The Border Part Two Read online
Page 4
“He was just trying to scare everything,” Jack replied.
“That was when he stopped being so serious,” she continued. “After he came back, he just seemed to find everything so goddamn funny.”
“I just hated the fact he always lied,” Jack muttered. “I remember challenging him on it once, when he was here last time, and he said he enjoyed it. Can you even understand how his mind works? He straight-up admitted that he enjoys lying, like it’s a hobby!”
“He’s an odd one, alright,” she replied, before pausing for a moment. “But that’s the extent of it. Please, Jack, stop thinking the worst about Ben. He’s still our brother, and I promise you, he’d never do anything truly bad. He’s just a bit weird, that’s all.”
“I just don’t get why he had to come back,” Jack said, turning and looking out the window. For a moment, he watched as people chatted in the town square. “Bowley’s usually a nice, peaceful, safe town. Except when Ben’s around. Coincidence or not, bad things happen when he shows up. I just can’t shake the feeling that if he’d stayed away, Mel Armitage would still be alive.”
“Maybe,” she replied, picking up the copy of the newspaper from his desk, “but then you wouldn’t have scored the highest-selling edition in the Herald‘s entire history. So, you know, there’s that.”
***
“Joe? Hey, Joe, you in here?”
Stepping through to one of the garage’s back rooms, Bryan glanced around for a moment, looking for some sign of life. Grinders and drills could be heard nearby, along with revving engines, but the area out back was mostly quiet.
“Joe? Seriously, man, are you here?”
He waited.
Nothing.
“Great,” he muttered, turning to head back through. “Just when -”
He stopped suddenly as he realized he could hear another sound nearby. Taking a step back into the room, he peered past one of the benches and finally spotted a figure on the ground, sitting with its back to the wall and gently sobbing.
“Joe?”
No reply.
“Hey, Joe,” Bryan continued, making his way over, “what’s going on, dude? There’s someone here to see you, she’s in the front office. I told her I’d come and get you, but…”
As Joe continued to cry, Bryan reached down and picked up the copy of the local paper that was on the floor nearby. Taking a look at the headline, he realized it was about the murder of Mel Armitage. He’d read it already, of course. Everyone in Bowley had read that day’s edition, and it had been the sole topic of conversation in the garage all morning.
“I think I get it,” he said after a moment, setting the paper on the counter. “Brought it all back, did it? Got you thinking about -”
He paused, figuring that he probably shouldn’t say Caitlin’s name. Joe was always a little unpredictable; not dangerous, not really, but definitely someone who could react badly to certain things.
“You remember what I said when I took you on here, yeah?” he continued, sitting next to him. “Any time you need to take time off, for any reason, it’s fine. I don’t want you pushing yourself too hard, you’re a good mechanic but only when you’ve got your head together. I should’ve realized this might happen, especially on the anniversary, and especially when…” Reaching over, he put a hand on his friend’s shoulder and quickly realized that Joe’s whole body was trembling. “Why don’t you get home for the rest of the day? Take the week off, come back in on Monday.”
He waited, but Joe was still sobbing and seemed too upset to reply.
“The only thing is,” Bryan continued, “I think you might have to talk to this woman first. She’s a cop.”
***
“Hey, Joe,” Jane said, getting to her feet as soon as she saw him in the doorway. “How are you doing?”
Staring at her with cautious, tear-stained eyes, Joe seemed incapable of replying. He paused for a moment, seemingly poised to turn and leave, before taking a step into the room.
“This must be a difficult period for you,” she continued, smiling as she reached out to shake his hand. “It’s been a while, hasn’t it? I don’t know if you remember me from the last time we met, back when…” She paused, realizing that it might be better to focus on the present rather than stirring up any unnecessary parts of the past. “I’m so glad you finally started working. It must feel good to have something to do with your time. Having a job makes it seem like you’re a part of the community again, doesn’t it?”
“It’s alright,” Joe said quietly, barely raising his voice above a whisper.
“Bryan says you’re good with engines.”
He shrugged.
Realizing that Joe wasn’t going to shake her hand, Jane made her way to the door and pushed it shut. She felt as if she was being patronizing and condescending, as if she was talking to Joe like he was a child, but at the same time she wasn’t sure how else to get through to him.
