Insulation (A Horror Suspense Novella)

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Insulation (A Horror Suspense Novella) Page 5

by Saunders, Craig


  *

  XVIII.

  A doctor fussed over some charts at the foot of Yvonne’s bed when Terry poked his head through the door.

  ‘Doc, OK to come in?’

  ‘No. No visitors.’

  ‘OK. I’ll just come in for a bit.’

  ‘I said no.’

  ‘I know,’ said Terry, with a smile for Yvonne. ‘But I only asked to be polite.’# Terry heaved himself into an armchair to one side of Yvonne. The doctor swore quietly. Terry could have that effect on some people. Yvonne would have smiled. Maybe it was the drugs, but she could manage to feel happy at the sight of Terry even through the pain.

  ‘Is she going to be OK, Doctor? No fancy words, please. I’m not a Doctor.’

  ‘She’ll make a full recovery,’ said the doctor. ‘She can’t talk.’

  ‘That’s pretty obvious,’ said Terry. ‘Thanks, Doc.’

  The doctor looked like he was going to make an issue, but just walked out, saying something under his breath.

  ‘You’re pretty amazing,’ said Terry. ‘You know that, right?’

  For some absurd reason he seemed proud.

  She turned her eyes to him. She couldn’t speak, she couldn’t smile. Couldn’t even cry.

  ‘The guy you killed…turns out he had over forty people stuffed in his walls. They’re still sorting out the parts. They’re calling you a fucking hero on the news. Well, not fucking, but…heroine, too, if we’re honest. I’d kiss you if I could get near you. I can’t begin to imagine…’

  He fell silent for a while. He looked like he was going to cry, but he was a big man and big men don’t cry. Not in front of anyone, anyway.

  ‘I just wanted to see you. Let you know…I’ve got a house…there are no neighbours. It’s up in Norfolk, just in the country. It’s not much, but it’s quiet. I thought…when you get out the press’ll be all over you. Maybe you’ll want to get away.’

  A tear rolled down Yvonne’s cheek.

  I can cry...I can still cry...

  She wished she could smile, then, because she knew if she could cry, one day, she'd be able to smile, too.

  She was just a little woman. She could cry in front of people. She couldn’t talk. She wished she could. But crying felt good enough for now.

  ‘You sleep now, if you want.’

  Yvonne wanted to thank him. A simple thank you. It meant more than Terry knew.

  But then, perhaps he did understand. He was a good agent, but he was a friend. A friend, maybe, first. She was surprised she hadn’t seen it before.

  Even if she could talk, she wouldn’t have known what to say.

  ‘I’m right here, honey. You want to close your eyes, go right ahead. I’ll be here when you open them again.’

  He noticed her tears. ‘Favourite client, that’s all. Don’t get all bloody misty.’

  Yvonne somehow managed to smile at Terry without moving her mouth at all. Perhaps it was all in the eyes. She let herself drift away again, while he sat beside her. This time she didn’t dream of darkness, or the unquiet dead packed into her landlord’s walls. Their voices were gone, never to be heard again. She never had those dreams again, but she had a new dream instead, the first of many while her friend watched over her.

  She dreamt of a home in the country. Nothing big, just a small cottage. It had low ceilings, but then she wasn’t tall. The light was dappled and shone through the trees but her head didn’t hurt anymore. She didn’t see the blackness, lurking there, at the edge of her vision. She saw only light and shade.

  The cottage was covered in some kind of plant, out of season. Maybe it was wisteria, or clematis. Maybe she would find out.

  And it was somewhere quiet. She could hear birdsong and the whisper of the wind through the trees all around. It was a place with cool breezes and water nearby that trickled and cleansed everything underneath it. There was just her, sometimes Terry, coming to visit, and no one else and for miles on end.

  The End.

  About the Author:

  Craig Saunders is the author of many novels and novellas, including 'Masters of Blood and Bone', 'The Estate' and 'Deadlift'. He writes across many genres, but horror, humour and fantasy are his favourites.

  Craig lives in Norfolk, England, with his wife and children, likes nice people and good coffee. Find out more on Amazon, or visit:

  www.craigrsaunders.blogspot.com

  www.facebook.com/craigrsaundersauthor

  @Grumblesprout

  Thank you for reading. If you're looking for other horror/dark fiction to try from British authors, here a few you might enjoy:

  Iain Rob Wright (www.iainrobwright.com)

  Bestselling author of Horror and Suspense. Active member of the Horror Writer’s Association.

  Matt Shaw (www.mattshawpublications.co.uk)

  Horror’s Darkest Imagination. EXTREME CONTENT.

