Dead Flesh Page 20
“‘They fell overboard! They just jumped!’ said this big guy,” Sam said, coming back across the room and sitting next to me on the bed.
“Some woman started shouting that a man and a woman had jumped overboard and this other guy said that they had just flipped over the side of the boat.
“I pushed through all the people, and saw my dad’s shirt floating on the waves. Then it disappeared beneath the boat. The captain raced towards us. He was telling people to get out of his way. He wanted to know who it was that had fallen over the side of the boat. I told him it had been my mum and dad,” Sam said.
“What happened then?” I asked him.
“The captain stood and stared at me,” Sam explained. “Then, he put his hands on my shoulders, and the captain asked, ‘you sure about that, kid?’
“I just nodded, Kayla. I didn’t know what to say. I was in shock or something,” Sam said, and I took one of his hands in mine. “My parents’ bodies were never found. And in the end the captain decided he should take the boat back to shore. We were met on the jetty by police officers, paramedics, and Life Boat crew.
“The captain spotted me standing alone in the crowd and pointed me out to a police officer. Everything seemed to slow down and I felt my knees begin to buckle beneath me. But before I fell down, an arm was snaking around my shoulders and holding me up,” Sam explained and his eyes had grown wide.
“Who was it, Sam?” I asked him.
“I looked sideways to find I was being supported by the hooded figure I had seen standing on the beach,” Sam breathed. “My eyelids felt heavy, and I had to fight to stop them closing. But the figure held me tight, then lent forward and whispered into my ear.”
“What did he say?” I asked, totally wrapped in Sam’s story.
“‘Everything is going to be okay. I promise.’ That’s what the figure said. ‘Who are you?’ I whispered back, unconsciousness nearly taking me. But I managed to tilt my head back just a fraction, in the hope I could see who it was beneath the hood. Then, the police officer came forward and took hold of me. He asked the stranger if they knew my name.
“‘Brooke. Sam Brooke,’ the stranger said, letting go of me.
“‘Do you know him?’ the police officer asked the stranger.
“‘Kinda,’ the stranger said, then stepped away. The police officer tried to support me with one arm as he fumbled for the radio attached to his belt. I slumped in the officer’s arms, and then fell to the ground. Rolling onto my back in the sand, I struggled to open my eyes. I needed to see who it was beneath that hoodie, Kayla.”
“What did you do?” I asked Sam.
“I called out as the stranger walked away up the beach,” Sam explained. “Turning, the figure looked back at me. Then, pulling back the hood, the stranger revealed their face to me. All I could do was stare in wonder – they were beautiful.”
“Who was it?” I gasped, almost ready to pee myself.
“It was you beneath that hood, Kayla,” Sam whispered. “You winked at me, then you pulled the hood back over your face and disappeared into the crowd. It was then that I slipped into unconsciousness and everything went black.”
“It wasn’t me,” I said, jumping up. “I’ve never seen you before and I’ve never been to a beach in Cornwall.”
“It was you, Kayla,” Sam insisted. “I couldn’t believe it the first day I saw you rummaging around in the Poor Box. It was like seeing a ghost. I didn’t want to...I couldn’t say anything, but that’s how I know you are different.”
“This is getting really weird...” I started.
“Don’t you see, Kayla? You were there the day my parents died, and then you show up here...and your parents drowned, too.”
I wanted to tell Sam that my parents hadn’t drowned, that it was lie created by Potter, but I had to keep the pretence up. “Sam, I don’t know what you’re talking about...” I tried to convince him that he was mistaken, but he wasn’t listening to me.
Then, gripping me by the shoulders, and staring me straight in the eyes, he said, “Don’t you see, Kayla, you’ve been sent to help me again.”
“Help you?” I breathed in disbelief. “What are you talking about?”
“You must realise that you are different from everyone else here,” he said excitedly. “Don’t you remember what McCain did with your hands – how he burnt you? You didn’t feel a thing.” Then, grabbing my hands and staring down at them, he said, “See, there are no scars, Kayla – your hands have healed already – that’s impossible.”
