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The Silent Ones: An absolutely gripping psychological thriller

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by K. L. Slater




  The Silent Ones

  An absolutely gripping psychological thriller

  K.L. Slater

  Books by K.L. Slater

  Safe With Me

  Blink

  Liar

  The Mistake

  The Visitor

  The Secret

  Closer

  Finding Grace

  Contents

  Prologue

  Day One

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Day Two

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Chapter 45

  Chapter 46

  Chapter 47

  Chapter 48

  Chapter 49

  Chapter 50

  Chapter 51

  Chapter 52

  Chapter 53

  Chapter 54

  Chapter 55

  Chapter 56

  Chapter 57

  Chapter 58

  Chapter 59

  One Month Later

  Chapter 60

  Three Months Later

  Chapter 61

  Finding Grace

  K.L. Slater’s Email Sign-Up

  Books by K.L. Slater

  A Letter from K.L. Slater

  Closer

  Blink

  Liar

  The Mistake

  Safe With Me

  The Secret

  The Visitor

  Acknowledgements

  Prologue

  The two girls skipped down the narrow side street, hand in hand. The council houses all looked the same around here, boxy and grey. Only the doors were painted different colours.

  ‘B. O. R. I. N. G,’ they chanted in time with each springing step.

  The afternoon sun warmed the backs of their necks and arms as their feet scuffed satisfyingly against the cracked grey asphalt, scattering gravel off the kerb and into the gutter.

  When they neared the house at the end, they slowed down and walked the last few yards, looking around them furtively.

  They had to be careful, because people were nosy. Everyone knew other people’s business in the small, sleepy village, and the girls didn’t want to get into trouble for straying this far from their grandparents’ home.

  Luckily, it was just after lunchtime and they were on a side street with hardly any cars around. Most of the adults who lived here were at work, with only the older people and young mums with babies at home during the day.

  It was quiet here on Conmore Road, although the girls had spotted one or two people pottering around in their back gardens with watering cans, or dozing in their front rooms in comfy chairs.

  Nobody appeared to have noticed the children, both barely taller than the fences and hedges that edged the small front gardens.

  One held open the peeling wooden gate, whilst the other girl slipped through, stepping on to the short weed-strewn path that ran down the side of the dwelling. They’d been to this particular house a few times before and knew better than to try and gain access at the front door.

  The old woman often forgot to lock up at the back of the house. Sometimes, she’d told them, she only realised the back door had been unlocked all night when she came down to make herself a cup of tea in the morning.

  Her name was Bessie, and she was much older than the girls’ own grandma, Joan. She liked to tell them stories about her secret work during the war, decoding messages intercepted from the Germans.

  The girls hadn’t believed her at first, but then she’d shown them actual photographs of her sitting at a large, very odd-looking machine, her slim fingers poised above the mysterious buttons and levers.

  In the pictures, Bessie wore her blonde hair swept back from her forehead, set in neat waves around her smooth, round face. You could see she had make-up on, possibly even red lipstick, although it was difficult to tell from a black-and-white photograph with creases in it.

  Truthfully, the girls found it hard to imagine it really was Bessie, seeing her as she was now: that soft, wrinkly face and the twisted fingers that sprouted at odd angles from swollen knuckles.

  Still, they enjoyed hearing the stories, and Bessie was good at telling them, always including lots of interesting detail. Yet she was useless at remembering anything else. The last time the girls had called, she must have asked a dozen times if they’d like a malted milk biscuit and a glass of home-made lemonade.

  In the end, one of the girls had decided to help herself, but she’d found the biscuit tin devoid of anything save a scattering of stale crumbs, and there was no lemonade in the fridge at all. Only a mouldy bit of cheese and a tub of margarine.

  They’d been annoyed, and when they’d raised their voices, a tear had slid down Bessie’s face. She’d said she must have thought she’d bought the stuff in and then forgotten that she hadn’t.

  Who did that? It was crazy.

  Anyway, they had nothing else to do today, because it was a staff training day at their primary school. Sometimes school sucked, but then it was boring around here without it to fill most of the day.

  ‘Let’s go and have some fun with Bessie,’ one girl had said to the other, and although the second girl didn’t want to make fun of the old lady, she’d known better than to disagree.

  To be fair, when Bessie got confused and thought the two girls were actually women she used to work with, it was quite funny.

  As they’d suspected, the back door was unlocked.

  They walked boldly into the kitchen without knocking, and wrinkled their noses against the stale odours and the smell of damp.

