Выбрать главу

Shavi's host introduced himself as Breaker Gibson. He'd been with the convoy for six years. As a group, the travellers had followed the road for most of the nineties, their number ebbing and flowing as people tagged along at different sites or drifted away without explanation; an extended family that owed as much to a gaggle of mediaeval itinerants as it did to any concept of modern grouping. Their neverending journey was seasonal, taking in most of the festivals: Glastonbury and Reading, some of the counterculture get-togethers in Cornwall and Somerset, the summer solstice at Stonehenge, Beltane in Scotland. They had their own code of conduct, their own stories and traditions that were related and embellished around the campfire most nights, their own myths and belief systems: a society within a society.

Breaker didn't want to talk about his life before he joined the collective; Shavi got the sense it was an unhappy time that he was trying to leave far behind, and the constant motion of his new existence appeared to be working. But of his time with the group he was robustly happy to discuss, and had a plethora of stories to tell, most of which he wildly exaggerated like a storyteller of old, all of which seemed to involve some kind of run-in with the law. After an hour Shavi liked him immensely.

For his part, Shavi was completely open about what had happened to him over the long weeks since he had hooked up with Church and the others, but he said nothing about the reasons for his mission south, nor his destination; it was too important to trust to someone he had only just met.

Breaker peered into the night beyond the light of the campfire. "Aye, we've seen some rum things over the last few weeks. We stopped to pick up a guy hitch-hiking near Bromsgrove. Dressed all in green, he was. But each to his own-I'm not a fashion cop." He chuckled throatily. "We got to the point where we'd promised to drop him off. Looked around-he wasn't anywhere on the bus! And we hadn't stopped anywhere he could have jumped off. Next thing, someone discovered all the pound coins had turned to chocolate! The kids had a feast that night, I tell you!" His chuckle turned to a deep laugh. "Could have been worse, I suppose." A shadow suddenly crossed his face. "'Course, we've seen some rotten things at night." Now a tight smile; Shavi knew what he meant.

"Still," he said, raising his mug of cider, "it's wonderful to be alive."

As they drank and chatted, two women came over. One was in her late twenties, with a pleasant, open manner and sharp, intelligent eyes. She had a short sandy bob and wore a thick, hand-knitted cardigan over a long hippie skirt. Her name was Meg. With her was a Gothy woman about ten years older with a hardened face and distinctly predatory eyes, but a smile that was welcoming enough. She said her name was Carolina. They both seemed eager to talk to Breaker, who obviously had some standing within their community.

"Mikey doesn't want to do the late watch," Meg said, drawing out a list of names and quickly running her eyes down it.

"The little git says we keep picking on him to do it," Carolina interjected sharply.

"But I've checked the rota and it's been divided up fairly," Meg added.

Breaker sipped on his cider, suddenly serious. "I'll have a quiet word with him. We can't afford to have too much dissent in the ranks." He turned to Shavi. "We had to instigate the watches a few weeks back after some bad shit happened."

Shavi could feel the eyes of the women sizing him up. "What was it?" he asked.

"Woke up one morning, hell of a commotion. Penny over there-" he motioned to a thin, pale woman whose eyes bulged as if she had a thyroid problem "-she was in a right state, understandably. Her baby, Jack, he'd gone missing. Taken in the night. And in the cot where he'd been lying was a little figure made out of twigs tied up with strands of corn." Breaker's cheerful face sagged for a second. "Naturally we told the cops, went through all their rigmarole, getting the usual treatment that it was partly our fault for the way we lived. It was just going through the motions. Everyone knew what had really happened. Since then we've had the watches going through the night. No more trouble, so I suppose you can say it's worked. But some of our… lesscommitted… friends don't like having their sleep disturbed." This was obviously a source of great irritation for him, but he maintained his composure.

"So what's your deal?" Carolina said to Shavi bluntly. "Why are you walking the land?"

"A friend of mine is very ill. I need to find some way of helping her."

"Medicine?" Meg asked.

"Something like that."

"So where are you going? Maybe we could give you a lift." Carolina glanced at Breaker, who nodded in agreement.

Shavi weighed up whether to tell them. "South," he said. "To Windsor."

Breaker tugged at his beard thoughtfully. "We could do south."

"Yeah, haven't been that way for a while." Carolina winked at Shavi. "We tend to steer clear of some of the posher areas. The residents used to run us out with pitchforks in case we robbed them blind."

The two women were called over by a teenager who looked as if he hadn't bathed for days; thick mud coated his face and arms like some Pictish warrior. Once they were out of earshot, Breaker said, "They just about run this place, those two. We couldn't do without them, though I wouldn't say it to their faces. Give 'em bigger heads than they've got." He looked Shavi in the eye. "So, are you with us?"

"I would be honoured."

"Good. One more for the watch rota!"

The camp was already alive when Shavi awoke from the best night's sleep he'd had in days. In the light it was easier to get a better handle on the people roaming around, and to see the vehicles, which looked like they would have trouble travelling a mile, let alone thousands. He ate a breakfast of poached eggs on toast with Meg, who had an insatiable desire for information about what was happening in the country; she was bright and sparky and he warmed to her. Afterwards he had his first mug of tea since The Green Man; it made his morning complete.

Once everyone had started preparing for departure, Breaker hailed him to invite him to sit up front in his sixties vintage bus, which had been painted white and vermilion like an ice cream van. The back was jammed with an enormous sound system and what appeared to be the cooking and camping equipment for the entire community.

"Hell-bent or heaven-sent," Breaker said with a grin as he clicked the ignition. He pulled in behind the black fifties bus and the convoy set out across the country.

The open road rolled out clearly ahead of them, with no traffic to spoil the view of overhanging trees and overgrown hedges.

"You have experienced the technology failures," Shavi said with a teasing smile, his gaze fixed ahead.

Breaker eyed him askance, then laughed at the game that was being played. "Oh yes, we've had our fair share of problems with that." He winked. "Some of us were even kinda happy to see it. Bunch of Luddites, I ask you! Travelling around on the Devil's Machines!"

"And what happens if the technology fails completely?"

"Well, that's why God invented horses, matey! If it's good enough for the old ancestors, it's good enough for me and mine. I can see it now: a big, old, yellow caravan… " He burst out laughing. "Bloody hell! Mr. Toad! Poot, poot!" He was laughing so much tears streamed down his cheeks and he rested his head on the steering wheel to calm himself. Shavi had a sudden pang of anxiety and considered grabbing the wheel, but Breaker pulled his head up a second later and righted the bus as it drifted towards the hedge.

Shavi noticed an ornate Celtic cross hanging from the rearview mirror. "For safety on the road?"