“They weren’t as bad as they looked,” I stammered. “I used cream...”
“Cream!” Sam cried. “There is no cream in the world that could get rid of burns like you had. You’re different, Kayla – even McCain has sensed it. You’re here for a reason.”
“And what’s that?” I snapped, just wanting him to leave my room so I could contact Kiera and get out of Ravenwood.
“You’ve been sent to help me,” he said, tears standing in his eyes. “You’ve been sent to get me out of here.”
I pushed him away from me, not wanting to hear any more. “I’m sorry, Sam, but I haven’t been sent here to save you or
anyone else.”
“But you have, Kayla,” Sam said. “You just don’t see what you are.”
“What am I?” I almost screamed at him.
“You’re an angel, that’s what you are,” he breathed. “You’re an angel, Kayla – a dead angel!”
“Dead angel?” I mumbled, and if I’d had a heart it would have been racing. “I’m not dead!”
Then, reaching into his trouser pocket, Sam pulled out a folded piece of newspaper. “I came across this, Kayla, not long after I saw you on the beach that day,” he said, unfolding the paper.
“What is it?” I asked, my hands starting to tremble.
“It’s about you, Kayla,” he said, handing me the torn piece of newspaper.
I took it from him, desperately trying to steady my hands as I looked down at the headline:
Murdered Girl Found on Side of Cumbrian Mountain
I read the words underneath and it described how sixteen-year-old school girl Kayla Hunt’s naked and mutilated body had been found partially covered by snow on the side of a mountain. With tears of my own beginning to well in my eyes, I screwed up the piece of newspaper when I saw the picture of myself staring back at me and read the part which described how the killer had cut off my ears.
“That’s not me,” I said, sniffing back my tears. “You’re mistaken.”
“That’s you, Kayla,” Sam said softly, almost caring. “I know it’s you.”
“It can’t be me,” I said looking at him. I tried to smile, as if brushing away what he had just said as being nothing more than nonsense. But I was in danger of being discovered. I just wanted to run – get out of Ravenwood. I wanted to talk to Kiera. I wanted to be with her – she always knew what to do – she made me feel safe. Why hadn’t I listened to her when she had warned against me coming to Ravenwood? Kiera said it would be too dangerous for me to come here and she had been right. So, looking Sam straight in the eyes, and trying to be as confident as Kiera, I said, “You’re mistaken, Sam Brooke. That can’t be me in that newspaper article because I’m not dead.”
“You are dead, Kayla,” he said, tears running down his face. “You’re my dead angel. I just have to prove it to you.”
Then, reaching into his trouser pocket he pulled out a long bladed knife. “Please forgive me,” he cried as he thrust the knife into my chest.
I looked at him, then down at the knife which protruded from me. I felt a crushing feeling inside of me, as if I were shrinking in some way. I staggered away from him. I just wanted to lie down. My whole body felt weak, and as I curled my numb-feeling fingers around the hilt of the knife, I noticed that my skin had started to turn grey and crack just like those statues I had seen.
“Kiera,” I mumbled weakly, dropping to my knees and into a black pool of my own blood. “
Kiera – I’m sorry I failed.”
Then, everything went black.
Chapter Thirty-Six
Kiera
I just couldn’t rest until Isidor came back. Potter sat in a cloud of cigarette smoke in front of the fire and we didn’t speak, both of us were lost to our thoughts and concerns. But, if I were being honest with myself, I was more than concerned. I feared for Kayla’s safety.
What was this body she had discovered? I wondered. Was it the body of Emily Clarke?
What I couldn’t be sure of was if there had been another murder committed. If so, had McCain done it like he had murdered Emily? But we didn’t even know that he had murdered her. Okay, so we know he used her credit card, but did that mean he had been involved in her murder?
