The Border: Part One
Page 1
Copyright 2015 Amy Cross
All Rights Reserved
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, events, entities and places are either products of the author’s imagination or are used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual people, businesses, entities or events is entirely coincidental.
Published by Dark Season Books
Kindle edition
First published: June 2015
“He’s our brother. Even if there’s a serial killer operating in the area, you can’t possibly suspect our own brother.”
At the heart of the Freeman family, there’s a secret. Something dark and rotten, something must never get out. Most of the time, they can ignore that secret.
But not now.
Not when Ben Freeman comes home after nine years on the road, to a family that suspects him of involvement in a series of horrific murders. There’s no proof that he’s responsible, and the only evidence is circumstantial, but still… Ben’s brother, sister and father all believe he’s the killer.
Matters aren’t helped by the fact that the murders always coincide with Ben’s visits home. Dead bodies, usually women, are found with their hearts ripped out, and with mysterious patterned knife wounds. When Ben’s latest visit coincides with yet another death, his family is finally forced to face the possibility that one of their own number is a violent, sadistic killer.
The Border is a horror thriller serial in eight parts, about a family’s search for the truth, and about a town gripped by the possibility that a killer lurks among them.
The Border
Part One
Prologue
Nine years ago
The lights of town were just about visible in the distance, but they were so far away, they might as well have been stars.
“So why did you invite me out here?” Caitlin asked, still holding onto Joe’s hand as she hurried across the dark field, forcing him to either let go or keep up.
He chose to keep up.
“I just thought it’d be fun,” he replied.
“But why?”
“Um…”
“It’s such a cold night,” she continued, her breath visible in the cold night air. “It’s fun being out here, miles from town, miles from anyone else. Warm nights are so cliched.”
“Hey, hold up!” Slowing, he held on tight to her hand, and this time it was her turn to make a choice. She chose to stop with him.
“What’s wrong?” she asked with a smile. “Going too far for you? Too fast?”
Sighing, he realized she was toying with him again. She was two years older than him, after all, and sometimes the age gap felt even bigger. A moment later, he felt his phone buzzing in his pocket and when he slipped it out, he saw to his surprise that it was Caitlin who was trying to get through.
“Aren’t you gonna answer?” she asked, grinning as she held her phone to the side of her face.
“Well, it seems -”
“Go on.” She was still holding his hand, albeit only fingertip to fingertip.
Figuring that he should keep her happy, he accepted the call. “Hey,” he said, “what -”
“Having fun?” she asked, her voice coming over the phone a fraction of a second after she spoke next to him. It sounded almost as if there were two of her.
“Yeah, but -”
“Do you realize,” she continued, “that my voice is being beamed up to a satellite and then bounced right back down to you?”
“Um… Sure…”
“Isn’t that amazing?” She pulled her hand away a little, so that only one fingertip was touching.
“It’s pretty cool.”
“Cool? Is that all you’ve got, Joe Baldwin? Cool?” She paused, fixing him with a faint smile. “Do you really think I’m gonna kiss you tonight if you can’t be a little more… engaging?”
He froze.
“Stop thinking so much,” she continued, suddenly stepping closer and clasping his hand in hers, while leaning toward him until their lips were just inches apart. She still had the phone against her face as she stared at his lips. “Come on. I like you because you seem spontaneous and fun, but right now I can see in your eyes that you’re frantically trying to decode everything I say.” She suddenly blew against his face, surprising him. “I’m not a puzzle.”
“I know,” he replied, lowering his phone.
“So don’t be that guy.”
“What guy?”
“Are you gonna hang up on me?”
“It’s cold,” he pointed out.
“So? Are you suggesting we should take our clothes off?”
“I’m just -” He paused. “Wait. What?”
“Come on.” Finally letting go of his hand, she turned and ran, racing across the field and quickly disappearing into the darkness ahead.
“Caitlin!” he shouted. “Stop!”
All he could hear were her footsteps on the grass, getting further and further away until they were gone.
“Caitlin!”
Silence.
A moment later, he heard her voice coming from his phone, before the signal cut off.
“Girls,” he muttered, starting to jog after her. After a moment, however, he stopped and looked around. Grass stretched away for a few meters in every direction, eventually blending with hazy darkness that rose to the sky.
He paused.
Listening.
Waiting.
“Caitlin!”
Hearing another buzz from his phone, he saw she was calling again.
“Hey,” he said as he answered, “where -”
“Hey?” she replied. “Is that how you answer every goddamn call, Joe Baldwin?” She laughed. “Hey,” she added, trying to imitate his voice. “Hey. Hey? Hey!”
“Sorry, I just -”
“Don’t apologize. Are you cold?”
“Kinda, but -”
“I wish there was a lake round here,” she continued. “Somewhere we could go swimming, you know? I’ve never gone swimming naked in a lake in the middle of the night. I know it’s cold, but that’d just make it more fun in a weird kind of way. Can you make a lake appear, Joe Baldwin?”