“The thing is,” she continued, “I need to have a word with you about something very serious that happened in town recently. I know this is a bad time, and I’m sure you’ve seen the paper this morning. I guess you know what happened the other night at the Monument.”
He nodded.
“Everyone’s in shock,” she added, “but I guess it must be particularly difficult for you. After all… Well, I know what you went through last time, Joe. I think it’s really brave of you to be out in the world again, trying to make a life for yourself. You know we’re always around if you need help, though. Don’t be shy or afraid.”
“I’m not,” he mumbled. “Are you the one who -”
She waited for him to continue. “Am I the one who what?”
“The one who was at the hospital.”
“Yeah,” she said, forcing a smile. “That was a long time ago, huh?”
“You look older.”
“Well, it has been nine years. That was almost my first day back then.” She paused. “So can we sit down, Joe? I really need to ask you some questions. I really don’t want to disturb you, but it’s important and I don’t have all the time in the world.”
Cautiously, and with tears in his eyes, Joe pulled the chair back and sat down. He had the same scruffy, cowed demeanor of a boy who was usually well-behaved, but who’d been hauled before the headmaster for some out-of-character transgression.
“I know this is going to be really difficult,” Jane continued, as she sat opposite him, “but I have to talk to you about the night Caitlin died. I went through all the paperwork from that time, but I felt that maybe you might remember a few extra things, now that so much time has passed. Do you think you could see your way to running over a few parts of that night with me again?”
He paused. “What parts?”
“Nine years ago, you said you didn’t remember very much about the man who attacked you. His face, or his voice… I know Alex has spoken to you a few times since and you said you still didn’t remember anything useful, but I was hoping that there might be something you can tell me. The thing is, we’re starting to think that the person who killed Caitlin -”
He flinched as soon as he heard that name.
“Sorry,” she added. “The person who was responsible for what happened to her, and who attacked you… We think it might be the same person who killed Mel the other night. Obviously we’re not sure, not yet, but we have to look into every possibility, and that’s why I came here today. I wanted to see if there’s anything else you remember, anything at all. Can you maybe go over it again? If it’s not too painful, I mean.”
She waited.
“Please?” she continued. “It’d really help.”
“I didn’t see his face,” Joe replied quickly, almost defensively.
“I understand that. It was dark and -”
“I didn’t see his face.”
“No, I -”
“I didn’t. I didn’t see it.”
She opened her mouth to rephrase the question, but something about Joe’s tone
seemed a little frantic now.
“I just saw…” He paused, staring down at the table as if he was reliving the moment. “You know what I saw. I’m not saying it again.”
“I know what you told us nine years ago.” She flicked through her notepad. “You said you saw a… Do you mind if I say it, Joe?”
No reply.
“You said you saw a man with a head like… You said he seemed to have antlers, or pieces of wood coming out of his head. Is that still correct?”
He nodded.
“Now,” she continued, “obviously that description presents a few challenges, because even though it’s very distinctive, it doesn’t -”
“It’s what I saw.”
“I believe you, but -”
“He had something over his head, like a cloth, and…” He paused again. “I saw them in the moonlight.”
“The antlers?”
“They weren’t very big. Some of them were… All of them maybe, they were broken.”
“Right.” She looked down at her notepad for a moment. “And did he -”
“Then he came at me,” he continued, flinching slightly, “and he let out this noise, like a cry. He fell on me and knocked me over, and then he was on top and that’s when I felt…” Looking down, he placed his hands on the front of his overalls, as if he was feeling his belly. “I kept looking at her while he was doing it.”
“Looking at her?”
“C-C-Caitlin,” he stammered, as if the effort of saying that name had required an inordinate amount of effort. “I knew I couldn’t fight him off, I was just a lanky streak back then, and I didn’t know where to look while he was doing it to me, so I looked at her. She was up above me, in the tree. She was already dead. I just kept looking at her while he was putting the knife in me over and over. I wanted her to be okay.”
“I know you did.”
“She was dripping blood,” he added. “She was… I knew… I could tell she was gone. I tried to reach out to her, but the man was too heavy.”