I could feel my stomach cramping and it wasn’t through nerves, it was the cravings again. I looked at Potter and he stared at me through the smog that his constant smoking was creating in the room. Turning away, I went to the window and checked again to see if there was any sign of Isidor. The sky was almost black and night was drawing in.
“Where is he?” I muttered to myself. “He’s been gone ages.”
“I told you that I should’ve gone,” Potter grumbled from the corner of the room. The fire in the grate hissed and spat, the coals glowing red and hot.
“Isidor will be able to track her,” I said, looking at him.
“You better hope you’re right, because...”
“He’s coming!” I almost screamed with relief, spotting Isidor heading across the field that stretched before the farmhouse. Through the darkness, I could see that his hands were empty and I feared that perhaps he hadn’t been able to find the camera after all. But at least he had come back and hopefully with some news. I ran to the front door, and throwing it open, I waved my arm in the air and shouted, “Hey, Isidor!”
Seeing me, Isidor ran the last few hundred yards to the farmhouse and Potter joined me at the door.
Before he’d had the chance to say anything, I said, “Did you find the camera?”
“Yes,” he nodded, stepping into the warm and closing the door behind him. Then, reaching into his coat pocket, he pulled out a small silver coloured video camera. I took it from him and as I looked into his eyes, I could see that they were dark and fearful.
“What’s happened, Isidor?” I asked him. “Are you okay?”
“Yeah, I’m fine,” he said.
“Are you sure?” Potter smirked. “Because if any of those school kids picked on you I’ll go and speak to their teacher.”
“Yeah, very funny,” Isidor said, and went into the kitchen where he switched on the laptop.
I glared at Potter who shrugged and said, “I’m just messing about with the kid.”
Ignoring him, I followed Isidor into the kitchen where we all sat around the table. As Isidor connected the camera to the laptop, I said, “So, what happened?”
“I got to the school okay,” Isidor started to explain. “I crept around the outskirts of the school and it was a while before I caught a whiff of Kayla’s scent. I tracked it to a place by the wall where there was a large chestnut tree. The branches spilled out over the top of the wall, and I figured that Kayla must have used the tree to climb over and get out of the school grounds. But there was another scent.”
“What kind of scent?” Potter cut in, his face now a mask of concentration, and for all his piss-taking, I knew that he did really care for Kayla and somewhere, deep down, for Isidor too.
“I could smell that a boy had gone with her,” Isidor said, jiggling a wire that he had attached to the camera and the laptop.
“Do you think it was this boy, Sam that she has spoken about?” I asked him.
“I can’t be sure, but whoever it was, Kayla felt comfortable with him,” Isidor said.
“How do you know that?” Potter pushed.
“Because they headed across the field together to a nearby wood,” Isidor said. “Their scents were side by side, which told me that they walked together – they were very close. Kayla definitely trusted him. Anyway, I followed their scent through the woods, and it wasn’t long before I picked up another.”
“What kind of smell was it?” I asked him.
“A corpse,” Isidor said, as he figured out how to use the camera.
“The dead body that Kayla mentioned in her message,” I breathed.
“I followed Kayla’s and the boy’s scents which ran alongside a stream, until I came to a massive clump of bushes, just like she said I would,” he explained. “I sniffed about a bit and checked the bushes and then found the camera.”
“What about the corpse?” Potter asked, reaching into his pocket for his smokes.
Peering over the laptop at Potter, Isidor said, “Now that’s where it all gets a bit strange.”
“Strange?” Potter asked, glancing at me.
“The smell of the corpse was really strong, so I followed the scent into the bushes,” he said. “I’m no Kiera Hudson, but even I could see where the body had been lying – but it wasn’t there anymore.”
“So somebody had moved the body?” I asked him, feeling confused.
“No,” Isidor frowned. “I could only smell the three scents; Kayla’s, the boy’s, and the corpse’s. Which makes me wonder how the body got there in the first place because who brought it there? There were no other scents. It was like the body had fallen out of the sky, but that doesn’t happen, right?”
