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PART I




Contents

  • Chapter 1
  • Chapter 2
  • Chapter 3
  • Chapter 4
  • Chapter 5
  • Chapter 6
  • Chapter 7
  • Chapter 8
  • Chapter 9
  • Chapter 10
  • Chapter 11
  • Chapter 12
  • Chapters 13
  • Chapters 14
  • Chapters 15
  • Chapters 16
  • Epilogue

  • 
    
    

    Chapter 1

    It was him.
    
        It was Jamie Cannon.  I was sure of it.
        Nobody else could dance like that - or would have dared to - like a
    demented chimp, waving his arms and elbows around and making silly faces.
        Was he making them at me?
        He was even wearing the same old baggy jeans and long-sleeved ghastly-
    taste tee-shirt - I couldn't make out the colours but probably pink, purple
    and vomit - a little acid-house ravy, a lot early Neanderthal bonkers.
    His hairstyle had changed though. He now had one of those pudding-basin
    haircuts with hair flopping all over his eyes. What was he dancing to - 
    heavy metal, indie or techno? Or was it still Madonna and Michael Jackson 
    like in the old days?    
        Maybe he'd got stuck in a time warp.    
        I hadn't seen him for seven years and here we were back on opposite
    sides of the road again, me staring at him out of my old bedroom window, 
    he (waving?) out of his.    
        He was still grinning that silly baby-faced grin just like the last 
    time we saw each other when we were both nine.  That's when my family - 
    Mum, Dad, me and Sophie - who's three years my junior and Very Probably 
    the Most Irritating Girl in the Universe - had moved with our two mangy 
    cats from London to Swanleigh which is in the Midlands.  Jamie's family 
    had gone off to Germany a few months later.    
        My name, by the way, is Abigail Edwards, which may not mean much to 
    you, but I think I can say without false modesty that I am the only 
    significant cultural icon in a village boasting thirty-odd houses, a pub 
    and a single shop that doesn't even sell foaming beauty wash - which at 
    my age, sixteen, becomes a vital weapon in warding off the effects of 
    acne, oncoming menopausal wrinkles and senilitude.    
        I suppose I ought to describe what I look like which I hate doing 
    as most of the time I think I look completely boring and then when I go 
    out to a party or something I get into a terrible state and spend ages 
    in the bathroom staring at my reflection to no purpose and Sophie says 
    I might as well pay Mum rent to live in there, which is all very well 
    for her to say as she's pretty in a cute-little-round-face, dimpled-
    cheeked, button-eyed, Irritating-Kid-Sister sort of way, whereas I'm 
    just average.    
        I've got green eyes which are my best feature and darkish, mousy hair 
    which I never know what to do with and most of the time it just sits around 
    on my shoulders doing nothing in particular.  If I make a special effort 
    with the old eyeliner and make-up and I've had a decent amount of sleep I 
    can look about six or seven on the attractive scale.    
        I used to be slightly small for my age until I was thirteen or 
    fourteen when I suddenly shot up a few inches so now I'm taller than 
    average, which I'm pleased about, except that it makes me look even 
    skinnier than I used to, but when I get in a state about it Mum says 
    look at all those supermodels, they're slim, and I have to remind her
    I am not Naomi Campbell and never will be.    
        "But you've got lovely eyes," Mum will say, but somehow 
    when she says it it doesn't count.    
        Jamie used to say he could read my eyes.    
        The first time he said it was a few days after he came to my primary 
    school when he was seven.    
        "This is Jamie Canon,"  said Mrs Wyndham, our teacher.    
        She was a large, florid, enthusiastic woman with a posh, plummy accent,
    who breathed heavily all the time and wore huge flowery dresses in thick 
    fabrics summer and winter and smelt of lilac and coal tar soap.  I still 
    remember the swishing sound her dresses made as she walked around the 
    classroom.    
        "He'll be joining our class from today.  Jamie's father is a 
    famous conductor so I'm sure Jamie will have lots of things he can tell us
    about conducting in our music lessons, won't you, Jamie?"    
        He looked like a tiny little monkey in baggy short trousers that hung 
    over his knees.    
        He didn't say anything but then he yawned, I now think with 
    embarrassment, but at the time I thought, he thinks we're all boring just
    because his dad's a bus conductor.    
        "There's an empty chair next to Abigail, so go and sit next to
    her, Jamie."    
        Chrissie Somers was away that day, and she used to sit next to me.  
    He gave me a funny stare when he sat down, as if to say, I know you don't
    like me but you're lumbered with me, so you'll have to put up with it and 
    anyway it's not my fault, I didn't ask to sit next to you, did I?    
        We didn't talk to each other for the rest of the day, nor the next, 
    and then it was the weekend and the following Monday Chrissie came back -
    she'd had the 'flu - but then she sat next to Emily Woolford and I felt
    very hard done by, because by then I was convinced he didn't like me and
    I certainly didn't like him.    
        The following afternoon we had art and handwork and Mrs Wyndham handed 
    out brand new colourful packets of Play-Do for us to model each other's 
    faces.    
        I was quite pleased with mine.  I'd made Jamie's look like a monkey's
    head.    
        "You've made me look like a monkey," he said.    
        I think it was the first time he'd spoken to me.    
        "That's 'cos you do look like a monkey."    
        "No, I don't."    
        "Yes, you do."    
        "No, I don't, and anyway you look like a mouse."    
        I stared at him, offended to the core.    
        "That's a horrible thing to say."    
        "No more horrible than saying I look like a monkey.  Look, 
    there's your eyes."    
        He showed me the plasticine head he'd made of me and it was true. 
    There were two round little green eyes on a blue mouse's head.    
        And it looked like me.    
        "I know what your eyes are saying," he said.    
        "What do you mean?"    
        "I can read your eyes."    
        "No, you can't ... So what are they saying then?"    
        "They're saying, you wish you could sit next to Chrissie and you 
    wish you didn't have to sit next to me."    
        "That's true," I said, "but then that's obvious, isn't it?"    
        "Hang on, I'm not finished yet, am I?  And you're thinking..."
        He gazed at me again in that funny way and I started to feel 
    uncomfortable.    
        "I know!" he said suddenly.  "You're thinking about ballet, aren't you?"    
        I stared at him.    
        "How did you  - "    
        "I told you, I can read your eyes.  I can even see your ballet 
    class.  You enjoy doing the exercises you've learnt, but you don't like 
    having to learn new steps.  You're going to think up some excuse for not 
    going this evening."    
        "But how  - "    
        "I'm going to be a dancer when I grow up," he said.  
    "I love dancing but not stupid old ballet.  I like dancing to pop 
    music ... Do you like Michael Jackson?"    
        "He's good, but I really like Madonna."    
        "She's OK.  I can make myself look like a werewolf, like Michael
    Jackson does in the Thriller video.  Mum tells me off though, 'cos
    I scare my brother.  He's only four.  My mum puts a blanket over the telly
    when Thriller comes on, so Mark won't be scared, but I wait till 
    she goes out and take the blanket off the telly and then he starts crying,
    the stupid twit."    
        "How did you know all that about the ballet?"    
        "It's simple.  I get these pictures in my head.  No, they're not 
    pictures, they're more like thoughts that I know don't belong to me, and I 
    get them sometimes if I look at people's eyes.  Mark can do it too.  He's 
    dead good, but he's only four so he can't describe them much ... Well, 
    actually he can't describe them at all, but I know he does 'cos ... well,
     I just know he can.  Can you do the Moonwalk?  I can!"    
        Before I could reply, Mrs Wyndham clapped her hands to announce that 
    we all had to place our plasticine heads on a long table at the side of
    the classtoom and then we would have a guessing game to see if we could
    identify them.    
        Jamie of course won.    
        At home that evening I couldn't stop talking about Jamie Canon who 
    sat next to me in class and who could read people's eyes and do the 
    Moonwalk.    
        I hadn't actually seen him do the Moonwalk but I just knew he would 
    be brilliant.    
        A few days later Jamie came into school looking really excited.    
        "Guess who's moving into the house across the road from where 
    you live?" he said.    
        "I give up.  Who?"    
        "I am ... we are.  Mum and Dad have just bought 
    the house.  So you can come round and play and listen to my tapes and 
    I'll show you the Moonwalk."    
        I was so thrilled I didn't know what to say.  So I said something 
    very stupid.    
        "Will your dad have his bus there?"    
        "Bus ... what bus?"    
        "I thought Mrs Wyndham said your dad was a conductor."    
        He rolled his eyes and smirked. "Not a bus conductor.
    An orchestra conductor.  Classical music and all that."    
        I felt a complete idiot, but decided to salvage some dignity out of 
    my faux pas.    
        "So what does he do, just stand around waving a big stick and 
    bowing?"    
        "It's better than sitting around doodling away on a drawing 
    board, like your dad does"    
        My dad's a graphic designer but I hadn't told Jamie.    
        "How did you know that?"    
        "Read it in your eyes.  No, actually my mum was talking to the 
    people who live downstairs from you.  I even know which is you bedroom.  
    It'll be opposite mine."    
        And it was.  And Jamie did do the Moonwalk for me, which wasn't as 
    good as Michael Jackson but nearly as good.    
        "Why wouldn't you do it at school?"  I asked as he slid 
    his feet up and down his bedroom floor.    
        He stopped and looked embarrassed.    
        "You'll probably think I'm stupid but I'm too shy to do it when 
    I think anyone's watching me.  It's just that when I start dancing ... 
    when I really get into it, I forget where I am and everything.  My parents 
    say I go off into a dreamworld."    
        "My sister's like that all the time," I said.  "It's 
    infuriating."    
        I told Chrissie Somers that Jamie could read my eyes.   She told Emma 
    Douglas who told Kevin Burrows and soon it was all round the class.    
        I didn't know about this until a few days later when someone passed 
    me a note in class.  It was torn and dog-eared and had obviously done the 
    rounds.  It read:
    
