Midnight Is A Lonely Place Part 25
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It was in the study. Switching on the light, she peered round looking for the box she had left on the desk. It did not seem to be there. With an exclamation of annoyance she began to search the room then suddenly she stopped. It was cold in there a extraordinarily cold a and she could smell earth; damp earth. She frowned, fighting a sudden urge to run out of the room. *Greg? What did I do with the first aid?' Her voice was unnaturally loud as she called over her shoulder. The door behind her was closed. Surely she hadn't closed it? She almost ran towards it, grabbing at the handle. It wouldn't open. *Greg!' Her voice rose to a scream. *Greg!' There was someone behind her. Someone very close to her. She could smell a strange perfume; sweet, cloying, and the cold was even more intense now, cutting into her fingers as she wrestled with the door latch. *Greg!' Her voice broke into a sob. Whirling round she raised her arms in front of her face to ward off whoever was there.
The room was empty. She stared round, stunned. She had been so certain; she had heard her, felt her, smelt her; a woman. She knew it had been a woman. Sobbing with fear she turned back to wrestle with the latch. The door swung open with ease.
*Ma? Are you all right?' She could hear Greg's voice calling her; not worried, not afraid, just curious. Hadn't he heard her screams then? Swallowing hard in an attempt to steady herself, she looked back into the room. The first aid box was on the shelf by the door where she would have seen it straightaway if she had looked. Grabbing it she slammed the door behind her and went back into the living room.
*Couldn't find it for a minute.' She gave Greg a bright unnatural smile. *Right. What I need is some boiling water and the TCP and I'm ready for you.' She hunted out a towel from the drawer while the kettle boiled, putting it gently under Greg's foot, fussing about laying out her equipment on the table.'
He put a hand on her arm. *Are you OK?'
She nodded. *I'm fine.'
*It's going to be all right.' He gave her a rea.s.suring smile. *There's an explanation for all this; nothing can bring Bill back, but I know it had nothing to do with Allie. Once the police get here they'll sort it all out, you'll see.'
She nodded again, concentrating on sorting out her dressings and bandages.
She boiled the razor blade for several minutes, then, was.h.i.+ng her hands first with soap and water, then in the TCP she waited for it to cool before picking it up. *Don't look.'
He grinned. *If I don't look I might find you've chopped my foot off.' He gritted his teeth as she laid the blade against the stretched swollen skin. She hardly seemed to apply any pressure at all but suddenly the wound was erupting in a froth of yellow-green pus. He swallowed hard, averting his eyes in spite of himself, wincing as he felt the pressure of her fingers pressing out the last of the poison. She swabbed the wound again and again, holding the cotton wool with a pair of tweezers, then at last it was over. He felt the cool, clean dressing on the fiery skin, and then the bandage.
*Thanks.' He spoke through gritted teeth, amazed to find he felt dizzy with pain.
She had noticed. *Rest a minute and I'll make us both a cup of tea.' She was gathering the swabs and throwing them into the bin, clearing up the mess, wiping down the table. Collecting the kettle, she was half way to the sink when the lights went out.
*s.h.i.+t!' Greg stared round. *It must be a fuse.'
*Don't you move.' Diana put a hand on his shoulder as he started to get up. *Wait there and I'll go and look in the cupboard.'
The room was dim without the lights; the windows allowed a grey, dismal daylight to filter in from the garden where, they realised suddenly, it had started snowing again a soft white flakes this time, drifting down out of the heavy sky.
The loud crash upstairs made them look at each other in alarm.
*Allie!' Greg said. *She's woken up.' He glanced at his father. Roger had not stirred, his head cus.h.i.+oned on his arm.
*I'll go.' Diana put down the kettle, horrified and ashamed to find that she was afraid a afraid of going to her own daughter.
*Be careful. Remember she's not herself,' Greg said softly.
She glared at him. *Who are you suggesting she is?'
*I don't know. No one. I'm just saying, take care. She's been through a lot and she's had awful nightmares and I don't think she knows what she's doing half the time at the moment.'
Another crash followed the first and they both looked up. *That came from Patrick's room,' Diana whispered.
*Take the rolling pin.' Greg murmured as she moved towards the upright studs which divided the living room from the kitchen. *Just in case.'
*To hit my own daughter?' She stopped.
*If necessary, yes. For both your sakes.' He levered himself to his feet. *d.a.m.n and blast this foot. I'm coming with you.'
