Authors: Barry Hutchison
âS
he's not here.'
The intercom on the nursing-home door crackled briefly, then fell silent. I stared at it, hoping I'd heard wrong.
âWhat do you mean
she's not here
?' Ameena demanded, stepping closer to the intercom and pulling me with her.
âI mean she's not here. She's out.'
âWhat do you mean
she's out
?'
I heard the woman on the other side of the intercom sigh. âHave a guess.'
âDon't get smart with me,' Ameena snarled, before thinking better of starting an argument. When she spoke again her voice was measured and controlled. âWhere is she?'
âThat's confidential.'
Ameena looked to the sky and shook her head. âIs
everything
confidential today?' she muttered. âLook,' she began, speaking into the intercom again, âI've got her grandson here. He's sick. Can we come in and wait for her to get back?'
There was silence from the other end for several seconds before the speaker gave another crackle.
âHello?' asked a man's voice. âWho is this?'
Ameena looked as if she was about to punch the intercom off the wall, but she kept it together and explained who we were and why we were there. Again. All the while I had to fight to stop myself puking on the front step.
âSo, that's the grandson?' the man asked when Ameena had finished. âHe's there with you now?'
âYes! That's her grandson, and he'sâ'
âOne moment.'
The speaker gave another brief crackle of static, then a
click
. Ameena stared at it, slack-jawed, apparently finding it hard to believe that anyone would dare hang up on her. âHello?' she said. âHello?'
âYou need to leave,' said another voice. I looked at the intercom, trying to blink it into focus, before I realised the sound hadn't come from there. A middle-aged man with a bald head stepped out of the shadows behind us. Even through the blurriness, I recognised him at once.
âJoseph.'
âJoseph?' Ameena repeated. âWhat, the guy you told me about? From the train? That Joseph?'
I nodded. The last time I'd seen Joseph had been on the train up to Marion's house. He'd told me he was looking after me, helping in his own way to keep me safe. I still didn't know whether to believe him or not.
The train wasn't the first time I'd met him. He'd been in the police station Ameena and I had run to while being chased by Mr Mumbles. He'd appeared in the school and freed me from the chair Caddie and Raggy Maggie had tied me to. He was popping up all over the place lately. And now, here he was again.
âThat man you just spoke to, he's phoning the police,' Joseph told me. His eyes were locked on mine, never once moving to look at Ameena.
âThe police?' I muttered. âWhy?'
âSomeone spotted the fire at Marion's house and called the emergency services. They found her...
remains
.'
I'd have felt sick, if I didn't feel sick already. âThey think I did it.'
âThey think you did it,' Joseph nodded. âAnd they are extremely keen to get you in for a chat.'
Headlights reflected off the glass in the door, making us all look round. A car drove by, not slowing. It wasn't the police. Not yet.
âShould I turn myself in?'
âIf you go in you won't come out,' Joseph said. âYou have to get away from here. Now.'
âBut I didn't do anything!'
âThey won't believe you.'
âHow do we know we can trust you?' Ameena asked. She was supporting most of my weight, but she wasn't showing any signs of struggling.
Joseph turned her way for the first time. A look of irritation flashed across his face. âSorry, was I talking to you?'
I felt Ameena go tense. Her mouth opened. I spoke before anything came out of it. âI need to find out where my mum is.'
âI know where she is,' Joseph said. âI'll take you.'
âYou sure about this guy?' Ameena asked, making no attempt to keep Joseph from hearing.
âI'll tell you what
I'm
sure of, Kyle,' he said. He normally looked quite a relaxed character. Mischievous, even. But now there was none of that to be seen. âI'm sure that men are coming to take you away and lock you up. I'm sure that they will try you for Marion's murder and they will find you guilty.'
He stepped closer to me and rested his hand on my shoulder. âAnd I'm sure that, right now, I'm your only hope of seeing your mum again. One hour from now you can be in a holding cell, or you can be at your mum's bedside. Your choice.'
He lowered his hand and stepped back. Somewhere in the distance, a siren wailed.
