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The Hollow Places - A Paranormal Suspense Thriller
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The Hollow Places
Copyright 2014 Dean Clayton Edwards
Published by Armoured Car Books
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Table of Contents
PART ONE
PART TWO
PART THREE
About the Author
PART ONE
Chapter One
For the driver, only three things existed: the road, the wheel and the woman in the back seat.
A glance in the mirror showed him nothing but the rear windscreen, so he took a look over his shoulder and saw that the woman hadn't moved, sitting with her head between her knees, a fall of dyed blonde hair, making burping sounds and sniffling.
“It’s okay,” Simon said and kept the car sliding through the darkness. He was enjoying a heightened state of awareness and sensed each turn before it appeared. His foot on the accelerator, he knew that they were unlikely to encounter anyone else on this road. It was just him and her.
When she sat up, her large, brown eyes were very dark and ringed with red. Her skin was waxy, streaked black with mascara.
“Oh-my-God, I am sorry,” she sniffed and wiped her mouth with the back of her hand.
“It’s okay,” Simon said again.
It wasn't his car.
Unknown to her, Simon watched her wipe her hand on the fabric of the back seat and then strain to see past her ghostly reflection in the glass. He offered her a bottle of water.
“I don’t think it is good for me,” she said, her Parisian accent coming through. “It will just make me more ...” She gestured throwing up and had to suppress another wave of nausea. “We are nearly there?”
“This way will avoid the traffic,” Simon said.
This way would avoid everyone.
Trees linked arms overhead, attempting to seal out the moonlight. Their leaves glowed preternaturally in the headlights before becoming ash-black and then scarlet as they rolled by. Ahead, a steep incline began winding down to the sea coast, but they would turn off before they reached the bottom.
“This might help,” he said, winding his window part-way down.
The sound of waves smothering rocks and then sliding back, crashing and retreating, accompanied the fluttering of owls or bats and the scampering of unseen things in the trees.
He might have found it disturbing, but he was on a high now and found himself observing the fine, curly hairs on the backs of his hands before remembering the road. The road appeared to be undulating beneath him, as if their destination was sliding towards them and the car was still.
“So, you really think it is broked?” she asked, holding up her hand, which was very small and pale, except for her little finger, which was swollen and almost black.
“We need a medical opinion," Simon told her. "I’m a taxi driver.”
He glanced in the mirror to see if she knew she was in trouble yet.
She was peering though the passenger windows, first one side and then the other. Both views offered her something that evidently upset her.
"This isn't London," she said. "Where is the hospital?
Part of him wanted her to know what was coming, because he didn't want to lie to her anymore, but he knew that lying was for the best. If their roles had been reversed, he wouldn't want to know what was coming either.
"Not far now," he said, though his heart wasn't in it.
She was starting to panic.
"Doesn't your finger hurt?" Simon asked.
"Yes," she said. "It hurts. But I can't do anything about it, so why complain?"
"Good for you," he said.
“How long you have been a taxi driver?” she asked.
“Six years,” he said.
"Why six years?" she demanded to know. "Why didn't you say five or seven? It's a lie, right?"
"I always say six years," Simon admitted. "I've been saying six years for two years."
“My mother owns a boutique and my father is a designer. They have money. A lot of money."
Some people attempted to develop a rapport with him to dissuade him from murdering or raping them. This young woman had gone straight to bargaining. She was sobering up fast and in other circumstances he might have liked her, though it was a long time since he had thought of anyone but him and his sister. Their survival came first.
The turn was coming up.
The usual sensation occurred as he slowed the car. He could feel the turn 'glowing', calling to him. It was like being pulled in by tractor beam.
He flicked off the lights.
“What are you doing?” She sat forward and he got a waft of vomit and perfume.
“Sit back,” he ordered her. “A rabbit in the road, that's all. Headlights dazzle them.”
She flopped back in her seat and Simon completed the narrow turning into the woods.
His eyes flicked back and forth from the forest to the rear view mirror.
She was trying the doors. Of course they were locked centrally. From the look in her eyes, she appeared to be thinking about screaming, but probably didn’t want to admit that she was in that much danger yet. She saw no point in accelerating events when she may still be able to talk her way out of this, whatever this was.
She sucked in a lungful of air, stifling another wave of nausea. Still and tense, she stared at her reflection in the black glass, until she was over the worst of it.
“So … Vincent,” she began. “Why don't I call my parents, before my friends do, and organise some money? Then you let me to go. It is easy to do.”
“I’ll do a deal with you,” Simon said. “You can ask me five questions and I promise to tell you the truth, answering yes or answering no. But then you have to stop talking.”
His night vision had become very good over the last few years, so he was able to discern a route ahead by squinting through the windscreen. After a few moments, however, he found that he knew when to jog left and jog right, and gradually let go of control, guided. The vehicle bounced down a new incline, crunching dirt and dead leaves. They could have been driving in a bubble at the bottom of the ocean, or bumping along over the dark side of the moon.
