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Authors: Adam Nevill

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BOOK: No One Gets Out Alive
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‘What’s all this then? You going somewhere?’ Josh spoke from just outside the kitchen. He’d seen her bags in the hall stacked neatly beside the front
door. When he stepped inside the kitchen Amber avoided looking him in the eye. She prodded the poached eggs with a fork. ‘Just for a few days. Two eggs enough?’

‘Plenty. Smells good.’

She suppressed a tremor in her voice. ‘All local. Bacon and sausage too. Even the bread. There’s coffee in the jug. Just made it.’

‘Cheers.’

In her peripheral vision she watched Josh approach the kitchen bin and drop a grey lump inside. More dust that he didn’t want her to see. He took a stool at the breakfast bar.
‘You’re up early?’

‘I often am.’ She left it at that, but could feel Josh watching her, and she assumed with a familiar expression of mystification at her habits and a concern for her mental
health.

‘Thought I’d take off to Cornwall for a few days.’

‘Good. I’m pleased to hear that.’

Amber brought two steaming plates to the table top. ‘Sauces and stuff are all there.’ She nodded at the condiments.

‘Mmm.’ Josh nodded at the plate with approval, his mouth already full. ‘Did you even go to bed?’

‘Too much on my mind.’

‘You’ll drop, kid, if you’re not careful. I’m guessing you never slept the night before either? You OK to drive?’

‘You’d be surprised at what I can endure.’

Josh was taken aback by her retort and tone. He didn’t pursue his curiosity any further as to why she was leaving her house after just one week; a place on which nine months of
modifications had just concluded, with a three hundred thousand pound price tag on security and renovations alone.

They ate in silence.

‘Give me a call when you get back here. Just check in,’ he eventually said before draining his coffee cup. ‘I better hit the road. And it’s just as well you’re up
to open the gate.’ He dabbed his mouth with a napkin. ‘That was lovely. Thanks for breakfast.’

Just before the front door he paused. ‘I want you to take some more of my infernal advice, Amber. Don’t live here on your own. Take it from someone who made the same mistake.
Discussion of full details not possible. But do not live alone with all that up there.’ Josh pointed at the ceiling, towards the study. ‘And with what is up here.’ He tapped the
side of his head. ‘And I am not talking about getting a cat. Is there a friend who might like a long holiday in Devon?’

A friend: the idea made her laugh unpleasantly. The closest she had to friends were the people she paid to look after her interests: Josh, her barrister, Victoria, her agent, Penelope, her
researcher, Peter. Her old friends from Stoke, Bekka, Joanie and Philippa, had all sold stories to papers when the story broke through the news stratosphere and when the world developed a large
rubber neck. Her relatively ordinary adolescence, troubled by an insane step-parent and the death of her father, augmented by a few flirtations with soft drugs and a couple of idiotic boyfriends,
had been sifted through in as much forensic detail by the tabloids as the black stony soil of 82 Edgehill Road had been analyzed by murder squad detectives on their hands and knees; and all because
of her
friends.

She’d relegated her ‘friends’ to the part of her personal history she had no inclination to revisit. The fact that not one of her old friends had offered her help when
she’d needed a friend most, was something she would never get past. Only Ryan had stepped up.

And look what happened to him.

Amber swallowed the lump in her throat brought on by the memory of her dead ex-boyfriend. The vivid strangeness of his presence in her dreams, and inside her home, produced a quick ripple of
panic.

‘Like who?’

Josh shrugged; he could see that he needed to distract her again. ‘Don’t they call them companions, for you ladies of leisure? So get a companion. A maid. No butler because you
can’t trust them around the lingerie. A housekeeper. I mean, what with all this bloody dust everywhere, don’t you need someone to keep it clean?’

She started to laugh at the preposterous suggestion. ‘A maid. I’m not sure I even believe in such a thing.’

‘A PA, if it makes you feel better. Find someone who can live in. Light duties. Bit of company. Situation immediately vacant for right candidate. There are agencies for this sort of thing.
If you do find someone, I’ll check them out. I’m serious. You do not want to sleep in this house alone. Because you won’t sleep in this house. If you had your way I’d still
be here at Christmas in the same clothes.’

‘I’d buy you an entire wardrobe.’