âWhat's it to be?'
Rows of orange street lights whizzed by, their glare reflecting off the windows of the car we were travelling in. I half sat, half sprawled on the back seat, my head resting against the cool glass. Whenever we hit a bump, my head would loll around for a moment, then thud against the window again. Maybe it hurt. I couldn't say.
I slept fitfully, plagued by nightmares whenever I closed my eyes. When I woke, I'd catch snippets of conversation between Joseph and Ameena. They were both sat up front, but even through the fog in my head, I could tell they weren't bonding well.
â...can't believe he trusts you. He's got no right to trust you. He hardly even knows you.' That was Ameena's voice, all cocky and aggressive.
âHe doesn't know you, either.'
âYes, he does! Besides, I've saved his life.'
âSo have I,' Joseph said. âYours too, actually.'
âShut up, you have not!'
âHave so.'
They continued like that, bickering and arguing every time I woke up, until the sixth or seventh time, when I awoke to find Ameena leaning round in her seat, watching me. She smiled when I opened my eyes.
âDead yet?'
I tried to shake my head, but the pain was too much. âNo,' I said. It came out as a croak.
âGood.'
âHow much further?' I asked.
It was Joseph who replied. âNot far. Three, four minutes, maybe. Your mum's in room forty-two. You'll see her soon.'
I struggled into a slightly more upright position and looked out through the windows. Tower blocks stood like giants on either side of the road. There was a lot of traffic about, but it didn't seem to be slowing us down. We crossed a bridge, passed a corner shop, a restaurant, a pub. I didn't recognise any of it.
âHow do you feel?' Ameena asked.
âBeen better.'
âYou've looked better,' she said, studying my face. âThe whole pale and sweaty thing isn't really working for...'
Ameena stopped talking and just stared at me.
âWhoa,' she eventually whispered. âThat was freaky.'
âWhat?' I asked. My lips felt cracked and dry. I licked them, but there was no moisture on my tongue.
âNothing, just a trick of the light or something,' Ameena said.
âWhat was it?' Joseph asked. âWhat did you see?'
âNothing. It was just... For a second there it looked like I could see right through his head.'
Joseph swore loudly and slammed his hands on the steering wheel. âNo, no, no, not now,' he hissed. âNot already. It's too soon.'
We both turned to look at him. âWhat?' asked Ameena. âWhat's too soon?'
Joseph didn't take his eyes off the road. I felt the car beneath me speed up. âHe's slipping away.'
Ameena's eyes went wide. âWhat, you mean... he's dying?'
âI'm dying?'
Joseph shook his head. From here I could see his hands on the steering wheel. The knuckles were white. âNo,' he said. âSomething worse.'
âWorse?'
Joseph didn't answer.
âYou seem to know a hell of a lot about all this,' Ameena growled. âWhat's going on? What's wrong with him?'
âHe's infected.'
âInfected? Infected with what?'
âNo time to explain,' Joseph said. He sounded irritated. âWe need to get him to the hospital.'
Ameena turned to look at me. Her head moved as a series of jerks. Her face looked blurred and hazy. When she spoke, her voice was muffled and faint. âIs there... Can they help him?'
He may not have spoken, but I couldn't miss Joseph's reply when he glanced over at Ameena. It was written all over his face.
âYou holding on in there, Kyle?' he asked, looking at me in the rear-view mirror. My mouth was too dry to speak, but I managed to hold up a thumb for him to see. âGood lad,' he said. I was jostled sideways as the car pulled round a corner and on to a much narrower road. âNot long now, it's just upâ No, no, no!'
âWhat now?' asked Ameena. Before Joseph could reply she said, âWhat happened to the engine?'
The car rolled slowly and silently to a stop. âThey've killed it.'
âWho has?'
âI don't know!
Someone!
' Joseph roared. His voice was so loud it made even Ameena jump. âWe need to get him in there,' he said, a little more quietly. He nodded ahead, to where the hospital stood. âIt can't happen out here.'
