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Three Mile Drove, Chapter Twenty Six (standard:horror, 1248 words) [27/29] show all parts | |||
Author: Brian Cross | Added: Apr 08 2008 | Views/Reads: 2802/1984 | Part vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
Approaching the conclusion of my story, set in the English fens. | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story It was as if their inhabitants felt like outcasts, that they needed to barricade themselves from the vast dome of forbidding sky that stretched down to meet the dark flat earth. But the true outcast lay ahead of him. In the distance he could make out a bank of trees, a different shade of darkness to the lowering sky. The dyke he travelled alongside ran straight and true, like a liquid pointer across the fields to the old house on Three Mile Drove. The windmill stood neglected and motionless as he passed, but still it made him shiver, its tall shape as sinister as the sound of the wind roaring through its broken blades. And then suddenly he was there, staring across the narrow drove straight at the lone willow, its deformed branches an uncanny caricature of the beings that would soon be inside the house it seemed to strive to protect. But not any more. He'd made good time, and it wouldn't be long before they arrived, even Claire's daughter, that was where the great pity lay and the thought caused him great sadness. But the evil had to be eradicated once and for all. There could be no more abductions, no more nasty accidents that behind the pretence amounted to murder. He would erase it, this was his hour – He'd barely reached the attic when he heard the howls and screams that heralded their arrival. Amongst them the voice of the one called Joseph had once filled him with dread, but it would do that no more. He heard them clambering up the stairs, heavy footed and yet at speed. He thought for a sickening second they would climb to the attic but no, they were making it all so easy for him, as if they were willing participants in their own deaths. They'd crowded into the room below, some sort of chase had come to an end, voices raised even higher. An argument of sorts. He lit a match from the box he'd carried and placed it amongst a pile of rags in the corner, pausing briefly while it took hold, then searched his pocket for the key he'd taken from Claire's house when he'd last visited. Without her knowledge – In preparation for such a moment – Then cautiously jumping from the attic he'd locked the door below, their own screaming had clothed their ears from the throaty click of the ageing lock and then he'd been away. Satisfied that his mission had been achieved. Somewhere out on the fens Shaun Tomblin would be scraping up their evening meal from the hovel of a storehouse he'd been told he used. He would have nobody to serve to. His little family was vanquished. There would be no more abduction in Three Mile Drove, no more killings. There would be no point. But then as he'd left the building, watching the flames begin to tear through the roof, he'd heard the low murmur of an engine in the distance. Crossing the drove he saw what looked like a four wheel drive, and then from the cover afforded by the windmill he saw Darren Goldwater leap down from it, hesitating for a second before disappearing behind the overgrown hedge. His heart rate on the increase again he'd heard the yells and screams from the creatures he realised the interfering stranger had managed to free. With a surge of anger and alarm he'd realised his mission hadn't been accomplished after all. He'd left his cover, parallel now with the track that lead between Tomblin's and the old house. If Goldwater had turned his head once more, looked across the drove like he just had, then he would have seen him. But he was too wound up to care about that. Tweet
This is part 27 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 |