The search party marches out into the darkness. Instantly the wind assaults them, the screaming rush of it. The flames of the paraffin torches billow and hiss and threaten to extinguish. Their eyes water, their ears ring. They find themselves having to push against the wind as though it were a solid mass, their heads bent low.
The adrenaline is coursing through them, itโs them versus the elements. A feeling remembered from boyhood โ deep, unnameable, feral โ stirring memories of nights not altogether unlike this. Them against the dark.
They move forward, slowly. The longish tract of land between the Folly and the marquee, hemmed in by the peat bog on either side: this is where they will begin their search. They call out: โIs anyone out there?โ and โIs anyone hurt?โ and โCan you hear us?โ
There is no reply. The wind seems to swallow their voices.
โMaybe we should spread out!โ Femi shouts. โSpeed up the search.โ โAre you mad?โ Angus replies. โWhen thereโs a bog in either
direction? None of us knows where it starts. And especially not in the dark. Iโm not โ Iโm not frightened. But I donโt fancy finding, you know
โฆ shit on my own.โ
So they remain close together, within touching distance.
โShe must have screamed pretty loud,โ Duncan shouts. โThat waitress.
To be heard over this.โ
โShe must have been terrified,โ Angus shouts. โYou scared, Angus?โ
โNo. Fuck off, Duncan. But itโs โ itโs really hard to seeโโ
His words are lost to a particularly vicious gust. In a shower of sparks, two of the big paraffin torches are snuffed out like birthday candles.
Their bearers keep the metal supports anyway, holding them out in front like swords.
โActually,โ Angus shouts. โMaybe I am a bit. Is that so shameful?
Maybe Iโm not enjoying being out here in a bloody gale, or โฆ or looking forward to what we might findโโ
His words are cut off by a panicked cry. They turn, holding their torches aloft to see Pete grasping at the air, the lower half of one leg submerged.
โStupid fucker,โ Duncan shouts, โmust have wandered away from the drier part.โ Heโs relieved though, they all are. For a moment they thought Pete had found something.
They haul him out.
โJesus,โ Duncan shouts, as Pete, freed, sprawls on hands and knees at their feet, โyouโre the second person weโve had to rescue today. Femi and I found Charlieโs wife squealing like a stuck pig earlier in this bloody bog.โ
โThe bodies โฆโ Pete moans, โin the bog โฆโ
โOh pack it in, Pete,โ Duncan shouts angrily. โDonโt be an idiot.โ He swings his torch nearer to Peteโs face, turns to the others. โLook at his eyes โ heโs tripping out of his mind. I knew it. Why did we bring him? Heโs a bloody liability.โ
They are all relieved when Pete falls silent. No one mentions the bodies again. It is a piece of folklore, they know this. They can dismiss it โ albeit less easily than they might in the light of day, when everything felt more familiar. But they canโt dismiss the purpose of their own mission, the possibility of what they may find. There are real dangers out here, the landscape unfamiliar and treacherous in the dark. They are only now beginning to realise it fully. To understand just how unprepared they are.