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‘All right,’ said Burnett. ‘I know you want to do your best for your patient. You’re a surgeon and it’s just possible that something might be done to help her. But you have to agree to certain conditions.’

‘I’m listening,’ said Macandrew.

‘I will give you a letter and a token of proof. You must take them to Dr Simone Robin at the Seventh University of Paris. The token will ensure that she will at least listen to what you have to say.’

‘And the conditions?’

‘If Simone says no, you must leave it at that and agree not to pester her any more.’

Macandrew was bursting with questions but he managed to hold his tongue in the interests of the greater prize. Burnett was no longer working on tumours but it seemed that Simone Robin just might be.

‘When will you give me these things?’

‘Come up to the abbey with me now,’ said Burnett.

‘I don’t think that’s a very good idea,’ said Macandrew. He told Burnett about the Abbot having refused him permission to speak to him.

‘I’m sure Father Abbot was just thinking of my welfare,’ said Burnett, ‘But you’re right. Maybe it’s not such a good idea. Give me a note of your full name and your affiliations and I will write you the letter after supper. Be at the gate in the morning at eight and I’ll give it to you along with the token when I go down to the guest house.’

Macandrew wrote down the details for Burnett on a page in his diary and tore it out. He handed it to him and said, ‘You’re a Benedictine monk, aren’t you?’

‘I’m a postulant,’ corrected Burnett.

‘But Benedictine?’

‘Yes.’

‘Then perhaps you’ll know what happened at the Benedictine convent in Israel, the one being used as a hospital?’

‘What are you talking about?’

‘The Israeli police raided a Benedictine convent in Jerusalem and came across a number of people who were on their missing persons list. Although they’d been perfectly healthy at the time of their disappearance, they were now deranged and seemed to imagine that they were other people The sisters told the police they had been the subject of experiments carried out by some priest sent from Rome.’

Macandrew faltered when he saw the look on Burnett’s face. He had never seen a human being go so white before. ‘Are you all right?’ he asked.

‘He used it!’ Burnett whispered. ‘He used it!’

‘Used what?’ asked Macandrew but in the circumstances, he really didn’t expect an answer. He doubted if Burnett could hear anything he said, he seemed to be in a state of shock. ‘Perhaps you should sit down for a moment...’ He started towards Burnett but the monk held up his hand and shook his head. He picked up the milk churns and hurried off, leaving Macandrew standing there feeling bemused. ‘Until tomorrow morning then!’ he called after him but the hooded figure did not respond.

Macandrew drove slowly back into Elgin and booked into a hotel for the night. He felt confused and troubled and the cheerless room he was given did little to improve things. He ran a bath but the water was lukewarm so he couldn’t indulge himself in the long, relaxing soak he’d planned. He had to towel himself down vigorously to get warm. There was a radiator in his room but it seemed decorative rather than functional and gave out more noise than heat, relaying the irregular timpani of multiple air locks in an antiquated system. The phone rang and a female voice asked him if he would be eating in this evening.

Macandrew said not. He wasn’t sure where he would be eating but it would be somewhere else — somewhere warm, assuming that such an establishment existed in this city. He looked out the window into the gloomy streets and saw the shimmer of frost on the sidewalks. The temperature was falling with the arrival of darkness.

An average meal in a grubby but warm Indian restaurant was followed by a couple of beers in a smoke-filled pub with the television on. He didn’t feel like a third so he drank up and plumped for an early night.

The temperature in his room and his state of mind conspired to make sure he didn’t get the good night’s rest he was hoping for. When he was awake, he was shivering with cold. When he was asleep, he was pursued in dreams by monks from another age, each hideously deformed and carrying an Emma Forsyth doll. He was glad when the dawn light came and chased the night away; he felt exhausted.

Being Sunday morning and “against management policy” — as he learned when he asked — an early cooked breakfast was out of the question. He settled for coffee and toast before checking out at seven. He comforted himself with the thought that if everything went according to plan he would be back in Edinburgh by nightfall. He would have a hot bath, a good meal and start making plans for a trip to Paris. He drove out to the monastery and arrived in plenty of time for his meeting with Burnett: he sat in the car watching the gates.

Just after eight, a white hooded figure came round the bend in the drive and Macandrew got out of the car. He frowned. There was something about the man’s gait that was wrong. The angle of the feet and the manner in which the sandals slapped down on the ground suggested a fat man. Burnett was small and thin.

The figure was now close enough for him to see that it was definitely not John Burnett. This man was middle aged, stout and had a florid complexion which was becoming more so through the exertion of carrying the milk churns. The bridge of his nose was depressed and his bottom lip protruded beyond his top, exposing a row of notched teeth, which suggested to Macandrew’s medical eye, the legacy of congenital syphilis.

‘Good morning,’ said Macandrew, trying to mask his disappointment. ‘I thought it would be Brother John.’

The monk looked puzzled, as if not knowing what to make of Macandrew then he glanced at the guest house and asked, ‘You’re here on retreat?’

‘Yes,’ lied Macandrew.

‘Brother John has been called to Edinburgh.’

‘Really? I thought this was an enclosed community,’ said Macandrew. ‘I thought the brothers didn’t leave here. Some emergency perhaps?’

‘Father Abbot doesn’t confide in me,’ said the fat monk testily. ‘He just told me to take over Brother John’s duties... in addition to my own.’

‘Do you know if John’ll be back soon?’

‘No idea.’

The monk carried on towards the guesthouse and Macandrew was left looking back up the drive. ‘Shit,’ he murmured. ‘Pax to you too, Brother.’

He sat in the car for a few minutes wondering what to do next. He couldn’t turn up at the abbey gates every morning hoping that Burnett would re-appear at some point. He wondered if being “called to Edinburgh” had anything to do with the Israeli story that seemed to disturb him so much. He concluded there was no alternative. He would have to tackle the Abbot about it.

A flurry of snow bestowed a medieval air on the scene as Macandrew walked up the abbey. As if to complete the picture, a single file of six monks crossed from their living quarters to the abbey, each with hood up and head bowed, hands tucked inside the sleeves of the robes. They had already entered by the time Macandrew reached the door. Another monk however, wearing a leather apron over his robe was hurrying across the courtyard and saw Macandrew standing there. He didn’t say anything but looked quizzically at him.

‘I must speak with the Abbot,’ said Macandrew.

The monk inclined his head to one side and gave a slight nod before disappearing back inside the living quarters. Macandrew looked up at the sky. The grey November light seemed strangely white despite the thick cloud cover. There was more snow to come.

The monk re-appeared at the door and beckoned Macandrew.