The opening page
Slant slab of
town, red sandstone, clinging, ever climbing. The American girl got off the bus
on the High Street. She wore a jacket too thin and carried a rucksack too
heavy. There was a smell in the air, acrid against the heavy damp of the
atmosphere, like a fire choking on its own smoke. The girl stopped an old woman
and asked directions to the library. There, she sat in the reference section
and pulled out the telephone directory, checked for the name Jack Duguid and
made a note of the address. A librarian in a kilt loaned her a town plan and
she copied it into her notebook and marked the route to Jack Duguid’s house.
She
stayed in the library until it closed at five o’clock, then gathered her
belongings and walked outside. Her breath fogged the air. Hunger scratched her
stomach. She swung her rucksack over her shoulder and walked downhill, past the
Meadows and the bridge over the railway cutting until she came to a little row
of houses at the end of Broich Road. Beneath the streetlight she checked her
map and looked at Jack Duguid’s house. There was a precarious gate and a narrow
path and a dark doorway. She stood outside and shivered. Inside, nothing moved.
She watched for half an hour until darkness fell like a rebuke, then turned and
retraced her steps. Behind her, in the split-the-winds between King Street and
Burrell Street, was a patch of green and, at the rear, nicely darkened, a wooden
shelter. Ash Harker installed herself in her new refuge and watched fog
swirling beneath the street lights and ice crystals forming on the pavement and
waited.
In
this manner night turned. Crieff, last Friday before Christmas, 1984. A north
wind blew itself towards the Ochils, trailing frost and snow. The town clung to
the Knock hill, straggling from Ferntower to Dallerie, the Laggan to
Braidhaugh. Here, five thousand souls slept. Street lights cast shadows over
doorways unemployed until morning. A police car passed the shelter three times
but didn’t see the troubled watcher within. A sheen of ice covered pavements
and empty roads. Night, time of dreams, unfolded itself. Ash began to shiver,
her fingers sore, feet numb. This was her second night on the streets but the
first in Scotland, following her arrival in Edinburgh that morning, stowed away
on a train from King’s Cross. It was much colder here, the cold much denser.
Silence hung black as a blanket. The hours cycled and Ash counted each on its
way. The dead sat with her.
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