Terrorscape (Horrorscape)

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Terrorscape (Horrorscape) Page 12

by Campbell, Nenia


  The phone rang then, splicing the silence with its shrill ring, and the receptionist gave her a final searching look before answering. His voice was a bland mumble, muted, anxious and subservient. Val did not hear the words being exchanged. She had eyes only for freedom.

  She had barely reached the marble columns when she heard the sound of footsteps pattering against the green speckled tiles, and the cry of “Wait!”

  She turned, surprised to see the receptionist hurrying after her, slightly out of breath, and felt the first pangs of alarm. She wanted to run. Fast, leaving the receptionist to chase fruitlessly after her.

  But he wouldn't be the only one chasing me. “Excuse me, miss,” the receptionist said, all politeness once more. “I am terribly sorry, but is your name Valerian Kimble?”

  Her heartbeat became irregular as she heard the name she had not answered to in months spoken aloud from the lips of a stranger. She swallowed and croaked, “It's Val.”

  This, apparently, was good enough. “I do apologize. Please, go right upstairs. You're expected.”

  Expected.

  The word, and its implications, sent needles of fear pricking at her skin. “I didn't know you were a visitor,” the receptionist was saying, and something about the way he said visitor, and the way he looked at her when he said it, made her wonder what the voice on the other end of the line had whispered. “If you could just sign the guest book….”

  Val wrote her name—her old name—without its usual flourish and felt, ironically, as if she had just signed a death warrant.

  “I believe your gentleman is in two-one-seven. That's on the second floor.”

  Why are you calling him that? There's nothing gentle about him. Then she realized what those words meant. He knew she was here.

  He was watching her.

  The urge to run was stronger than ever. With effort, she suppressed it. Gavin had made it clear that the consequences of fleeing would be worse than whatever it was that he had planned for this afternoon.

  She froze again in the hallway, like a frightened rabbit, torn between stairs and elevator. Her legs felt rubbery and she wasn't sure she would be able to manage the climb. On the other hand, the elevator would be faster and she was in no hurry to get to her destination.

  She ended up taking the elevator. When it ground to a halt she stumbled and fell in an ungraceful sprawl on the wine-red carpet of a corridor plastered with aged fleur-de-lis wallpaper.

  A passing maid looked at her curiously, clucked her tongue, and continued pushing her cart of cleaning supplies. Val barely noticed this admonishment. As she pushed herself up her brain had room for only one thought and it shrilled like a klaxon, drowning out everything else:

  Don't go don't go don't go don't go. 217 was no more sinister than the other identical doors lining the hall. There was no lamb's blood dripping from the frame, no eerie lights, no howls of pain. Really, it was nothing more than it appeared to be on the surface: a perfectly ordinary door. And that, to Val, made her situation all the more terrifying because when it came right down to it, it meant nobody would ever suspect anything was amiss— nobody but her, that is.

  Just the way he wants.

  Val took a deep breath, swayed slightly, and knocked on the door. It swung open with a creak to reveal a room decorated in various shades of rose with cherry oak accents. She started, like a cat, at the rusty hinges, but when no human answered she nudged the door open wider. Timidly at first, and then more boldly.

  The unmade bed was the only sign of occupancy. There were no clothes casually tossed over chairs or tables, no shoes by the door, no suitcases, no food.

  No personal effects of any kind. But then behind the sofa—for she had gradually wandered past the threshold and into the actual room —her eyes landed on a chess set, carefully set up and ready for play on top of the nightstand. When she opened the single drawer, there was bible and a phone book inside.

  With a hand that was now shaking, she closed the drawer and stared at the chess set. If she had any doubts before, the chess set had erased them.

  This is his room. I am standing in his room. One of the chess pieces was missing, though. She checked under the nightstand, wondering if she had gotten too close and accidentally knocked it off herself but the pale gray carpet would have revealed one of the glossy wooden pieces easily.