*No, Greg a '
*Yes. Give me a walking stick from the hall. I'll be fine as long as I don't put too much weight on it.' He was staring up at the ceiling.
She brought it without further argument and then led the way to the staircase, pulling open the door which hid the dark stairwell. Looking up she listened, aware that Greg was right behind her, breathing painfully as he tried to balance with the stick.
Holding her breath she began to climb the stairs. At the top she peered cautiously down the pa.s.sage. It was empty. Alison's bedroom door was closed as she had left it. The key was in the pocket of her trousers. She closed her hand around it and with a glance over her shoulder towards Greg, she moved stealthily towards the door and listened. At the far end of the pa.s.sage the door to Patrick's room stood slightly ajar.
Biting her lip as she tried to move soundlessly, Diana led the way down the pa.s.sage towards it. Behind her Greg felt the sweat break out on his forehead as he forced himself to walk softly after her. Without lights the upper hall was almost dark; the black beams threw wedges of shadow across the soft pink of the ceiling. The curtains, though open, blocked whatever light filtered in from the heavy sky. The garden was totally silent. Even the sound of the wind had died. Diana tightened her grip on the rolling pin, slowing as she approached the door, reluctant to go in.
Behind her Greg frowned. He could feel the skin on the back of his neck crawling. He put his hand out and gripped his mother's arm. *Let me,' he whispered.
She did not argue. Flattening herself against the wall, she let him pa.s.s and watched as very slowly he pushed open Patrick's door with the end of the stick. Peering over his shoulder she could not at first see anything, then slowly her eyes began to make out the dark interior of the room. *h.e.l.l, look at his books.' Greg spoke out loud. He pushed the door back against the wall and took a step inside. The contents of every bookshelf had been tipped into the centre of the floor. There was no one there.
*Allie did this? Why? How did she get out?' Diana spoke in a whisper. The room smelled faintly of lavender.
Greg shrugged. He ran his stick under the bed, grunting with pain as his foot caught his weight, then he pulled open the cupboard door. There was nowhere in the room for anyone to hide. Pus.h.i.+ng past him Diana pulled back the curtains, letting in a little more light. It revealed nothing but the shambles of books in the middle of the carpet. *Some of them are torn,' she said sadly as she stood surveying the mess. *He'll be so upset.'
*Where is she?' Greg turned and hopped back onto the landing. One by one he threw open the other doors a his own room, his parents', the bathroom. All were empty. It left only Alison's. *She must be back in there.' He glanced at his mother. *Shall I look?'
She nodded bleakly. He put his hand on the door k.n.o.b and turned it. Nothing happened. *It's locked,' he said in a whisper. *Is there a bolt on the inside?'
She shook her head. *I've got the key.' She put it into his hand. He frowned. With only a slight hesitation he inserted it into the lock and turned it as quietly as he could.
Alison's room too was dark, the curtains closed, the light which had been on beside her bed now off like the others. Greg stood in the doorway peering into the darkness, trying to see. If only they still had a torch that worked. His ears, straining in the silence adjusted to the sound of breathing. It was slow and steady and came from the bed. He groped in his pocket suddenly as he remembered his matches. Pus.h.i.+ng his stick at his mother, who was immediately behind him, he struck one and held it high. The light was small and barely touched the room, but it was enough to see the hunched form of his sister in the bed. Wincing with pain he took a shuffled step forward and held it near her face. For a brief second, before it went out, he saw her closed eyes, the dark lashes on her cheek, her fist, clutching the blanket below her chin. Holding his breath he waited, half expecting her to leap from the bed with a scream, but nothing happened. The silence extended and filled the room again. All he could hear was her slow, heavy breathing, and behind him his mother's, quicker, lighter, exuding fear. Carefully he withdrew another match. The rasping sound as he struck it seemed to echo deafeningly as it flared and steadied, but Alison's lids did not flicker. He watched her for several seconds before raising the match high and glancing round the rest of the room. As far as he could see it was as it should be: her clothes lay in heaps on the floor, tapes and books in confusion on the chairs and table, but nothing seemed out of the ordinary. Nothing but the smell. As the frail light went out again he sniffed. The room was full of the heavy, spicy odour he had smelt before in the study. His mouth dry he began to back out. Diana moved with him. Without a sound he pulled the door closed and relocked it, then taking his mother's hand, he led her towards the staircase.