“He was holding you down?”
“He had her heart in his hand.”
“While he was attacking you?”
He nodded.
“So…” She paused. “This might be important, Joe. Did he keep her heart in his hand the whole time he was on top of you, or did he put it down somewhere?”
“He held onto it.”
“Are you sure?”
“I saw it.”
She made a quick note. “And then what happened?”
“Then he stopped. He leaned closer, real close, and looked into my eyes. I guess he thought I was dead, or as close as made no difference, and then he got off. I remember wondering why…” He paused. “I remember wondering why he was so delicate with her and arranged her all nice, and why he was so rough with me and just left me on the ground like that. The next thing I remember is being in the hospital, with everyone running around and all those voices shouting.”
“But the face of the man who attacked you -”
“I didn’t see it,” he continued. “He had something over it, like a piece of cloth or a sack, something like that. There were holes for the eyes, but I didn’t see anything in there. It’s like they weren’t there at all.” Suddenly, he started unbuttoning the front of his overalls. “I’ll show you what he did to me.”
“It’s okay,” she replied. “I remember. I came to the hospital, remember?”
“Look,” he continued, pulling the fabric aside to reveal his scarred belly. “That’s what he left!”
“I know,” she told him. “I saw you nine years ago when you still very sick, when they didn’t know whether or not you’d -” She caught herself just in time. “I know what this monster did to you, and that’s why I’m going to make sure we catch him so that -”
“You can’t catch him,” he replied.
“I promise you, we can.”
“Then why haven’t you?” He turned for a moment, as if he was hearing a voice nearby, before glancing back at her. “When I think about him,” he continued, “and I think about you, I can’t see you putting handcuffs on him and taking him to jail. It’s just not going to happen.”
“Why do you say that?”
“Because it’s ridiculous,” he added. “Someone like you, getting hold of someone like him… It’s like someone from one world trying to catch someone from another. It’s silly. I mean, can you imagine it happening?”
“Yes, Joe. I can.”
“It ain’t gonna.”
She paused, before closing her notepad and slipping it into her pocket. “If you think of anything else, Joe, you must come and speak to me. Even if it seems like something small, like something completely insignificant, it might help us. Do you promise you’ll do that?”
“C-Caitlin shouldn’t have died.”
“I know that.”
“I should have saved her.”
“You can’t blame yourself.”
“That’s what I was trying to do while he was stabbing me,” he continued. “I was reaching out and trying to transfer my life energy into her, so that she’d survive, even if it meant I had to die. Is that stupid? I don’t believe in all that crap, but at that moment, I was trying to help her any way I could. I just…” He paused again, as a tear ran down his cheek. “If I hadn’t asked her out there that night, she’d still be around today. I could still talk to her and everything.”
“I’m sure you did everything that was in your power,” she replied. “You need to just focus on how things are at the moment, on the things you can control. You’re rebuilding your life, and that’s great.”
“He’ll kill again.”
She paused. “What makes you say that?”
“I’ve seen him, remember? He was amazing. Powerful, strong… I could just tell. Someone like him, as long as he’s alive, he’ll always kill again.” He paused, staring at her with dark, unblinking eyes. “Maybe he should kill again, if it’s what he does best.”
“I’m not sure that’s true, Joe -”
“You didn’t see him,” he replied, interrupting her as a faint smile crossed his lips. “It was horrible, and it hurt, but seeing him in action… It was like seeing a creature do the one thing it was put on this earth to do. He’s magnificent.”
***
“What are you thinking about?”
Turning, Alex saw his wife Ruth standing in the doorway.
“Don’t take this the wrong way,” she continued, stepping closer, “but you’re not the kind of guy who usually stands at a window, looking out at the rain and the world, contemplating things. You’re a doer, not a brooder, so when I see you like this, I can’t help wondering what’s going on.” She paused. “Missing the cigarettes?”
He shook his head.
“Not tempted to go back to them?”
“Course not,” he replied, turning back to the window. “I’m just looking out at the town and wondering where it all went wrong.”
“Wrong?” Making her way over to join him, she looked out at the town square. “Doesn’t look like much is wrong, not to me.”