“Where are you taking me?”
“Have you never played Twenty Questions? You can still have five.”
“Stop fucking around,” she said. “What are you doing?”
“I'm not fucking around,” he said. “Four.”
“Can I please go home? Please.”
“No.”
“Please?”
Simon stopped the car, shut off the engine and faced her. “You can ask two more questions,” he told her.
Her voice thinned. “Please don't hurt me. Vincent? Are you going to ...?”
“No,” Simon said.
She couldn’t announce her fears out loud. She still didn't want to make it real.
Simon opened her door from the outside and held open a plastic, supermarket bag.
“Empty your pockets into this,” he said.
“I don't have money,” she said. “I said to you. My parents have the money.”
She squirmed around on the back seat, reaching into the pockets of her skin-tight jeans. It took some time, because she only had use of her right hand. She managed to retrieve a plastic lighter, some tissues and a phone number written in blue ink on a strip of paper. She dropped each one into the bag.
“My purse is in my handbag,” she said.
“Drop it in,” he told her and she unzipped it, searching for the purse. “No,” Simon said. “Your handbag. The whole thing.”
She dropped it into the carrier
and looked up into his face, holding his gaze. He imagined how he must look to her. It was difficult, because since he had got out of the car he felt very little. He watched her face for some clue as to how he might appear to her.
After thirty seconds or so, her eyes began to tremble. Whatever she'd been searching for in his eyes, she hadn't found it.
"Time to go," he said.
She managed to punch him in the face as he leaned in, but her fist glanced off his cheek and soon he was hauling her out into the night. As she struggled, she reignited the pain in her dislocated finger and cried out, so Simon clamped one hand over her mouth and that’s where it stayed as he pulled her away from the car and forced her deeper into the forest. He held her body tight against him, knowing that her attempts to scream for help would give way to sobs. Soon, he could feel her tears and snot running over his fingers, the chill in the wind making his wet hand feel icy.
When her legs gave way, he responded by picking up his pace, dragging her towards the sound of waves until they came to a clearing, where he remembered to pop her finger back into place. He muffled her howl and subsequent whimpers. A couple of minutes later, she settled and he relaxed his hold on her.
She took in her surroundings, realising that all the while they had been approaching the edge of a cliff.
“Are you going to let me go now?” she asked quietly.
It had helped him to think of it as a game, but now she was all out of questions and he was out of time.
“Yes and no,” Simon said. “You’re going to be okay. After a few minutes, you won't know what's happening. You won't feel anything.”
Stifling her protests, he dragged her through the rest of the clearing, towards the edge. Her eyes rolled and she stamped her bare heels, grinding her toes into the dirt, but he was much too strong for her. She was punching and kicking, but he lifted her from the ground, dumped her onto one shoulder and stood facing the drop.
Silvery clouds shrouded the moon in the dark, blue sky, and the black sea rolled below, toiling and growling up at them.
He imagined himself carrying her back to the car, setting her in the back seat, and driving back to the road before dumping her somewhere, alive, but the idea alone was enough to promote a headache. It was as if a finger penetrated the back of his skull and a sharp fingernail began peeling back a layer of brain.
“Okay!” he thought in response and winced. “I’m doing it!”
He pitched her over the edge, almost losing his footing in the process, making his stomach lurch.
She didn’t scream. The last sound she made was a gasp. Perhaps she was surprised that he'd really dropped her, or perhaps she was sucking in the air for a scream that didn't have time to materialise.
Simon peered over the edge in time to see her body disappear into an enormous wave. It arced over the rocks and plucked her out of the air. Sea water crashed against the cliff, showering Simon’s face, shoulders and chest. The woman's body was gone. Taken.
Only once had he been this close to the Creature.
Chapter Two
Three things contributed to Simon's survival and the survival of his sister. He delivered whoever the Creature asked him to, he thought ahead and he knew when and how to stop thinking entirely. He switched between modes as easily as he had switched gears in the car he had dumped.
Huge rainddrops spattered on his raincoat - thinking ahead - which was good, because the rain would also help to confuse any evidence he had left behind.
As he walked, he was dimly aware of the Creature, circling his mind. It was doing so more proprietorially than with any real interest, but he made sure to give it nothing to consider or question anyway.
He turned to meditation. As he strolled along the narrow paths, the muddy roads and later the glistening streets, he imagined that everything was being washed clean. Even him.
He counted the footsteps that disturbed the flooded gutters and caused the reflected sky to tremble; he counted street lamps that turned raindrops into sparks; and he counted the occasional car that held him in its headlights before passing by, as if satisfied that he wasn't the one they were looking for.
*
Home was a two-storey brick building, boxy with a bay window, much like its suburban neighbours. He hadn’t done any work on it since he inherited it, so it remained old-fashioned and in disrepair. He had intended to tidy things up, to repaint the walls and fix the leak in the bathroom, to lay wooden flooring and fix the hinges on the cupboards, or perhaps replace the kitchen entirely, with spotlights and an electric cooker instead of a microwave and a second-hand electric hob plugged into the mains.