  Val turned, glancing longingly at the open door, and regarded the rest of the room. The closet was open. A few clothes hung on the steel bar. Buttondown shirts in black, white and burgundy. There were two suits and a handful of belts and ties. The dresser contained a similar color scheme though when she realized one contained underwear, she flushed and terminated the search, trying to clear her head of the images that came, unbidden, to her mind.

  The fact that she was still capable of thinking about him in that way shocked and disgusted her almost as much as his threats had—except this time, all that loathing and repugnance was directed inward.

  She found no books or newspapers, though there was a small leather-bound journal that logged various numbers and letters. She remembered this, yes. She had seen one just like it five years ago. Chess notation. She turned the pages, marveling at the sheer number of games. He had to be playing at least twenty a day.

  Maybe fifty. But that would require a complete set, so where is the black queen? Suddenly, it seemed imperative that Val find her, that missing piece. Why, she couldn't say.

  The trashcan was mostly empty. There was an apple core, a plastic container that had once held cologne and was labeled in French, a couple of tissues, and a few pieces of crumpled up paper that proved to be receipts.

  Val looked around the room again. Each one of her footsteps sounded too loud and in the buzzing silence she could clearly hear the sound of her own heart like a large timpani drum.

  Every instinct in her body was now telling her— no, screaming at her—to leave. Now. While she still could. Oh, and she desperately wanted to, but she had to wait, because if she didn't at least try to play by the rules he wouldn't hesitate to punish her and the people she cared most about.

  Any clue she found might help. For whatever reason, Gavin did not appear to be around. Maybe, after all these years, she would finally get the evidence she needed to destroy him once and for all. Just as he had destroyed her.

  The only place she hadn't snooped was the bathroom, which would take the least time to scan. And then, after that, she would consider this whole agreement—or whatever it was—null and void.

  Gavin couldn't accuse her of defying him. The receptionist would back her up.

  Right, her brain mocked. Since when has he ever played by his own rules? He twisted them around whenever it suited him. And hadn't Gavin called to deliver his instructions? That had to mean that he knew she was here. That, or somebody else was in on this, which she doubted.

  But then where is he?

  And where is the black queen?

  The bathroom door was closed— was it closed before?—and when Val pulled it open the first thing she noticed was the steam. It was so hot and humid she could feel her hair frizzing. Beneath the dye, she still had red hair the same color and consistency of copper wire.

  Val shrugged off her pea coat and looked around, fanning herself. The bathroom was decorated similarly to the bedroom—rose towels and bathmat, ivory soap, and a jewel-tone collection of shampoos and lotions provided by the inn. Everything was spotless save for the mirror. In the steamed-up glass somebody had written the word checkmate. And there, yes, there, in the soap dish, was the missing black queen.

  Somebody had pounded a nail through the spot where its heart would have been had it been human. The symbolism of that was not lost on Val, and she was treated to the additional bonus of seeing her reaction in the mirror, eyes wide, lips parted in mute terror.

  She gasped aloud, clutching onto the doorknob as if for dear life as the floor beneath her reeled. He left it there. He left it there for me to find. He really does want to kill me. He
wasn't bluffing. Oh God, I have to get out of here.

  Behind her the door slammed. Val stumbled out of the bathroom, slipping and skidding on the still-damp floors, and came face to face with him—Gavin—the grandmaster—the man who had stalked her in her nightmares for nearly five years and who was now here, in the flesh, leaning against the closed door with his arms folded.

  He was wearing the black leather jacket from before over a white shirt, one of the white buttondowns from the closet, with half the buttons left undone. His black jeans looked freshly pressed, with creases so sharp they looked lethal.

  “Val.” The silver chain glinted at his bare throat, making a soft clinking sound as he tilted his head in a way that reminded her of a raptor.

  “I didn't think you'd come.” His words flew through the hush like a fleet of arrows. Val jerked visibly at the sound of his voice. He looked her up and down and his lips parted into a smile that wasn't at all friendly.

