‘I don’t suppose they’d be in the phone book?’ Bel suggested.
‘We could try Yellow Pages under cults.’
Instead, we went back into Oban itself. It was too late in the day to start our real business, so we became tourists again. The wind had eased, and there was no more than a marrow-chilling breeze as we traipsed the harbour area and the shops which had closed for the day. Bel huddled into my side, her arm through mine. She had the collar of her jacket up, and the jacket zipped as high as it would go. There were other holidaymakers around us, but they looked used to the climate.
‘Let’s go in here,’ Bel said, picking a pub at random. I could see straight away that it was a watering-hole for locals, and that strangers, while tolerated in the season at least, couldn’t expect a warming welcome. The customers spoke in an undertone, as though trying to keep the place a secret. Bel ignored the atmosphere, or lack of one, and asked for a couple of malts.
‘Which malt?’ the red-cheeked barman asked back.
‘Talisker,’ she said quickly, having just seen a bottle displayed in a shop window.
The barman narrowed one eye. ‘What proof?’
That got her. She thought he must mean proof of age.
‘Seventy, I think,’ I said.
‘And double measures,’ said Bel, trying to recover. As the barman stood at his row of optics, she saw there were three grades of Talisker: seventy, eighty and one-hundred proof. She nodded at me and smiled, giving a shrug. We paid for our drinks and went to a corner table. The bar grew silent, waiting to eavesdrop. They were out of luck. The door swung in and a laughing group of teenagers stormed the place. They couldn’t be much over the legal drinking age, and a few of them might even be under it. But they had confidence on their side. Suddenly the bar was lively. Someone put money in the jukebox, someone else started racking up for a game of pool, and the barman was kept busy pouring pints of lager.
They kept looking over at us, probably because Bel was the only woman in the bar. One of the pool players, awaiting his turn, came over and drew out a chair. He didn’t look at us, but returned to the seat after he’d played. This time he gave us the benefit of his winning grin.
‘I don’t know why I bother,’ he said. ‘He beats the pants off me every time.’
I watched the other pool player potting his third ball in a row. ‘He does seem pretty handy.’
‘He’s lethal. Look at him covering that pocket.’ He got up to play, but was quickly back in his seat. ‘On holiday?’
‘Sort of.’
‘It’s all right, I don’t mind tourists. I’m a carpenter. I work for this other guy who sculpts lamps and stuff from bits of old wood. The only people who buy them are tourists.’
‘Maybe we’ll look in,’ I said. ‘Where’s his shop?’
‘He doesn’t have a shop. He’s got a workshop, but he sells the stuff through shops in the town. Souvenir shops, fancy goods.’
‘We’ll look out for them,’ Bel said. ‘Meantime, could you do me a favour?’
He licked his lips and looked keen. Bel leaned across the table towards him. They looked very cosy, and his friends were beginning to exchange comments and laughter.
‘We were told there’s a sort of religious commune near here.’
He looked from Bel to me. I tried to look meek, harmless, touristy, but he seemed to see something more. He got to his feet slowly and walked to the pool table. He didn’t come back.
We drove into town next morning and bought a map of our own. It was newer than the hotel’s map, but still didn’t help. We sat poring over it in a coffee shop. The other customers were all tourists, their spirits dampened by another cool, wet day. The rain was as fine as a spraymist, blowing almost horizontally across the town. Bel bought a bottle of Talisker to take back to Max.
An old van puttered past the café window where we were sitting. It was an antiquated Volkswagen bus, most of its body green but the passenger door blue. It squeezed into a parking place across the street and the driver cut the engine. He got out, as did his passenger. The driver pulled open the sliding side-door, and three more passengers emerged. They all seemed to be holding scraps of paper, shopping lists maybe. They pointed in different directions and headed off.
‘Stay here,’ I said to Bel.
By the time I left the coffee shop, they had disappeared. I crossed to the Volkswagen and walked around it. It was twenty-four years old, two years older than Bel. There was a lot of rust around the wheel arches and doors, and the bodywork was generally battered, but the engine had sounded reliable enough. I looked inside. The thing was taxed for another three months. It would be interesting to see if it passed its MOT this time round. There were some carrier bags and empty cardboard boxes in the back of the bus. The rows of seats had been removed to make more space. There was a dirty rug on the floor and a spare can of petrol.
The passengers had looked like New Agers: pony tails and roll-up cigarettes and torn jeans. They had that loose gait which hid a post-hippy sensibility. The few New Agers I’d come across were a lot tougher than their 1960s ancestors. They were cynical, and rather than escape the system they knew how to use it to their advantage. Aesthetics apart, I had a lot of time for the ones I’d met.
‘Something wrong?’
I turned. The driver was standing there, lighting a cigarette from a new packet.
‘The way you were looking,’ he went on, ‘I thought maybe we had a bald tyre or something.’
I smiled. ‘No, nothing like that.’
‘Maybe you’re thinking of buying?’
‘That’s pretty close to the mark. I used to own one of these, haven’t seen one in a while.’
‘Where was this?’
‘Out in the States.’ I hadn’t actually owned one, but the New Agers I’d met there had.
The driver nodded. ‘There are a lot of them still out there, on the west coast especially.’
‘Right,’ I said. ‘They don’t use salt on the roads.’
‘That’s it. They last longer than this rust-bucket.’ He gave the van a playful slap.
‘The one I had blew up. I’d twin-carbed it.’
He shook his head. ‘That was a mistake. You don’t live around here, do you?’
‘No, why?’
‘You’re talking. Not everybody does.’
‘You’re not a local yourself then?’
‘I haven’t lived here long.’
He inhaled on his cigarette and examined its tip. He was in his twenties, nearer Bel’s age than mine. He had short wavy black hair and a weeks growth of beard, and wore liver-coloured Doc Marten boots with stained jeans and a thick woodsman’s shirt.
‘I’m just visiting,’ I said.
‘Enjoy the trip.’ He nicked his cigarette and put it back in the pack, then got into the van and put some music on. As far as he was concerned, I had already left.
I walked back across to the café and got Bel.
‘I nearly yelped when I saw him coming out of the shop,’ she said. ‘I knew you couldn’t see him. What did he say?’
‘Not much. Come on.’
We got into the Escort and drove back the way the Volkswagen had come in. Once we were out of sight, I pulled over again.
‘You think it’s them?’
‘I get that impression. We’ll find out.’
So we waited in the car, until the bus announced itself with its high-turning engine. It could put on good speed, which was a relief. I hadn’t had much experience in tailing vehicles, but I knew that out here, with so little traffic on the roads outside the town, I’d have trouble keeping my distance from a crawling VW. The thing didn’t have side mirrors, which helped, since the driver probably couldn’t see much from his rearview mirror other than the heads of his passengers. Habitations became sparser as we drove, and a sudden heavy shower slowed us down, though the driver didn’t seem to worry. At last, the tarmac road ended, we went through a five-barred gate and were driving on a gravel track. I stopped the car.