Page 105 of The Twisted Root (William Monk 10)
"In a tree," he replied. "It has to be. There’s nowhere else!"
"Up a tree? But someone would find it in time!" she protested. "It would rot. It..."
"I know," he said hastily, shaking his head as if to rid himself of the idea. He moved the lantern ahead of them, picking out undergrowth and more trees. A weasel ran across the path, its lean body bright in the beam for a moment, then it disappeared.
"Animals would get rid of it in time, wouldn’t they?"
"In time, yes."
"Well, it’s been over twenty years! What would be left now? Bones? Teeth?"
"Hair," he said. "Perhaps clothes, jewelry, buttons. Boots, maybe."
She shuddered.
He looked at her, shining the light a little below her face not to dazzle her.
"Are you all right, Mrs. Monk?" he said gently. "I can go on my own, if you like. I’ll take you back and then come back here again. I promise I will..."
She smiled at his earnestness. "I know you would, but I am quite all right, thank you. Let’s go forward."
He hesitated for a moment, still uncertain, then as she did not waver, he shone the lantern ahead of them and started.
They walked together for forty or fifty yards, searching to left and right for any place that could be used for concealment. She found herself feeling more and more as if she was wasting her time—and more important, Robb’s time as well. She had believed Miriam’s story because she wanted to, for Cleo’s sake, not because it was really credible.
"Sergeant Robb," she began.
He turned around, the beam of light swinging across the two trees to their right. It caught for a moment on a tangle in the lower branches.
"What’s that?" he said quickly.
"An old bird’s nest," she replied. "Last year’s, by the look of it."
He played the light on it, then moved forward to look more closely.
"What?" she asked, with curiosity more than hope. "Clever how they weave them, isn’t it? Especially since they haven’t got any hands."
He passed her the lantern. "Hold this onto it, please. I want to take a closer look."
"At a bird’s nest?" But she did as he requested, and kept the light steady.
With hands free it was easy enough for him to climb up until he was level with the nest and peer inside where it was caught in a fork in the branches, close to the trunk.
"What is it?" she called up.
He turned around, his face a shadowed mask in the upturned beam.
"Hair," he answered her. "Long hair, lots of it. The whole nest is lined with hair." His voice was shaking. "I’m going to look for a hollow tree. You just hold the light, and keep your eyes away."
She felt a lurch inside. She had no longer believed it, and now here it was. They were almost there—in the next half hour—more or less...
"Yes," she said unsteadily. "Yes, of course."
Actually, it took him only fifteen minutes to find the tree with the hollow core, blasted by some ancient lightning and now rotted. It was closer to the road than the nest, but the spread of branches hid the hole until it was deliberately sought. Perhaps twenty-two years ago it had been more obvious. The entire tree was hollow down the heart.
"It’s in there," Robb said huskily, climbing down again, the lantern tied to his belt. His legs were shaking when he reached the ground. "It’s only a skeleton, but there’s still cloth left..." He blinked, and his face looked yellow-gray in the beam. "From the head, she was killed by one terrible blow... like Treadwell... and Mrs. Stourbridge."
13
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