Hunted ts-1

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Hunted ts-1 Page 6

by Adam Slater


  Callum shook his head, confusion raging in his mind.

  ‘I don’t have any idea what you’re talking about!’

  For the first time, a flicker of doubt passed over the white face.

  ‘Can it be? Can you truly not know the truth about our kind?’

  ‘Our kind? What do you think I am?’ Callum cried in frustration.

  Jacob gave a smile that almost froze his blood. ‘You are a chime child. Like me.’ Callum slammed the door.

  Chapter 10

  It has come a long way. Distance and effort mean nothing to the Hunter; time does not age it. But the time between kills makes it hungry. It understands time.

  Instinct has brought it to a place of tangled trees. It can sense the leaf mould of long centuries at rest here. This has never been a place for flesh and blood to live, though at the old wood’s heart is one of their flimsy sacred piles of stone, and down where the wood thins stands a row of ruined, empty dwellings.

  The next human victim is close. The Hunter can sense its presence. Hunger draws them together. But the Hunter cannot tell precisely where its target waits.

  It pauses in the wood, straining to follow the tantalising glimmer of the victim’s energy, that power that makes this one worth the chase. The Hunter’s hunger grows piercing.

  Then, suddenly, as though a door has been slammed, the energy is gone.

  There is nothing. No clue, no guide.

  This has never happened before.

  The Hunter is furious. It is happy to be challenged, but it will not be mocked.

  With lithe, supernatural stealth, it moves swiftly through the trees. It cannot sense its victim any more, but it remembers the row of ruined dwelling places.

  Perhaps not all of them are empty.

  The Hunter must feed.

  Chapter 11

  Callum leaned against the door, breathing hard. His heart was beating wildly. After a moment, he threw the bolt across and double-locked the door. Then he ran through the cottage, pulling all the curtains closed, determined to shut out the horrors beyond them.

  Back in the sitting room, he looked around. The jar of rowan berries and hazel leaves still stood on the table. Melissa had told him about their powers of protection against the supernatural – now he had seen it at first hand. Was it just a coincidence that the cottage was filled with them?

  Yes, of course it was. Gran was an artist. The leaves and berries were pretty. She was probably planning to use them in one of her paintings.

  Still, even surrounded by their protective power, Callum wished he wasn’t going to be in the house alone for the next hour and a half. What were you supposed to do when a demonic spectre defaces your door with his own dripping blood? Dial 999? Yeah, right . . .

  Two bloody messages in two days, Callum thought, shuddering. He had tried to convince himself that the first one wasn’t meant for him, even though he couldn’t see any possible way he could have known about it before the news was made public. But the message on the door – there could be no denying who that was intended for. Was Jacob telling the truth when he claimed they were warnings? And what did they have to do with Callum being a . . . what had the boy called him?

  A chime child.

  ‘Born in the chime hours . . .’ Callum murmured. That didn’t make any sense either. How could the time he was born make a difference?

  And all the other murder victims – even if they had been born at the same time, why would that make someone want to kill them all?

  Callum stormed around the little cottage trying to convince himself that everything was normal. Table, pulled out. Jar of rowan (pretty berries, no more than that), on the mantelpiece. Homework, on the table. Kettle, on the gas ring -

  The front door shook. Someone was rapping smartly on the round brass knocker.

  Callum froze. Had the ghostly boy been standing out there all this time, waiting? Did he think Callum was likely to respond to a polite knock by opening the door again and inviting him in?

  ‘Go away!’ he shouted.

  ‘Oh, I’m sorry,’ replied a muffled voice from the other side of the door. It was a girl’s voice, a human voice. It sounded apologetic and surprised, and other than that, normal.

  Callum stepped closer to the door. After a moment’s hesitation he demanded, ‘Who’s there?’

  ‘It’s Melissa. Melissa Roper, you know, from school?’

  Callum’s heart sank. If it was Melissa, he couldn’t leave her standing there on the same side of the door where Jacob and his demonic dog were lurking. But what if it wasn’t Melissa? What if it was a trick? Callum bit his lip.

  ‘What do you want?’ The question came out more rudely than he’d intended. But he hoped her answer might give him a clue about whether it really was Melissa.