“I don’t want to put a downer on things,” Potter said, lighting his cigarette, “but if you could only smell three scents, perhaps the boy and the corpse were one in the same?”
“What are you trying to say?” Isidor asked him.
“Maybe Kayla got hungry – needed the red stuff?” he suggested, blowing smoke out of his nostrils. “You know what I’m trying to say, perhaps Kayla killed the boy?”
“Never,” Isidor hissed. “She wouldn’t do a thing like that!”
“Don’t be so sure,” Potter came back. “Your sis can be real feisty when she wants to be.”
“She would only kill in self-defence,” Isidor said.
“Maybe it was in self-defence,” Potter suggested. “All I’m trying to say is, we don’t know anything about this kid she has gone and hooked herself up with. Haven’t we all learnt by now that people don’t always tend to tell us the truth? People have a habit of talking bullshit around us.”
“She still wouldn’t have killed a human,” Isidor insisted. “Kayla knows that if she ever fed from one of them, she’d be creating another vampire.”
I sat silently for a moment and thought of the dream that I’d had of the girl falling out of the sky and landing in a wooded area near to Ravenwood School. Her face had been deformed somehow, but she had been chased away by wolves and ended up at Ravenwood.
“Are you okay, Kiera?” Potter asked me. “You look kind of lost.”
“I’m fine,” I said back, forcing a smile. “I was just thinking about what Isidor has just told us. So what did you do next?”
“The smell left by the corpse led out of the bushes and back in the direction of the school. So I followed it. I picked up Kayla’s scent again, and the boy’s. It was like the corpse was chasing them back to the school.”
“Sounds like a freaking vampire to me,” Potter cut in.
“It wasn’t a vampire, because the boy was still alive and he bled,” Isidor said.
“Oh this just keeps getting better and better,” Potter groaned.
“There was blood?” I gasped, my concern for Kayla’s safety growing with every passing moment.
“Only a little,” Isidor explained. I hardly got a whiff of it, it was very faint. If Kayla had fed on the boy, there would have been blood everywhere and the smell would have been stronger. I’m guessing that the boy fell over and got up again, because both he and Kayla made it back to the school. I followed their scents back there.”
“And the corpse that was running around, what happened to it?” Potter
snapped.
“Well that’s the strangest thing of all,” Isidor said, finally figuring out how to use the camera.
“What do you mean?” I asked him, feeling anxious.
“The corpse did make it as far as the school wall and the tree. The scent was really strong there, like it had stayed rooted to the spot for a while. But then, the smell moved off again. I followed it back across the field, the scent becoming stronger and stronger the whole time. It led me back into the woods and then suddenly, it stopped.”
“What did you find?” I asked him.
“Well this is the craziest part of my story,” Isidor said, his voice dropping to a whisper. “The smell stopped by a statue.”
“Statue?” I breathed, glancing over at Potter.
“Crazy, right?” Isidor said. “It was like the statue had been the corpse that had chased after Kayla and the boy!”
“Crazy,” Potter whispered and looked at me.
“You don’t know what that could mean, do you?” Isidor asked.
I looked at Potter, who stared back at me.
“Was the statue of a girl?” I asked Isidor.
“No, the statue was of a male, although it was hard to tell as it didn’t really have a face. But it was dressed like a man.”
Hearing this I thought of the nightmare I’d had in which the statue of a male had crawled from some bushes in a wooded area, and asked for someone called Alice.
“We’ve seen one of these statues before,” I told him.
“Where?” Isidor frowned.
“Back at the manor,” I said.
“So why didn’t you say anything?”
“What could I have said? I couldn’t explain why it was there myself,” I answered, but really I had wanted to forget the statue, I was scared that I was becoming one, too.
“What do you think they are?” Isidor asked me.
“I don’t know, Isidor,” I whispered. “I really don’t know.”