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Be that as it may, we walked quite a long way along the bank of one of the two rivers, and when we came to a bridge after about forty minutes we crossed over it and wandered along the opposite bank back to Watersmeet. We climbed up the steep steps to the road and the car, and drove to the little seaside town of Lynmouth.

We had a late lunch at one of the pubs down by the harbour without speaking to a single soul. We bought a few essentials in the neighbouring town of Lynton, including a pair of Wellington boots, then returned home over the moor to Darne Lodge.

A day in the life, I thought once again. I read the old diaries of my husband, who is probably dead. I go for a walk with my dog. I buy a few essentials.

Before long I shall regard cutting my nails or brushing my teeth as an event of significance.

I tried to rekindle my irritation once more — it seemed to have been blown away by the wind. As I had enjoyed it — the irritation, that is — and as it had no doubt been caused by the Samos diary from 1977, I decided to continue reading it. The rest of that first summer. Then a few chapters of Dickens, four games of patience, and then bed.

I duly did all that, and when I was about to let Castor out for his final evening walk, I noticed something lying there just outside the door. It was that dead pheasant again.

Or possibly another one, but just as dead. I dropped the glass I was holding in my hand, it shattered as it hit the stone paving, and I realized that once again I had forgotten to buy that torch.

21

The tenth of November. Cloudy with sunny intervals and a strong wind from the south-west. Eleven degrees in the morning. I took the dead pheasant with us in a plastic carrier bag when we went for our morning walk, and threw it into a clump of thorn bushes on the way to the Roman remains at the top of Winsford Hill. I tried not to think about it — the pheasant, not the Roman monument — but it was not easy. How come that it had ended up outside my door twice? I had convinced myself that it was the same bird, in fact. Some animal must have dragged it there, I thought — on the second occasion at least, at some time yesterday evening. But what animal? There are presumably foxes around here even if I haven’t seen one, but why would a fox kill a pheasant and then leave it completely untouched?

Another bird? Various birds of prey soar overhead on the moor, but even if I don’t know much about their habits it didn’t seem very likely. Birds don’t attack other birds, surely? Not in that way, at least.

A person? I dismissed the thought.

Instead, as I struggled into the powerful headwind with Castor hard on my heels, I began thinking about that face in the window. The pale young man and the gesture he had made over his throat. What had he actually meant by that? The significance in itself was obvious enough, of course — but in this case? Was it some sort of bizarre joke? Was there an intention behind it? Something serious? Who was he? Perhaps a madman who lived in that isolated house and made the same gesture to everybody he saw? Or at least, everybody who walked past his home: there were presumably not very many who did.

I also thought about the two deaths that had taken place in Darne Lodge. Two suicides with more than a hundred years between them. Irrespective of how many normal people had lived in the house since the latest act of self-destruction, it felt macabre. But on the other hand, wasn’t every aspect of my stay here macabre? Perhaps that wasn’t the right word, but something like that in any case. Something on its way out of the real world. But then, where exactly is the borderline between what we call real and what we call unreal? I had only slept in that house for eight nights by this time, and already I was beginning to experience. . well, what exactly?

Some sort of menace? Something warning of danger, something telling me that if I wasn’t careful I would find myself in a right mess?

Rubbish, I thought. Figments of the imagination.

Then again, what had I expected? I had divested myself of my old life on that Polish beach: I had put an end to it just as conclusively as one breaks a bone off a chicken. Absolutely everything had changed, nothing was the same as before. Isn’t that the fact of the matter? If you wanted, you could argue that it was Martin who had set everything in motion when he raped that waitress in the hotel in Gothenburg — or left his sperm on her stomach, at least. What I did in the bunker had simply been a natural reaction, albeit a bit on the late side, albeit a bit drastic and very much unplanned — something done in a flash, as they say. But nevertheless one thing had led to another, and there was a clearly linked series of causes and effects for the left side of the brain to revel in. . Yes indeed, there was a lot that one could maintain and think about in the back of one’s mind, surrounded by this open, peaceful moorland with bracken, cheerful-looking gorse and surly-looking heather, mud, grass and wild ponies: but when all was said and done, the biggest problem, the distressing point, was my own mind which simply couldn’t calm down and rest. Couldn’t stop producing all these words and half-baked analyses, futile and would-be wise, non-stop, every day, every hour and every minute until at the predestined moment my heart stopped pumping oxygen-laden blood into these highly overrated rantings.

The real world, I thought. I need some kind of context, otherwise I shall succumb unnecessarily. A dog isn’t enough.

And so I made up my mind to visit the Winsford Computer Centre during the afternoon. What had Margaret Allen said? Between eleven in the morning and six in the evening?

It was Alfred Biggs who was on duty. He was a mousy little man wearing clothes that were too big for him. As if he had shrunk after buying them, or inherited them from an older brother who had died in some war or other a long time ago. His spectacles with black plastic frames were also too big: I had the impression that he was trying to hide behind them, and that his smile was shy and somewhat introverted.

‘You must be that writer,’ he said when we had introduced ourselves. ‘Margaret told me about you.’

‘Is she not here today, then?’

‘No, Saturdays are mine. Margaret only works here two days a week. She works at the library in Dulverton as well.’

I nodded. ‘Yes, she said that.’

‘But I live more or less next door. I’m retired, so I have all the time in the world.’

‘I’m pleased that I can come here occasionally — I don’t have an internet connection where I’m living.’

‘You’re always welcome. That’s the point of this place. If we’re not open, all you need to do is to knock on my door — that red one just round the corner.’

He pointed in the direction of the church.

‘So this is Castor, is it?’

Castor heard his name and stretched his nose out towards Alfred Biggs, who stroked him cautiously on the head. He smiled again, and I tried to assess it. There was something odd about his teeth. Something his lips did their best to conceal. He showed me where I could sit, and asked if I would like a cup of tea. Just like the previous occasion, there was nobody else in the room; I accepted and made a mental note to bring with me some sort of biscuits the next time I came.

When I had received my cup, I sat down to check our e-mails — first mine, and then Martin’s. Alfred went back to his book. Castor settled down under my table.