  ‘I didn’t mean to disturb you. I’ve brought you my . . .’

  Melissa’s voice carried on, even more muffled than before, so Callum couldn’t make out what it was saying. Carefully, he undid the lock and the bolt and opened the door a crack, wedging his body behind it so he could slam it shut if he had to. He peered through the gap.

  It was Melissa all right, standing beneath the porch light. She’d changed out of her school clothes and wore a long velvet skirt and a leaf-green cape. Over her shoulder was an obviously heavy bag decorated with tiny mirrors.

  ‘You’ve brought me your Pictish Fiction of the Actual?’ he said dubiously.

  Melissa laughed. For all her airy-fairy gear she looked solidly alive and normal. ‘British Dictionary of the Supernatural,’ she said. ‘It’s got your black dog in it. I thought you might like to have a look. And I said I’d help.’

  ‘How’d you know where to find me?’

  ‘Everybody knows where you live, Callum.’

  Callum was not reassured. Melissa laughed again. ‘Your gran’s address is in the post office window, you know. Pet portraits and watercolours for sale. Can I come in, or do you really want me to go away?’

  Callum scanned the garden behind her, but could see no sign of Jacob or Doom. He opened the door a bit wider so Melissa wouldn’t think he was a paranoid lunatic, and Cadbury came streaking into the house, his tail bristling like a toilet brush. Melissa giggled, and Callum felt himself relax slightly.

  ‘No – no. You can come in,’ said Callum, glad to have human company. He pulled the door fully open. ‘Sorry about the graffiti.’

  ‘Graffiti?’ Melissa replied.

  Callum looked down at the door’s faded green paint. The dripping, bloody letters were gone.

  ‘Nothing. Forget it.’

  Callum chewed his bottom lip. Maybe ghost blood was as insubstantial as a ghost itself.

  Melissa stepped easily over the threshold, frowning a little. As she put her bag down on the floor with a thump, it fell open, revealing a bundle of books. She straightened up, stretching, and looked around the room as Callum shut the door behind her and double locked it.

  ‘Wow,’ Melissa said. ‘Bringing you a bag full of books is sort of like carrying coals to Newcastle, isn’t it!’

  ‘They’re Gran’s,’ said Callum.

  ‘What, haven’t you read any of them?’

  ‘Gran’s taste is pretty dire,’ Callum answered. ‘Modern romance and nineteenth-century novels. And gardening and painting.’

  ‘Bet you’d find something if you looked.’

  ‘D’you want a hot chocolate?’ Callum asked. ‘I was just getting ready to do my homework.’

  ‘I’m sorry. You don’t like being interrupted, do you?’ Melissa said. ‘You sounded pretty angry when you answered the door. I could come back another time.’

  ‘No, it’s fine. To tell you the truth -’

  Callum stopped himself. He couldn’t tell her the truth.

  Instead he told her something close to the truth, something believable. ‘I thought you were Ed Bolton. He’s been out for revenge since that run-in with Gower yesterday. Look, let me get the fire going and boil the kettle, and I’ll take
a look at your book.’

  ‘You do the fire, I’ll make the hot chocolate,’ said Melissa.

  ‘OK.’

  Callum stirred up the embers as Melissa headed into the kitchen. She was quick but very messy. She managed to get milk all over the worktop, which Cadbury gladly attempted to clean up, and left rings of chocolate everywhere. But she was finished in no time.

  ‘So,’ she said, thumping herself down on the hearthrug with two steaming mugs, the breeze of her skirts stirring the flames in the grate. ‘Wow, cosy. I love this place. OK. Look, this is my Dictionary of the Supernatural. Here’s the entry on the Churchyard Grim.’

  Callum sat down beside her while Melissa read aloud.

  ‘“A Churchyard Grim is the spirit of a dog buried alive in a graveyard to act as a guardian for those laid to rest there.”’ She paused and made a face. ‘Ew, I’d forgotten about the buried alive bit. So in theory it’s not really dead, I guess – an immortal dog. But a good dog, since it’s supposed to be protecting people!’

  ‘Who’d expect loyalty and protection from something they’d buried alive?’ Callum replied, half laughing and half appalled.