He had begun the project well, ripping up the carpets in the bedrooms and stripping the peeling paper from the stairway and the bathroom walls. He'd removed the broken cupboard doors and had bullied furniture into what was now a store room downstairs in order to make room for repair work and painting. Having done this, however, he discovered that he lacked the proper motivation to finish a single one of the jobs.
Having discarded the things he didn't want, he discovered that it was enough that they were gone.
He was not short of funds, thanks to his inheritance from his father, via his mother, so he could have paid a builder to come in and do it all for him, but he refused. He never had any guests or workmen inside the house. It was a fortress and a sanctuary. Neither needed to be pretty.
Structurally, it was sound and his father had upgraded the windows and doors on every part of the house. The new front and back doors were fitted with toughened security glass and a turn of the handle sent five metal bolts into the frame with a clack. It wouldn't keep an intruder out if they were determined, but it would slow them down and hopefully that would be all he needed.
From the outside, it looked like any other house on their Essex street, only somrwhat shabbier. It was set back from the road by a semi-circular drive, on which sat his shitty, metallic-blue Toyota Corolla, and was protected from view by evergreens, which also flanked the property.
Although their nearest neighbour was thirty seconds walk away, he sometimes felt as though he was alone, living in one of the nearby forests. While this was good for privacy, which he protected fiercely, it also reminded him of events that he would sooner block out.
If trees really did communicate, then the news of what he had done on the cliff had reached home before him. He glanced up at the foreboding branches before unlocking the front door and ducking inside.
He was met by the familiar disarray of the kitchen/diner, where every available surface was occupied, not at all like those show homes in the adverts. This was real-life. Yet there remained an otherness to the house, as though he was looking at it all through tissue paper. He felt like he’d been away for years, although it had only been one night, and almost felt himself drifting across the room like a ghost.
It was not the house that was in any way unreal, he knew, it was him. He was still connected to the Creature and would be until It released him, minutes or hours from now. It was reasonable to assume that his work was done for the night, but he could feel It circling his mind. It was observing, but It made no further demands.
He set about domestic chores, although his body wanted him to collapse and dream. Sleeping while the Creature was in residence was the most dangerous thing of all, because that's when thoughts rose up, unbidden, and who knew what the mind would throw up when it was moving towards unconsciousness, crazy things, repressed memories, the truth. Instead, he emptied the washing machine and hung an armful of wet clothes over the radiators. They looked like multicoloured skins. He counted them as he went … sixteen.
The sink was full of cups and plates, pots and pans, one in particular burnt black from an over-ambitious attempt to make flapjacks using convection setting on the microwave. He had left it to soak, but that had been some days ago and now it was a science project. He attempted to root out the plug to release the sludge of water, but there was no plug, only rotting food – p
eas, rice, spaghetti - and hair.
He unloaded the sink, so he could unblock it with the plunger.
One, two, three, four, five …
Then, he began washing up.
Six dinner plates.
Three breakfast bowls.
Eight forks.
Five desert spoons.
Five tea spoons. There should have been six, but one of them had gone missing. He wondered if it wouldn’t have been better to pare down to two of everything, rather than have to deal with all this shit he had inherited.
Eleven knives.
Throw it all away.
A corkscrew.
A manual juicer.
An electric tin opener. Broken.
He heard a toilet flush upstairs and then the sound of footsteps, on the stairs, in the hall.
“Hi,” the girl said.
Simon rinsed and stacked. Rinsed. Stacked.
She sat down at the breakfast bar and scooped up her college papers, underneath which lurked the mail from the last few days. For want of an empty space, she dumped them all on the floor next to her stool, then gave the same treatment to a large clothing catalogue and miscellaneous magazines and TV guides. She appeared to have been infected by Simon's cleaning drive, but then she uncovered what she had been looking for. She opened up the cardboard box and helped herself to a slice of cold pizza.
“Want some?” she asked.
Simon glanced at her and saw that she was wearing her blue dressing gown. The slice of pizza in her hand was yellow and green. She took a bite with her perfect, little teeth and a layer of hard cheese slid from the pizza base. She stuffed it into her mouth with her little finger. Although he had been desperately hungry, the sight turned his stomach. He bent over the sink and returned to scrubbing the non-stick surface from a frying pan.
“You know,” she said, above the sound of scouring, “I’ve only got revision today. I could skip college. We could do something.”
He could hear her flicking through the pages of a magazine.
“Sally,” he said. “I think you should go to college today. Exams are important.”
“They're not even real exams,” she replied, not picking up on the fact that he'd called her Sally. “They're mocks, remember? And I can study at home, as if I need to. I'd probably end up skipping out later anyway. They're like kids. I'd quite like an adult conversation, or as close as I can get to one with you.”