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  All my stories begin with the premise: What if . . . ? This has never been more so than with Ash. However, let me plead that there are some basic truths among the fiction. Have fun deciding which are which.

  JAMES HERBERT

  ‘There are dark forces at work in this country about which we know little.’

  QUEEN ELIZABETH II (allegedly)

  CONTENTS

  PART ONE: THE JOURNEY

  1

  2

  3

  4

  5

  6

  7

  8

  9

  10

  11

  12

  13

  14

  15

  16

  PART TWO: COMRAICH CASTLE

  17

  18

  19

  20

  21

  22

  23

  24

  PART THREE: THE HAUNTINGS

  25

  26

  27

  28

  29

  30

  31

  32

  33

  34

  35

  36

  37

  38

  39

  40

  41

  42

  43

  44

  45

  46

  47

  48

  49

  50

  51

  52

  53

  54

  55

  56

  57

  58

  59

  PART FOUR: THE CURSE

  60

  61

  62

  63

  64

  65

  66

  67

  68

  69

  70

  71

  72

  73

  74

  75

  76

  77

  78

  79

  80

  81

  82

  83

  84

  85

  86

  87

  88

  89

  90

  91

  92

  93

  94

  95

  96

  97

  98

  99

  100

  101

  102

  103

  Pont D’Alma tunnel, Paris

  31 August 1997

  12.59 a.m.

  As her life ebbed away in the crumpled Mercedes she thought of her two sons.

  Who would take care of them? Who would guide them through their early years?

  Not their father. Oh God, not him and all he stood for. How could their lives be normal?

  Now her mind, along with her flesh, was becoming cold. She could feel herself drifting away, far, far away from this ruined metal shell that entrapped and hurt her body so.

  She was aware, vaguely, of incessant bright flashes, a gabble of shocked, greedy voices – the last sounds she would ever hear – as closure softened her remaining moments in this intrusive world.

  Even as her life faded, her final concerns returned to those of the living. Her two sons – who would be there for them?

  For the briefest of moments, their images followed her into the painless, velvet void, but then they were gone, leaving her to wonder for a second if in death she would find the soul of the barely born child she had lost.

  Oblivion took her just as hands reached in to help.

  PART ONE: THE JOURNEY

  PRESENT DAY

  1

  The untidy little man peered out from the bookshop’s window display, squinting to sharpen his vision.

  He was watching the doors of the huge grey building that housed the BBC World Service offices and studios: those doors were in constant use, drawing in and disgorging a ceaseless stream of visitors and staff. The mark was still inside, but Cedric Twigg was patient as always, comfortable in his assumed role of book browser in the Kingsway WHSmith, pretending to be interested in the lofty novel he held in his hands. He had idled here for the last twenty minutes, having arrived half an hour earlier, picking up a hardback here and there to peruse its contents, replacing each volume, then choosing another.

  The phoney shelf cruising had led him from the back of the store to the large plate-glass windows overlooking the busy street beyond and from where he chose a final volume entitled Flat Earth News, which he opened and brought up close to his face as if absorbed.

  But every few minutes he would gaze distractedly through the windows as if considering the text while, in truth, he was contemplating the impressive edifice of the Aldwych building at the end of the broad and bustling Kingsway. There was another entrance/exit in the discreet courtyard at the back of Bush House, but he had an associate covering that. A call to Twigg’s Samsung would inform him if their mark had left the building that way.

  His pretended attention returned to the book again and he turned a page, appearing to be engrossed in its warnings about the world’s news media.

  Twigg was a fastidious individual who had once enjoyed the subterfuge involved in surveillance and tracking, learning the mark’s habits and regularly visited haunts. But these days he found the chase less agreeable; the long stakeouts tedious, the satisfaction coming only with the final dispatch.

  Small in stature and unremarkable in appearance – he could reasonably have been taken for a poorly paid accounts clerk on his lunch break – which suited his role perfectly. Although Twigg appeared commonplace, his unblinking grey-eyed stare could be quite unsettling if directed your way. And although his shoulders were narrow, they were strong and capable of exerting great force through his deceptively dainty hands. With a pot-belly recently beginning to swell over his belt buckle, the assumed image was complete.

  Now the mobile phone in his trouser pocket vibrated against his upper thigh, its ringtone switched off; he reached for it. The tiny screen showed the caller’s code name – Kincade – and Twigg thumbed the accept key.

  ‘Mark leaving the building now,’ the thin excitable voice of his apprentice blurted. ‘Rear exit, heading up the Strand. Alone.’

  ‘Right.’ Twigg broke the connection and slid the neat little instrument back into his pocket. He returned the book to its shelf and made his way out of the store.

  He walked quickly along the pavement, almost invisible among the lunchtime throng, making his way towards the even busier Strand, searching ahead for his prey. He only caught the attention of one person, a pretty young office worker on her way to have lunch with a friend, and that was only because he reminded her of someone as he strode purposefully towards her. She couldn’t quite place the name, but the little man in his old-fashioned raincoat looked like the creepy actor who was in all those slasher movies a few years back. What was his name?