“Can I make a lake appear?” he stammered.
“Can you?”
“Well, I -”
“Can you perform any kind of magic at all? Anything that might impress me? Even if it’s just for a fraction of a second, I want magic.”
“Um -”
“Hey, is that you?” Suddenly there was a hint of concern in her voice.
“Is what me?”
“Coming toward me, dummy.”
Standing completely still, he looked around. “What do you mean?”
“I’m waving at you. See?”
He turned, but there was nothing.
“You must be able to see me,” she continued. “I can see you.”
He squinted, still looking around at the darkness, but there was no sign of her anywhere.
“Where exactly are you?” he asked cautiously.
“Come catch up,” she continued. “I really need to strip down a little.”
“I don’t see you.”
“Then why are you waving at me?”
He paused. One hand was holding his phone, the other was loose by his waist. “I’m not.”
“Don’t be a dick. Come on, can’t you get over here a little faster?” She laughed. “That’s better.”
“I’m standing still,” he told her.
“I can see you,” she said again. “Or your silhouette, at least. You’re still waving. You’re walking right toward me.”
“I’m not waving, Caitlin,” he continued, starting to worry a little, “and I’m not walking. I’m completely still, trying to work out
where the hell you are.”
“Liar,” she replied. “Hmm, you know what? Maybe this’ll hurry you up. I’m taking off my shirt right now. I know it’s cold but, hey, just a minute or two should be okay.” A moment later, fabric could be heard rustling against the phone.
He waited. “Caitlin?”
“There,” she continued, and from the tone of her voice he could tell she was smiling. “Well?”
“Well what?” He looked around again, but there was still no sign of her. “I don’t see you!”
“You’re walking right this way,” she told him. “I can see your silhouette. Now I can even see your breath. Fine!” Suddenly she could be heard running, before stopping again. “There. Ha, I see you decided to keep up after all.”
“Caitlin,” he shouted, “that’s not me! There must be someone else out here!”
“Come on,” she continued. “I’m tired of games. Come closer.”
“Caitlin…” Pausing, he realized he could hear footsteps over the phone, crunching toward her over the frozen grass.
“A little closer,” she said after a moment. “That’s right, Joe Baldwin, let me see your -”
He waited for her to finish. A moment later, he heard a sudden cracking sound that lasted a couple of seconds before cutting off dead.
“Caitlin?” he asked finally.
Silence.
“Caitlin? Are you okay?”
Taking a look at his phone’s screen, he saw that the connection was gone. He tried to call her back, but suddenly her phone seemed to be off.
“Caitlin?” he called out, looking around at the darkness. “Stop messing about! Where are you?”
He waited, but with a sigh he realized she was playing with him.
“Can you just give me a clue?”
No reply.
Taking a few steps forward, he tried to spot something – anything – that might give him a clue as to which way she’d gone. He could see the lights of the town in the distance, but they weren’t much use as he kept on going, convinced that sooner or later she’d give him a hint. She was playing with him, he told himself; she was just fooling around, messing with his mind. Trying her number again, he found that her phone was still off, which clearly meant that she was making life hard. He figured she was laughing at him, trying to spook him, making him work hard for whatever she was willing to give. Any other girl wouldn’t be worth the effort.
Either that, or she’d given up and gone home. He couldn’t discount that possibility, not entirely.
“Caitlin!” he shouted.
Making his way across the grass, he finally spotted something in the distance. After a few more steps, he realized it was just the old oak tree that everyone used as a reference point when they were out on the south side of town. Having been struck by lightning many years earlier, the tree was twisted and gnarled, with its trunk split in two almost down to the ground. On account of its distinctive v-shape, that goddamn tree had picked up a lot of nicknames over the years, not all of them fit to be repeated in polite company. As he got closer, Joe told himself that at least it would make a decent place to stop and get his bearings, and he figured -
Stopping suddenly, he realized there was a figure sitting between the two main parts of the trunk, nestled in its nook.
He stopped.
“Caitlin?”
No reply.
No sign of her breath, either, in the cold night air.
He took a few more steps forward, and now he could tell that the outline of the silhouette was definitely hers. With the lights of town in the distance, he could make out the shape of Caitlin’s head, with her distinctively perky nose and her hair drawn back tight into a ponytail. She seemed to be leaning forward slightly.
“Hey,” he continued, stepping closer, before remembering what she’d said earlier. “No, wait, not hey. I mean…” He stopped just a few feet from her. “I’m here,” he continued, with a faint smile. “Now what?”
He waited.
No response.
“Did you take your shirt off?” he asked, trying to work out the answer from her silhouette. He took another step toward her, looking at the shape of her chest. After a moment, however, he saw something drip down from her chin, landing on her belly.
He paused.
“Caitlin?”
A moment later, another drip, larger than the first. This time, the cold night air seemed to amplify the sound of the drop as it patted on her belly.
Not wanting to seem too young or immature, he told himself not to panic.