  Greg James (www.manderghastpress.co.uk)

  Horror and Grimdark Fantasy.

  Ian Woodhead (www.ianwoodhead.moonfruit.com)

  A master of nightmares.

  Graeme Reynolds (www.graemereynolds.com)

  Dark tales from a twisted mind.

  Jacob Rayne (www.jacobrayne.worpress.com)

  Writer of gritty and disturbing horror fiction

  Tim Miller (www.timmiller.org)

  Extreme Horror Author.

  Michael Bray (www.michaelbrayauthor.com)

  Bestselling author of Whisper, a #1 hit!

  Bonus novella (sample):

  A Scarecrow to Watch over Her

  by

  Craig Saunders

  1.

  Thursday

  ‘Madge!’

  ‘What?’

  ‘Door!’ Bernie, shouting at her from somewhere upstairs.

  ‘I heard it. I’m doing breakfast!’

  ‘I’m in the toilet, woman!’

  Brilliant.

  How just like Bernie. Delivering orders from the throne.

  Margaret swore under her breath about Bernie, the persistent caller at the door, and just the general kind of swearing that put-upon people mutter quietly to themselves.

  She took the pan off the AGA, wiped her hands on a tea towel, tossed it onto the worktop. The bacon still sizzled as she walked from the kitchen, along the hall, to the front door.

  She checked her hair in the full length mirror in the hallway. Grey, but tidy. Good enough. There was a spot of fat on her dress. She thought about a quick change, but the ringing at the door wouldn’t give up.

  ‘Just a minute!’ she called, pulling her hair back from her forehead with her palm. The strands fell back across her face as she pulled open the heavy door.

  ‘Oh,’ she said, as she saw the policeman on her doorstep. He was smiling, but that didn’t stop her asking, ‘Is something wrong?’

  ‘No, ma’am,’ he said, keeping his smile in place. It came out as ‘marm’. Policemen really did still speak like that in the rural heart of the fens.

  ‘Can I help you?’

  ‘I’m sorry, am I interrupting your breakfast?’

  Well, yes, she thought.

  ‘Not at all.’

  He nodded. Took a breath.

  'It’s just a courtesy call, really. We’re stopping at all the homes in the area.’ He made a show of stepping back, taking in the view. ‘It’s a nice house.’

  ‘Thank you,’ said Margaret, a trifle impatiently. She knew full well it was a nice house. It was a Georgian farmhouse; old enough to have space and style, but not old enough to be tumbling down around their ears.

  The policeman coughed into his hand. When he took his hand away his beard was slightly askew, wiry ginger strands pointing this way and that.

  Margaret wondered what the world was coming to. Policemen wearing beards indeed!

  And gormlessly, he stared back.

  ‘Officer?’ she prompted.

  A quick sniff and the man dragged his mind back on track.

  ‘Ah. Yes. As I say, a courtesy. We thoug
ht we should let you know, there’s a load of gypsies coming the weekend. A horse and pony show. The long weekend?’

  ‘I know it’s a long weekend, officer. Your point?’ Margaret smiled as she said it. She was aware she was being brusque. She didn’t like to be thought of as rude. She was, despite her best efforts, thought rude among the ladies of the parish council. Margaret simply was not a people person.

  ‘Well, we thought we’d let you know. You know.’

  ‘No, officer, I’m afraid I don’t know. What about the gypsies?’

  ‘They’re in Mr. Davis’ field.’

  ‘I know Mr. Davis. I’m sure who he lets in his field is of no concern.’

  The policeman coughed again. This wasn’t going how he had expected.

  ‘Erm, Mrs…?’

  ‘Rochette.’

  ‘Mrs. Rochette, as I’m sure you are aware, gypsies are prone to stealing things, and can be quiet, ah, unsociable, shall we say?’

  ‘And stealing away babies and suchlike?’

  ‘Please, Mrs. Rochette. I’m just doing my job. I understand your point, but it’s a fact. We’re calling at all the houses in the area. I’d advise you to make sure your doors are locked, and the barns, too. You may wish to give them the benefit of the doubt, but we’re letting you know for a reason. Thefts in the area rocket whenever the gypsies come, and that’s a fact, ma’am.’

  Margaret nodded. She deemed it the quickest way to get rid of the man. Her bacon would be ruined. She was more concerned about that than any gypsies.

  ‘Well, thank you for the warning, officer. I’m sure I shall take it in the spirit intended.’

  The policeman wasn’t sure how to take that. He tipped his hat and rubbed his face, seeming surprised to find his beard there.

  ‘I’ll leave it to you ma’am.’

  ‘I should think so,' she said. 'Is that all?’

