AS THEY FOLLOWED THE COURSE OF THE RIVER INLAND, THE estuary plain was wide and sandy. But the sand gradually turned to a mixture of sand and mud, that in turn grew a surface of moss and vegetable scum, that in turn became wide open fields where animals grazed. On a raised bank overlooking these flats, they passed a row of upturned boats and dinghies like the shells of sleeping turtles.
After another mile or so, a bare track led to an open place by the water. At the end of the track was a collection of mismatched wooden buildings, at the heart of which stood a ramshackle stone cottage. The roofs of the buildings had all been repaired with tarpaper. There was a straw-covered yard before the cottage and beyond the yard, a gate in a rail fence led out into open paddock and grazing land. This was poor land, low-lying and liable to flood.
As they were approaching, Sebastian thought that he saw a figure flit between two of the buildings. The track was growing rougher, and the driver stopped the car with at least a dozen or more yards still to go.
He clearly didn’t expect to be staying here for long. He kept the engine running as he got out to open Sebastian’s door.
As Sebastian stepped down, the driver said, “You should know this is a waste of your time.”
“How so?” Sebastian said, noting the presence of horses far off in the paddock, right down by the water.
“Grace Eccles can be a bit wild. I’m telling you, she’s known for it.”
The driver closed the car door behind him. Sebastian started toward the buildings alone.
Before he’d taken more than a few strides, a young woman came out. She wore a full skirt and a man’s jacket buttoned up tight, and her hair was so long and unkempt that it seemed so by intent rather than neglect.
Grace Eccles, he assumed. She had a rock in her hand.
She said, “This is my house. You come no closer.”
Sebastian stopped.
“How close would be acceptable?” he said.
“I prefer you fuck off and far away, sir, and here’s the proof of it.”
He might have been shocked by her language, had she given him the chance to react. But she did not.
It was a good throw, overarm and with force in it. And accurate, too. It would have laid him out flat if he hadn’t turned side-on and dodged it. It missed his head by a whisker. It missed the driver by more, but went on to smash through the Daimler’s side window like a marble fist.
Whereupon the driver emitted a loud oath that was almost as foul as her own and scrambled to get back to the wheel of his vehicle. He crashed the gears in his haste to reverse up the track to a place of greater safety; and as the wheels spun and the Daimler slid around in its retreat, Sebastian remembered to look toward Grace Eccles in case there might be another rock coming.
But she was watching the car’s departure with visible satisfaction.
Sebastian said, “That was uncalled for.”
“Whatever you say,” Grace Eccles replied. “How many motorcars can you muster? I’ve no end of stones.”
With the aim of catching her unawares, Sebastian said, “I’m here on serious business. Two young girls were found dead on the estate yesterday.”
She showed no particular reaction. She kept on looking at the car for a while, and then she looked at him.
“What’s that to me?” she said.
“I thought you might be concerned to hear it.”
She did no more than shrug.
“Can I ask you something?”
Sebastian said, “What happened to you and Evangeline Bancroft? And why will no one speak of it?”
“I know why you’re here,” she said, ignoring his question. “Tell him I don’t care who he sends. This was my father’s house, and now it’s mine. I’ve a piece of paper that a judge has looked at, and here I stay.”
“I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
“Then where’s the point in you standing there and listening to me?”
She turned her back on him, walked across the yard and into her house, and slammed the door.
In that moment it was as if she’d walked out of the world completely; the house sat like a dead thing, abandoned and unlived in.
Sebastian waited.
Then he turned away and walked up the track to the car. The driver was beside it, pulling glass out of the door frame and examining his coachwork for further damage.
As Sebastian drew close, the driver looked up angrily and said, “How stupid was that? As if I didn’t warn you.”
“I know,” Sebastian said. “Forgive me. I never listen.”
He swept broken glass from the leather seat, and they continued their journey. The remainder of it was undertaken in silence—or as close to silence as could be achieved, save for the noise of the car’s engine and the wind that whistled in through the broken window.
The car might be damaged. But not so damaged, Sebastian thought, as the young woman who’d thrown the rock at it.
OWAIN LANCASTER had been born the son of a Welsh corn merchant. As a young man he’d been sent away to study the law in Manchester, but an interest in science and engineering had prevailed, particularly in its application to long-range artillery. He’d sold the rights to his first arms patent, an improved breech-sliding mechanism for field guns, for thirty pounds. After seeing how much money it made for its new title holders, he never signed away another.
He’d risen to own foundries and factories and a shipyard, and had bought Arnside Hall and its estate from a bankrupt family some twenty-five years before. He’d meant it for a summer retreat and had spent a considerable amount on rebuilding the house and installing the most modern conveniences: ducted heating, electricity from its own plant, the first telephone in the county. Now he’d sold his London house and lived here all the time.
Sir Owain’s entire life had been material proof of the value of science, a triumph of the rational. It had brought him a fortune, a fellowship in the Royal Society, and a reputation that, with a single publication, he’d managed to destroy almost overnight.
Where insanity threatened a fortune, the Lord Chancellor’s Visitor in Lunacy was obliged to intercede. Distant relatives, alarmed at the endangerment of riches they might someday hope to share in, had written to the Lord Chancellor’s office raising questions over Sir Owain’s ability to manage his affairs. Their letter had been passed to Sir James, whose first move had been to send his man—Sebastian’s predecessor, now retired—to investigate and report.
The drive ascended through farmland to grouse moor, and then from grouse moor to managed forest. Its last mile was up a narrowing valley, winding and switching until Arnside Hall came into view at the top of it.
It was a strange building. Half doll’s house, half castle, perched atop an enormous rockery where a waterfall spilled down to a trout lake below. Sebastian looked up at it through the Daimler’s good window and felt something between a chill and a thrill. After selling off his business interests at loss-making prices, Sir Owain had retreated here to live off his patents. As the income from these began to decline, his inventions superseded by newer technologies, he’d let estate staff go and allowed the building and its grounds to deteriorate.
Rich man’s retreat or madman’s hideaway?
Soon, Sebastian hoped to know.