Something happened in Will at that moment. A scrap of hope that had stayed green in the months since the accident withered and went to dust. He didn't say anything. He just got up and left her to her tears.
ii
After two days of home-bound penance he went to school. It was a smaller place than St Margaret's, which he liked, its buildings older, its playground lined with trees instead of railings. He kept to himself for the first week, barely speaking to anyone. At the beginning of the second week, however, minding his own business at lunchtime, a familiar face appeared in front of him. It was Frannie.
'Here you are,' she said, as though she'd been looking for him.
'Hello,' he said, glancing around to see if Sherwood the Brat was also in evidence. He wasn't.
'I thought you'd be gone on your trip by now.'
'I will,' he said. 'I'll go.'
'I know,' Frannie said, quite sincerely. 'After we met I kept thinking maybe I'd go too. Not with you-'she hastened to add '-but one day I'd just leave.'
'Go as far away as possible,' Will said.
'As far away as possible,' Frannie replied, her echoing of his words - a kind of pact. 'There's not much worth seeing around here,' she went on, 'unless you go into ... you know...'
'You can talk about Manchester,' Will said. 'Just 'cause my brother was killed there ... it's no big deal to me. I mean, he wasn't really my brother.' Will felt a delicious lie being born. 'I'm adopted, you see.'
'You are?'
'Nobody knows who my real Mum and Dad are.'
'Oh wow. Is this a secret?' Will nodded. 'So I can't even tell Sherwood.'
'Better not,' Will replied, with a fine show of seriousness. 'He might spread it around.'
The bell was ringing, calling them back to their classes. The fierce Miss Hartley, a big-bosomed woman whose merest whisper intimidated her charges, was eyeing Will and Frannie.
'Frances Cunningham!' she boomed, 'will you get a move on?' Frannie pulled a face and ran, leaving Miss Hartley to focus her attention on Will. 'You are-?'
'William Rabjohns.'
'Oh yes,' she said darkly, as though she'd heard news of him and it wasn't good.He stood his ground, feeling quite calm. This was strange for him. At St Margaret's he had been intimidated by several of the staff, feeling remotely that they were part of his father's clan. But this woman seemed to him absurd, with her sickly sweet perfume and her fat neck. There was nothing to be afraid of here.Perhaps she saw how unmoved he was, because she stared at him with a well-practised curl in her lip.'What are you smiling at?' she said.
He wasn't aware that he was, until she remarked upon it. He felt his stomach churn with a strange exhilaration; then he said:
'You.'
'What?'
He made the smile a grin. 'You,' he said again. 'I'm smiling at you.'
She frowned at him. He kept grinning, thinking as he did so that he was baring his teeth to her, like a wolf.'Where are you ... supposed to be?' she said to him.
'In the gym,' he replied. He kept looking straight at her; kept grinning. And at last it was she who looked away.'You'd better ... get along then, hadn't you?' she said to him.
'If we've finished talking,' he said, hoping to goad her into further response.
But no. 'We've finished,' she said.
He was reluctant to take his eyes off her. If he kept staring, he thought, he could surely bore a hole in her, the way a magnifying glass burned a hole in a piece of paper.
'I won't have insolence from anyone,' she said. 'Least of all a new boy. Now get to your class.'He had little choice. Off he went. But as he walked past her he said:
'Thank you, Miss Hartley,' in a soft voice, and he was sure he saw her shudder.
CHAPTER VII
Something was happening to him. There were little signs of it every day. He would look up at the sky and feel a strange surge of exhilaration, as though some part of him were taking flight, rising up out of his own head. He would wake long after midnight and even though it was bitterly cold, open the window and listen to the world going on in darkness, imagining how it was on the heights. Twice he ventured out in the middle of the night, up the slope behind the house, hoping he might meet Jacob up there somewhere, star-watching; or Mrs McGee, chasing hares. But he saw no sign of them, and though he listened intently to every gossipy conversation when he was in the village - picking up pork chops for Adele Bottrall to cook with apples for Papa, or a sheaf of magazines for his mother to flick through - he never heard anybody mention Jacob or Rosa. They lived in some secret place, he concluded, where they could not be troubled by the workaday world. Other than himself, he doubted anybody in the valley even knew they existed.
He didn't pine for them. He would find them again, or they him, when the time was right. He was certain of that. Meanwhile, the strange epiphanies continued. Everywhere around him, the world was making miraculous signs for him to read. In the curlicues of frost on his window when he rose; in the patterns that the sheep made, straggling the hill; in the din of the river, swelled to its full measure by an autumn that brought more than its share of rain.
At last, he had to share these mysteries with somebody. He chose Frannie, not because he was certain she'd understand, but because she was the only one he trusted enough.
They were sitting in the living-room of the Cunningham house, which was adjacent to the junkyard owned by Frannie's father. The house was small, but cosy, as ordered and neat as the yard outside was chaotic: a needlepoint prayer framed above the mantelpiece, blessing the hearth and all who gather there; a teak china cabinet with an heirloom tea-service elegantly but not boastfully displayed; a plain brass clock on the table, and beside it a cut-glass bowl heaped with pears and oranges. Here, in this womb of certainties, Will told Frannie of the feelings that had risen in him of late, and how they had begun the day the two of them met. He didn't mention Jacob and Rosa at first - they were the secret he was most loath to share, and he was by no means certain he would do so but he did talk about venturing into the Courthouse.
'Oh, I asked my Mum about that,' Frannie said. 'And she told me the story.'
'What is it?' Will said.
'There was this man called Bartholomeus,' she said. 'He lived in the valley, when there were still lead mines everywhere.'
'I didn't know there were mines.'
'Well there were. And he made a lot of money from them. But he wasn't quite right in the head, that's what Mum said, because he had this idea that people didn't treat animals properly, and the only way to stop people being cruel was to have a court, which would only be for animals.'
'Who was the judge?'
'He was. And the jury probably.' She shrugged. 'I don't know the whole story, just those bits-'
'So he built the Courthouse.'
'He built it, but he didn't finish it.'
'Did he run out of money?'
'My Mum says he was probably put in a loony bin, because of what he was doing. I mean, nobody wanted him bringing animals into his Courthouse and making laws about how people had to treat them better.'
'That was what he was doing?' Will said, with a little smile.
'Something like that. I don't know if anybody's really sure. He's been dead for a hundred and fifty years.'
'It's a sad story,' said Will, thinking of the strange magnificence of Bartholomeus' folly.
'He was better put away. Safer for everybody.'
'Safer?'
'I mean if he was going to try and accuse people of doing things to animals. We all do things to animals. It's natural.'