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Authors: Craig Saunders

BOOK: The Love of the Dead
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Mary’s bladder let go.

From under the cloak, the man pulled something that hurt Mary’s eyes. The room became suddenly darker. The killer held a black blade, but made of something so dark no light reflected from it.

It was longer than a knife, maybe not quite a sword. Mary didn’t think this as she watched his terrible smile and cried while he approached. These were solely Beth’s thoughts, but this close, within Mary’s mind or memory or spirit, she could understand the terror, the knowledge of the end to come. It was so close now. The man stalking on bare feet over the carpet in pure silence. Mary screamed, but now Beth didn’t know if it was her terror or Mary’s that she was feeling.

He came closer. Mary turned her head, saw Stan, looked deep into his eyes. He was a small man, never brave or outgoing, but in his eyes Beth could see Mary’s love for him reflected.

The blade swiped across her throat. Beth looked up from the floor at Mary’s body, her body. The room shifted wildly and she felt giddy as her head rolled. It came to a stop, looking up at Stan. Stan was looking away from her, toward his death.

The blood pumping from her neck cascaded over her mouth, and she tasted it. It hit her eyes and mercifully made her blind so she didn’t see Stan’s head suddenly thump beside her.

But she heard it.

Beth sat up, herself once again, and puked down the front of her shirt.

 

 

 

 

 

Chapter Twenty-Nine

 

Mary’s spirit knelt over Beth, deep concern etched into her face. Beth held out a hand for her to step back. She didn’t want her near her. Not again. She couldn’t take that ever again.

She’d been a vessel before, and she’d always hated it. That complete loss of control. Someone else, some spirit, riding you.

She’d never experienced death first hand, though.

She felt bile rising into her throat again and gagged it down.

“Why did you do that?” she asked, even though she knew Mary would not, could not, speak.

Mary’s eyes were infinitely sad. Beth’s old friend shook her head.

She couldn’t say. Wouldn’t say. Beth got the message. Some things weren’t for her to know. But it was a hell of a way to go about it.

She was still disoriented. Her head swam and her eyes felt like they weren’t her own.

The young policeman, Newman, remained in the kitchen. Somehow a spirit, Mary’s or something else, was keeping this room sealed away from him. He couldn’t hear, he couldn’t see into it. Beth was sure he would have come to investigate if he’d heard her being sick or speaking. But she looked through into the kitchen, and now he was staring out of the window, looking at the garden. She wondered what he was seeing there. Perhaps not as interesting as what she saw, but she envied him a little. It must be nice to see only flowers and no dead gardeners.

Mary tugged Beth’s sleeve, perfectly able to manipulate the material. She was powerful, even in spirit.

The spirit pointed at something on the wall. Something nobody else had seen, because it looked like it belonged there. But they couldn’t see what she could see. The police had all walked past it, ignoring it as if it was just background, something irrelevant, like the sink or the couch. But it wasn’t irrelevant.

There was a picture on the wall. A collage made of pebbles behind glass, so the pebbles didn’t fall down. The stones had been worn smooth by the sea. Maybe the Westmoor’s had collected them on a vacation, maybe they’d bought the picture. But the feather in the middle of the stones, it didn’t fit.

Mary nodded when Beth saw it. Beth knew it wasn’t right. The feather, the stones. The feather was black, and it didn’t come from any happy vacation. If the collage was store bought, she was sure no one would have put a feather in with the pebbles. It was incongruous, discordant. Just the look of the thing there in and among the stones, the soft with the hard, but the feather wasn’t soft. She felt something coming from it, black and deep and powerful. She wouldn’t touch it, ever, because she knew that if she did she’d cut herself and its poison would seep into her blood. She’d sicken, die. But what if it was the kind of sickness that didn’t kill you? A kind of sickness that made you like him—the kind of man who could take a woman’s head and make it talk as though it were nothing more than a puppet?

Beth shivered and wrapped her arms around herself.

Newman remained oblivious. She checked, because she didn’t want to freak him out. He seemed sweet enough, and she’d got what she came for.

“Move on, Mary. Stan’s waiting for you.”

