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Three Mile Drove, Chapter Nineteen (standard:horror, 2432 words) [20/29] show all parts | |||
Author: Brian Cross | Added: Aug 25 2007 | Views/Reads: 2813/1952 | Part vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
Approaching the conclusion of a serialisation of my completed horror story, Three Mile Drove. Darren Goldwater is drawing the conclusion that Claire Summerby has betrayed him. Is he right, and if so, why? | |||
CHAPTER NINETEEN Darren placed a hand on the bonnet of the Jeep, rapping his fingers on the black paintwork, watching Claire's car become a speck on the flat horizon of the drove. Go back to the hotel room she'd insisted, lie down – No way. He was going to finish off what he'd barely started last night, even though his head was racked with hot pain. Even if it was broad daylight. His conviction of Tomblin's attempt to kill him was paramount. He couldn't understand the negative attitudes of Claire and the parson, that they hadn't even considered seeing things his way. Then there had been Claire's vehemence that he shouldn't trespass, and how it had oddly conflicted with the worried look in her eyes when they'd parted. It all served to override his inhibitions, submerging them beneath the adrenaline that surged within. * * The morning sun was already fading behind cumulus cloud as he pulled the Jeep to a halt and jumped out. Behind the bank of conifers that shielded Tomblin's house from sight, a metallic tapping mingled with the intermittent cries of kids carried on the wind. He crossed the makeshift bridge over the dyke and glanced at the derelict house to his left, what could have been the front lawn covered in a mass of bog and undergrowth. His heart rate on the up he approached the open cross-barred gate that created a gap in the trees. He caught sight of the kids first, two boys and a girl in the middle of a rough and tumble, in a concrete yard badly in need of repair. He stared as he approached the house, wondering for one stupid moment whether one might be the missing kid. But that was just what it was. Stupid. Because the resemblance to Tomblin was clear enough to see, prominent foreheads all of them, uneven jaw lines, the same huge hands, even the girl. He saw them fighting and glance from him to their right, then from the oldest, a kid he judged to be about twelve, came a voice of disapproval as they backed through the open door, though the voice was so thick and ill formed only the tone betrayed his resentment. And then he saw what had forced their retreat. Looking to his left he saw Shaun Tomblin rising from the battered blue bus he'd been hammering on. ‘You tired of livin' fella? I thought I'd warned you off,' the same thick accent though much deeper, carried across the yard as Tomblin stomped towards him. Darren's initial reaction would have been to back towards the gate, but his own rage held him steadfast. Tomblin almost upon him now, bent his head forward, ‘Now you get this plain and simple,' he said slapping a huge hand on his shoulder and forcing him towards the gate, ‘I catch you anywhere near my land again I'll hit you so hard you won't see daylight for a month.' Darren swung round, his movement so quick that Tomblin's grasp was not only freed, but the big man almost fell in the process. He glared up the six inches or so that separated them in height, his temper as high as the wind right now, ‘Your threats don't scare me Tomblin, any more than your attempts to kill me last night.' Tomblin adjusted his balance, knotting his bushy brows. He placed his hands against his thighs, ‘What the fuck are you on about?' His voice lowering to a quiet growl he let the hammer slip to the floor. ‘You were at my bungalow last night as if you didn't know,' Darren lifted his face towards Tomblin, ‘you came up behind me, shoved some kind of rag across my face – some kind of poison in it. You thought there was enough to kill me and you placed cans of beer in the kitchen to make it look as if I'd dosed myself with a lethal cocktail.' ‘You're mad, get yourself off while you still can.' But Darren wasn't getting himself off of Tomblin's land, at least not under his own devices. Tomblin's hands moved quickly from his pockets, grabbing him in a bear hug so tight his breath seemed to be dying in his throat. He was half carried to the barred gate and hurled to the track outside. He heard the sound of metal as the gate slammed shut and rolled over to see Tomblin's hands clenching the top bar; he saw renewed anger, barely contained, on the man's face and the dark look in his eyes. Behind him the children edged out again, gruesome all three, but they weren't playing now, they were staring with the same animosity Click here to read the rest of this story (199 more lines)
This is part 20 of a total of 29 parts. | ||
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Brian Cross has 33 active stories on this site. Profile for Brian Cross, incl. all stories Email: briancroff@yahoo.co.uk |