  Then he’d passed her and the moment was gone. Now what puzzled her was why the little man with freaky eyes was carrying a furled umbrella under his arm on such a chilly but bright, cloudless day.

  2

  Lucy Duncan looked up from her receptionist’s desk as the heavy, black-painted entrance door was pushed open, allowing cold air to impinge on the comfortable warmth of the lobby.

  David Ash, unshaven and weary-looking, hurried through, the front door slowly closing of its own accord behind him. He strode towards the desk, making for the carpeted staircase. As usual, he ignored the building’s claustrophobically small lift, preferring to take the stairs to the first floor where Kate McCarrick’s office was located.

  He managed a brief smile at Lucy, but the smile didn’t quite
make it to his eyes.

  ‘You’re late, David,’ the receptionist scolded him lightly. ‘The meeting started twenty minutes ago.’

  Lucy watched as Ash climbed the stairs, two at a time, and gave an inward sigh. Such an attractive man, with his thick, tousled dark hair, flecked slightly with grey, and his deep blue but ever-melancholy eyes. This morning his chin was stubbled. Somehow it made him look sexier, though usually she preferred her men clean-shaven.

  Lucy had replaced the previous receptionist called Jenny, who had left ‘to have babies’, although staying on an extra month to show Lucy the ropes and how to deal with some of the more questionable – and often distraught – phone calls that sometimes came through. Jenny had told her that Ash had been through some difficult times over the past few years, with two particularly unfortunate cases that appeared to weigh heavily on him. Perhaps they still did: he always seemed to be so downcast. Or ‘brooding’ might be more apt.

  The phone rang as David Ash disappeared up the stairs and Lucy quickly picked up the receiver.

  ‘Psychical Research Institute. How may I help you?’

  Ash reached the first-floor landing and paused to take a breath. The meeting with Kate and the prospective client had been due to start at 9.30 a.m., and he, as Lucy had already told him, was late. If only he could sleep peacefully at night in the darkness of his room. If only the nightmares that always culminated in his eyes snapping open, his body in a sweat, would stop. Dawn was always a relief. Only then could he sink into oblivion in the knowledge that he was safe now that the night terrors had expunged themselves.

  Kate McCarrick’s office door was closed and he knocked before entering.

  Kate, who was head of the Psychical Research Institute, looked past the shoulder of the person seated across the desk from her. She frowned slightly.

  ‘Sorry I’m late,’ Ash apologized both to Kate and the trim, dark-suited man, who had turned in his chair to appraise the new arrival. His expression was neutral.

  ‘David, this is Simon Maseby. Simon . . .’ her hand indicated Ash. ‘David Ash, the investigator we were just discussing.’

  Ash raised his eyebrows at Kate as Maseby rose and extended a hand towards him. He was a short, smartly dressed man, somewhere in his forties, his dark hair slicked back from his forehead, his chin clean-shaven (unlike his own, Ash thought), and his eyes were a very pale shade of green in his fresh roundish race.

  ‘You’ve had some interesting times, Mr Ash,’ Maseby said with a faint smile.

  Again the parapsychologist glanced at Kate, who gave him a slight but reassuring nod of her head. He shook the proffered hand, which was dry and firm to the touch.

  ‘I’ve just filled in your background a little for Simon,’ Kate said. ‘Your experiences are of great interest to him.’

  Maseby sat, eyes on Ash, a hint of curiosity and – no, not humour, Ash decided, but a kind of bemusement in his expression.

  ‘So you believe in the supernatural, Mr Maseby,’ Ash asked as he took the other chair facing Kate McCarrick’s desk.

  ‘Well now, that’s a difficult question to answer.’ Maseby crossed his legs, and Ash saw that the dark-suited man’s shoes were polished to perfection, his grey socks made from some silky material. ‘I have to say that I haven’t given such, er, such things much thought in the past.’

  ‘But now you have, for some reason.’

  ‘Quite. For the moment, let’s say that my eyes have been opened to what I would have thought unbelievable only a short time ago.’

  ‘Shall I explain, Simon?’ Kate leaned forward on her crowded desk, at one side of which was a computer screen and keyboard. Bookshelves were filled with studies on psychic phenomena and the paranormal, with titles such as The Vertical Plane, Telluric Energy, Radiotelethesis and Genius Loci. Grey, chest-high filing cabinets overspilling with case-history folders took up one side of the room. Two tall windows behind Kate’s desk overlooked the busy city street below.

  Maseby acquiesced with a bow of his head. He smiled at Ash, wrinkles appearing at the corners of his eyes.

  But before Kate could begin, Ash jumped in with a question. ‘Can I ask you something, Mr Maseby?’

  ‘Of course.’ Maseby glanced enquiringly at Kate.

  She anticipated Ash’s question. ‘David is always interested in why a prospective client should choose this particular institute and not one of the equally respected organizations such as The Spiritualist Association or The College of Psychic Studies.’