Mary nodded, unable to speak. But Mary’s smile was enough. She raised her hand.

Goodbye.

Then she was gone.

Beth felt like crying, but she reined it in. She felt like crying a lot lately. It wasn’t surprising. She’d seen things nobody should know. Felt things that nobody should feel. Things that would drive some people crazy, she didn’t doubt.

She took some tissues from her bag and tried to clean the vomit from her top. She couldn’t get it all, but she managed to pull her jacket over it. It would have to do.

Her visit had been hard, but worth it. She knew more than she had yesterday, and even though she thought Coleridge would do right by her, she couldn’t rely on anyone else. Peter was gone. Miles was dead. It was just her. She had to do it herself, because she knew she couldn’t trust the killer to keep to his word. He was a liar. He was building a tower and the tower was death. But his card wasn’t the Tower. It was what he did, not what he was.

She couldn’t afford to trust his word, because he was the beast himself. She knew that now. His card was the Devil, and he would be coming for her, too.

 

 

 

Chapter Thirty

 

 

A raven hopped up to the windowsill in Miles’ room. Deep black feathers shone in the sunlight like wet hair. It shifted its head this way and that, testing the air. It hopped down onto the bare floorboards of Miles’ room and made a
toc-toc
sound by clacking its beak, like it was happy.

It flapped its wings, spreading them wide, flew through the doorway. Its wingtips brushed the frame of the door.

The windows were open in every room. The air was chilly, but the raven didn’t feel the cold. It was an intelligent bird, but it didn’t think.

It wasn’t him, but he called the bird kindred. A brother in soul and sometimes form. An eater of the dead, a carrion bird, once proudly haunting the field of battle, taking the flesh of the brave and cowardly and the noble and the lowborn alike.

This raven had only ever tasted the flesh of road kill and carrion rotting in the fields and forests.

He had promised it flesh.

The raven craned its head this way, that way. There was no flesh here, only a lingering trace of something long dead, a corpse left behind on the battlefield that it could not eat.

It cawed, frustrated, hungry.

The phone rang and it leaped into the air.

Head cocked, it listened then copied the sound, mimicking the shrill ring perfectly. The ringing stopped, and a man’s voice came through.

“Beth? You there? Pick up would you?”

A pause. The raven waited and listened, intelligent eyes scanning the phone, like it understood the words.

It knew many words. Its kind were ancient and proud. People forgot them in the new world, but the raven was an old soul.

Its master, older still.

“Alright, Beth. Look, call me, OK? I’m getting worried. I haven’t heard from you for a couple of days. I’ll try you again tomorrow. If I don’t hear anything I’m coming down. Listen, when I said if you need me...I...ah...I’ll be there. Just call. Please call me back, Beth, I’m getting worried now.”

The man on the phone sighed. Couldn’t think of anything else to say.

The raven listened to the silence. Flapped and hopped onto the small wooden table that Beth used for the phone and her keys and the other objects that people put down when they came in, cell phones, spare change, pieces of paper with lists, receipts. The table was littered, the raven’s claws rustling the scraps of paper as it walked stiff-legged to the phone.

It watched the red light blinking for a moment then hit it with its beak. It listened to the man’s voice again.

A woman’s voice followed this time.

“To listen again, press 1. To save the message, press 2. To delete the message, press 3.”

With its heavy black beak, the raven hit three.

Looked this way and that, flapped into the kitchen, flew out of the kitchen window and away into the dunes, then it was lost in the distance.

 

 

 

Chapter Thirty-One

 

Coleridge wasn’t happy. He’d already been from Beth’s to the coroners, to the station, and now he was in the car again.

Aside from all the other indignities of cramming his bulk into a car, his back ached like a bastard, and when he drove for more than half an hour his left leg went a little bit numb below his knee.

They just didn’t make cars his size. Maybe he could get himself a Land Rover or something bigger, instead of these shitty little toy cars.

Maybe he could cut down on his food. Get some exercise. Go for a walk. Live longer. Get out on the date circuit. Speed dating. That’d be about his style. Meet some women, then have enough time left over to go and have some decent grub. Fast dates followed by faster food.

