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Three Mile Drove Chapter Twenty (standard:horror, 1688 words) [21/29] show all parts | |||
Author: Brian Cross | Added: Sep 23 2007 | Views/Reads: 2803/1945 | Part vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
A pop musician has inherited a smallholding in the English fens, and right now things are getting a little too hot for him to handle! | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story the wind, fragmenting, making it seem like a Catherine Wheel out of control. White heat emblazoned the grey skies, illuminating the lone willow which had seemed to stand before the house like a deformed guardian, now seeming to turn it into a weird caricature of the old man he'd just seen, with its two remaining branches stretching out like thin ageing arms, each with points seeming like fingers, fingers that warned him away. The sensation set his heart pounding, but he fought for control of his senses, summoned logic against the nonsense that had entered his mind. Claire's old house was on fire, derelict or not McPherson had believed it held the key to the missing child, now it was burning before his eyes. He thought then of the child he'd reckoned seeing at the window before he'd dismissed it as a figment of his imagination, and with a growing unease pressed heavily on the accelerator. He cursed himself for driving so far while his mind led him on a turbulent trail of thoughts circling around Claire. And then amidst the fury of the blaze he heard awful screams, wailing which sounded like high-pitched sirens carried on the wind. The same, inhuman calls that had caused him such concern, only now whoever was responsible for the howling was surely entrapped within the inferno raging around the house. Pulling the Jeep to a halt a safe distance away Darren glanced back at the fire that the gusty wind was spiralling high into the grey skies, creating an eerie merger. He stepped out and walked about twenty yards, passing the tall bank of trees, which shielded Shaun Tomblin's house from the road, pausing alongside the makeshift bridge, which crossed the dyke. A timber rafter disintegrating in the heat broke away, crashing to earth, sending sparks and cinders crackling around him like demented jumping jacks. There was nothing he could do and yet there had to be. The howling told him that much, but even as he flung himself from the Jeep and fought his way through the mixture of thick bog and grass that had once served as a garden, he felt his legs buckle on the uneven ground, pitching him headlong into the foul smelling soil. He gazed up at the house, its upper floors billowing smoke and flame, he saw the window he'd thought he'd seen the child and saw the fiery glow lashing at it like huge fingers. The sight served to pull him up, stirring the leaden weights that were his legs towards the door. It was a flimsy construction and gave easily as the foggy swirl of smoke seared his breath. The screams rang out again from above, mixing eerily with the sound of cracking timbers. They were upstairs somewhere, whoever they were. He was going to find out, the blaze hadn't yet engulfed the whole house but it was within minutes, perhaps seconds of doing so. He fumbled in his pocket for something to mask his lungs from the acrid smoke which darkened the room like a smog, finding a handkerchief as wet as the soaked clothing he wore. But his soggy condition afforded him some protection from the fire that ravaged upstairs. He could hear it rippling through the rafters; he could see the flashes of light that lit the stairs like a fairground from hell. He forced himself up the stairway against the pall of smoke, finding the landing and grasping the banister for support; it shook with his weight but it didn't give. But neither did the bedroom door that he swung his foot at, the door behind which came the frenzied screams. He cursed briefly at the irony of it, that an internal door should be tougher than an external one, then launched his foot again with all the force he could muster. He felt a surge of adrenaline as it gave with a splintering sound and a wall of flame dashed out to greet him. He covered his eyes from the searing heat, staggering into the room, feeling himself immediately jostled by featureless silhouettes in the smoke as they rushed towards the landing. A rafter missed his head by a whisker and a ball of fire hurtled down from above as if tossed by a giant hand, but the fire's captives whoever they were had been freed, he could hear the quick tread of footsteps down the stairs; hear their urgent, high-pitched yells. He turned back to the landing, rushing headlong down the stairs after them. Somebody had fired the attic, tried to kill them and more than anything right now he needed to know why. He needed to know who these people were; he was within a few yards of the owners of the terrible sounding screams that had plagued him since his arrival here, but he had to fight his way through a dense wall of smoke that seemed to defy his every downward step. And then he saw a face, the face of the girl he'd imagined he'd seen from the window, it looked back at him, panic stricken, through the gathering darkness as he stumbled to the edge of the doorway taking deep breaths of smoky air. In an instant she'd turned and fled, joining the others, the owners of the screams that continued to shriek in the distance. He plunged his feet into the soggy soil, cursing the fact that his weight was much heavier than the child's, that it inhibited his progress far more than it had done to her, or any of the rest for that matter. But he'd seen the route that she'd taken and forcing much needed air into his withering lungs he gave chase. He reached the gap in the overgrown hedge he'd seen the child disappear through, though now the cries had ceased and the track cut three ways; one lead into the fens, another towards the drove while the third lead into Tomblin's home.Instinct would have led him in that direction but for a sudden explosion of fire that illuminated the area in white flame. He caught sight of movement, a sudden hustling along the track that led deep into the fens. Tweet
This is part 21 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 |