    
    "wotchit girls jamy canons cycic
    HE CAN TELL WAT COLOUR NICKERS YOUR WEARING"
    Before I could stop him Jamie had leaned across to read the note. His face went bright red and he didn't say anything for the rest of the afternoon. I don't think he minded being teased. I often teased him and he took it in good part, it was just that he'd told me something about him that was special and important, and it had become public property. I remember feeling that I had betrayed him, but he never once referred to it. And he never talked about reading eyes ever egain. I still teased him about the buses though and that went on until we were nine years old. "How's the buses?" I'd say. "Prokofiev's well, thanks, Shostakovitch is a bit under the weather." "Who are they, ticket inspectors?" "Anyone with half a brain would know they're composers, which rules you out." "So what does your dad do, sing 'Any more tickets please' in E flat?" "No he conducts - in a tuxedo." "Why, are tuxedos lightning-resistant?" "No, but I am." He mimicked lightning striking his head and then contorted his body as the electricity shot through it, rolling his eyes and then shot off down the road like a galvanised rabbit. Jamie would always end an argument by running off - but then he'd always trip over and you knew he was joking. He was very good-natured - and actually very clever. Much cleverer than me. Anyway, Jamie's father had been appointed conductor of an orchestra in Stuttgart which is in Germany. We'd written to each other every month for the first three or four months and then a couple of more times and then I'd got wrapped up in my life in Swanleigh which is near Stratford-on-Avon where you can buy foaming beauty wash and see Shakespeare's plays and go to the Phoenix Pop Festival about which more anon - and then when I was eleven I started secondary school and things got even busier and I just never got round to replying to his last letter. I felt vaguely guilty. I remember in that letter he'd said something about his dad not being well, and something being wrong but it was all a bit of a blur. It was hard to see from my window, but even his funny upturned nose and freckles seemed to be the same. Chrissie Somers (who used to be my best friend and then wasn't and then was again and then wasn't and so on until I left London) used to say he was like one of those Victorian urchins you saw in postcards, pressing their noses against the windowpanes of rich people. In Jamie's case, Chrissie said, his nose just got stuck. I was dying to go over the road and see him, but what would we say to each other? It was strange enough being back where we used to live - which was actually half of the second floor of a big Victorian house that had been divided into eight flats. The house itself looked really grand, like a hotel, but in a seedy sort of way. My parents had kept the flat on for four yours, "as our London base", they used to say (actually it was because it took that long to sell it) so we often used to come back and stay. Mum and Dad were still friends with Duncan and Nettie who'd bought the flat and Soph had been back with them a couple of times but I'd always found some excuse not to go. I often dreamt about the flat. In my dreams it was still my home and I was afraid it would have changed out of recognition. It had of course. "We've stripped most of the floors," Duncan said as we sat sipping pre-prandial cocktails in what used to be our living room but now looked more like a trendy wine bar. "It's a dirty job - " "And the someone who has to do it is me," Nettie shouted from the kitchen. It was gone half past nine and we were about to eat a late supper with Duncan and Nettie but in the meantime we were just sitting around talking about art, music, politics, the cosmos and who was living in the other flats now and how much it had cost to buy the freehold. As usual Sophie didn't even bother to look interested and was listening to her Walkman. "Oh, come on, Nettie, that's not fair. I'm either shuttling on and off the Eurostar or sitting around in some godforsaken Eastern European airport. When do I have the time?" Duncan had something to do with imports and exports, but I couldn't make out what. "Well, you'd better find the time to get started on the baby's room," Nettie said pointedly as she came in with the hors d'oeuvres and patted the swelling beneath her pretty, flowered smock. "Which room will that be?" Mum asked hesitantly - I could tell she was feeling un peu wistful, like me, even though she'd had time to absorb the changes. "The little front room - " Duncan started to say. "My bedroom," I blurted out, and then blushed. "I'm sorry, I mean - " "It's all right, Abi," Nettie said gently. "I know you felt a bit nervous about coming back here, but you know you're always welcome to come and stay, any time - you could even come on your own if you want, if that's all right with you, Paul and Fiona?" My parents nodded happily (which I thought was a bit two-faced of them 'cos they're always moaning on at me about not wanting to do things with them as a family any more, but they'll grow out of it). Fortunately Soph was plugged into her headphones, otherwise she would have been bound to say "What about me?" "Anyway," Nettie went on, "for the time being, the room's more or less as you left it, fortunately for you. Actually, there are still quite a few loose floorboards - we'll have to replace them." She glared at Duncan. "Maybe I can get a start-up loan from the EC," he said, and then began wittering on about the single European currency. I was getting extremely bored extremely quickly. I muttered an excuse and left Sophie to her groany old compilation of last year's chart hits and went for a wander around the flat. Everything had changed: instead of the old threadbare Indian carpets there were stripped varnished floorboards with tasteful rugs, huge Mexican cheese plants, Japanese screens, Italian prints on the walls which had been repainted in muted colours with names like Mellow Seahaze and Autumn Dreamscape. It looked much more elegant than when we lived there. I liked what they'd done but it somehow seemed wrong, as if you'd gone to a party with all your friends and your parents had turned up looking all young and trendy. I felt sad and a bit shocked. Another bit of my childhood had slipped away. I had reached the end of the corridor that led back to the front door. My bedroom was on the right. Nervously I pushed the door open, very slightly. There was a gentle creaking sound which I knew like an old friend. Slightly relieved I closed my eyes tightly, pushed the door open, held my breath and switched the light on. Then I opened my eyes. The room was in near darkness. I squeezed myself through two aisles of cardboard boxes and as my eyes began to adjust I could see the empty lightbulb holder hanging forlornly from the ceiling. Nettie was nearly right - the room was "more or less" as I'd left it. There were boxes everywhere, rolls of wallpaper and stacks of framed paintings, towers of hifi, chairs and a table. They had done nothing radical at all apart from turn it into a junkroom. "Heigh-ho," I sighed to myself, and then, looking more closely, I started to recognise a few familiar landmarks: my old bed and some bits of furniture I'd left behind, like the wooden trolley I kept my books and games on. We used to call it the "Benny Binder" after an old friend of my great-aunt who'd been given it as a wedding present. It was falling to pieces when my parents put it in my room. Dad was always meaning to fix it, but never got round to it. A bit like Benny Binder himself probably. I was glad it was still there. In the corner, wedged between the fireplace and the wardrobe, I found some abandoned toys: a few dried-up felt-tip pens, a notice board studded with badges, a jar of beads, a red plastic castle, a couple of Sindy dolls, some combs and a hairbrush. I picked up the hairbrush and absently started to brush Sindy's hair, and then remembered I was sixteen. Outside, in the main road that led into the South Circular Road, the street lamps had come on. I peered out of the window at the continuous flow of traffic, so different from Swanleigh with its thirty-odd houses, pub and single shop etc. etc. I remembered that the traffic was always so bad that Mum and Dad would make Sophie hold my hand just to cross the road to Jamie's house. Sometimes Mum or Dad or Fran, Jamie's mother, would drive us all - me, Sophie, Jamie and his brother Mark - up the hill to school, but more often we walked. I gazed at the rambling Edwardian house on the corner opposite where Jamie used to live. There was something different about that house too, but it wasn't anything obvious, no yuppie facelifts there. If anything it seemed not so much unlived in as dead ... or in a trance ... I shivered and hugged myself even though the evening was warm and humid. The windows looked bgcolor="black and vacant like the man with no eyes ... The thought made me shudder. A few months before, I'd spent the day with my friend Lizzie Hubble in Oxford. (Lizzie has sickeningly perfect skin and blonde hair and everything else that boys go for, but she's a really good friend with a wicked sense of humour.) Anyway we found ourselves wandering the back streets, not really sure where we were. We'd turned a corner and come face to face with a man whose eyes were missing from their sockets. I'd hardly had time to register the fact when he smiled at me. I felt awful, guilty that I was so shocked: yet upset as though he'd deliberately set out to shock me. I know that sounds mad. I've often seen blind people, with or without dark glasses, yet this was different. I still thought of that man, those eyeless sockets, and tried hard to remember that he was still a human being. It was getting darker. I turned and looked around the room, wondering whether my bedroom window had the same vacant uninhabited look. It was when I turned back that I saw Jamie, dancing in the window. They were talking about Third World famine and civil war when I got back to the living room. "Where've you been?" said Sophie indignantly. "We've been waiting for ages to eat and I'm dying of starvation thanks to you." The nearest Sophie ever got to dying of famine and starvation was when she ran out of chocolate but the smell of Nettie's lasagne and talk of starving millions had obviously got the better of Forty Totally Boring Smash Hits. I gave her one of my withering looks. "I'll come and visit you in the Anorexia Ward. Mum, do you mind if I just pop over the road - I think I've just seen Jamie Canon." "But Abi, we're about to eat." "I won't be long, I promise." "Can I go too?" Sophie piped in predictably. "No!" Mum and I said together. "If she can go, why can't I?" "We didn't say either of you could go," Mum said and looked across at Dad for moral support. "But Mum - " "Fi, let her go," Dad said. "I'm sure Duncan and Nettie won't mind, will you?" They shook their heads vehemently and I smiled gratefully at Dad. "Well, OK, then, but don't be long," Mum smiled. "What about me? I want to see Mark," said Sophie, glowering. "Hard luck, he's not at home. Anyway, you don't even remember him." "Of course I do. We started school together. He was my first boy - " She stopped and blushed. I couldn't resist it. "At last Sophie Edwards reveals all in tomorrow's tabloids. 'Mark Canon was my first and only love - '" "Oh shut up, you cow." "Come on, you two," said Dad. "Look, Abi, you can go and see Jamie on condition you take Soph with you." Sophie looked revoltingly smug. For a moment I considered decapitating her but decided it would be too messy. "Come on, then," I said, making for the door, "but for God's sake don't embarrass me." "Me embarrass you!" she said, following me out noisily.


