"Worried about the competition, are you?" said the woman. "Reckon there ain't room for two foxes in this place, maybe?"
"Shut up, Bella," said Fox with the edge back in his voice.
"Yeah… yeah. It was a joke, sweetheart. You've gotta learn to relax… get stoned… take happy pills. We're with you, darlin'… all the way. You've just gotta trust us."
"Obey the rules and I will. Break them and I won't. First rule, everyone works to the rota and no one shirks their turn. Second rule, no one fucks with the locals. Third rule, no one leaves this campsite after dark…"
Wolfie crawled out from his hiding place when he heard the bus door close and tiptoed to one of the windows overlooking the entrance to the Copse. It was hung with fox brushes, and he pushed them aside to watch his father take up position behind the rope barrier. There was so much he didn't understand. Who were these people in the other buses? Where had Fox found them? What were they doing there? Why weren't his mother and brother with them? Why were they building a fortress?
He pressed his forehead to the glass and tried to find meaning in what he'd heard. He knew that Fox's full name was Fox Evil. He had asked his mother once if that meant Evil was his surname, too, but she'd laughed and told him, no, you're just Wolfie. Only Fox is Evil. From then on, Wolfie transposed the words and thought of his father as Evil Fox. To his child's mind, always seeking balance and answers, it made more sense than Fox Evil, and Fox immediately assumed the virtue of a surname.
But who was this old man called Lucky Fox? And how could his father not know him if they had the same name? Excitement and fear collided in the child's heart. Excitement that Lucky Fox might be related to him… might even know where his mother was; fear of a murderer…
Mark retreated, closing the drawing-room door quietly behind him. He turned to the visitor with an apologetic smile. "Would you mind if we left the introductions for a few minutes? James is… er…" He broke off. "Look, I know he's going to be thrilled to see you, but just at the moment he's asleep."
Nancy had seen more than Mark realized and nodded immediately. "Why don't I come back after lunch? It's no trouble. I need to book into Bovington Army Camp by five o'clock this evening… but there's nothing to stop me doing it now. I can come back later." This was far more embarrassing than she'd imagined it would be. She certainly hadn't expected Mark Ankerton to be there. "I should have rung first," she finished lamely.
He wondered why she hadn't. The number was in the book. "Not at all." He placed himself between her and the front door as if afraid she might make a run for it. "Please don't go. James would be devastated." He gestured to a corridor on the right, rushing his words to make her feel welcome. "Let's go down to the kitchen. It's warm in there. I can make you a cup of coffee while we wait for him to wake up. It shouldn't be more than ten minutes or so."
She allowed herself to be shepherded forward. "I lost my nerve at the last minute," she admitted, answering his unspoken question. "It was all rather spur of the moment and I didn't think he'd appreciate a phone call last night or first thing this morning. I had visions of it getting very complicated if he didn't catch on to who I was. I thought it would be easier to come in person."
"It's not a problem," Mark assured her, opening the kitchen door. "It's the best Christmas present he could have had."
But was it? Mark hoped his anxiety wasn't showing for he had no idea how James was going to react. Would he be pleased? Would he be afraid? What would a DNA test show? The timing was crazy. He could pluck a hair from Nancy's shoulder and she wouldn't even know he'd done it. The smile froze on his face as he looked into her eyes. God, they were so like James's!
Discomfited by his stare, Nancy pulled off her woollen hat and fluffed her dark hair with her fingertips. It was a feminine gesture that belied the otherwise masculine way she was dressed. Thick fleece over a polo-neck jumper, cargo trousers tucked into heavy boots, all black. It was an interesting choice, particularly as she was visiting an elderly man whose tastes and opinions on dress and behavior were bound to be conservative.
Mark guessed it was a deliberate challenge to James's willingness to accept her because it said effectively, no compromise. Take me as I am or not at all. If a butch-looking woman doesn't fit the Lockyer-Fox mold, then tough shit. If you expected me to woo you with feminine charm, think again. If you wanted a manipulable granddaughter, forget it. The irony was that, quite unconsciously, she had presented herself as the antithesis of her mother.
"I'm on temporary secondment to Bovington as an instructor in field operations in Kosovo," she told him, "and when I looked at the map… well… I thought if I left at the crack of dawn I could use today…" She broke off to give an embarrassed shrug. "I didn't realize he had guests. If there'd been cars in the drive I wouldn't have rung the bell, but as there weren't…"
Mark made what he could of this. "Mine's in a garage at the back, and he and I are the only ones here. Truly, Captain Smith, this is-" he sought for a word that would put her at ease-"brilliant. You've no idea how brilliant, as a matter of fact. This is his first Christmas since Ailsa died. He's putting on a damn good show, but having your solicitor to stay isn't much of a replacement for a wife." He pulled out a chair for her. "Please. How do you like your coffee?"
The kitchen was warmed by an Aga, and Nancy could feel herself blushing in the heat. Her awkwardness deepened. She couldn't have picked a worse time to walk in unannounced. She imagined the Colonel's shame if he came looking for Mark with the tears still in his eyes and found her sitting at the table. "Actually, I don't think this is a good idea," she said abruptly. "I saw him over your shoulder, and he's not asleep. Supposing he wonders where you are? It'll devastate him to find me here." She glanced toward a door in the corner. "If that leads outside I can sneak away without him ever knowing I was here."
Perhaps Mark, too, was having second thoughts because he looked irresolutely toward the corridor. "He's having a pretty bad time of it," he said. "I don't think he's sleeping much."
She pulled on her hat again. "I'll come back in two hours, but I'll phone first to give him time to compose himself. It's what I should have done this time."
He searched her face for a moment. "No," he said, taking her lightly by the arm and turning her toward the corridor. "I don't trust you not to change your mind. My coat and wellies are in the scullery and the door from there takes us out on the other side from James. We'll go for a walk instead, blow the cobwebs away after your drive. We can take a discreet look through the drawing-room window in half an hour to see how he's getting on. How does that sound?"
She relaxed immediately. "Good," she said. "I'm much better at walking than coping with uncomfortable social situations."
He laughed. "Me, too. This way." He turned to the right and took her into a room with an old stone sink on one side and a litter of boots, horse blankets, waterproofs, and ulsters on the other. The floor was covered with lumps of mud that had dropped from the treads of rubber soles, and dust and grime had accumulated in the sink and on the draining board and windowsills.
"It's a bit of a mess," he apologized, swapping his Gucci loafers for some old Wellingtons, and shrugging into a Dryzabone oilskin. "I sometimes think everyone who's ever lived here has abandoned bits of themselves as proof of passage." He flicked an ancient brown ulster hanging from a peg. "This belonged to James's great-grandfather. It's been hanging here for as long as James can remember, but he says he likes to see it every day… it gives him a sense of continuity."
He opened the outer door on to a walled courtyard and ushered Nancy through. "Ailsa called this her Italian garden," he said, nodding to the large terra-cotta urns that were scattered around it. "It's a bit of a suntrap on a summer evening and she used to grow night-scented flowers in these pots. She always said it was a pity it was at the scrag-end of the Manor because it was the nicest place to sit. That's the back of the garage." He nodded to a single-storey building to their right. "And this-" he lifted the latch of an arched wooden door in a wall ahead of them-"leads into the kitchen garden."