Midge stole a quick glance at me.
"You'd quite often find a sick cow or pony tethered outside here for a day or so, who were inevitably in fine fettle by the time the owners arrived to take them home again. Dogs, cats—quite a menagerie on occasions! Now you can't tell me that animals had faith in her powers, so it's hard to fathom how they became well again. Yes, yes, a wonderful gift had Flora. Pity that I only got to know her toward the end of her life. May I have another glass of lemonade, Margaret? It's rather cooling on a day like this."
She poured and was obviously engrossed with the cleric's account of Gramarye's previous owner. "I'm surprised her fame wasn't more widespread from what you've told us."
"Heavens, no! All kept very secret in these parts, you know. Yes, very hush-hush. Flora would bind those who came with their problems to secrecy before she would even attempt a cure. However, as with all such delightful mysteries, there were always whispers, a confidence here, a hint there. I think the locals felt that to admit these things openly would somehow break the old lady's spell."
"That's an odd word for a vicar to use," I remarked.
He looked reasonably abashed. "Yes, I admit 'spell' has certain mumbo-jumbo connotations, but I'm merely recounting what went on in the minds of the local folk. I think it's quite charming, don't you?"
"Uh . . . yeah, I suppose so. I'm just surprised to hear a vicar talk in those terms."
He laughed aloud at that. "Quite so! I can understand your surprise. But spells, incantations and yes, Magic itself, have a lot to do with my particular trade, wouldn't you agree? When we clergy preach the almighty power of the Lord's divine goodness, we are, after all, speaking of Magic."
"I . . . hadn't thought of it like that," I admitted.
"Of course not. And I'm teasing you a little. Remarkable though Flora Chaldean was, I'm afraid that such sorcery went out of fashion a few hundred years or so ago. The microchip is the new Magic, isn't it?" He gulped down more lemonade, obviously very thirsty. (I learned from Midge later that Sixsmythe had cycled from the village in the belief that the exercise on such a fine day would do him the world of good. Although the oversized trilby had kept his neat-lined hair in place, it hadn't done much for his body temperature.)
"Mike," he said, placing his glass back on the table and regarding me with a beagle-eyed expression, "these Synergist people—you told me yesterday they'd visited you here a number of times."
Wondering what was coming, I nodded a "yes."
"They also used to visit Flora Chaldean."
I had no particular comment on that; it seemed reasonable enough.
"The point is, they were very unwelcome. Flora hated this pseudo-religious group with all her heart. So much so, in fact, that she even complained to the village constable, but there was very little he could do to stop them coming here." He gestured at the landscape behind him. "These woods are common land and so are the paths around the cottage: they had the legal right to pass by or linger at any time they chose to do so."
"Wait a minute. Are you saying they harassed the old lady?"
"From what I've been led to believe, yes, most definitely."
"But why should they do that?" cut in Midge. "The three we've met couldn't be more friendly, or more harmless. Why on earth should they try to upset Flora?"
He raised his hands slightly, then let them fall onto the table. "Who can say? Flora was a very private person, despite—or perhaps more correctly, because of—the discreet services she provided to those in need. She was certainly eccentric, not to say a trifle cranky on occasions, so she might have taken a particularly strident dislike to them for any number of personal reasons."
"I got the impression yesterday that not many of the locals do care for them, so she wasn't alone in that respect," I said. "I still can't understand why they're so unpopular, though. What have they done to pis—to cause such resentment?"
"They're strange people, and they live in a strange way."
I sighed. "That's hardly reason—"
"They're a suspect organization, Mike, not unlike a few others I could mention that are around nowadays. They came here five years ago, led by a man named Mycroft. There were only a few of them at first, and they moved into Croughton Hall, keeping very much to themselves. Others followed, though, people from different parts of the world, assembling on the Croughton estate as if it were some focal point for their religion. And it wasn't long after that they set out to recruit more followers, many from around here, locals, mainly youngsters, enticing them away from their families, brainwashing them to accept their ways, Mycroft's teachings, so that they never wanted to leave, no amount of persuasion from their familes or loved ones drawing them back into the real world again."
"Surely the authorities would have stepped in if it's as bad as you say." Midge's eyes were sharp with concern.
"Since there were no minors involved, and no laws have ever been broken, they deemed they were in no position even to investigate. Odd cults and religions are hardly rare these days, after all. The Synergists aren't even registered as a charity, so even their financial status cannot be questioned as long as their records are carefully maintained and presented."
"Isn't there some law against secret societies?" I asked.
"The Synergist Temple is hardly that. They keep very much to themselves, but I wouldn't describe them as a secret society."
"Have you ever met this man Mycroft?" Midge watched the vicar over the top of her glass while she drank.
"No, never, even though I've called at the house more than once. I suppose I should refer to the place as their temple, but it's awfully difficult for me to regard it as such. No, our Mr. Mycroft always appears to be either indisposed or away on business at the time of my visits. As a matter of fact, I don't believe anyone hereabouts has ever set eyes on the man."
"You haven't explained why they should be interested in Flora Chaldean," I said. "She was a bit ancient to become one of their Fosterlings, wasn't she?"
Sixsmythe raised his eyebrows. "You know how they refer to their followers?"
"One of the three who've been visiting us regularly dropped by yesterday evening to thank me for helping out the girls in the village. He told us something about the Synergists."
"I see."
I grinned. "Don't worry, he wasn't trying to convert us. We were interested, so we asked. And he gave us answers."
Sixsmythe was quiet for a moment or two. Then he said, "I firmly believe that you both should take the utmost caution where these people are concerned. Yes, I'm well aware that they appear to be extremely affable, even rather innocent, yet I can't help but feel there's something more to them than they would care to admit."
"That sounds very sinister."
"Perhaps so."
"Oh come on, you'll have to give us something more than that," Midge scoffed mildly.
"I'm afraid I can't. Call it a gut feeling, one that's shared by many of my parishioners. If it was anything more, any evident acts of misconduct on the Synergists' part, then our local council might have been able to exercise its authority and have done something about their presence in the district. As it is, they keep to themselves and, so far, haven't committed any public offense."
"Then why all the fuss?" Midge was quite irritated by now. "Just because they don't conform to the natural pattern of life around here, it's no reason to shun them."
"Dear girl, if only it were that simple. As I said, call it gut feeling, intuition—whatever you like—but the locals are wary of them and, as a man of God, so am I. There's an air of secrecy about them that we find extremely disturbing."