“That’s the problem,” he replied. “I’ve spent my whole life trying to keep Bowley and its people safe, and I always thought I was doing a pretty good job. No-one complained, that’s for sure, and life just seemed to keep on going without too many problems. Now I’m starting to wonder if the bad things were just better at hiding than I realized. Like maybe there’s things going on here that I don’t know anything about.”
“I very much doubt that,” she told him.
“There’s obviously something,” he continued. “There’s some… force that killed Caitlin Somers nine years ago, and then laid dormant until it killed Mel Armitage the other night. And for those nine years, I thought the place was safe again, I thought the evil had moved on, but it was here all along and I just couldn’t see it. It was hiding or waiting or… laughing at me. Feeling smarter than me.”
“Look out there,” she replied, putting
her arms around him from behind. “This town is so peaceful and beautiful. Do you honestly believe that there could be much of anything bubbling away under the surface?”
“If you’d asked me yesterday,” he muttered, “I’d have said no. But now? Now I’m starting to think I might have been the biggest fool around. I think there might be something here, Ruth. Something that just got real good at keeping out of view. And the worst thing is, even now I know it’s there, I still can’t see it.”
***
Lowering herself slowly into the bath, Katie winced as soon as she felt water against her torn and scratched skin. Every nerve in her body seemed to be screaming out to her, telling her to stop, but she kept going, forcing herself down until she was sitting on the submerged mat, with water up to her shoulders.
Finally, unable to hold back any longer, she let out a faint gasp.
After a few minutes, she lifted her left arm and looked at the cut that ran from her elbow to her armpit. The skin on either side of the cut itself was red and sore, but the wound was already healing over. She lowered her arm again, trying to ignore the stinging sensation as she felt hot water against her injuries. Although she wanted to close her eyes, she didn’t dare. She knew she’d see Mr. Crutchlow’s grinning face again, the same face that had seared itself into her mind during her second night at The Border.
A moment later, she heard her phone start ringing. She’d left it on the closed toilet lid, and when she leaned over and took a look she saw to her horror that it was Simon, the man from the office, who was trying to get in touch. She waited, daring herself to answer, and finally the ringing stopped.
Silence.
And then she flinched slightly as it started again.
“Go away,” she whispered. “Please…”
Reaching out with a wet, dripping hand, she picked up the phone and looked at the screen. She knew she should answer, that she’d promised to always be available for The Border whenever they needed her, but at the same time she’d been hoping for a night to herself. Finally, she felt a hint of relief as the phone once again stopped ringing.

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Destiny of the Last Wolf
The Haunting of Lannister Hall
The Music Man
Apocalypse (The Ward Z Series Book 3)
Dark Little Wonders and Other Stories
Werewolves of Soho
The Horror of the Crowford Empire
Terror at Camp Everbee (The Ward Z Series Book 2)
The Middlewych Experiment
Harper's Hotel Ghost Girl
The Children of Black Annis
The Strangler's Daughter
The Haunting of Briarwych Church
The Art of Dying
Bad News
Escape From Hotel Necro
The Ghost of Briarwych Church
Werewolves of the Other London
The Legend of Rinth
Lights Out
Asylum
Dead Souls Volume One (Parts 1 to 13)
The Purchase
Friend From the Internet
The Dying Streets
The Butcher's Husband and Other Stories
The Beast on the Tracks
The Haunting of the King's Head
The Haunting of the Crowford Hoy (The Ghosts of Crowford Book 5)
The Haunting of Aldburn Park
The Vampire Burns
The Family Man