    
    
    


    
    

    Chapter 2

    Outside it was already dusk.  By reflex I took Sophie's hand to cross the 
    road and by reflex she took mine ... and then pushed me away.  But as we 
    got to the gate I felt Sophie shiver and reach for my hand again.  I held 
    hers gratefully.
        I registered with mild curiosity that it was a new gate, not the rusty
    old cast-iron gate I remembered but a bigger, more solid-looking one. At 
    the same time I noticed the high walls surrounding the garden.    
        Then I realised that the walls were camouflaged by a thick mass of 
    ivy that blended with the greenery of the garden and that was why I hadn't
    spotted them earlier.  The gate was actually quite elaborate, so that 
    although it looked from a distance like a normal gate, painted an 
    unobtrusive green, it was constructed of thick steel and was firmly 
    locked, with an entryphone buzzer system to one side.    
        I pressed the buzzer and we waited.  The house seemed even more 
    forbidding than it had looked from my window.
        It suddenly occurred to me that the house was once again plunged in
    darkness with no sign of life from any of the windows.    
        How was that possible? Surely I hadn't imagined seeing Jamie.  
    Could he possibly have left the house in the short time it had taken to 
    come across the road? He couldn't have gone to bed - it was barely ten 
    o'clock.
        There was a noise on the entryphone and then a female voice.    
        "Yes?"    
        "I'm Abi ... I came to see Jamie."    
        There was a long pause and then the voice came back.    
        "Please wait."    
        A buzzer sounded and the gate opened: I looked at Sophie and she 
    shrugged back at me and we walked up to the front door.  There was no 
    doorbell so we just stood there waiting.    
        There was an eerie silence and then we both heard the sound of a 
    dog barking.  It seemed to be coming from deep within the house and after 
    a minute it stopped.    
        "I don't like this at all," Sophie whispered.  "I thought 
    you said you'd seen Jamie," Sophie whispered.  "I don't like this
    at all," she repeated.  "It's creepy."    
        "I did see him.  He was at the window, dancing.  I think 
    he waved to me.  You'll see him in a minute.  And darling Marky no 
    doubt."    
        I tried tapping on the door and this time the barking was even louder.    
        Sophie's hand tightened on mine.  "Let's go," she said.  
    "I don't know why we came.  Anyway I'm starving."    
        "I didn't ask you to come but now you're here I'm not letting 
    you go back on your own."    
        To tell the truth I was grateful that Sophie was with me and anyway, 
    before this turned into a full-scale argument, the barking grew even louder.  
    I remembered Jonah, the Canons' Jack Russell, that used to yap nearly as 
    irritatingly as Sophie, but this wasn't Jonah.  It sounded more like an 
    Alsatian.    
        "Shhhh," I whispered, anticipating some inanity from Soph. 
    Beneath the barking I could hear muffled voices, then a door slam shut. 
    Then after a brief pause, footsteps and the front door opened.    
        I was right.  Big Bad Jonah was a huge Alsatian, baring its teeth and
    growling at us.  Fortunately it was on a lead.  Unfortunately its owner 
    wasn't and she looked even more fierce.    
        "Can I help you?"    
        This woman was certainly not Jamie's mum Frances.    
        Mrs Munster, Soph and I later agreed, had somehow escaped Hollywood 
    and taken up residence in Jamie's house: at least six inches taller than 
    Frances, dressed as though for a business meeting, in a well-tailored
    black twin-set.  Her bgcolor="black hair, greying slightly at the temples, was 
    immaculately swept back to reveal a face that would send young children
    screaming for their mothers.    
        "I ... we came to see Jamie," I stuttered.    
        She stared at us, particularly at me.    
        "I think you are mistaken.  There is no such person here."    
        Her voice was deep, cold, with maybe an accent, but I was too 
    bewildered to wonder about that.    
        "But ... I saw him, just now ... at the window."    
        She stared at me again and frowned.  "That is not possible."    
        Big Bad Jonah seemed to agree and growled even more menacingly.    
        "But I did!"    
        I felt myself growing hot with anger.  I tried to look past her but 
    the hallway was dark and I could hear nothing apart from the dog's growling.    
        "Come on, Abi, let's go," Sophie hissed.    
        I know it was childish but I felt like crying.  "I want to 
    see Jamie now!" I found myself saying in a high shrill voice.    
        "Please wait there."    
        To my surprise she slammed the door shut, perhaps worried that we'd 
    follow her into the house.    
        "Please, Abigail, can we go?" Sophie pleaded.  I could tell 
    she was as upset as I was because she used my full name, but I wasn't in 
    any mood to tease her.    
        "Look, Soph, go if you want.  I'll be back soon, I promise."    
        She opened her mouth to speak, but she could see I was determined to 
    stay.    
        "You're always doing this," she muttered.  "You're a 
    fascist."    
        "Fascist? Moi?"    
        "Yes, like Hitler and Mussoloni or whatever his name was.  And 
    Margaret Thatcher."    
        "You're too young to remember Margaret Thatcher," I said.    
        "No I'm not, and you're just like her."    
        "OK.  So why am I like Margaret Thatcher?"    
        "'Cos she said, 'You turn.  This lady's not for turning.'  And 
    that's you.  That's what you said."    
        "Which quiz show did you pick that titbit up from - or 
    was it Trivial Pursuits?"    
        "I don't spend all my time watching telly like some people,"
    Sophie said.    
        "No, you spend all your time listening to dumb chart music."    
        "At least it's performed by living human beings and not machines. 
    Or boring old drones who just stand there like zombies with big eyebrows."    
        Sophie's knowledge of decent techno and indie was somewhat 
    hampered by the fact that she was clinically brain dead.    
        "What do you know about it anyway? You're musically challenged, 
    i.e.  tone deaf.  You only go for the looks."    
        "And you're a fascist."    
        "Moron."    
        "Twitface."    
    Our uplifting badinage was 
    interrupted by the door opening again.  This time, to my blessed relief, 
    the dog was nowhere to be seen or heard and instead of Mrs Munster, we 
    were greeted by a man who was the spitting image of the actor who played 
    Dr Doolittle in the film.  Maybe he'd had a friendly chat with Big Bad 
    Jonah and the Alsatian had agreed to call it quits.  He looked like he'd 
    spent a long time in the sun or under a UV lamp.  He must have been at
    least in his fifties with lines etched in his forehead and big bags under 
    piercing blue eyes and long flowing greyish hair to make up for his 
    receding hairline.    
        I couldn't take my eyes off him.    
        "I understand you're under the impression that someone called 
    Jamie lives here," he said in a smooth, velvety voice that made my 
    skin crawl.    
        "He did live here, seven years ago, and ... and I saw him here
    tonight, in the window."    
        Dr Doolittle smiled.  "I'm really sorry er ..."    
        "Abigail."    
        "I'm sorry, Abigail, but this is not possible.  What was his 
    surname?"    
        "Canon ... Jamie Canon."    
        "Ah yes, the Canons.  We bought the freehold of this property 
    from the Canons' estate.  I negotiated for the property while I was in 
    Germany.  So I accept that this ... Jamie Canon did live here but now ..." 
    he smiled again, "as you see ... no."    
        "Estate?" I asked faintly.  "Do you mean  - "    
        He nodded sadly.  "I can see this may have come as a shock to 
    you but I understand from the Canons' solicitors that the whole family -
    all four of them - were killed in a car crash some years ago."    
        "But I saw him in the window upstairs.  From my window, 
    there."  I pointed to my bedroom window across the road, which was 
    also now shrouded in bgcolor="blackness.    
        Did I imagine it? Far back in the house, almost it seemed, under 
    the house, I seemed to hear a muffled cry.    
        He paused and something in his face seemed to change.  Have you ever 
    watched someone driving and coming to a dangerous bend? You could actually
    see him almost deciding to switch on his concentration,
    to go into a different gear.    
        "Impossible," he said slowly and rhythmically, almost like a
    chant.  "Perhaps the lamplight and the leaves, the shadows, made you 
    imagine  - "    
        As he spoke his blue eyes seemed to be drilling into me and for a few
    seconds I thought I was going to pass out.  I felt myself reeling and was 
    finding it hard to breathe.  His words seemed to amplify and echo in my 
    mind, like the repeated sampling and reverb you get in techno.    
        "Impossible ... impossible ... lamplight ... lamplight ... 
    leaves ... leaves ... shadows ... shadows ... imagine ... imagine ... 
    imagine ... imagine  - "    
        With a huge effort I pulled myself together and glanced at Sophie. 
    Her eyes were drooping and her hand was now limp in mine.    
        "I didn't imagine it ..."    
        He sighed.  "I'm sorry, I must go now."    
        He bowed and closed the door.    
        As soon as he had gone we both seemed to snap out of whatever it was 
    we had snapped into, though I was too upset to say anything as we walked 
    back to the old house.  But as we climbed the stairs to the second floor, 
    Sophie came to a halt.
        "Did you see what I saw?"    
        "What?"    
        "In their garden, in the tree.  It looked like one of those 
    what-do-you-call-them, survelance cameras."    
        "Surveillance."    
        "Yup.  In the tree.  I wonder what they've got to protect."    
        I suddenly remembered the muffled cry.    
        "Maybe it's like Colditz," I said.    
        "What's that?"    
        "It was a German prisoner-of-war camp.  Maybe it's not so much 
    who they don't want to let in as who they don't want to let out.'
    