But the fact was, he wasn’t that man. He couldn’t think while he was walking. That was how he worked. He talked to people, then he ate, then he thought. That was about the long and short of it. He didn’t have a partner because he didn’t want one. His last partner had blown his head off. That was it for Coleridge. There was only so much you could take.

He figured he had big shoulders. He could take a cheating wife. He could take his boss breathing down his neck—he had every right.

He couldn’t take an empty stomach, though.

What he really craved, what’d do the trick nicely, was a spot of fish and chips. He headed into Cromer, a town only twenty minutes from Beth’s. He didn’t want to drive anymore than he had to. He pulled up outside a chip shop on a busy street, on a double yellow line. People hit their horns behind him. He figured they could go up on the pavement to get by if they needed to. The coast was pretty much deserted in the winter.

He got two large cod, large chips, a pickled egg, and a can of Coke. The beeping horns were getting on his nerves. He paid and took his food, wrapped, back into the car. Drove to where he figured the sea was, got out and walked until he found a bench.

Sat down and thought.

Ate. Thought some more.

He finished his first piece of cod, his chips, his pickled egg. He took out the second piece of fish and managed to take a bite before a seagull came down and took the whole lot out of his hand.

“Oi!” he shouted, got up, about to try and chase it. “You’re welcome,” he said, laughing. What was he going to do? Fly after it?

He’d eaten enough anyway. He felt the energy running through his massive frame, finally reaching his brain. He picked up his cell phone and made the call he should have made right at the start, when Yvonne Stanton’s corpse had been found, missing a head and a heart.

 

 

 

Chapter Thirty-Two

 

“Who’s that?” Coleridge said when he got through.

“Mooney. Coleridge?”

“Listen, Yvonne Stanton. Get her client list. It’s a blue book with little flowers on it. Check it for a name that only comes up once. Got that?”

“I’m not your fucking gopher.”

Coleridge took a deep breath before he spoke again. “I know. But I’m in Cromer, you’re in Norwich. Just do it, would you?”

“For fuck’s sake, Coleridge. We’re working our asses off. What the fuck are you doing in Cromer?”

“Having fish and chips. Very nice it was, too. I’ll wait. Call me back.”

He hung up before he could take any more flack. He’d have to talk to the boss soon, but he didn’t want to talk to him before he had something to go on.

He walked back to the car while he was waiting for the call. It came through just as he got to the parking lot.

After catching his breath he picked up.

“Coleridge?”

“Yeah,” he panted. “What you got?”

“A few regulars. Some names that only appear once. Not many.”

“Scratch the women. It’s definitely a man.”

“Three names. You want them?”

“Not yet. Check the others.”

“Ahead of you. Smith didn’t keep a book, or if he did we didn’t find it. Same goes for George and Meakings. But the Westmoors kept records.”

“Go on. Don’t fucking draw it out.”

Coleridge could sense Mooney smiling over the phone.

“Gregory Sawyer.”

“Gregory Sawyer? Is it him?”

“What do you think?”

Coleridge thought he’d have to have some kind of dark, foreboding name. The kind of killer who’d do that to people, take someone’s heart right out of their chest. Cutting their heads off. What the fuck would someone called Gregory want with a bunch of body parts? No. His first instinct was that Gregory didn’t cut it.

But what’s in a name? Nilson? His first name was Dennis, for Christ’s sake. West, fucking Fred. Shipman, what was that? Harold. A Harold, a Fred, and a Dennis.

Maybe people with simple first names were more, not less, likely to be serial killers.

Coleridge caught his mind wandering. Wished he’d got to eat his second piece of fish. It was just a fucking name, and more, it was a lead. Slim chance, but better than yesterday.

“How far away did the Westmoors live from Stanton?”

“Hold on.”

Mooney went to check some online route finder. Quicker and more accurate than a map.

Coleridge would’ve checked the map and guessed.

“Forty-three miles. On the back roads, north of the county? Could take over an hour.”

“Long way to drive,” said Coleridge. “You get an address on Sawyer?”

“Harvey’s working on it.”

Fucking Harvey. He had a score to settle with him.

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