  ‘Dunno,’ Melissa said, and took a gulp of hot chocolate, liberally sprinkling her long skirt with drips as she put the mug back on the hearth. ‘I don’t think the people who buried dogs in graveyards were very logical. It says that in Wales they used pigs instead of dogs!’

  ‘You’re really making a mess,’ Callum said as Melissa slopped yet more chocolate on herself.

  ‘I know. I can’t help it. Pretend it’s holy water – protection against evil spirits.’ Melissa shook her flyaway curly hair back out of her face and turned the page of the book. ‘“A Grim loves the sound of church bells and can be pacified by their ringing.” Look, there’s a picture.’

  Callum peered over her shoulder. The illustration showed a seventeenth-century engraving of a shaggy black beast as big as a bear. The size was about right, he reckoned, but it didn’t look much like a dog. Callum shivered. The creature from the woods hadn’t looked much like a dog either when he’d first seen it. But at least the book proved that the monster wasn’t just a product of his own imagination. Maybe it could be helpful in other areas . . .

  ‘Hey,’ Callum said. ‘Does this book say anything about chime children?’

  ‘Chime children?’

  ‘Yeah. Does it say what a chime child is?’

  Melissa picked up the book and propped it against her knees as she found the entry and began to read out loud.

  ‘“Chime child. Born beneath the light of a full moon in the ‘chime hours’ between midnight on Friday and cockcrow on Saturday. Until the age of eighteen, a chime child is gifted with unnatural luck, an uncanny ability to foresee future events, and the power to see ghosts. A chime child may also be able to sense the presence of evil spirits or of living beings of evil intent.”’ Melissa paused. ‘Wow, that could be helpful.’

  ‘Helpful!’ Callum echoed in disbelief. ‘Seeing ghosts could be helpful?’

  ‘No, knowing the future. Knowing about evil intent. Like guessing Ed Bolton’s plans for you -’

  Melissa looked up at Callum suddenly, her eyes wide.

  ‘That’s how you knew!’

  Callum shook his head. ‘Knew what?’

  ‘Knew that Ed was up there at the top of the stairs yesterday, even though you couldn’t see him. You knew something was going to happen to me, and you stopped it happening.’

  ‘I -’

  Melissa wouldn’t let him interrupt. ‘And again today in science. You knew something was going to happen there, too! You jumped out of your chair for no reason, and you didn’t get hurt!’

  Melissa slapped the book face down on the hearth. Her mug wobbled, cocoa splashing down the sides. Callum grabbed it before it could fall over.

  ‘It doesn’t mean anything,’ he protested. ‘I was lucky.’

  ‘Unnaturally lucky! Premonitions of the future, unnaturally lucky, and you can see ghosts, can’t you? That’s why you asked about the Church Grims. You’ve seen one, haven’t you?’

  Callum shook his head, his lips pressed together. He couldn’t answer. All his life he’d avoided talking about his strange abilities, as if keeping silent about them made them less real. But now that didn’t seem to be working any more. His abilities were pushing their way into his life, whether he liked it or not.

  ‘Say no if the answer’s no!’ Melissa commanded, her big eyes wide. Callum stared back at her, trying to gauge her mood. She wasn’t angry and she wasn’t sceptical. She was . . . well, the only word for it was excited. She thought this was an adventure. Maybe even fun.

  Callum looked away. It didn’t feel fun or exciting to him.

  ‘Go on – say no! Tell me you can’t see ghosts!’

  ‘I can,’ Callum said fiercely. ‘All right? I can. I see ghosts everywhere.’

  It was an embarrassment and a huge relief, all at the same time, to say it aloud to another person – to a human, not a bird or a cat. Or a ghost.

  ‘Wow,’ Melissa breathed, and fell silent.

  Callum couldn’t bring himself to say anything more. He stared at the fire, sipping at his own mug of hot chocolate, his knees drawn up close to his chest.

  After a moment, Melissa stirred.

  ‘Can you see them here? Now?’ she asked softly.

  Callum shook his head slowly. ‘No. Inside this house is the only place I feel safe.’

  ‘Wow,’ Melissa repeated with feeling.