    
    


    
    

    Chapter 3

    "So either you imagined you saw Jamie," said Dad as we sat round
    Duncan and Nettie's table, and I'd wiped my tears and ate what I could of 
    the lasagne, "or you did see him  - "    
        "In which case he didn't die in a car crash," I said.    
        "... but they don't know he's gone back there," Dad went on 
    sceptically.    
        "Or they do know he's there and they're lying," I said.    
        "Well, they're an odd couple, the Polsons, but I doubt whether 
    they're criminal types," Duncan said.  "Moved in at the 
    beginning of the year.  Keep to themselves.  I parked my Volvo a little 
    too close to his driveway at the back so he couldn't get his car out but
     he was quite civil.  Distant though.  Didn't really want to chat."    
        if">I remembered the back driveway.  The Canons' house was on the 
    corner of Somerset Road - the main road where we used to live - and 
    Farley Rise which led up to the school.  A fence surrounded the property 
    and at the end of this was a large gate which was the Canons' driveway.  
    At the back of the driveway there used to be a broken fence.  For a few 
    months, when we were seven or eight, Jamie and I had crawled through this 
    fence and made a hidey hole for ourselves.    
        "And you've never seen the Canon kids?" Dad asked.    
        "No.  Mind you, I haven't really been looking for them.  What 
    about you, Net?"    
        "Sorry, no."  She looked at me sympathetically as if to 
    say, sorry to let you down.  I smiled and shrugged.    
        "There's one thing though," she added.  "They always 
    go out every Wednesday between three and six in the afternoon, regular
    as clockwork."    
        "Perhaps they go to church," said Sophie cynically.    
        "The Hellfire Club coven meeting more likely," I muttered.    
        "There's always a fourth alternative," said Mum.    
        We all looked at her and I knew what was coming.  Mum was into 
    lots of New Age type stuff, Tarot and meditation and palmistry.  
    We used to laugh at her but at least she didn't spend all her time
    going to tupperware parties or coffee mornings like some of the other
    women in our village and prattle on about babies and flower arranging.
        "What you saw was a ghost."    
        "No, it couldn't have been," I said confidently but even
    as I said it I could feel the doubts creeping in.  "I don't believe
    that.  He was so real, just like he used to be."    
        "There's more than one type of ghost," Mum said.  
    "For instance, it could have been the ghost of Jamie as you remember
    him seven years ago, a kind of electrical imprint  - "    
        "No."    
        "Or possibly it could be a projection coming from you."    
        "Which is another way of saying I imagined it."    
        "Not exactly.  The mind is very powerful - it's possible that
    you're a kind of medium through which Jamie can continue his existence."    
        I shook my head.  "No.  I can't accept that."    
        "Then again, Jamie's actual entity - Jamie himself - his 
    living spirit may have returned to the house."    
        "I'm sorry it's just not  - " I felt myself starting to
    cry again.    
        "I'm sorry, Abi, I didn't mean to upset you," Mum said gently.  
    "We don't know what the truth is, none of us.  But there has to be an 
    explanation."    
        "Well, I don't believe in ghosts," said Duncan.  For a moment
    I felt grateful to have him as an ally but then he added, "You probably
    just imagined the whole thing."    
        Nettie darted him an angry look.    
        "Polson said they were all killed in the car crash?" 
    Dad asked.    
        "He said "all four" ..." Sophie began.  We stared 
    at each other.  "Which means that  - "    
        "One of them at least is still alive!" I said.    
        Duncan and Nettie looked puzzled.    
        "There were three children," Mum explained.  
    "They had an older daughter called Natalie.  As far as we know she went 
    with them to Stuttgart.  So one of the Canons wasn't in the car."    
        "If there really was a car crash," I muttered.    
        "Well, maybe I can help out there," said Duncan.  
    "I'm off to Germany next week.  I'll see what I can rake up."    
        "Oh, would you?" I said, warming to him again.    
        "Can't promise too much.  The police can be stroppy about 
    enquiries from the general public, especially non-natives, but I know a 
    chap on Der Spiegel.  Anyway I'll do my best."
    