‘You could afford it too. I’ve seen the posters for your film all over the sides of the 38 bus in the West End. But I’m not house trained. Too many bad habits, and I
don’t like sitting on my arse all day. Last night is all I will inflict on you.’

Amber felt like a child again, watching her mum walk away from the school gates. Her smile failed as soon as the front gate shuddered closed and Josh’s car disappeared
from view. She went back inside the farmhouse, and distracted herself by attending to the dishes and wiping away the cooking oil spattered on the kitchen surfaces. While she worked in the kitchen
she left the door connecting the kitchen to the garage open, so she could keep an eye on the car and the room around it, to make sure that all remained in place and as it should be, until she left
the house that morning.

During the night, once she’d gathered her wits and pulled herself off the kitchen floor, just after three a.m., she’d showered, dressed and packed. Standing in the wet room and
allowing the force of the water to drown out the sound of her crying in case she woke Josh, she’d realized her experience before the mouth of the garage had been similar to a psychotic
reaction, or a hallucination produced by powerful drugs; conditions she had read about while researching her book with Peter St John.

But there were no drugs in her life. She constantly questioned her sanity and knew she was teeming with paranoia, insecurity, phobias, aversions, and a persecution complex that medication and
therapy might one day successfully soothe, if she chose that route. And maybe her psychological trauma was still so catastrophic she was generating her own ghosts inside the farmhouse. Two
psychiatrists had already told her as much, and that she may never fully recover from those nine days at 82 Edgehill Road, and should maintain a programme of structured therapy until a physician
deemed it prudent to stop. Advice she had decided against taking once the investigation and the inquest concluded. Maybe that was another unwise decision. For a long time she had longed for a
doctor or psychiatrist to categorically tell her that she was mentally ill and had imagined everything.

But she was not going to fool herself that the impossible had not returned to her life. Not now. And her connection to 82 Edgehill Road would no longer be shared with Josh or Peter St John,
because neither of them would entertain her ravings.

Maybe the kind of person who claimed a special relationship with the dead – a medium or spiritualist – would engage with her. She’d just spent hours considering the option of
inviting such a ‘gifted’ individual to her home, while also worrying that a medium might try and shake her down for a small fortune. Going that route also made her feel she was
introducing the inauthentic to an experience she had never embellished with spiritual beliefs or superstition.

But what troubled her most since she had struggled up and off the kitchen tiles in the early hours of the morning were her thoughts of Ryan. If her impressions of the night had been correct,
Ryan was not at rest, and nor were any of the victims of number 82. But not even dear Ryan, who had unwittingly sacrificed his life in an attempt to save her, was welcome here.

Ryan had been with her last night, and inside her room, at least
in spirit.
A presence of Ryan. Or perhaps an illusion of her ex-boyfriend that
something
had introduced into
her home to taunt her and drive her mad. In the middle of the night, as she’d thrown clothes and toiletries into her Samsonite cases, Amber had even considered that Ryan was trying to warn
her. And maybe Margaret Tolka had performed this function too, by filling the kitchen with the fragrance of perfume. Revenants that acted as sensory warnings. Beside Bennet, it was possible that
was all the dead had ever tried to do at 82 Edgehill Road: warn her.

She had come across such things in her study of hauntings, but she wasn’t convinced; they hadn’t warned her last night, they had guided her downstairs. And now her confounding
ignorance of why
this
had come back into her life had begun to feel terminal.

SEVENTY-NINE

Amber jogged upstairs to fetch her portable hard drive from the study and her laptop from the bedroom; all of her electronic files were saved to both devices.

She unlocked the study and flicked the lights on. Picked up the back-up hard drive from her desk, keeping her eyes averted from the faces and headlines plastered to the wall. The room looked
like the secret chamber of an obsessive, a spy, or a stalker. And she acknowledged with discomfort that she may be all three of those things about her own history.

Amber drew the blinds to see the vista outside. Her vision swept the garden and the rolling green mounds of maize beyond the foot of the rear fence, and took in the copses of trees dotted about
the land where hedgerows met at the corner of the hilly fields. The giant swelling of the ocean beyond the hills glinted in a thin line of white gold on the horizon. And within the gentle sway of
row upon row of long, supple maize leaves, she picked out the presence of what she thought was a leafless tree, withered black by age or even scorched spindly by a lightning strike.