Safely downstairs he subsided into one of the deep armchairs beside his sleeping father. He realised suddenly that he was shaking again. A sheen of sweat iced his skin as the pain, which had seemed dulled upstairs, swept up his leg and took hold of him again. He lay back and closed his eyes, fighting to remain conscious.
*I'll check the fuses.' Diana's voice reached him through the roar in his ears. She groped in his pocket for the matchbox, paused for a moment to rest a gentle hand on Roger's head, then she had gone.
Greg had allowed himself to slide away into the spinning kaleidoscope of pain, settling deeper into something approaching sleep when he felt a gla.s.s being pushed into his hand. *Brandy.' The voice was crisp and commanding. *Come on, Greg. I'm sorry, but I need you awake.'
He opened his lips obediently and felt the fire on his tongue. For one more minute he resisted, then, choking, he felt himself propelled into full consciousness.
*There are no trips out and I've tried all the fuses. Nothing works.'
Opening his eyes he realised the room was full of candlelight. He was still disorientated. *Did you smell the perfume?'
*What perfume?' She sounded irritated. *Did you hear me, Greg? The electricity is off. All of it. And I can't find out what's wrong.' Her voice rose slightly and he realised that it was fear that he could hear. Desperately he took a grip on himself and swigged another mouthful of the brandy. Fire shot through his veins this time, and he felt his head clearing rapidly. *It's the wind and the snow,' he said as steadily as he could. *You know we are always being cut off when the weather's bad. We've got the fire, and the Aga and candles. There's nothing to worry about.'
*No.' She didn't sound convinced. *What happened upstairs, Greg, it wasn't Allie, was it.' She sat down on the arm of the chair beside him. He could feel her trembling as she leaned against his shoulder. He reached for her hand and pressed it gently. *No. It wasn't Allie.'
*Then who a?'
He shook his head. *The wind? An earth tremor? Perhaps the shelves were under too much stress. Perhaps it was the cats. Where are they? Those two are quite capable of knocking a million books when they play scatty cats round the house.'
*When they were young, perhaps.' She sniffed. *Not now. Not for ages. Normally they are here, by the fire.' Suddenly her eyes filled with tears. *I haven't seen them since Allie came back.'
Greg frowned. Now that he noticed, their absence was a tangible thing. He took it for granted that one or the other or both would always be there, in the chair where he was sitting now, or on the sofa with his father, or on the rocking chair beside the Aga. The room without them was unfurnished; empty. Threatening. *I expect they've gone out before the weather worsens,' he said, trying to comfort. *They won't have gone far, not when it's like this. They're soft little b.u.g.g.e.rs, for all they like to think they're so tough.'
*Oh Greg!' A sob escaped her in spite of all her efforts to sound calm. *What's happening? The car; the cats; Allie; Bill a I can't bear it.'
He put his arm around her. *Just a sequence of strange coincidences,' he said as firmly as he could. *And some b.a.s.t.a.r.d out there who will be behind bars before much longer if Paddy and Kate have anything to do with it.'
*They will get through?' It was a plea.
*Of course they will get through.' He wished he felt as positive as he sounded.
L.
Sleet hit the side of the dune, lodging in the crevices of sand, standing a moment, half snow, half ice, then melting into the cracks and crannies. A further lump of sand fell away, and behind it the black peat, spongy, sweet, no longer encased in its jacket of airtight clay and meeting daylight for the first time in nearly two thousand years, began to wash in a black streak down the face of the excavation.
Deep down the great golden torc, symbol of Nion's royal blood, settled further into the subsoil. Torn from its silver companion by its weight and accepted by whichever G.o.ds there were in that black underworld, it would never again see the light of the sun.
Far above, the sea was meek, restless, the waves brown from the sandbanks which the storm had chewed over and rearranged in the night. Overhead a skein of geese, flying low and fast, sent their ringing bugle cries out into the wind where they were lost.
Another high tide, another storm and the dune would be gone, the peat and the clay mingling in the churning depths of the North Sea, its secret hidden forever. Another slice of soft black soil peeled off and slid away and the air, corroding, acid, insidious, touched the arm which lay there cus.h.i.+oned on what had once been a raft of flowering rushes. Around the humerus, loose where once it had clung tightly, lay the twisted semi-circle of a priestly arm-ring.
*Come on, through here.' Patrick turned and gave Kate his hand. They were both panting now, exhausted from the scramble through the tangled, wet undergrowth.
*You are sure you know where this short cut goes?' Kate climbed after him, hearing her jacket rip once again on a trailing bramble as she levered herself up the slippery bank to stand beside him in a clearing.