    
    Back at school in Swanleigh my GCSEs were about to begin.  For the first 
    few days I kept seeing Jamie dancing in the window - the image popping up 
    in my brain like a gremlin in a computer game, but exams soon distracted 
    me, and so did Thomas who had sort of been my boyfriend except that we 
    broke up the night before my French oral.
         I wasn't really upset about this: I'd been thinking of dumping him
    for some time. I occasionally enjoy watching sci-fi videos and playing
    computer games but you can't spend twenty-four hours a day on them, 
    which was what Thomas did.  He's quite good-looking in a pale, 
    interesting sort of way, but after the initial attraction I realised 
    I didn't really fancy him and in any case we just didn't like the same 
    music so I felt relieved that he was the one who dumped me.    
        I know this may sound callous but the thing that upset me most was 
    that just before we broke up I'd managed to get my parents to pay for 
    two tickets for the Phoenix Pop Festival and I'd already given Thomas his 
    ticket.    
        So I got my friend Lizzie - she of the sickeningly perfect skin and 
    blonde hair and everything else that boys go for - to chat Thomas up and
    persuade him to let her have the ticket.  If he was expecting a night of 
    unbridled passion with her he was in for a cruel disappointment because 
    Lizzie only goes for boys who are even more perfect than she is and they 
    had so far proved unobtainable.    
        As it turned out she did agree to go to a Star Trek convention with 
    Thomas - and met some really gorgeous boy there, by which time Thomas had 
    got over her and got off with some Trekkie, so in the end everyone got 
    what they wanted.    
        The day we went to the Phoenix was gloriously sunny: the kind of day 
    you never wanted to end though you knew it would, apart from the queues 
    for the ladies' lavatories which you thought would never end,
    which in fact was true.  We managed to see all the bands we both wanted 
    to see, snack at various exotic food tents, and avoid spending whatever 
    money we had left on all the ethnic and New Age stuff you get at festivals.
        Then we decided to try the Megadog dance tent.    
        Personally I'm not into the kind of raves where drugs are taken.  I've 
    never taken any drugs myself but I've known kids, not only older but also 
    younger than me, who've taken them and in one or two cases it has really 
    screwed them up.    
        As far as I'm concerned you can get high and enjoy yourself without 
    having to mess up your system in the process.  I know many kids who enjoy 
    raves without needing to take ecstasy and I was looking forward to dancing
    to Techno, which I love.    
        I wasn't disappointed.  Lizzie and I were soon really into the music 
    which veered from slow and dreamy Ambient and Trance to frenetic Techno 
    and Jungle.    
        At first I wasn't aware of him.  He was just a boy dancing wildly 
    somewhere in the corner of my vision.    
        And then I recognised him.    
        It was Jamie.    
        He looked just the same as he had when I had seen him through the 
    window of his house across the road, happy, animated, and yet still 
    seeming to be in a world of his own, unaware of anyone around him.    
        I tugged at Lizzie but she was in her own little Hubble Bubble.
        "It's him, Lizzie," I shouted to make myself heard above the music.    
        "What!"    
        "Jamie, the one I told you about.  The boy I used to know in 
    London who I saw again last time I was there."    
        "Where?"    
        I pointed to where Jamie was still dancing, though now he was 
    half-hidden by other dancers.    
        "Which one?" she shouted.    
        "In the psychedelic orange tee-shirt."    
        She nodded, spotting him.  "He looks sweet.  Why don't you go 
    and talk to him?"    
        "What do I say?"    
        "Tell him who you are.  Find out if it's him."    
        Something made me hesitate.  Perhaps it was because he had looked 
    so happy, so self-contained, that I didn't want to break into his little
    haven of contentment.  Maybe I suddenly felt a little shy.  
    Whatever, by the time I had made up my mind to follow her advice, 
    Jamie had disappeared.    
        I tried to find him but the dance area was poorly lit and he seemed 
    to have just been swallowed up in the crowd.    
        Had it really been him?  Was I imagining it again?  I had so 
    many questions in my mind and I couldn't seem to think straight.    
        By the time I found Lizzie again I had given up searching for him.    
        There was a strange expression on her face but I could hardly 
    register what she was saying and she had to drag me out of the dance 
    tent before we could talk.    
        "He's a real weirdo, your friend," she said.    
        "What do you mean?"    
        "I saw him leaving the tent.  He looked like a zombie,
    like someone had pulled the plug out on him."    
        At least, whoever it was, Lizzie had seen him too, but this was 
    small comfort.    
        "Maybe he was still into the music," I said glumly.     
        Lizzie stared at me and shook her head.
        "No, this wasn't trance.  It was more like ... death."
    


