Ann Pilling – The Witch of Lagg (страница 6)
“It’s much bigger than it looks,” said Oliver, crouching down, “Thicker as well as taller.” They were right up to the stake now, and wandering all round it. “And it’s pine, not oak,” he added, squinting at it.
“Grierson said it was
“Well, the first one must have been oak in that case,” said Oliver, taking a tape measure from his pocket. “But, if the site’s as old as people think, it must have been replaced several times.”
“How long has it been here then?” asked Colin.
“Oh, hundreds of years. I don’t know exactly. I’ve not researched it properly yet,” his cousin said self-importantly, measuring the girth of the trunk. “How tall do you think it is?”
Colin stood next to it. “Well, I’m five foot six, so I reckon … one … two … about eight feet, say eight and a half. But what’s it
“Dunno. We can ask the Rosses. They look after it,” said Oliver, “according to Drac. It obviously marks some significant event though. Perhaps it was the scene of a fight or something. We’re quite near the English border here after all.” He pocketed his tape measure, folded his arms and stared at it thoughtfully. Prill had her back to the two boys and was leaning against the stake, staring out to sea.
“The tide
Colin suddenly whispered something to Oliver and the boy smiled, and dug in his pocket. A minute later poor Prill found herself grabbed from behind and tied securely to the old wooden stump with a green tape measure. The others were running off up the beach. Jessie was leaping about, pawing and slobbering all over her, and the tide was filling those deep channels faster and faster.
“Come
She didn’t want to do an Oliver and be a spoilsport, though it was rather typical of him to lend his tape measure for a trick he’d have hated himself. But Prill didn’t like it. The tide
“All right, all right. Hang on Joan of Arc.” He came racing back. He knew Prill was rather thin-skinned about practical jokes. They were both ankle-deep in water now while the cowardly Oliver was striding off firmly towards the dunes. “Sorry,” he muttered, as Prill stood there crossly, lashed to the great wooden stump with her brother picking at the knots. “I didn’t mean to tie it quite so tightly …
She was free, rubbing her wrists and trying to find a bit of sandbank to stand on, to escape from the swirling water. “Trying to drown me, were you? And listen to Oliver, he’s laughing at us. He’s an absolute pig. I’ll tie him up, next time.”
“Nobody’s laughing,” Colin said quietly. “Don’t over-react. He’s just embarrassed because it was his tape.”
“He
Colin stared after them, and the laughter came again, on the wind. The sound sent an icy chill through him. Prill was quite right, someone
It was just half past nine. Oliver had been writing his diary and he was now in the bathroom, going through his elaborate bedtime ritual of cleaning his teeth and brushing his hair one hundred times. His mother believed it was the only sure way of avoiding nits.
He called his diary a journal, but it wasn’t a grand leather-bound affair like Hugo Grierson’s, just a small Woolworth’s exercise book, and he didn’t write in it every day. It was kept for events of special importance in his life. There’d been quite a lot to say, tonight.
“
“
Colin and Prill were rather attractive children, and poor Oliver was only too aware that he was a bit funny-looking. Colin was tall and broad, with a handsome mop of auburn hair, and Prill was growing more and more like something out of a Victorian painting. She had red hair too, and she wore it long. Both had large brown eyes and the kind of skin that tanned easily. People sometimes commented on their good looks in Oliver’s presence. He didn’t think it was very tactful. They did quite well in school and they were both good swimmers, whereas Oliver swam like a brick. Colin was getting good at rugby too, according to his father. “
Colin, feeling more and more uncomfortable, turned the page in fascination. “
“Seen enough?” said a spiteful little voice from the doorway. Oliver was wearing striped Viyella pyjamas and carrying a large sponge-bag, and his thin face was dark pink with rage. He stormed across the room and snatched the notebook from Colin’s fingers with such force that it ripped across the back. “Do you make a habit of reading other people’s diaries, Colin?” he spat out, in a strangled voice.
“No more than you do,” his cousin answered smartly. “You were reading Mr Grierson’s. I saw you.”
There was an abrupt silence, and Oliver flushed darker than ever. “That was different,” he stammered. “There’s something going on here. It involves Mr Grierson, and we’ve got to get to the bottom of it.”
“I know,” Colin said quietly. “That’s why I’ve come. Prill’s coming too, in a minute.”
The two boys stared at one another. Oliver had lost his usual composure and his face had somehow crumpled up. He actually looked as if he might cry, when he saw the ripped notebook.
Colin felt rather sorry for him, and he hated himself for having read the diary. At least he knew how things looked to Oliver.
“I’m sorry, Oll,” he said. “I shouldn’t have read your diary and … and we didn’t
There was a pause, then Colin said awkwardly, “Well, what was
Oliver shrugged. “It was all a bit boring really, with sums down the margin. He obviously studies his bank balance when there’s not much to say. That’s the
“Anything else?” said Colin, trying to sound casual. The familiar faraway expression in Oliver’s eyes told him that there
“Yes, as a matter of fact,” his cousin replied, in rather a grand voice. He knew Colin was dying to know. “He’d written something from the bible, in red, after every single entry. And he’d written it
“Could you work it out?” Colin asked, more and more intrigued.
“Oh yes,” Oliver said airily. “Easy as anything. It’s mirror writing. Anyone can do it, once they’ve got the knack.”
“Go on then, what did it say?”
“‘Oh God, wherefore art thou absent from us so long’,” quoted Oliver. “‘Save me, for the waters have entered my soul’. Things like that. They were all the same, all about being cut off from the land of the living.”
“Heavens,” Colin muttered dumbly. “Why write that sort of thing in a diary?”
Oliver pulled a face. “Search me. Perhaps he’s brooding over something … perhaps he feels guilty. He
Colin tried to recall Grierson’s face. They’d only seen the man once. “I don’t know,” he said thoughtfully. “I thought he was rather striking, as a matter of fact, but definitely unhappy-looking. Why write backwards though? That’s
“Witches did things back to front,” Oliver said solemnly. “To undo the power of good.”
“Oh
“I’m not saying anything, yet,” the boy cut in impatiently. “I’m just telling you they did, that’s all. It’s worth remembering.”