  “You see, I still wasn't quite sure what I might do if I saw you again.” He took a series of quick steps, his eyes never once leaving her face as he approached. “But now? Yes, now I know, because you helped me decide.”

  Val was finding it hard to breathe. He was mere feet away now. If she had so desired, she could have reached out and brushed him. But she did not desire. Time had done nothing to temper his fury. She could see the fiery intensity of it burning in his pale eyes as clearly as if they were windows into his twisted soul.

  Something had changed. And then she knew. What she knew, exactly, she did not know. But whatever it was, it caused her fear for her own well-being to eclipse that of Jade's.

  Her scream took flight from her lips like a startled moth, ending as abruptly as it started. And then her legs remembered how to work and Val did the first sensible thing she had done since she had chosen to come to this horrible place—she ran. She ran without looking back because the sound of his footsteps told her everything she needed to know.

  He was fast. She was faster, but only just so. She had learned that the hard way in Harper Hall. A fold in the carpet, a single misstep, and he would catch her.

  She circled and jumped over furniture, nearly stumbling in her haste, and managed to reach the door. She gave the knob a sharp jerk. It wouldn't open. He'd fastened the deadbolt.

  She spun around just as his hands hit the wall on either side of her with a slam that made her body twitch. “I wasn't finished,” he said, and the volume of his voice was almost conversational, but the tone—the tone was several shades below civil.

  He cupped her chin, tilting it closer for inspection. She felt his breath, quick and light from running, stirring the damp hairs around her face. He turned her face this way and that. “Look how you've grown.”

  “Please don't hurt me.” He leaned in so close she could make out the scent of him—wild and musky, with a floral edge that conjured up images of thorns rather than petals—and when his lips fleetingly grazed hers, too briefly to be a kiss, she felt her insides squirm. These were not the actions of a man who would listen reason.

  “Don't like to be touched, Val?” He dusted his hand across her breasts, once, mockingly, before wrapping them around her throat and pulling her in for a deep kiss that knocked her head back against the wall.

  He had cast off his mantle of fleece and wool. That was what had changed.

  He was all wolf, no longer concerned with keeping up appearances. She swallowed and his gaze dropped to her throat and then the grip on her neck was gone, replaced by his mouth.

  “A pity, that.” He flicked his tongue into her ear, just to see her shiver. “I've always wondered…how you would taste.”

  Her eyes leaped to his. He arched an eyebrow and, like a basilisk, it seemed his eyes could both and kill. “Yes, I've always wondered—that, among other things.” He tugged at her earlobe before moving down to the soft hollow where jaw and throat and ear conjoined. “Things you can't even imagine.” He smiled that chilling, mirthless smile. “But I think I'll show you. Yes, how about it, Val? Are you up for one—last—game?”

  She socked him in the face.

  It was hard to say who looked more stunned.

  She couldn't believe what she had done. Her fist had seemingly acted of its own accord and she stared at the appendage with as much shock as if it had suddenly sprouted tentacles.

  Even more shockingly, her punch had drawn blood. Gavin's blood. A bead of it clung to his lower lip, which had been torn by his teeth upon contact. She had never thought him capable of bleeding.

  Apparently he could. Rage whipped unbridled across his face like lighting, chased by another emotion Val couldn't read. A kind of knowing, as ominous as the thunder that preceded a storm, though what he thought he knew about her she couldn't even begin to guess.

  She struck him again, trying to lunge past him. He grabbed her wrists, nearly yanking her arms out of their sockets as he pinned them over her head.

  Val had never thought it possible to drown on air, but she was a believer now. Oh, yes. With the hand that wasn't holding onto her, he touched two fingers to his lip. The pad of his fingers was smeared red, staining the whorls of the skin. He stared at the blood for a moment, then looked at her through narrow eyes. She recoiled when she saw his arm flex, thinking he was going to hit her, and when she gasped he smeared his fingers all over her lips.

  She could taste it, his blood. The taste reminded her of the old, dirty pennies she had once put into her mouth as a child. Coppery, thick, dirty.

