me.â
âAnd you didnât think it might be better to get away. To call the police? To tell your mother?â Daniel tried to keep any disbelief out of his voice. âDoes she know where you are now? Have you called her since you escaped?â
Katya shook her head, her gaze dropping. âShe doesnât have a telephone.â
Hilary was horrified. âBut surely thereâs someone â a neighbour, perhaps? She must be out of her mind with worry.â
âIt is a place with not many telephones, I think. People are poor.â
âBut we must do something!â Hilary turned to Daniel. âSomeone must be told. The police, surely, could find Katyaâs mother . . .â
âNo! No police!â Katya also looked to Daniel beseechingly. âYou promised!â
âBut your mother, my dear!â Hilary was deeply concerned.
âShe will guess whoâs taken us. She was always afraid he would come.â
âBut they could help you find your sister.â
âDaniel is going to help me?â The statement lifted into a question at the end, and her eyes pleaded with him.
âI said Iâd try,â Daniel agreed cautiously.
âBut I donât understand . . .â Hilary looked at him, quite plainly bewildered, and he responded with a lowering of his brows and a slight shake of his head. Thankfully, she read his meaning and merely shrugged. âOh well. If you know what youâre doing.â
âI hope so. But we need to decide what to do next, donât we, Kat? You say youâve no idea where your sister is. Donât you remember anything at all about the place?â
Katya shook her head helplessly. âNo, not really. It is dark when we are taken there and we arenât allowed outside. When we escape, we run really fast into the trees at the back and then across the moor.â
âHow did you escape?â Hilary asked.
âWe climb out of a window on to the roof and then down a tree,â Kat replied, as if it were the most natural thing.
âOh, of course,â Hilary murmured.
âSo you wouldnât recognize the house at all?â Daniel persisted. âWhat about the garden? What could you see from the windows? Do you think you would recognize it if we drove by?â
Katya thought hard. âThere are gates. Big ones with stone posts and . . .â she made an indeterminate movement with her hands as she struggled to find the word she wanted â. . . circles?â
âSpheres?â Hilary suggested. âLike a ball?â
âYes.â Katya nodded eagerly. âA ball on top.â
âWell, thatâs something to look out for,â Daniel said. He told them about his attempt to retrace the girlsâ steps from Stack Bridge.
âDid you do that this afternoon?â Hilary asked. âI thought you were working.â
âNo, at the weekend. Actually, I spent this afternoon trying to convince the boys from the local nick that I wasnât attempting to ravish a young girl in the woods earlier. Your friend the major didnât waste any time.â
âOh dear. What did you tell them?â It was Hilary who asked, but Daniel was aware that Katya was watching him like a hawk.
âI said that the young girl and I were friends and everything was fine. They were very keen to speak to Kat â to check out my story â but as they hadnât a clue who she was, they were on a hiding to nothing.â
âSo they let you go?â
âEventually. After weâd dealt with the majorâs allegation of assault.â
âBut he hit you , didnât he?â Hilary frowned.
âMm. Thatâs what I told them. Itâs all right now, but it took a ridiculous amount of time to sort out. And speaking of time . . .â He looked at his watch. âIâve got an early start tomorrow, so Iâd better be on my way. I
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