Part 23 (2/2)

He cursed quietly. He'd be useless as a witness. With an hour or so, he'd be wondering whether the shunt had really been deliberate, or if it could just have been an unfortunate accident.

Still shaking slightly from the shock, he got back in his car, reversed it on to the road and carried on. What else was there to do?

The field barn hadn't been used for a while. Not for its proper purpose, anyway. At some time it had become surplus to requirements on whichever farm it belonged to. Too inconvenient for storing hay, too expensive to maintain, impossible to get planning permission for a conversion. So it had stood, damp and deteriorating, half of its roof fallen in, the ground around it scattered with sheep droppings.

Cooper steered the Toyota off the road and into the gateway. He killed the engine, but left the headlights on for a moment as he examined the building. It was big for a field barn, divided into two sections by a brick wall that was completely out of keeping with the pale limestone the building had originally been constructed from. The side nearest the road had been occupied by sheep in recent months. The other half had been used for housing farm equipment, and the doors were high and wide enough to get a tractor in. The roof was more intact too, with only the occasional missing tile that would show light through in the daytime.

Recent tyre tracks ran in from the road. The doors at the far end of the barn stood open, and he looked for the glint of a headlight or reflector that would indicate a vehicle parked partially out of sight. It was difficult to tell in the dark, with his headlights only just reaching, but he thought the barn was empty.

He got out of the car, locked it carefully and took a few paces into the field.

'h.e.l.lo?' he called.

But there was no answer, except for a chattering of rooks in a copse of trees across the road. No traffic pa.s.sed; there were no houses in sight. The field itself was empty too, the gra.s.s looking as if it might have been reseeded and left to establish itself. He turned and looked at the gate. An old chain hung from it, but it was broken off where it had been attached to an iron bolt in the stone wall.

'h.e.l.lo?' he called again. 'Anyone there? It's Ben Cooper, Matt's brother.'

Still silence. He didn't know how many people were here to meet him. He couldn't even be sure of their intentions at second hand. In other circ.u.mstances he would never have come alone, without backup. He certainly would have made sure someone knew where he was going. But this was different. It was more personal.

And someone did know where he was, of course. Matt had arranged this meeting, or had at least pa.s.sed the message on. His brother was complicit in whatever happened. That ought to be rea.s.suring.

He moved forward a few more feet, smelled the odour of sheep from the open end of the barn. There were no sheep here now, but they'd left their mark in more ways than one. His boots squashed a carpet of black pellets underfoot as he moved.

'I arranged to meet someone here,' he called. 'Where are you? Come on out and let me see you.'

No answer. No sound of movement, no light of a torch to let him see where someone stood in the darkness. He took half a dozen more steps. The further he got from the road, the darker it seemed to become. That must be an illusion, because there were no street lights out here. The entire area was deep in that true darkness you only ever got in the countryside, when the sky was overcast with cloud as it was now. No stars, no moon, no glimmer of illumination from a nearby village or lights of traffic on a main road.

'd.a.m.n,' he muttered.

He was standing just short of the open doors now, so close that he would have been able to hear the tick of an engine as it cooled. He knew this must be a test. They wanted to see how he would react, what sort of person he was. It was a typical game to play. He ought to stop at this point, go back to his car, fetch the torch that lay on the back seat, switch the headlights on to light up the building again. But that would look as though he was scared. It would be a retreat. He knew that at least two pairs of eyes would be watching his every movement from somewhere in the blackness. He couldn't look weak, or they might just drive away and he would never get a chance to talk to them and hear what they had to say.

Cooper felt in his pocket for the rea.s.surance of his ASP, the extendable baton carried by CID officers. Folded, it was small enough to be un.o.btrusive, but it extended to eighteen inches of steel with a flick of the wrist.

He took a deep breath and squared his shoulders, thinking, Well, Matt, I hope you know what you're getting me into.

When the two men appeared from the barn, they had balaclavas over their faces and carried weapons in their hands. Cooper was too busy trying to make out their eyes to take in the details of what they were threatening him with. So he missed seeing the first blow coming, and it caught him off guard. The impact in his side sent spurts of agony up his arm and down into his left leg.

'Stop. Back off. I'm a police officer.'

'We know that.'

The second blow came too quickly for him to react. It struck from behind, an impact with a heavy object on his back, throwing him forward. He stumbled as he tried to keep his balance. Don't go down, you mustn't go down.

A third swing from his a.s.sailant glanced off his shoulder and struck his temple. Cooper fumbled for his ASP, twisted his body, struck out at the dim shape looming out of the night. He heard a curse of surprise as the ASP hit home.

But then someone else grabbed him from behind. Cooper jabbed an elbow backwards and felt it sink into cus.h.i.+ony flesh. A whoosh of breath past his ear was followed by a relaxation of the grip on his neck. He twisted his hips and grabbed at an arm, forcing it back against the wall. He was vaguely aware of the size and weight of the body he was heaving against a a billowing torso and clumsy limbs, as if he was wrestling a king-size mattress.

He struggled to get a grip on something, but his fingers slid off the surface of a waxed coat. He could smell the wax itself, and deeper smells ingrained into the fabric. He saw the business end of a baseball bat swinging back for another strike.

Then lights came over the hill and swept across the field, briefly illuminating a corner of the barn.

's.h.i.+t,' muttered one of the men. 'Let's get out of here.'

The arms released him, and he dropped to the floor. He heard the confused sounds of running feet, an engine starting up, doors banging, someone shouting.

Groggily, Cooper picked himself up and felt the side of his head. There was no blood, but it was painful, and he could feel a lump developing where the the bat had hit him.

He lifted his eyes at the sound of a vehicle slowing, and peered into the headlights to see a familiar face behind the wheel. The car stopped, a door opened and the driver jumped out.

'Matt? What are you doing here?'

'Thank G.o.d. Ben, are you all right? What happened?'

'What do you think? Somebody jumped me.'

'Why would they do that?'

'Because I was asking too many questions in the wrong place?'

'What questions? Who could be so worried about questions?'

'Actually, I thought you might know, Matt.'

His brother flinched away. 'What?'

'In case you hadn't put two and two together, I was attacked right after you talked to your mates who used to be in the Young Farmers Club.'

'No.'

'Oh yes. It's hardly open to debate.'

'They wouldn't do such a thing,' said Matt.

'I think so. But I'm just wondering whose side you're on.'

'I never wanted for this to happen.'

But Ben could hear the doubt in his voice, and see it in his eyes. He still knew his brother well enough for that. He'd retained some of the ability to read Matt's thoughts in an expression or a small gesture.

'If your friends had nothing to do with the Pearsons, what are they so sensitive about? Why do they object to people asking questions?'

Matt looked distressed.

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