Along the country lanes of England's sleepy hills eyes glint in the hedgerows, and tree limbs thrash in the dark.
A school bus trundles around muddy roads, past a graveyard surrounded by brambles and a weather-beaten oak tree in the middle of an empty field. Its charred branches lie by the gnarled trunk the aftermath of a thunderstorm.
In June a sickly heat rises over boughs of rotting elderflower and towering nettles, dark blackberries are protected by tangled masses of thorns.
The woods stretch out; dark, hushed, in every direction, until they are woken by listless car headlights. thin and ghostly, the trees quiver in the face of feigned daylight.