  ‘Yes. Good morning to you.’

  Margaret sniffed and looked out into the field past the policeman. The scarecrow was down again in the front field. She’d have to tell Bernie about that.

  She closed the door.

  *

  The policeman shrugged and walked away. He’d tried. Some people just didn’t want to listen to sense. Being politically correct was all well and good, but they hadn’t called in reinforcements from three counties on a whim.

  He turned up the gravel drive and gave one last look back at the house. It didn’t look secure, but it wasn’t his job to tell them that.

  'I'll be a monkey’s uncle if they don’t lose their best silver before the weekend's through,' he said to himself as he crunched back down the drive to his car.

  *

  Bernard came down the stairs hitching his trousers around his waist. He was a man with an ample waist and very little behind, hence his habit of pulling on his trousers. If he didn’t, they were likely to fall down around his ankles at the most inopportune of moments.

  ‘Who was it?’ he asked, pretending to scratch his nose, but really smelling them, in case his finger had slipped a little while wiping. Bernie wasn't much of a hand-washer.

  ‘The police.’

  ‘What? The police?’

  ‘Yes, Bernie. The police.’

  ‘What?’

  ‘The police, Bernie.’

  ‘Hmm. Buggers. What did they want?’

  ‘Apparently we’re to batten down the hatches for the weekend. The gypsies are coming. If that young man had his way I suspect we’d all be hiding in the cellar as if it were the Germans.’

  ‘Gypsies, you say?’

  ‘Yes, Bernie, gypsies.’

  ‘Hmm. Can’t abide gypos.’

  Bernard turned smartly on his heel after this pronouncement and walked out into the hall. Margaret sighed and followed him.

  ‘Bernie?’

  He was in the dining room with his head bowed before a the locked cabinet, fiddling with the lock. The lock and key were small, and Bernard’s fingers large. Like sausages.

  Margaret watched him with a frown on her face. Her arms were crossed and her fingers tapped out a rhythm on her bicep, too. As if any one of the three signs of displeasure wasn’t enough.

  When Bernard turned around with the shotgun, a side-by-side Berretta twelve-gauge, she shook her head firmly, just in case he didn’t get the point.

  ‘Where do you think you’re going with that?’

  ‘If the gypos are coming I’m going to be ready. Thieving buggers.’

  She snatched the gun from him before he could load the shells he was fumbling with, and thrust it back in the cabinet.

  ‘Nobody is shooting anybody, you hear?’

  ‘How are we supposed to protect ourselves if we haven’t got a gun? I’m not young enough to be doing any fisticuffs, you know.’

  ‘Bernie, don’t be an arse.’

  Bernard looked sufficiently chagrined, she decided. She held her hand out.

  ‘Key.’

  ‘Madge!’

  ‘Key.’

  ‘Oh, blast it, woman. They’ll be in here, raping you, you know. Stealing the cows and the silver.’

  ‘Key.’

  He puffed air through his red-veined nose but gave her the key, then stalked out of the house in a childish huff.

  Margaret put the key in her mother’s blue vase.

  Bloody fool, she thought. He’d probably shoot himself before he shot any gypsies, but she didn’t trust him enough to take the chance.

  *Sample End*

  Also by Craig Saunders

  Novels

  The Dead Boy

  Left to Darkness

  Masters of Blood and Bone

  Damned to Cold Fire (previously published as 'The Estate')

  A Home by the Sea

  RAIN

  Vigil

  The Noose and Gibbet

  A Stranger's Grave

  The Love of the Dead

  Spiggot

  Spiggot, Too

  BLOOD DRUGS TEA (previously published as 'The Gold Ring')

  The Devil Lied

  Novellas

  UNIT 731

  Death by a Mother's Hand

  Days of Christmas

  Flesh and Coin

  Bloodeye

  Deadlift

  A Scarecrow to Watch over Her

  The Walls of Madness

  Insulation

  Short Story Collections

  Dead in the Trunk (Vol. I)

  Angels in Black and White (Vol. II)

  Dark Words (Vol. III)

  The Cold Inside (Vol. IV)

  Writing as Craig R. Saunders:

  The Outlaw King (The Line of Kings Trilogy Book One)

  The Thief King (The Line of Kings Trilogy Book Two)

  The Queen of Thieves (The Line of Kings Trilogy Book Three)

  Rythe Awakes (The Rythe Quadrilogy Book One)

  The Tides of Rythe (The Rythe Quadrilogy Book Two)

  Rythe Falls (The Rythe Quadrilogy Book Three)

  Beneath Rythe (The Rythe Quadrilogy Book Four)

 

 

 


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