  ‘It’s very simple,’ said Maseby, his patronizing smile beginning to irritate Ash. ‘Katie and I go way back. We met when we were students up at Oxford, she at St Hilda’s College and I at Magdalen. All the colleges hold a weekly “formal hall” – a dinner for students to which guests from other colleges are invited. At that time, St Hilda’s was an all-female establishment, so the girls there were particularly keen to welcome young men to their social evenings. That was how I met Kate, and we became firm friends – of the platonic kind, I might add.’

  ‘Okay. I just wondered.’ Ash looked across the desk at Kate McCarrick, who smiled back, giving nothing away. She guessed Ash suspected that she and Maseby had been lovers in the past despite her old friend’s comment to the contrary.

  In fact, she and Simon had slept together only once when they were students, both quickly deciding they were not suited to a drawn-out affair. Even then, Simon was a little too much in love with himself to sustain an equal partnership.

  Maseby continued to answer Ash’s question. ‘Kate and I have kept in touch over the years and I admit, while I couldn’t quite accept the strange profession she’d chosen, I’ve always had high regard for her intellect. When events that could only be described as paranormal began to occur in an establishment with which I’m associated, she was the first person I thought of turning to. Ghosts and hauntings are not something I’ve experienced before.’

  Kate took over from him. ‘Simon represents a group of influential people who have an interest in a particular Scottish castle.’

  Ash caught the sharp glance Maseby suddenly gave Kate so he dug deeper. ‘And who are these influential people?’

  ‘That really doesn’t matter at this point,’ Maseby all but snapped back. ‘All you need to know is that the castle is currently having problems that are unaccountable.’

  ‘Hauntings?’

  ‘We think so.’

  Kate spoke up again; she knew David had lost none of his surface cynicism, despite the shocking experiences he’d suffered over the past few years. It was his way of testing potential clients: he never wasted time on neurotics with over-imaginative and often misguided claims of supernatural activity. ‘Comraich Castle is used as a kind of, well, a kind of sanitarium. Would you call it that, Simon?’

  ‘I’d prefer to say it’s a retreat.’

  ‘A religious retreat?’ asked Ash.

  Maseby gave a sharp bark of derision. ‘No, it has nothing to do with religion, even though one of our residents was an archbishop in his better years. When his mind wasn’t so addled.’

  ‘It’s a mental institution?’ Ash refrained from calling it an asylum.

  ‘As I said, we refer to it as a retreat.’

  ‘But a retreat from what?’ Ash persisted.

  ‘From the world, Mr Ash,’ Maseby said simply. His smile this time was thin-lipped.

  3

  Maseby spoke to Kate McCarrick. ‘Perhaps from this moment on we should have Mr Ash’s assurance that whatever else we discuss this morning will not be mentioned beyond these four walls.’

  ‘All our cases are confidential, you know that, Simon.’

  ‘Mr Ash?’ There was something hard in Maseby’s stare.

  Ash gave a shrug. ‘It’s fine by me. Victims of haunting often demand the utmost discretion.’

  ‘Kate tells me you have had a drink problem.’ It was bluntly put and, to Ash, irrelevant. He frowned at his employer, who had the grace to look apologetic.

  ?
??Simon needs to have every confidence in you before engaging the Institute,’ she explained. ‘I’ve told him your drinking is no longer an issue.’

  ‘Vodka, wasn’t it?’ Maseby enquired, his face a mask of indifference. Ash knew he was probing, looking for weakness.

  ‘Kate’s right – I’ve given up the vodka.’

  ‘Then I hope there’ll be no relapse during this assignment,’ the other man said grimly. ‘I have to answer for any mistakes, so I must be sure of you.’

  ‘I haven’t tasted a drop of the stuff for over a year now. But I’d still like to know who it is you answer to.’

  ‘As I explained, that’s irrelevant for the moment. However, I can tell you that it’s an alliance of like-minded and extremely wealthy individuals. People of influence, as Kate has already informed you.’

  Kate spoke. ‘So let’s move on and tell David of the strange – and terrifying – incidents that are happening at Comraich. You already know I have absolute trust in him.’

  Maseby acknowledged the firmness of his old friend’s tone with a small nod of his head. ‘Well now,’ he said briskly, turning round in his seat to face Ash more easily. ‘The organization I represent owns a large but necessarily remote castle in Scotland. Its residents are only accepted on the understanding that no outsider can ever know its precise location, not even the people who have placed them there and pay their fees. I should add that those fees are extremely high, with a harsh financial penalty for betrayal of trust.’

  ‘Betrayal?’ Ash was surprised. It seemed a potent word to use.

  ‘You’ll understand after you’ve countersigned the contract drawn up between myself and Kate. The Institute would be liable should you break our agreement.’

  ‘It would wipe us out,’ Kate told Ash grimly.

  ‘Then why take it on? Why risk everything?’ Ash stared at Kate.

  It was Maseby who answered him. ‘Because the reward for success would mean that the Psychical Research Institute would never be under financial pressure again.’

  For a second or two, Ash was lost for words.

  ‘It’s true, David,’ Kate said. ‘You know our cash flow has always been borderline, but if we accept this contract and are successful we’ll be secure for a long time to come. Trust me on this.’