75

‘I TAKE MY HAT OFF TO BURKE AND HARE,’ MUTTERED HARRY, inserting the crowbar beneath the stone lid of the sarcophagus before leaning on it with his entire weight. The heavy slab moved a fraction of an inch. With the skill developed over nearly an hour of practice, he moved the lid just enough to be able to shine his torch inside.

Nothing. Which was precisely what he’d found in the eight stone coffins he’d managed to open. No bones, no mummified flesh, no shrivelled grave clothes, and definitely no Joe. He’d probably never know when the remains of the long-since-dead clergy had been taken away from St Barnabas’s crypt, but gone they were.

His nervousness had long since evaporated. There really was nothing like building up a sweat for chasing away the willies.

Only one alcove remained a mystery. The very last in line, closest to the rear of the crypt. None of the keys he’d retrieved from his desk drawer had opened the iron grille. When the police had searched it previously they must have used one of Sinclair’s keys. Harry had tapped out rhythms on the ironwork, he’d stuck a wrench through the bars and banged on the two sarcophagi that he could reach, he’d called Joe’s name and had spent at least ten minutes just listening quietly. At last he’d been compelled to give up. Joe wasn’t in the church. He wasn’t in it and he wasn’t below it.

At least now he knew.

Harry crossed the first chamber of the crypt and found the doorway to the second with his torch beam. He was now under his own church, and even close to midnight, some light from the street outside was making its way down.

Harry walked forward. Impressed by his own daring, he switched off his torch. Gradually, vague shapes emerged from the darkness. The streetlights outside were shining through the windows of the church and a fraction of that light was seeping through into the cellar.

How exactly?

He walked over to where the light seemed strongest. Yes, definitely light, a square beam. He reached it and looked upwards. There was a grille of some sort directly above his head. He reached up and tugged. It held firm. He tried pushing and it shot upwards.

Sliding it to one side, Harry heard it scrape along the tiled floor. He reached up and grasped the edges of the hole he’d opened up. His fingers closed around the stone tiles he knew covered the uncarpeted part of the chancel floor. Time to find out how strong his arm muscles were.

Strong enough. One massive push and he was up, looking round. He was directly behind the organ, in the cramped, dust-filled void that often existed behind old instruments. Through gaps in the pipes he could see the pulpit, not four feet away from him.

Time to kill.

‘So this is where you were,’ muttered Harry. ‘Our little friend with the voices.’ Harry lowered himself back down, replaced the grille and made his way out of the crypt. The Fletcher children’s strange friend, Ebba, knew her way around this church, that was clear enough. It had probably been she who’d led him such a dance the day he’d arrived.

Harry locked the crypt, then checked that the main doors of the church were locked and bolted. He used the lavatory at the rear of the building and then entered the nave. Thanks to Jenny Pickup, he and the Fletchers had eaten a couple of hours earlier. He had a travel rug from his car, which he’d parked half a mile down the hill in a quiet cul de sac. He was all set.

When he reached the altar, he lifted the drapes that surrounded the old oak table. The altar had been spread with a creamy damask linen and the rich purple brocade of the Advent cloth. He pushed a couple of prayer kneelers underneath, then crawled in himself. Pulling the altar cloths back into place and the car rug around him, he lay down.

He was in the killing ground. If someone brought Joe here tonight, he’d be ready.

Blood Harvest
cover.xml
001 - Title.xhtml
002 - Contents.xhtml
003 - Copyright.xhtml
004 - Dedication.xhtml
005 - Frontmatter.xhtml
006 - About_the_Author.xhtml
007 - Otherbooks.xhtml
008 - Prologue.xhtml
009 - Part_1.xhtml
010 - Chapter_1.xhtml
011 - Chapter_2.xhtml
012 - Chapter_3.xhtml
013 - Chapter_4.xhtml
014 - Chapter_5.xhtml
015 - Chapter_6.xhtml
016 - Chapter_7.xhtml
017 - Chapter_8.xhtml
018 - Chapter_9.xhtml
019 - Chapter_10.xhtml
020 - Chapter_11.xhtml
021 - Chapter_12.xhtml
022 - Chapter_13.xhtml
023 - Chapter_14.xhtml
024 - Chapter_15.xhtml
025 - Chapter_16.xhtml
026 - Chapter_17.xhtml
027 - Part_2.xhtml
028 - Chapter_18.xhtml
029 - Chapter_19.xhtml
030 - Chapter_20.xhtml
031 - Chapter_21.xhtml
032 - Chapter_22.xhtml
033 - Chapter_23.xhtml
034 - Chapter_24.xhtml
035 - Chapter_25.xhtml
036 - Chapter_26.xhtml
037 - Chapter_27.xhtml
038 - Chapter_28.xhtml
039 - Chapter_29.xhtml
040 - Chapter_30.xhtml
041 - Chapter_31.xhtml
042 - Chapter_32.xhtml
043 - Chapter_33.xhtml
044 - Chapter_34.xhtml
045 - Chapter_35.xhtml
046 - Chapter_36.xhtml
047 - Chapter_37.xhtml
048 - Chapter_38.xhtml
049 - Chapter_39.xhtml
050 - Chapter_40.xhtml
051 - Chapter_41.xhtml
052 - Part_3.xhtml
053 - Chapter_42.xhtml
054 - Chapter_43.xhtml
055 - Chapter_44.xhtml
056 - Chapter_45.xhtml
057 - Chapter_46.xhtml
058 - Chapter_47.xhtml
059 - Chapter_48.xhtml
060 - Chapter_49.xhtml
061 - Chapter_50.xhtml
062 - Chapter_51.xhtml
063 - Chapter_52.xhtml
064 - Chapter_53.xhtml
065 - Chapter_54.xhtml
066 - Chapter_55.xhtml
067 - Chapter_56.xhtml
068 - Chapter_57.xhtml
069 - Chapter_58.xhtml
070 - Chapter_59.xhtml
071 - Chapter_60.xhtml
072 - Part_4.xhtml
073 - Chapter_61.xhtml
074 - Chapter_62.xhtml
075 - Chapter_63.xhtml
076 - Chapter_64.xhtml
077 - Chapter_65.xhtml
078 - Chapter_66.xhtml
079 - Chapter_67.xhtml
080 - Chapter_68.xhtml
081 - Chapter_69.xhtml
082 - Chapter_70.xhtml
083 - Chapter_71.xhtml
084 - Chapter_72.xhtml
085 - Chapter_73.xhtml
086 - Chapter_74.xhtml
087 - Chapter_75.xhtml
088 - Chapter_76.xhtml
089 - Chapter_77.xhtml
090 - Chapter_78.xhtml
091 - Chapter_79.xhtml
092 - Chapter_80.xhtml
093 - Chapter_81.xhtml
094 - Chapter_82.xhtml
095 - Chapter_83.xhtml
096 - Chapter_84.xhtml
097 - Epilogue.xhtml
098 - Authors Note.xhtml
099 - Acknowledgements.xhtml