But he could remember the sound of shattering glass and the familiar whistle of the bullet rushing past his ear.
Hamish was right: it had been damnably close! He had felt the wind of its passing. Either the shooter was a very good marksman, or he’d come closer than he’d intended.
It was rather like being stalked by someone who didn’t exist. But the bruised grass by the hedgerow told Rutledge it wasn’t a shadow following him.
He remembered too the uneasiness he’d felt at Beachy Head. He’d felt it again in that pasture, a tall target there by the hedgerow, a target even a poor marksman couldn’t have missed.
He didn’t like being vulnerable.
He didn’t like a nameless, faceless pursuer at his heels, invisible because he couldn’t be identified.
“Aye, he could be anywhere,” Hamish told him. “Even in yon courtroom, staring down at you from the gallery.”
It was a thought Rutledge carried with him into the witness-box.
But if this stalking had been an attempt to change Rutledge’s testimony, it had failed.
He saw the prisoner in the dock convicted and walked out of the courtroom with grim satisfaction, even as he scanned the faces around him: five or six women, twice as many men, three ex-soldiers still wearing their army-issue greatcoats, one of them on crutches, and a baker’s boy in his white apron, his face speckled with flour.
There was no one among them he recognized.
But did one of them know him?
5
Constable Hensley was not a glutton for punishment, but he was not a man of self-discipline either. When the note came, he stared at it for a moment and then crumpled it in his fist.
There was no salutation or signature. Just the words “I saw you there in the wood.”
He’d have sworn that he’d taken every precaution. Who had been out in the fields, or for God’s sake, along the road that afternoon? Why had they been spying on him? What did they know? Did they have any idea how often he’d gone to the wood? That he was unable to stop himself from searching it over and over again, looking for any sign that the ground had been disturbed?
Where had he—or she—been, this watcher?
How many times had he been watched?
He remembered that strong sense of someone else in the wood. The sound of a footfall somewhere behind him.
Now that he considered the possibility, he was sure that he hadn’t imagined it after all. Frith’s Wood was always intimidating, with that ominous feeling of something there that was not natural. Not even human.
But this time it must have been a human agency. And he had been so locked in his own fancies, he’d mistaken it for ghosts. He swore.
“If I’d had my wits about me, I’d have had him!”
For the rest of the day he went about his duties with only half his mind on what he was doing or saying. All he could think about was what had taken someone else to the wood.
Was it only to watch him? Or had this person been up to no good and interrupted by Hensley’s unexpected arrival?
Then why send the message? Why give himself—or herself—away by admitting to being there?
That was a question that muddied his thinking to the point that he began to imagine nuances in conversations or sly glances caught out of the corner of his eye. Even the rector, for God’s sake, had pounced on him, wanting to know if he’d heard any news of twins born to a second cousin in Letherington, where he’d claimed to be. He’d wormed out of that one by saying he’d forgotten to ask.
Then he’d wondered who had put the old fool up to it.
For more than a week, Hensley resisted the gnawing mystery of the note shoved under his front door. In the middle of Friday night, he’d come wide awake, remembering that he’d left the wood first. What had happened there after he was gone?
Which appeared to him to explain the note—it had been sent to frighten him into staying away. I saw you . . .
A man with a guilty conscience would take that as a warning and not risk going back.
Hensley, on the other hand, was eaten up by worry.
What had the writer found? And why, after all this time, had he been poking around there? What was worse, once he’d got the wood to himself, what had he done?
The constable took every precaution. He rode out of Dudlington, traveled three miles north of the village, and left his bicycle well hidden behind the stone wall that ran along the road, shutting in the stock that in good weather grazed in Long Meadow. Then he walked another mile before turning back to the wood.
He’d been a right fool the last time to leave his bicycle where anyone on the main road could have glimpsed it. He was sure that that was what had betrayed him.
The wood lay on the north side of Dudlington, beyond Church Lane, in a fold of the land where the Dower Fields ended. This time Hensley kept the trees between himself and the village, using it as a shield. Approaching it now, he wondered what it was about this one dark place in a landscape of open fields that seemed so evil.
Why hadn’t the Harkness family, who’d owned this land for generations, cut it down centuries ago and set the land to the plow? He’d have had it done in a fortnight, in their shoes.
He’d been hardened in London; he’d seen death in many forms. He was a policeman, for God’s sake, hardly likely to be moved by nonsense about old bones. And this was just a stand of trees, the undergrowth just a tangle of briars and vines and fallen boughs.
But then countrymen were a superstitious lot. It was their stories that had set Frith’s Wood apart from the beginning. Passed down from father to son, over centuries.
“Don’t go in there—the dead walk there. Restless, because they’d had no time to pray before they were cut down. Shun the wood, if you know what’s best for you.”
In spite of his bravado, the closer he got to the trees, the harder his heart seemed to pound. Still, the note had been real enough. Ghosts didn’t put pen to paper.
But what if he was walking into a clever trap?
He stopped at the edge of the wood.
In for a penny, in for a pound, he told himself, bracingly.
And he stepped into the shelter of the trees, grateful for the respite from the cold wind that had pursued him across the bare fields.
He walked slowly, studying the ground as he always did, poking at briars and the dried stalks of shrubs to see if the matted tangle beneath had been disturbed.
He was only some thirty feet into the trees when the hairs on the back of his neck seemed to stand stiffly against his collar.
Stupid sod! he scolded himself. There’s nothing here but your own wild fancy. The sooner you do what you came here to do, the sooner you’ll be away again.
He walked on, catching himself on the verge of whistling. He was nearly through the wood now, and he’d found nothing suspicious—no one had been digging here or shifting rotted logs—nothing that could explain what had brought someone else here.
Had this been a wild-goose chase? Then what had that damned note been about?
There was a sound behind him, and he whirled, not sure what he was going to see.
Nothing.
Another five yards. Ten... Fifteen.
God, he’d looked back four times already! It was the wind, rubbing dry branches together. Flicking the dry heads of dead wildflowers against one another. He should have thought about the wind.
Another twenty feet. Not much farther, now. But he’d have to go back the way he’d come, back through the whole damned wood.
This time the sound was nearer. He turned quickly, listening for the shuffle of feet in the dead, wet leaves.
Instead he heard a bird in flight, feathers riffling through the air.
Something struck him in the back, a blow like a fist, piercing his body, tearing into him like a hot poker jammed hard into his ribs. His breath went out in a frosty gust and had trouble sucking in again.
Even as he realized what it was—even as he knew for a certainty that it was a human agency and not a phantom that was intent on destroying him—he could feel his knees buckle and a terrifying sense of doom sweeping through him.
He’d been shot by an arrow. His fingers could just reach it, the shaft round and smooth. And he’d be found here, in Frith’s Wood, with all the village knowing he couldn’t stay away.
He mustn’t die here!
But he knew he was going to. It was his punishment.
He sank to his knees and then fell forward, blacking out before the pain touched him.