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Who was it?"
"Haven't the foggiest. That boy needs a good walloping."
"Daniel Babbidge!" Mrs. Babbidge was calling nearby. She too had seen. Cautiously she advanced on to the glass, wary of losing her balance.
Jason and company were soon at her side. "It's all right, Mum," he assured her. "I'll fetch the little. perisher."
Courteously Bob Marchant offered his arm and escorted Mrs. Babbidge back on the rough ground again. Jason and Partridge stepped flat-foot out across the vitrified surface accompanied by at least a dozen curious spectators.
"Did anyone spot who helped him up?" Jason demanded of them. No one admitted it.
When the group was a good twenty yards from the bird, everyone but Jason halted. Pressing on alone, Jason pitched his voice so that only the boy would hear.
"Slide off," he ordered grimly. "I'll catch you. Right monkey you've made of your mother and me."
"No," whispered Daniel. He clung tight, hands splayed like suckers, knees pressed to the flanks of the bird as though he was a jockey. "I'm going to see where it goes."
"Goes? Hell, I'm not going to waste time arguing. Get down!" Jason gripped an ankle and tugged, but this action only served to pull him up against the bird. Beside Dan's foot a heart with the entwined initials 'ZB' and 'EF' was carved. Turning away, Jason shouted, "Give me a hand, you lot! Come on someone, bunk me up!"
Nobody volunteered, not even Partridge.
"It won't bite you! There's no harm in touching it. Any kid knows that."
Angrily he flat-footed back towards them. "Damn it all, Sam."
So now Partridge did shuffle forward, and a couple of other men too.
But then they halted, gaping. Their expression puzzled Jason momentarily — till Sam Partridge gestured; till Jason swung round.
The air behind was empty.
The slow bird had departed suddenly. Taking its rider with it.
Half an hour later only the visitors from Atherton and their hosts remained on Tuckerton green. The Buckby, Edgewood and Hopperton contingents had set off for home. Uncle John was still consoling a snivelling Mrs. Babbidge. Most faces in the surrounding crowd looked sympathetic, though there was a certain air of resentment, too, among some Tuckerton folk that a boy's prank had cast this black shadow over their Mayday festival.
Jason glared wildly around the onlookers. "Did nobody see who helped my brother up?" he cried. "Couldn't very well have got up himself, could he? Where's Max Tarnover? Where is he?"
"You aren't accusing Master Tarnover, by any chance?" growled a beefy farmer with a large wart on his cheek. "Sour grapes, Master Babbidge!
Sour grapes is what that sounds like, and we don't like the taste of those here."
"Where is he, dammit?"
Uncle John laid a hand on his nephew's arm. "Jason, lad. Hush. This isn't helping your Mum."
But then the crowd parted, and Tarnover sauntered through, still holding the silver punch-bowl he had won.
"Well, Master Babbidge?" he enquired. "I hear you want a word with me."
"Did you see who helped my brother onto that bird? Well, did you?"
"I didn't see," replied Tarnover coolly.
It had been the wrong question, as Jason at once realized. For if Tarnover had done the deed himself, how could he possibly have watched himself do it?
"Then did you —"
"Hey up," objected the same farmer. "You've asked him, and you've had his answer."
"And I imagine your brother has had his answer too," said Tarnover. "I hope he's well satisfied with it. Naturally I offer my heartfelt sympathies to Mrs. Babbidge. If indeed the boy has come to any harm. Can't be sure of that, though, can we?"
"Course we can't!"
Jason tensed, and Uncle John tightened his grip on him. “No, lad.
There's no use."
It was a sad and quiet long walk homeward that evening for the three remaining Babbidges, though a fair few Atherton folk behind sang blithely and tipsily, nonetheless. Occasionally Jason looked around for Sam Partridge, but Sam Partridge seemed to be successfully avoiding them.
The next day, May the second, Mrs. Babbidge rallied and declared it to be a "sorting out" day; which meant a day for handling all Daniel's clothes and storybooks and old toys lovingly before setting them to one side out of sight. Jason himself she packed off to his job at the sawmill, with a flea in his ear for hanging around her like a whipped hound.
And as Jason worked at trimming planks that day the same shamed, angry frustrated thoughts skated round and round a single circuit in his head:
"In my book he's a murderer. You don't give a baby a knife to play with. He was cool as a cucumber afterwards. Not shocked, no. Smug.»
Yet what could be done about it? The bird might have hung around for hours more. Except that it hadn't.
Set out on a quest to find Daniel? But how? And where? Birds dodged around. Here, there and everywhere. No rhyme or reason to it. So what a useless quest that would be!
A quest to prove that Dan was alive. And if he were alive, then Tarnover hadn't killed him.
"In my book he's a murderer. " Jason's thoughts churned on impotently. It was like skating with both feet tied together.
Three days later a slow bird was sighted out Edgeway way. Jim Mitchum, the Edgewood thatcher, actually sought Jason out at the sawmill to bring him the news. He'd been coming over to do a job, anyway.
No doubt his visit was an act of kindness, but it filled Jason with guilt quite as much as it boosted his morale. For now he was compelled to go and see for himself, when obviously there was nothing whatever to discover. Downing tools, he hurried home to collect his skates and sail, and sped over the glass to Edgewood.
The bird was still there; but it was a different bird. There was no carved heart with the love-tangled initials 'ZB' and 'EF.
And four days after that, mention came from Buckby of a bird spotted a few miles west of the village on the main road to Harborough. This time Jason borrowed a horse and rode. But the mention had come late; the bird had flown on a day earlier. Still, he felt obliged to search the area of the sighting for a fallen body or some other sign.
And the week after that a bird vanished only a mile from Atherton itself; this one vanished even as Jason arrived on the scene.
Then one night Jason went down to the Wheatsheaf. It was several weeks, in fact, since he had last been in the alehouse; now he meant to get drunk, at the long bar under the horse brasses.
Sam Partridge, Ned Darrow and Frank Yardley were there boozing; and an hour or so later Ned Darrow was offering beery advice.