    
    
    


    
    

    Chapter 4

    Duncan had yet to come up with anything in his enquiries about what might 
    have happened to the Canons in Germany and after the Phoenix Festival, as 
    the summer holidays stretched ahead, I had a curious sense of anti-climax 
    as though I had found something very precious and lost it again.    
        For the first two weeks I went camping in Brittany with my family, but 
    unlike previous years I felt homesick and couldn't wait to be back in 
    Swanleigh.  When we got back, Lizzie rang me to tell me her she had 
    tickets for the Reading Festival at the end of the month and my first
    thought, though I know it was totally silly, was that maybe I would see 
    Jamie again.    
        My GCSE results came through in the third week of August.  They were 
    decent enough - one A (for English), five Bs and a couple of Cs - and as 
    I'd already bribed Mum and Dad into giving me a cash bonus on top of my 
    pocket money (ten pounds for an A, five for a B) I had fifty pounds to
    spend on some decent new gear for the Reading Festival.    
        Of course Sophie had also wanted to go, which would have ruined 
    everything, but my parents came to the rescue by saying she could go 
    next year.    
        As the Reading Festival approached I had a stupid sense of excitement 
    that was somehow wrapped up with the possibility of seeing Jamie again.    
        I know it didn't make sense.  It had been pure chance that I had seen
    him in the Megadog tent at the Phoenix and the chances of seeing him again
    at Reading were smaller than winning the jackpot in the National Lottery.     
        But something seemed to have changed inside me.  It was as though 
    since the first time I had seen Jamie again in London I had slipped into
    another dimension, a kind of dream world in which I somehow knew 
    that I had to see him again.    
        One night in France I had even dreamt that we were back in my old 
    flat, playing hide and seek.  It was my turn to search for him and I heard 
    him calling me from my room.    
        I'm here, Abi.  I bet you can't find me!    
        I looked around the room but he was nowhere to be seen.    
        I'm down here, Abi.      
        I looked down and noticed a crack in the floorboards directly 
    underneath me which grew bigger and bigger.  As I tried desperately to 
    step out of the way, I stumbled and fell into the gap.    
        I screamed but I couldn't be heard as I descended into the bgcolor="blackness ...    
        I still remembered the terror I felt on waking up.  And yet I felt 
    Jamie was still there in my waking life, calling me to find him.    
        And then Polson's voice would reverberate hypnotically in my mind:    
        Impossible ... impossible ... lamplight ... lamplight ... leaves ...
    leaves ... shadows ... shadows ... imagine ... imagine ... imagine ... 
    imagine ...
    
    
    The Reading Festival was, for Lizzie and me, on a much grander scale than 
    the Phoenix because we were to be there for three days, camping out.  Mum 
    and Dad had grumbled a bit that I was too young to be there on my own at a 
    pop festival for three days and I'd told them I'd be perfectly OK and 
    anyway I'd be with Lizzie and Lizzie's parents didn't have a problem with 
    it so why did Mum and Dad and they gave in, and then Lizzie told me that 
    her parents had said the same thing and she'd given the same reply as I 
    had.    
        Almost as soon as we arrived I realised just how ridiculous I had been 
    assuming I was going to bump into Jamie and though I would sometimes find 
    myself looking around the crowds for a dayglo orange tee-shirt, there were 
    too many distractions, such as Robbie Connors.    
        Robbie was a year older than me, in Sixth Form College at Swanleigh 
    which I would be starting in September, and normally he would never have 
    noticed me, let alone speak to me.    
        But Reading seemed to break down those barriers and I was starting to
    wonder why I had spent so much time thinking about someone who was mainly 
    just a memory from my childhood and whose present existence could well have
    been a figment of my imagination.  Maybe Polson had been speaking the 
    truth and Jamie had died in the car crash.    
        After I'd stopped seeing Thomas I had been in no hurry to get another 
    boyfriend.  I know some girls who can't seem to function without one, but
    I think friends - real friends, male or female - are more important and 
    I would rather wait for the "real thing".  I'm not sure whether
    that makes me a hopeless romantic or hopelessly unromantic, and frankly 
    I don't really care.    
        Anyway, during the first two days at Reading Robbie and I became 
    good friends - and I do mean just friends, especially after he confessed
    to me he fancied Sarah Matthews, who's also in Sixth Form College and 
    whose sister Jackie is in my class.  Sarah and Jackie were there at 
    Reading and so I worked with Robbie on a campaign to get her to go out
    with him.    
        Unfortunately it worked out brilliantly so by Sunday, the last day of 
    Reading, I was back with Lizzie who by this time had broken her golden 
    rule and had found herself a long-haired hippie who was at least two years 
    older then her and was only too obtainable.  As the morning wore on I began 
    to feel more and more like a gooseberry and decided to go off on my own.    
        Unlike the Phoenix which had all types of music, the Reading Festival 
    has more rock and indie-type music and there were no dance tents for me to
    wander into.  I had noticed a dance club, which would mean forking out more
    money, and had not given it much thought, but now, without Lizzie or 
    Robbie around, I found myself once again thinking of Jamie.    
        I'm here, Abi, I bet you can't find me.    
        With a sense of being wasteful and irresponsible, I paid my money and 
    entered the club.  At first it was difficult to make out anyone's features 
    in the swirl of dancers, the flashing of strobe lights.  On the far wall 
    continuously changing psychedelic images were projected onto a huge screen 
    while Techno and Goa Trance were pumping out of the 10K speakers at 
    deafening decibel levels.  The combined sweat of the dancers drenched the
    atmosphere.    