Ameena began to speak, but he cut her off. âWhen I say, get out of the car and help Kyle up. We'll both carry him. No arguments, we need to move fast.'
After a quick glance at me, she nodded.
âOK. On three. One. Two.'
âThree!' Ameena cried, throwing open her door.
My door flew open next, and hands reached in for me. They caught me by the front of my jumper and dragged me out into the chilly night air. The blast of cold cleared away the cobwebs a little.
Now that I was a bit more alert, some of what had been said in the last few minutes began to sink in. I suddenly felt scared â a feeling that wasn't helped when Joseph and Ameena hooked my arms round their necks and began hauling me along the darkened road as quickly as they could.
The large building ahead of us wasn't, in fact, a large building at all. It was a collection of smaller buildings, every one of which seemed to come from a different period in time. Shiny glass and metal stood beside moss-coated stone. A low, squat grey granite structure lurked in the shadow of a red brick tower block. The hospital must have started off small, then been gradually added to over the years since then.
From what I could see, the buildings all seemed to be interconnected, but every single one of them looked out of place. It wasn't like any hospital I'd ever seen before.
So why had they moved Mum here?
I was about to ask Joseph when I heard the whispering again. The same whispering I'd heard earlier in the night. It was louder this time, audible even over the laboured breathing of Joseph and Ameena as they ran with me towards the hospital entrance.
âVoices,' I said, the word coming out as a squeak. âHear voices. Whispering.'
Joseph swore again. âHow close?'
âClose.'
âHe said he heard something before,' Ameena chipped in.
âWhat are they saying?'
I listened. The whispering came from every direction at once, hundreds of voices, all overlapping and tumbling together.
âKyle, can you hear what they're saying?'
The closer we got to the hospital, the louder the voices became. They weren't whispers now. They were more like a series of murmurs â low at first, but becoming higher pitched all the time. In moments the night was filled by their excited, hyena-like squeals.
âY-yes.'
Joseph gave a grunt of effort as he tightened his grip on me. âWell? What is it?'
â
Hungry
,' I croaked. âThey're saying
hungry
.'
I was pulled sideways as Joseph suddenly picked up his pace. âMove, move, move!'
âWhat? He's hallucinating, right?' I heard Ameena say. She sped up too, but struggled to keep pace. âTell me he's hallucinating.'
âHe's not hallucinating. We need to get him inside
now
. If it happens here he won't stand a chance.'
Hungry. Hungry. Hungry
. They were screaming it now. Their voices came from the left and right, from behind me and from up ahead.
Hungry. Hungry. Hungry.
Some of them were close. Closer, even, than Joseph and Ameena. A voice screeched right by my ear and I felt a blast of warm breath on my face. But when I squinted through the dark, I saw nothing there.
âWha's happ'ning?' I slurred. Pain clawed through my skull like five fiery fingers, beginning where the Crowmaster had scratched me and reaching all the way down into my chest.
The hospital wasn't far ahead â I couldn't tell how far, exactly â but I suddenly felt that we weren't going to make it.
Hungry hungry hungry hungry!
The voices had been whipped into a frenzy, screeching and howling like wild animals. Ameena and Joseph showed no signs of hearing them, but Joseph made sure to shout when he next spoke.
âListen to me, Kyle,' he bellowed in my ear. âWhen we get inside, there won't be long before it happens. The Crowmaster infected you with a virus and it's about to kick into top gear.'
âWhat does that mean?' a voice asked. I couldn't even say if it was mine or Ameena's.
âIt means you're going to slip through into the Darkest Corners,' Joseph told me. âThose voices you hear, they're from over there. Those...
things
must know you're coming. They're waiting for you.'
Hungryhungryhungryhungryhungry.
The Darkest Corners. It was the place all imaginary friends went when they were forgotten about â an alternate reality filled with pain, suffering and unimaginable horrors. A bit like my last visit to the dentist, but without the free sticker at the end.
I'd been to the Darkest Corners a few times and had barely survived each time. Fortunately, I was able to flit back and forth between here and there just by concentrating hard enough, so an escape route was never far away.