She had gazed out over these fields each morning for a week and recalled that no tree stood in the centre of this field, particularly one that suggested a direct line from itself to the rear
gate of her garden.

Amber screwed up her eyes.

The thump of her heart became too noticeable and irregular between her ears. Her scalp prickled.

This was no tree.

The figure was the only black in the green sea of crops, and seemed to draw in the shadow of a passing cloud to stain dark the wide open space that circled the silhouette’s lonely vigil.
This was a man. A tall man standing with his head bowed.

Amber hoped hard enough for it to feel like a prayer that this was a farm worker, or an unusual rambler studying a map. Because the indistinct head was lowered or bent over something that it
seemed to be studying: an object held close to the chest and cradled like a baby. The thin, uneven silhouette of the head soon revealed itself to be close-cropped and bony by raising itself so that
far off eyes could peer back at her.

Amber dropped the hard drive and only held onto her laptop by her fingertips.

She staggered away from the window to evade the piercing scrutiny of a face obscured by distance, the features seemingly blackened by soil or soot, though the figure was too far away to reveal
what discoloured the flesh. The idea of the thin and unsightly sentinel being aware of her introduced a stutter to her breathing. She ducked down from the level of the window sill, backed out of
the study in a crouch, and fled for her room and for what was locked inside a small aluminium case within her bedside drawer.

Amber stopped short of the bedside cabinet, pulled up hard by a better idea:
take a picture
.

She wrenched at her iPhone in the top pocket of her denim jacket. Ran back to the study and willed herself through the door and across the room and up to the wide window frame. Focused the
camera on the field of maize, shining with sunlight and no longer concealed by passing clouds. A field now empty of anything but the crop.

EIGHTY

‘I’ve some more anecdotal stuff on Bennet senior from the children of former neighbours, and some council records of complaints about number eighty-two. But nothing
earth shattering on that front.’ Peter St John turned his laptop round so Amber could see the screen. ‘I have the hard copies at home, but scanned these for you. You can take the memory
stick. It’s all on there.’

Amber collected their lunch plates and stacked them on the room service trolley so they would have more space to work. Prompted to do the same, Peter arranged the coffee things. ‘Coffee?
Or you staying on the wine?’

Peter’s sandy hair and thin features looked good with the new tan; his green eyes glittered like a warm sea. He’d been in Spain. A white cotton shirt and cream linen jacket further
defined the impression of a well-heeled and comfortable man. A marked difference from the pale, chain-smoking journalist, pathologically anxious about money, that she’d met three years
before. They may have done each other a world of good financially, but Amber now envied Peter’s effortless self-assurance, his aura of serenity.

‘Wine, thanks.’

For privacy they’d eaten in her room at the Duke. Peter had arrived in Plymouth at noon. On Monday Amber called him and mentioned problems with the farmhouse and Peter assumed the building
project was unfinished.

Though their book had included as much detail about the history of 82 Edgehill Road as was available at the time of publication, as well as material uncovered during the first year of the police
investigation, Peter had spent the next two years researching the building and its occupants in more detail, discovering and poring over applications for planning permission, censuses, local
history, any rental agreements, tracing individuals known to have lived at the address across one hundred years. He’d even undertaken a foray into genealogy.

Peter’s fastidiousness, Amber knew, had not been down to his ingrained investigative thoroughness alone, nor was it taken to satisfy Amber’s desire for alternative theories about the
house and its previous occupants. The case had become the making of Peter St John, the uniqueness of the story a vertical accelerant for his career. Four generations of murderers had lived and been
active at the same address in North Birmingham, and not one of them had been brought to justice. Peter had written the definitive book about the murders and made the story his life’s work; he
was the first person to be summoned by the international media, as a talking head, for any feature about, or similar to, the case. In their entire careers most journalists would never encounter
such a sensational story, not to mention his exclusive access to one of two surviving cast members; the second survivor, Svetlana Lanka, spoke poor English and had long ago returned to her home
country. Her official testimony about the presence of anything unnatural in the house had never been substantial. She and Margaret had not resided at the house for long either, but had both heard
voices and noises in unoccupied rooms, and even become frightened of the second floor room that Amber had spent her first two nights inside.

BOOK: No One Gets Out Alive
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