        Feeling very self-conscious standing there on my own, I began 
    hesitantly to dance but after only a few minutes I started to lose myself
    in the music.    
        I closed my eyes and seemed to see Jamie dancing in front of me, 
    holding out his hand to me and grinning.  The vision seemed so real that
    I finally had to open my eyes again.    
        I felt as though I had touched a live two hundred and forty volt wire.    
        He was dancing in front of me.  A happy, contented smile lit
    up his face, but once again I couldn't tell whether he was smiling at me.    
        This time I had to know.    
        I reached over and touched his face.  For a moment he seemed startled, 
    then he laughed and carried on dancing.    
        I felt really foolish.  Suppose it wasn't Jamie?  What could I say to 
    him now?  I continued dancing, determined this time not to let him out of 
    my sight.  Occasionally he would turn and dance a few feet away from me 
    and once or twice another dancer interposed themselves between us and I 
    would edge myself back into place as near to him as I could.    
        But for some reason I was still too shy to speak to him.    
        My energy was starting to flag and I was wondering just how long he 
    would carry on dancing when he suddenly turned and began to make for the 
    exit.    
        I followed on his heels, pushing my way through the dancers, knowing
    that if I lost him this time I would never forgive myself.  We were just a 
    few feet apart as I rushed up the steps that led to the exit door when he 
    stopped and turned.    
        There was a frown on his face.    
        "Are you following me?"    
        "No! ... I mean ... yes!" I stammered.    
        He grinned.  "I didn't know I had such pulling power ... Who are 
    you?"    
        I stared at him uncertainly.    
        "My name's Abigail Edwards," I said slowly, searching his 
    eyes for some sign of recognition.    
        There was none.    
        "Hi, Abigail Edwards, pleased to meet you."    
        "Is your name ... Jamie Canon?"    
        For a second I could swear he looked disconcerted, but then the
    serenity I had seen earlier returned to his face and I thought maybe I had 
    imagined it.    
        "That's a funny name.  Sounds like a cowboy ... or a photocopier."
        My heart sank.    
        "It's the name of a boy I used to know in London," I said 
    feeling totally stupid and embarrassed.  "We used to go to the same 
    school and he lived opposite me.  I haven't seen him for years, but then
    I thought I saw him in his old house and ... he looked just like you ... 
    And he danced like you."    
        "Poor chap.  I thought I was the only one.  Maybe we should meet 
    and swap a few dance steps ... Sorry,"  he added when he saw the 
    look on my face.  "I didn't mean to sound flippant."    
        "Well, you did," I muttered.    
        For a moment neither of us seemed to know what to say.    
        "Look, I meant what I said," he jumped in.  "I really
    am pleased to meet you.  I don't know anyone here."    
        "So ... what's your name?" I asked, a little 
    mollified.    
        He grinned again and then did a somersault.    
        "What kind of answer is that?" I said, amused and 
    exasperated at the same time.    
        In reply, he turned on his heels and ran off so that I had to sprint 
    for five minutes to catch up with him.  He suddenly tripped over a few 
    yards in front of me and in turn I tripped over him, so that we collapsed 
    on top of each other in hysterics on the grass.    
        When we had recovered I gazed at him.  It was just the kind of thing 
    Jamie would have done.    
        "Are you sure you're not Jamie Canon?" I asked.    
        "Are you sure you are Abigail Edwards?"    
        I sighed.  "Then who are you?"    
        He faltered and then gave me an odd look, as though trying to 
    remember something.    
        "I'm ... a transmitter."    
        I thought I hadn't heard him right."    
        "You're a what?"    
        "A transmitter," he repeated almost tonelessly.    
        "I don't know what you mean."    
        "Transmission ... trance mission."    
        His face had gone all dreamy as if he were in a trance.  Then he 
    looked confused as if he didn't understand what he had said either.    
        "What on earth does that mean?"    
        He grinned.  "God knows - maybe you've got the key."    
        "Well, Jamie's dad, Richard, was a conductor ... you don't mean 
    that, do you?  Do you conduct?"    
        I know it was a silly question, but I was desperate for some sign of 
    recognition, even just a flicker, and maybe I imagined it but for a few 
    moments a dreamy, faraway look came into his eyes.    
        I suddenly remembered the expression on his face as he was dancing 
    in the club, as if he were on another planet.  "You're not ... have 
    you taken something?"  I asked cautiously.    
        It was his turn to look perplexed.  "What do you mean?"    
        "I suppose I mean drugs - dope, ecstasy, I don't know.  Do you 
    take them."    
        He looked disgusted.  "Of course not.  What gave you that idea?"    
        "You seem so ... you look so happy and yet a bit lost at the same time."    
        I could see him thinking about this.  "Well, I am very happy, here,
    now, with you.  So if I am lost I suppose I don't want to be found."    
        "And you're not on drugs."    
        He stood up and pulled me up with him.  "Look, I really don't 
    know anything about drugs and I certainly haven't taken any.  All I know
    is that I've always liked dancing to this kind of music and when I'm 
    dancing I seem to get right out of my head.  I can forget the bad things."    
        "What bad things?"    
        He shrugged.  "Oh, you know, don't you sometimes want to forget 
    who you are and just ... enjoy being."    
        I thought about this.  "No, I can't say I've ever wanted to 
    forget who I am.  Except maybe when I'm with Sophie - she's my kid sister -
    and she says something totally, excruciatingly embarrassing and I just want 
    to disappear into the ground."    
        His eyes lit up as though he had remembered something.  "That's 
    where I come from."    
        "Where?"    
        "Somewhere down there."  He pointed downwards to the earth...
    