  “That was very unwise.” His teeth closed over her throbbing pulse. She felt his tongue flick across her skin, and then he bit down. Not enough to break the skin, but with enough to make her squirm. Enough to make her wonder if a few drops of blood were perhaps the least of her concerns.

  “The rules have changed.”

  His words were muffled, but she understood them clearly enough. “There are penalties for defiance. Before, there were others to take the fall for your…” He blew against her dampened skin, and pulled back to regard her. “Impetuousness.”

  She sank back against the wall. “Nothing to say? No brave words? No…witty retort?” He seemed to only just register how white her face was. “Oh, I see. Am I frightening you?”

  What kind of a question was that? Of course he was frightening her! “What's the matter, Valerian? You don't think I could bring myself to mark your lovely skin? I'll take my knife to you, if that's the case. I'll carve my name in your breast so that every beat of your heart will remind you that you are mine—and mine alone. Because blood is binding, and because I would rather see you destroyed than see you free or in the possession of another, so I suggest you not try me, or you will suffer as no earthly creature has.” He slammed her back against the wall. “Or ever will. But that is a suggestion, and one you are free to disregard at your own peril. But you are going to answer my question.”

  The bile clotting her throat made speaking an effort. “What question? I…don't remember.” He tugged her face closer with the scarf. “I asked if I was frightening you.”

  “Yes,” she said in a tiny voice.

  “Yes, what?”

  “Yes, you're frightening me.” She shuddered. He released her arms.

  “W-what are you doing?”

  He gave her that smile. The one she had learned to fear because it was the smile he had given her first when he had tried to capture her, and then again when he had tried to kill her.

  When he broke her heart, and then her mind. “Are you going to kill me?'”

  He tapped her under the chin.

  “Run.”

  This time, he was in the way of the door.

  Always five steps ahead , she thought, literally and figuratively.

  She started for the bathroom, which she remembered had a lock, and he cut her off, his steps mirroring hers as he stalked her. His eyes were flinty with intent.

  Val ducked behind the couch, trying to keep it between them as she caught her breath.

  “Get
ting tired?”

  She screamed when she felt him swipe at her arm.

  “Don't touch me!” she hissed. A hiss that turned into a yelp when he vaulted over the back of the couch, causing it to topple over with a loud thud.

  “Oh no,” he said, amused, when she glanced at the door. “That won't help you.”

  He was closer now, his posture deliberately obstructive. She feinted right—he moved left, blocking off another exit. She looked around with a wild desperation, spotted the chessboard. Yes. She grabbed it, and threw the board at him just as he was almost upon her. Rather than grabbing her, he shielded his face with his forearm and the pieces hit the floor with a sound like the rain that was still falling outside.

  “How feral you have become.” Val picked up the nightstand, grunting a little with the weight of it, but he grabbed the legs before she could hurl that at him too.

  She shoved hard, slamming the legs of the nightstand against his chest and forcing him to take a step back. A grudging smile appeared on his lips; it quickly disappeared.

  Val tightened her hold on the wooden edges as he began to wrest the table away from her. Her palms were slick with sweat, though, and blood from where the sharp edges had cut her—and he was quite a big stronger. She dug her heels into the carpet for traction, her whole body straining.

  Gavin gave a final, hard yank. Both of them stumbled back from each other, and she lost her balance and fell on the carpet in a heap. He had the table, which he flung against the wall. The wood splintered. She felt the floor shake with the impact. There was a dinner-plate-sized dent in the plaster that had crumples of white paint and drywall tumbling down to sprinkle the carpet like powdered sugar.

  She kicked against the carpet as he strode purposefully over to where she had fallen. But, like a nightmare, the air was too thick and she moved far too slowly. She began to crawl. He scooped her up, one arm around her waist and the other cupping her backside, swinging her up with the same force with which he had tossed the table.

  He was breathing hard, from exertion and something more. Something that made her redouble her struggles, scrabbling against him with flailing limbs and clawed fingers.

 

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