  They found the old lady in her chair, snoozing. She looked thinner than when they’d seen her during the spring bank holiday week a couple of months earlier. On the small lamp table next to her were a few pound coins and a small piece of paper. To pay the milkman, she’d explained to them before.

  Pressing her finger to her mouth, the girl with the ponytail tiptoed up to the chair and bent forward so her mouth was right next to Bessie’s ear.

  ‘WAAKE UUUP!’ she yelled.

  She shouted so loudly, the other girl jumped back from the doorway in alarm.

  Bessie let out a strangled yelp and lurched forward, tipping right out of her chair. The girl with the ponytail howled with laughter, bent over double, her eyes shining with mirth.

  ‘Oh! Oh no… please, help me…’ Bessie pleaded, rocking slightly on her back like a dazed swatted fly.

  The girl snatched at Bessie’s arm and roughly tugged at the pretty ruby and gold ring on her right hand before slipping it into
the pocket of her shorts. Bessie had once told them it had belonged to her mother, but it was too nice to be stuck on the finger of an old lady who never went out.

  ‘I need the bathroom,’ said the girl at the door, and hastily walked away. She wanted to leave now; it had all got out of hand and this wasn’t what she called fun. But her cousin seemed to be enjoying it. She would try and think of an excuse why they should go home.

  When she got back from the bathroom, she gasped when she saw the blood seeping steadily from the side of Bessie’s head. It pooled neatly on the worn, patterned carpet and sank into the grooves around the corner of the cream tiled fire surround.

  ‘What happened?’ She swallowed down a knot of panic.

  ‘It… it was an accident,’ her cousin stammered.

  The girls backed out of the room and had just stepped into the kitchen when they heard it… a scuffling sound, like the movement of feet.

  They froze as a shadow loomed in the hallway and advanced towards them.

  Had Bessie jumped up and started coming after them covered in blood looking like a zombie from a horror film?

  Alarmed, they let themselves out of the kitchen and darted around the side of the house until they were out in the front garden again.

  Behind them, through the open window, they felt sure they heard Bessie laughing.

  They were halfway up the street, heading back home, when they heard the sirens.

  Day One

  One

  Juliet

  I offload the last armful of red and blue toddler painting smocks and push the empty delivery box away with my foot, sinking down on a nearby chair.

  ‘I thought we’d never get to the end of that lot.’ I stick out my bottom lip and blow air up onto my face, damp wisps of hair flying off my forehead, as I think about the mountain of other stuff I have to get through today: I offered to pick up Mum’s prescription from an out-of-town pharmacy, and then I have to wash Josh’s football kit for his away match the day after tomorrow.

  ‘You know, we could take somebody on part time to help with stuff like unpacking.’ Chloe, my sister, cuts into my thoughts. ‘Our time could be spent far more productively and you might not complain about being exhausted the whole time.’

  Compassion isn’t one of my sister’s strong points. Now I regret telling her in a moment of weakness that the doctor has put me back on my medication. Just until I can feel I’m back in control of everything, feel less overwhelmed.

  ‘Maybe we can look at taking on help in another year or so.’ My best friend Beth is the obvious choice for the job, but I refrain from voicing that, as she and Chloe can’t stand each other. ‘Are you coping with the admin?’

  Chloe isn’t just an employee, she’s also a director of my business, InsideOut4Kids, so she’ll hate me for checking up on her, but this stuff is important.

  Top of her to-do list is our insurance renewal, and some quarterly expenses paperwork the accountant asked for over a week ago now. As the main shareholder, I make it my business to keep a discreet eye on what needs doing.

  Every time I ask her if she’s OK, I simply get a stock ‘yes thanks’ in reply, so I’m reluctant to ask. But Chloe has always been one to take the path of least resistance, even when we were children. She’d always rather Mum buy a cake than help her bake one. So I feel I have to keep tabs on the stuff she’s doing, because it could make or break the company.

  ‘I’m on top of my responsibilities, thanks for asking,’ she retorts. ‘The fact remains that we spend a lot of time sweating the small stuff that someone else could easily take on.’

  I try to appeal to her logical side.

  ‘Like Beth says, for now we need to plough any spare cash back into the business. I can’t afford to do anything to jeopardise this order now I’ve put the house up as collateral. We talked about all this, remember?’

  Chloe folds her arms and shoots me a belligerent look.

  ‘Yes, Mother, I do remember,’ she snipes back. ‘But let’s at least make decisions off our own bat. The business actually has sod-all to do with Beth bloody Chambers.’

