Prologue
The quad bike bounced across the moors, headlight catching coarse
blades of grass before rearing up into the infinity of the night
sky. Like a rider struggling with an unbroken horse, the woman
fought to control the vehicle. But rather than slow down, she
kept the revs high, knees flexed in readiness for the next jarring
bump.
Way off to her right the undulating red light that topped the
radio mast disappeared behind a rise in the land. Finally she
dropped her speed and the engine’s angry growl subsided
to reveal the same sound that had sparked her reckless dash in
the first place; the terror stricken bleating of a sheep.
‘Not another,’ she murmured, eyes turning to the
shallow ravine that dropped away to her right. She yanked the
handlebars round but the headlight’s angle was too high.
A turn of the key and the engine shuddered into silence. Suffocating
darkness engulfed her. She groped for the heavy-duty spotlight
behind the saddle and, as she set off down the slope, began playing
the yellow beam before her.
Maybe thirty metres away was a cluster of large boulders. A haze-winged
moth homed in on the torch like a heat seeking missile. It landed
on her cuff and she felt the frantic blur of wings against the
back of her hand. Ignoring the insect, she trudged onwards, eyes
fixed on a blood stained clump of white fleece. The moth launched
itself on a sharp curve, flashed across the trembling shaft and
plummeted into the turf. She reached the head high rocks, stepped
round the outermost one and shone the light into the semi-circular
grouping.
The sheep was lying on its stomach, head hanging over front legs
that were tucked under its chest. Its rear legs were tangled up
in entrails that glistened like freshly caught eels. An acrid
smell stung her nostrils. She stepped closer then crouched down.
Oh no. The animal was still alive. She swung the torch towards
the base of the nearest boulder. Something to put it out of its
misery. A rock. Anything. The light picked out a trail of blood
dripping down the steep grit surface. The implications were just
sinking in when the low snarl sounded from above. As the torch
began to swivel upwards a heavy black form landed on top of her.
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