The Wedding of Rachel Blaine
Three Nights of the Vampire- The Complete Trilogy
The Ghost of Molly Holt
New Title 2
Room 9 and Other Ghost Stories
The Horror of Briarwych Church
The Raven Watcher
The Madness of Annie Radford
The Soul Auction
One Night at a Soul Auction
The Life, Death, Life, Life and Death of Martin Keller (Dark Season V)
The Priest Hole
The Devil, the Witch and the Whore (The Deal Book 1)
Dead Souls Volume Three (Parts 27 to 39)
Dark Season II: Sentinel
The House on Everley Street (Death Herself Book 2)
The Sickening King (The Grid 2)
Graver Girl (Grave Girl 2)
Army of Wolves (Dark Season III)
The Gravest Girl of All
The Return of Rachel Stone
Raven Revivals
The Island
Haunted
3AM
The House We Haunted and Other Stories
Dead Souls Volume Four (Parts 40 to 52)
The Last Priest
The Abyss (The Island Book 3)
The Border Part Four
Gothos (Dark Season VI)
Days 9 to 16 (Mass Extinction Event Book 3)
The Blood House
The Haunting of Blackwych Grange
The Dead City (Ophelia book 2)
The Border: Part One
Last Wrong Turn
The Raven Watcher (The House of Jack the Ripper Book 7)
Horror Thriller Box Set 1
The Border Part Three
Meds
The Dead and the Dying (a John Mason thriller)
The Night Girl: The Complete Series
Days 5 to 8
Evolution (Demon's Grail Book 2)
Days 5 to 8 (Mass Extinction Event Book 2)
American Coven: The Complete Series (2013)
The Vampire's Grave and Other Stories
The 13th Demon (Demon's Grail)
The Lighthouse
Asylum: The Complete Series (All 8 Books)
The Ghost of Shapley Hall
Days 46 to 53 (Mass Extinction Event 11)
The Broken Trilogy
The Final Act (The House of Jack the Ripper Book 8)
The Border Part Five
The Nurse
Doctor Charles Grazier (The House of Jack the Ripper Book 6)
Annie's Room
The Mermaid's Revenge
Doctor Charles Grazier
The Final Act
Days 54 to 61 (Mass Extinction Event 12)
Finality
Dark Season: The Complete Third Series (All 8 books)
Fallen Heroes
Ophelia (Ophelia book 1)
The Border Part Two
Broken White: The Complete Series (All 8 Books)
At the Edge of the Forest
The Devil's Hand
The Death of Addie Gray
Mass Extinction Event: The Complete Fourth Series (Days 54 to 61)
Grave Girl
The Printer From Hell
Dark Season: The Complete Box Set
The Farm
The Body at Auercliff
The Haunting of Caldgrave House
The Dead and the Dying
Ward Z
Testament (Dark Season VII)
13 Nights of Horror: The Disappearance of Rose Hillard
Ascension (Demon's Grail Book 1)
Laura
The Ghost of Longthorn Manor and Other Stories
A House in London
Days 9 to 16
Eli's Town
The Grid
B&B
Persona (The Island Book 2)
Other People's Bodies
The Border Part Eight
The Devil's Photographer
Lupine Howl: The Complete First Series (All 8 books)
The Ghosts of London
Archangel (A Ghosts of London Novel)
Darper Danver: The Complete First Series
AHC2 Vampire Asylum
Days 1 to 4
The Vampire of Downing Street and Other Stories
The Library: The Complete Series (All 8 Books) (2013)
Perfect Little Monsters and Other Stories
Journey to the Library [The Library Saga]
The Dog
Take Me to Church
Mass Extinction Event (Book 3): Days 46-53
The Pornographer's Wife
A Beast Well Tamed (The House of Jack the Ripper Book 5)
Stephen
Broken Blue: The Complete Series
The Civil Dead (Dark Season IV)
The Girl Clay
Dead End (Dark Season VIII)
The Dead Ones (Death Herself Book 3)
The House of Broken Backs: A Joanna Mason Novel
The Scream
Alice Isn't Well (Death Herself Book 1)
Mass Extinction Event (Book 2): Days 9-16
Twisted Little Things and Other Stories
Broken White: The Complete Series
The Ferry
The Prison
Ward Z: Revelation
The Curse of Wetherley House
The Haunting of Emily Stone
The Writer
The Horror of Devil's Root Lake
The Border Part Six
The Border Part Seven
Days 1 to 4 (Mass Extinction Event 1)
Mass Extinction Event (Book 1): Days 1-8
The Girl With Crooked Fangs
The Ghosts of Lakeforth Hotel
After the Cabin
The Hollow Church
The Camera Man
Meds (The Asylum Trilogy Book 2)
The Murder at Skellin Cottage