“So are you okay?” he asked finally.
He waited, before finally another drip fell.
Reaching into his pocket, he took out his phone and brought up the torch app. Shining it forward while trying not to blind her, he saw her face and realized that she was completely still, staring straight ahead with her eyes wide open and with something dark smeared around her chin.
He opened his mouth to ask what she was doing, before another drip fell down from her face.
“Caitlin?” he whispered.
He stepped closer, forcing a smile.
“Hey, Caitlin. Come on, enough’s enough, don’t -”
Suddenly there was a faint cracking sound as her head jerked forward slightly, and the drips gave way to a brief trickle of liquid that seemed to run from the center of her face, splattering against her belly
He opened his mouth to say her name again, but something stopped him.
It’s a trick, he told himself. She’s messing with me.
He stepped closer, but this time he made his way around so he could see her properly. The light from his phone lit her face bright white and he saw that there was a thick wound, punctured in the center of her forehead just above the eyes, with two distinct trickles of blood running down to meet a second wound that had smashed her lower jaw and dislodged several of her teeth. Her neck was at an unusual angle, twisted in a way that instantly made him feel nauseous. There was something else, too; a hole had been punched in her chest, just below the collarbone, leaving a glistening, hollow space behind the broken ribs.
For a moment, all he could do was stare.
It’s not real, he told himself, trying to think of all the ways she could be tricking him. She brought a dummy up here to -
Suddenly his phone started buzzing. Looking down, he saw to his horror that it was Caitlin again, trying to get in touch.
He paused, before tapping the screen to answer and then slowly raising the phone to the side of his face.
“Hello?” he asked. “Caitlin, is -”
Immediately, he heard his own voice coming from the phone, right over his shoulder.
He turned.
His scream was heard for miles.
I
There might be a thin line between good and evil, but Beth Hague had learned long ago that things could get muddied when you were close to the border. You could be on the bad side, but still real close to the good, or you could be on the good side and just one step from doing something really really bad.
Today – Paradise Beacon motel parking lot, just outside Bowley
“Come on, you goddamn cock-sucker,” she whispered, barely even blinking as she sat in her dark car and watched the door to room 5. She’d been crying earlier in the evening, crying more than she’d ever cried before, but now she was dry-eyed and determined.
Now she had a plan.
“Mummy, can we go home?”
“Soon,” she replied, not even turning to look at Lucy in the back seat.
“Mummy, I’m tired.”
“I know, just…” She paused, letting her voice trail off for a moment as she imagined the door to room 5 opening and Bob – lying, cheating, skirt-chasing Bob – stepping out with his arms around that little bitch’s waist. For a moment, she allowed the image to fill her soul, to consume her every thought and bring boiling rage rising through her body until she was almost trembling with anger, until she was almost ready to storm out of the car
and go knock on that door and bring the bastard out, and then make him pay for every single humiliation. One by one, in order, and with no mercy, she’d list ever slight, every wrong. She knew it wouldn’t help in the long-term, but right now it’d feel so goddamn good.
Finally, remembering that she’d always sworn to be a better mother to her daughter than her own mother had been to her, she turned and stared at Lucy, before slowly forcing a smile. “Hey, sweetheart,” she continued, “just… Just five more minutes, okay? And ignore any bad words Mummy says. Mummy should know better.”
“What are we doing here?” Lucy asked, with tired eyes.
“We’re just taking a quick look to see if Daddy’s around.”
“Why would Daddy be here? Daddy works on the other side of town. Daddy’s office is a big tall building, and it doesn’t have a neon palm-tree flashing outside” Turning, the little girl looked out the window and watched as a dark figure emerged from the brightly-lit pharmacy on the other side of the parking lot. “I don’t like this part of town,” she added cautiously, as she noticed a crack in the car’s window, running up from the bottom-right corner.
“I know, but…” Beth paused for a moment. It was so tempting to unleash the whole thing, to tell Lucy what a disgusting man her father was, to stop protecting her and to start teaching her, at the age of just eight, something she’d inevitably find out for herself one day. At the same time, she knew she had to be the better person, and she didn’t want to break the girl’s heart. Not yet. “We’ll go to McDonald’s after, okay?” she continued, finding another smile from somewhere. “You can have whatever you want.”
“I don’t like McDonald’s.”
“Since when?”
“Since forever. Anyway, Burger King’s closer.”
“It is?” She checked her watch. “Huh. You know, for an eight-year-old, you sure -”
Hearing her phone ringing, she turned and grabbed her jacket from the next seat. Fumbling through the pockets, she was already trying to work out what she’d say if it was Bob on the other line, calling from inside room 5 with some pathetic excuse about why he’d missed all her calls earlier. “I’m at work,” he’d probably say, which was his go-to excuse for everything, since he obviously assumed she’d never check. By the time she found her phone, she was just about ready to tell him to go to hell, but finally she saw – with a hint of relief, but then some disappointment – that it was her brother Jack who was trying to get through.