*Of course. Greg and I used to come this way all the time. It doesn't go anywhere near the lane; it cuts off the whole corner and comes out just below the Farnboroughs' place.' Patrick looked round. It was quite dark in the clearing; the trees, glistening with sleet, hung low above their heads and they could hear the hiss of rain on the leaves of a holm oak. The air smelled of wet earth and beech mast and rotting leaves.
Kate s.h.i.+vered. She glanced at Patrick again. He had slung the gun across his back; in his hand was a stout staff which he had pulled from a thicket as they dived into the woods. Both gave her comfort. She glanced behind her again. Not for the first time she had the feeling that they were being watched. Her fist tightened on her own stick. Not as long as Paddy's, but just as st.u.r.dy, she held it in front of her as she looked from side to side into the shadows.
Patrick saw her glance. *There's no one around.' He did not sound very confident. *If there were we'd hear the birds go up. Pheasants. Pigeon. They make a h.e.l.l of a din if they are disturbed a you heard when we set them off. And there are magpies down here. They would all let us know if there was anyone around a or anything.'
She nodded. *I wish we had a dog with us all the same.'
Patrick nodded. He grinned. *A detachment of paras wouldn't go amiss either. Come on. It can't be much further. Once we're on the road we'll feel better.'
So, he was feeling it too. Kate looked behind her again. There was no sign of the way they had come. The tangle of brambles and dead brown gra.s.ses and nettles had closed without leaving any sign of where they had forced their way through. She felt a moment of panic. *Which way?'
*Upwards. The road is quite a lot higher than Redall. It's uphill all the way, I'm afraid. We're bound to hit the road somewhere between Welsly Cross and the Farnboroughs'. We can't get lost.'
*No?' she grinned wanly. *I hope those aren't famous last words.'
He was about to set off again when he stopped. He gave her a long look, his thin face drooping with exhaustion. *You look absolutely whacked.'
She smiled. *So do you.'
*It will all be over soon, won't it?'
*Of course it will.' Trying to rea.s.sure him did nothing for her own confidence. She glanced up at the sky. Where she could see it, between the interlaced branches of the thicket, it was growing increasingly black. *We ought to get on.'
*I know. It was an excuse to get my breath back.' He hitched the gun higher onto his shoulder then he turned and led the way with more bravado than confidence up the high slippery bank which led out of the thicket and, he hoped, towards the north.
Ten minutes later he stopped. *There ought to be some kind of path. But I suppose it could be overgrown.' He sounded doubtful.
*Have you got a compa.s.s?' It was the sort of thing all boys in the country festooned themselves with as far as she could remember.
He shook his head. *I know this path like the back of my hand.'
She refrained from comment.
He bit his lip. *It's getting so dark.'
*I know. There's more snow on the way. You can smell it.'
He smiled. *And to think Greg thought you were Lady Muck from the town. You know more about the country than he does in many ways.'
*I can believe it a' She broke off as she saw a movement out of the corner of her eye. She spun round, staring into the shadows of the trees. *What was that?' she whispered.
*Where?' He swung the gun off his shoulder.
*I thought I saw something move.'
They stared in silence for a moment, side by side.
*Probably a rabbit or a deer,' Patrick said softly.
He slipped the safety catch off the gun with a barely perceptible click.
She strained her eyes into the distance, trying to penetrate the murky depths of the scrub. There it was again, a shadow against the shadows, upright. Human. *There.' Her whisper was scarcely audible. Inside her warm jacket she could feel her skin growing cold. *There is someone there.'
*What shall we do?' Patrick's voice rose in panic and she was reminded suddenly that he was only a schoolboy and that he was probably far more scared than she was. If that were possible.
*I don't know. He must have seen us.'
*Do you think he's got a gun?'
She shook her head. *I doubt it. We'd know by now.'
*Shall I shoot at him; try and scare him off?'
*I don't know.' She had started to shake again. *Supposing it makes him angry?'
*If it does and he comes at us, at least we'll see who he is. And I can shoot him for real.' She saw Patrick's finger curling round the trigger.
She had only taken her eyes off the shadow for a second. Now as she looked back it had moved closer. It was tall; dark. To her horror she saw that it was moving quite swiftly, seeming to have no problem with the rough, tangled undergrowth. *Yes. Go on, shoot.' She could hear her voice shaking with fear.
Midnight Is A Lonely Place Part 25
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Midnight Is A Lonely Place Part 25 summary
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