  Callum was a little perplexed at her eagerness to believe him. ‘How come you don’t think I’m crazy? It doesn’t make any sense – seeing ghosts, seeing the future. And you’ve only got my word for it.’

  ‘You proved it to me yourself. You stopped me from getting hurt.’

  A glimpse of Melissa lying at the foot of the stairs, her skull shattered, a bloody mess, flashed across Callum’s mind. He tried not to react, but she must have read something in his face, because she suddenly went very still.

  ‘Oh my God, it was more than that, wasn’t it? You saved my life. You saw that something terrible was going to happen to me and you stopped it happening.’

  Callum gritted his teeth and said nothing.

  ‘Didn’t you?’

  He didn’t have the energy to argue with her. His shoulders slumped forwards in defeat.

  ‘You don’t want to believe it yourself, do you?’ Melissa said suddenly. ‘That’s why you’re so miserable about it. You don’t want it to be true.’

  ‘I don’t understand why you believe it,’ Callum said. ‘You’ve got no proof at all. You don’t see the ghosts, you don’t have the visions, your hands don’t start to tingle when something terrible’s about to happen.’

  ‘Do they really?’ Melissa asked, with intense interest. ‘So you can tell if a vision’s coming on?’

  ‘I think so.’

  ‘Can you feel it now?’ she asked.

  ‘I . . . well . . .’

  Callum had never seen Melissa look so determined. She was concentrating on something.

  ‘Are your hands tingling now?’ she asked fiercely.

  ‘Yes . . .’ Callum stared at Melissa. His fingers were electric with pins and needles. ‘Yes, they are – What are you doing?’

  Then another vision seared into his brain. Melissa’s hand in the fire, her head back, screaming in agony, the skin of her fist charred with bubbling blisters . . .

  Callum shook his head, trying to shake the horrific image away. But beside him, Melissa was already reaching out towards the hearth. Pushing her hand towards the burning coals.

  Without thinking, Callum rolled over on to his side, knocking her off balance. Then he grabbed her hand and held it down.

  ‘You idiot!’ Callum gasped. ‘What are you doing?’

  ‘You knew!’ Melissa crowed triumphantly. ‘You stopped me!’

  ‘But you weren’t just thinking about doing it – you were going to do it! If I hadn’t stopped y
ou, you’d have actually done it!’

  Callum thumped her fist down on the floor between them, holding it firmly. Melissa stared back at him, her chin tilted defiantly.

  He suddenly realised he had underestimated her. A lot. She was brave, and determined, and for some reason she trusted him – trusted that he could see the future. She’d been willing to risk burning the flesh off her hand to make her point. To prove to Callum, once and for all, what he was. Perhaps someone like that deserved his trust too.

  ‘I said I wanted to help you,’ she whispered.

  Callum let go of her hand.

  ‘All right.’

  Chapter 12

  ‘Hasn’t your gran ever said anything? About you being a chime child, I mean. She must know when you were born.’

  Callum shook his head. ‘People remember the day you were born, not the exact time – or if there was a full moon.’

  Melissa hesitated. ‘What about your mum’s family?’

  ‘They’re all in Cornwall. I haven’t seen them since she died three years ago . . .’ Callum trailed off. He didn’t need a vision of the future to know what Melissa would want to know next – how she had died. But he realised he didn’t mind telling her. Telling her about the ghosts had been harder.

  ‘I haven’t seen them since my mum’s funeral,’ Callum went on. ‘They never liked Dad and they shut Mum out after she married. When Dad left she stayed up north, because she had a good job. She was like me, I guess, a bit of a loner – an outdoor type. I suppose that’s where I get it. She was into mountaineering and that sort of thing. She was killed on a climbing trip in Wales along with three other people. I was supposed to go too, but that morning I decided to play cricket instead.’

  ‘Must be the worst thing ever, losing your mum.’

  ‘Well, you learn to live with it. But I still miss her.’

  Melissa hesitated. ‘When you see ghosts, do you -’

  ‘No.’

  ‘I wondered if maybe you could ask when you were born.’

  Callum shook his head. ‘I’ve never seen her. Besides, I can’t talk to ghosts. Most of the time they don’t even know I’m there.’

 

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