was a clear night, it was dark away from the town’s lights and the susurration of the sea drowned out any nearby sounds.
“What do you reckon?” Veitch asked at a point where the path wound round so it was impossible to see far ahead or back.
“Doesn’t seem-” The words were barely out of Church’s lips when the night was disturbed by a throaty bass rumble, deep and powerful, rolling out from somewhere close by.
“What was that?” Veitch hissed.
Church felt the now-familiar shiver of fear ripple down his back. He glanced down the path behind them, then ahead, and finally up the steep bank. Another sound echoed out. “Up there,” he whispered.
They stood stock-still, trying to peer through the gorse and willowherb, their breath burning in their throats. Finally they caught a glimpse of a black bulk moving against the sky on the ridge above them. Veitch went to speak, but Church silenced him with a wave of his hand. The silhouette moved slowly, dangerously, and then it turned its head and Church caught the terrible glitter of red eyes, burning like embers.
“Black Shuck,” he muttered.
He thought his words had been barely more than an exhalation, but the creature suddenly froze. Another throbbing growl rolled out menacingly. Slowly, the eyes moved, searching.
The dog disappeared from view and a second later they heard crashing through the undergrowth as it thundered down the bank to the path.
“Is it in front or behind?” Veitch asked, glancing around anxiously. Church shook his head. They vacillated, desperately hoping for some sign, but they knew once they had one it would be too late.
Finally Church grabbed Veitch and forced him onwards around the corner. They breathed easily when they saw the dog wasn’t there, but its growls were still reverberating loudly and seemed to be drawing closer. Church nodded to a point where the bank wasn’t so steep. “If it’s down here, we should be up there.”
“Yeah, but we have to come down sooner or later.”
They launched themselves at the bank and scrambled up, digging their nails in the turf and weeds to haul themselves along. At the clipped lawn on the summit, they rolled on to their stomachs and peered back down. Church caught a glimpse of the dog prowling menacingly back and forth along the path.
“It knows we’re here,” Veitch noted in a hoarse whisper. “It can smell us.”
“Something more than that, I think.”
“Okay, but from what you’ve told me, if the dog’s here, the Hunt can’t be far behind, right?”
That was the one thing Church had been trying not to consider. “We have to get back to the others,” he said.
Shavi, Ruth and Laura sat in Tom’s top floor room looking out across the rooftops. Tom lay on the bed, his face pale and drawn.
“Where’ve they got to?” Ruth paced around anxiously. “You’re sure they’re going to be all right?”
“I told you. I’ve done all I can. A simple direction of the energies, a masking.” The snap of anger in Tom’s voice was born of exhaustion. “If they’re not in plain sight, they should be fine.”
“What if they’re pissed and lying in a gutter?” Laura asked. “You know how boys like to play once they get together.”
“You’d think they’d have thought to get back here by nightfall,” Ruth moaned.
“They never call.” Laura’s singsong voice dripped with mockery. “Listen to you. You sound like their mother.”
“Why don’t you-“
“Listen.” Concern crossed Shavi’s face. From the street without came the gentle clip-clop of horses’ hooves, an everyday sound, but it made their blood run cold.
“Can you see?” Ruth knew she was whispering unnecessarily, but she couldn’t bring herself to raise her voice.
Shavi pressed his face up close to the glass and attempted to look down. He shook his head. “Only if I open the window.”<
br />
“Don’t do that!” Laura snapped.
“I was not about to.”
They listened as the sound of the hooves slowly moved away and only when the sound had finally disappeared did they speak again.
“Maybe it wasn’t them,” Ruth said hopefully. “Earlier I saw a guy who takes tourists on tours of the front in a horse-drawn carriage.”
“It was the Hunt.” Tom’s voice had an edge of fatalism.
“How fast does it move?” Veitch panted. They slipped and slid down the grassy bank on the other side of the hill until they reached the museum.
“Faster than you could ever run, even on a good day.” Church dropped on to a path and peered over the old castle walls. If the tide had been out, they could have taken a short cut across the beach and up the vertiginous seafront steps to the street where the B&B lay, but the waters crashed against the cliffs on which the town perched.
“Hey, I’m fit. You’re the one who spends his time sitting on his arse writing about old bones.”
They hurried under the crumbling stone arches of the castle’s defences and quickly arrived back at the quay. Disturbingly, the dog’s growls didn’t diminish. Church glanced back and thought he could see the eyes burning in the distance.
“It’s got our scent,” he said. “Or whatever. We might lose it up in the town where there are too many other distractions.”
But as they turned to run back up St. Julian Street, the threatening blast of a horn echoed out across the quiet town.
Church’s heart skipped a beat. “The Hunt. They’re in the old town.”
As they waited uncertainly, with the dog’s growls growing louder behind them, they heard a horse approaching slowly down St. Julian Street. A street light threw an enormous angular shadow across the front of the pastel houses in which Church could make out the cruel pike-weapon he had seen used so effectively on Dartmoor.
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