    
    He still wouldn't tell me his name or where he really came from and 
    everything he said seemed to have an odd sort of double meaning, but 
    I didn't think he was trying to be mysterious: I think he was genuinely
    replying to my questions the only way he could.  And although he had said
    he wasn't Jamie, in some part of my mind I still believed he was.    
        "OK, then, if you won't tell me your name," I said as we 
    made our way towards one of the main stages, "what do I call you?"    
        He thought for a moment as though he himself accepted that telling me
    his name was out of bounds.    
        "Well, as we met dancing to Trance, why not call me Trancer?"    
        "Trancer?"    
        "Yes?" he replied, already having taken on the name.    
        We both laughed and after that we spent the rest of the afternoon 
    together.  I decided that whoever he was I liked him.    
        The time seemed to fly by with him: we watched bands, drove on the 
    dodgems at the funfair, and never stopped talking to each other.    
        I couldn't tell you what we said, though, because it would sound 
    like nonsense. I still knew nothing about him, but I knew the important 
    things - his quirky sense of fun and his bright intelligence.    
        Towards the end of the afternoon I thought I detected a few moments 
    when he grew tense and as dusk approached we fell quiet.  At first it was 
    what is known as a companionable silence but then, suddenly, it wasn't.  
    Within minutes, he seemed to grow sullen and I felt that if I had tried 
    to say anything he wouldn't have replied. I could see his face becoming 
    drawn, and then expressionless.    
        "Trancer?" I said anxiously.  "Are you all right?"    
        He stared ahead ignoring me.    
        I remembered what Lizzie had said:    
        He looked like a zombie, like someone had pulled the plug 
    out on him ... This wasn't trance.  It was more like ... death.    
        I felt a cold shiver of horror as the truth dawned on me.  
    Trancer was turning in front of my eyes into the lifeless zombie Lizzie
    had seen leaving the Megadog dance tent.    
        "Trancer?"    
        He slowly turned his head towards me.    
        His eyes had grown vacant like the blindman we had seen in Oxford 
    earlier in the year.    
        Suddenly there was a loud shriek of laughter from a group of people 
    behind us and by reflex I turned to see what the commotion was.    
        When I looked back he had vanished.
    


    
    


    
    

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