The professor smiled at her. “Address the essay title,” he said, tossing her back her essay. It was creased and glossed over completely in red ink. “Stay focused, be relevant. Do better.”
Freya was fuming. She ostentatiously checked her watch.
“Yes, you’re right,” Stowe said. “We’re finished now.” He set the reading and essay titles for next week and rose from his chair as Julie and Freya packed up.
“Freya, if I could have a word in private with you.”
The two students made eye contact.
“I’ll wait for you outside,” Julie said and left.
“I just wanted to say,” Professor Stowe said, standing behind his wing-backed chair and leaning forward on it, “that you are, without a doubt, one of the smartest students in your current year-perhaps the smartest-and that is why I was so tough on you.”
“I don’t understand.”
Professor Stowe turned his head rather theatrically to gaze out of the window and said, “The problem with your essays is that you are trying to advance the reasoning of the field, trying to arrive at some conclusion, whereas your only goal is to display an evidence of having read the material and, to some degree, retained it and understood it. We’re not looking for a breakthrough. We don’t want to revolutionise the field”-he slid his eyes away from the window and back to her-“just yet.”
Freya considered this. “So . . . ?”
“So for now, you need to toe the line. I never want to discourage original thought, but the truth is that this is the wrong forum for that. You’ll want to save all that for your doctoral thesis. But in order to get there, you need to finish your graduate degree, and for that you’ll need to, barbaric as it sounds, simply follow the herd- or lead it, if you can. This isn’t the time for individual thought-it is the place for it, but not the time, yet. Do you follow?”
“That’s an ironic comment to come out of an essay on determinism.”
Professor Stowe laughed, his eyes creasing merrily. “See, you’re obviously brilliant. All things in their places, that’s all I’m saying.”
Professor Stowe straightened and went to stand by the window. “I believe you’ve got a shining career ahead of you-you’ve an excellent academic mind, but you have to maintain distance. We’re scholars of philosophy and theology, not practitioners, after all.
You must maintain the perspective of the outsider.”
Freya didn’t agree with this at all and opened her mouth to protest, but Professor Stowe held up a hand and turned his face to the window.
“Now, the other thing I wanted to talk to you about-come over here for a second, please. Look down there.”
Freya cautiously crossed the room to the window that looked down on the street.
“See that man opposite us, sitting on the pavement?”
Freya craned her neck. There was a form huddled against the wall of the house across from them that looked to be . . . Daniel.
“Do you know him?”
Freya nodded. “Yes, that’s . . . an old friend of mine I was at school with.”
“His name is Daniel, correct?”
“Yes.”
“Did you know he was following you?”
“No.”
“I first noticed him sitting outside here three weeks ago. He’s quite a notorious figure in Oxford. I used to volunteer at the night shelter a few years ago. He was banned for violent behavior. A couple weeks ago I saw him walking down the street with blood on his face. Has he approached you?”
“Yes. Like I said, we were at school together.”
“I would never advise a student on their personal life, but I would ask you to consider your involvement with him very carefully and treat him with great trepidation. There is little doubt in my mind that he will want to exploit your past friendship. It won’t seem like that initially-he’ll want to earn your confidence at first-but gradually he’ll make more and more demands of you, which you’ll find increasingly difficult to refuse.”
Freya felt anxious. She thought about her agreement to meet Daniel later on that day.
“If you like, I can ring the police and have them caution him.”
“No,” Freya said. “That’s fine. I’ll-keep an eye on him.”
“Have you planned to meet him again?”
Freya was going to deny that she had but then felt childish. She nodded her head. “We arranged to meet in a church . . . St. Michael’s in Summertown.”
“I don’t think that’s wrong but if I might advise you-miss the appointment. Just this once, to let him know that you have your own schedule.”
“Okay, I’ll consider that.”
“Good. I just want you to be safe, that’s all.”
“I know, thanks.” Freya shouldered her bag and moved to the door. She waved good-bye and then joined Julie outside in the hallway.
“What was that about?” she asked.
“Nothing, he just wanted to give me a little more feedback.”
“More? He was pretty harsh in there.”
“No, he’s okay, really.”
They walked off into the Oxford gloom.
4
Daniel spied the police officers when he was already mostly down St. Michael’s Street. They were standing outside of the Gatehouse, and although that wasn’t a common sight, it wasn’t particularly rare either-it just meant that he wouldn’t be able to nag the staff about getting in.
The coppers were talking to some of the guests while the staff stood in the doorway. Someone turned-Daniel now recognised him as Scouse Phil-and called out.
“Johnny! Johnny Boy! Wait up!”
Daniel slowed and looked behind him. There was no one around him, but Phil was definitely talking, and walking, directly to him.
“Keep walking,” Phil said in a lower voice once he was nearer.
“Don’t look around, just smile and greet me.”
Daniel jerked his head upwards and slapped Phil on the arm as he came to walk alongside him. One of the police officers turned her head to study Daniel and Phil. Her face registered them disinterestedly and then turned back to the group.
“Are you in trouble, like, Danny? Those officers there want to talk to ya. Thought ya’d want to be told. Have ya done anything any of us should know about?”
Daniel only frowned and shook his head.
“We’s got to stick together, right? I wouldn’t tell them about you-just like you wouldn’t tell them about me, right? I scratch your back, and we wash each other’s hands, right?”
“Of course,” Daniel said, trying to sound reassuring.
“Champion. Well, best lay low awhile, and stay out of the usual haunts, just for a few days-that’s as long as the pigs usually stay interested.”
“Sure. Cheers, Phil.”
“Be seein’ ya, Danny Boy.”
They had reached the end of the street and they split. Daniel headed towards George Street, planning a route of escape, and then realised with a start that today was the day he had arranged to meet Freya. He had to make his way up to Summertown and dodge the police that were prowling for a vagrant matching his description. At all costs he would have to avoid the canal where he’d made his kill, which would have been an ideal route otherwise. That left Jericho as a possibility, though not a great one. He was just going to have to stick to the side roads and chance it.
A couple nerve-racking hours later, he made it. He tried to stick to streets with a lot of parked cars on them for cover. Of course that thinned out the farther he went into affluent North Oxford, but there was more street parking as soon as he crossed Marston Ferry Road into Summertown.
Now he pushed open the wooden lych-gate of the church of St. Michael and All Angels and stepped into the churchyard. Passing row after row of worn, weathered tombstones, he thought, All these people came before me, with lives nearly as big as my own . . .
He twisted the oversized iron ring that hung on the large double doors of the church, which responded with a half turn and a sharp clack. Pushing the door open, he stepped inside.