  I should have known better than to mention Beth again, but her knowledge and advice have been invaluable to me as I try and build the business. In fact, if Beth hadn’t encouraged me to go for it, to take a chance, I probably wouldn’t have had the confidence to start up in the first place.

  We began eighteen months ago from my spare bedroom, getting our trademark kids’ clothes made by local home workers and selling them on eBay.

  Now we have a sophisticated website complete with shopping cart function and we sell clothing wholesale to independent shops up and down the country. Six months ago, we moved out of my box room and rented a local industrial unit.

  We have big plans to expand by selling to Europe in the next twelve months, and there’s still a sense of celebration in the air after we recently won a very lucrative contract for major Dutch wholesaler Van Dyke.

  Pretty rapid by anyone’s standards, though still not quick enough for Chloe, judging by her comments today.

  But she’s not the one who has remortgaged her house to fund the merchandise to satisfy this big new order.

  ‘Sir Alan Sugar never got anywhere in business by being cautious.’ Chloe’s is a big fan of The Apprentice. ‘We need to talk about these issues seriously, Juliet. If we moved production to Bangladesh or India, we’d double our profits overnight.’

  Her phone rings and she glances down at it on the floor between us. The screen lights up with the words ‘No Caller ID’ and she ignores it.

  ‘Remember what we said when we started out?’ I sigh. ‘Fairly paid work for local people, and we get vibrant, happy clothes made with care. Not a load of tat churned out by some poor soul trapped in an unregulated sweatshop.’

  We’d had to go abroad for the Van Dyke merchandise but we still chose to go ethical over the cheaper sweatshop options.

  Chloe rolls her eyes and picks up her phone, the screen still lit up from a text notification. She dabs a fingertip on it and reads the message.

  I try and read her expression and wonder idly if she’s seeing someone again. There’s been nobody really special since Jason walked out on her and my niece, Brianna, five years ago, but she does use online dating sites in fits and starts and occasionally tells me about her dates.

  But Chloe’s face remains deadpan as she presses a button so her phone screen turns black again. She seems oddly distracted, still staring down at it when there’s nothing to see.

  ‘Do you want to have a proper conversation?’ I suggest.

  ‘About what?’ Her fingers begin to drum on her thigh as if she’s thinking about something else entirely.

  She’s dressed in old jeans, which she’s paired with a faded blue T-shirt and a cropped cream cardigan. Her reddish-brown hair is pulled back into a smooth ponytail and she looks effortlessly groomed in a sort of laid-back way.

  She is all sharp angles now, but for the wrong reasons. Her perfect nose, cheekbones and jawline used to match her toned body, with its wide shoulders, narrow hips and slim legs. But that was before she lost so much weight. Now her head looks a bit too large, out of proportion with the rest of her. There’s her bony clavicle, the protruding tendons in her neck and the once perfectly fitting skinny jeans that now bag a little around her bum and thighs.

  In contrast, I am shorter and rounder, my features less distinctive. I do make the effort to tame my dark corkscrew curls before I leave the house each morning, usually by twisting my hair up in a messy bun, but bits of it constantly make a bid for freedom throughout the day.

  Our daughters are similarly different physically too.

  ‘Chloe, do you want to talk about the reason why you can’t seem to focus on anything I’m saying?’

  She hesitates and glances at me, and I think for just a moment that she’s actually going to open up to me, but then her eyes glaze over again.

  ‘Maybe, just not now.’ She blinks and picks up her ph
one again, scrolling unenthusiastically through her Facebook feed. ‘But you’re not the only one who gets to make decisions around here. Remember that.’

  I sigh, stand up and brush bits of red cotton from my jeans.

  ‘I’ll add the new stock to the system in the back office while it’s fresh in my mind,’ I say, picking up the mood.

  ‘Put the kettle on while you’re in there, will you?’ Chloe calls just as her phone rings again.

  I pop into the tiny kitchenette and wash the packing dust from my hands, drying them on the small hand towel. Then I reach into my handbag on the counter and pull out my phone.

  Three missed calls, and they’re all logged as having no caller ID. Immediately I think of my ten-year-old daughter, Maddy. I hope there hasn’t been a problem at school and it’s the office trying to get in touch with me. I can’t think of anyone else whose number isn’t in my phone who would be so desperate to speak to me.

  My eight-year-old son, Josh, is away on an overnight school trip to Hathersage in Derbyshire. But I know everything is OK with him, as the teacher sent a group text to parents after breakfast confirming they’d had a good night at the youth hostel. They were heading to an adventure survival centre before returning to the school for pick-up this afternoon.

 

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