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Three Mile Drove, Chapter Nine (standard:horror, 1978 words) [10/29] show all parts | |||
Author: Brian Cross | Added: Oct 08 2006 | Views/Reads: 2899/2144 | Part vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
Set in the English Fens. Darren Goldwater inherits a run down smallholding and encounters murder, mystery and horror. This is a serialisation of a completed work | |||
CHAPTER EIGHT McPherson watched the forensic team leave the house with the tiny content of his find carefully sealed in a transparent bag. Overhead, crows were gathered on the telephone lines, which ran above the drove on either bank. Their silence, in contrast to the wind whistling sharply through them, and the stark backdrop of the dark old house behind brought to mind scenes from the old Hitchcock movie. It struck him, how a simple scene could appear so sinister. He reflected on his visit to the village parson, David Endleberry, the evening before. He'd questioned him on the history of the house, thinking that there wasn't a lot Endleberry didn't know. In a small place like this the village parson was a “jack of all trades,” the central pillar of the community and a mine of knowledge. Only it hadn't turned out that way, Endleberry hadn't had much to say about the house at all, needing the help of an old binder to assist his memory. He'd seemed to concentrate instead on what he believed were exaggerations, tricks of the mind even, in fact drawing attention away from the house itself. Was that what he'd done, and if so why? The place hadn't appeared to have been occupied since the mid-sixties, but Endleberry had settled into his role as parson shortly before that time, so he'd been told. An old couple had apparently owned the place, Henry and Maisie Thompson. He thought back on what Endleberry had told him, about the bouts of pneumonia which had killed them within a few days of each other and that the place had thereafter been bequeathed to a child too young to occupy the property, and consequently it had fallen into an increasingly bad state of disrepair. But it was all rumour, or so Endleberry said. Nobody seemed to know who this child was. Perhaps then, it was all hearsay, the dividing line between fact and fiction was thin on the fens. It was just Endleberry's bewildering vagueness that plagued him. The only established fact was that Henry and Maisie Thompson had perished within a few days of each other, apparently from pneumonia. McPherson set his car in gear and headed towards the exit to Three Mile Drove. Just as he reached the junction a car turned in. McPherson turned his head sharply to the right; both the vehicle and the driver were familiar to him. It was Claire Summerby. * Darren approached the stationary figure on the bridge, aware that his adrenaline was rising. He'd no idea what he'd say or do, he'd leave that to his instincts. The bloke wasn't encroaching on his property; he wasn't trespassing. It was just that the unusual slant of the head in his direction, was both provocative and unnerving. He simply needed to combat this feeling by confronting the figure. As he got closer he could see that the man was tall and gaunt, and that he had a stoop. He was wearing a black anorak that had clearly seen better days. Its hood flapped madly around his neck in the wind like a giant, angry moth in confinement. Something registered in the back of Darren's mind; he'd seen this man before, and then he remembered where. It had been at the pub, where he'd asked for directions to the farm. This had been the eldest of the four men he'd encountered. The four guarded men who'd eyed him with suspicion. ‘Brisk morning,' the gaunt figure grunted unsmiling, deep set eyes locked firmly upon him. ‘Yeah.' Darren reached the bridge, hell bent on confrontation with the prying old bugger. ‘Tell me, what is it you find so interesting about me and my property then eh?' He placed a hand on the rusty railing of the bridge, so close to him that despite the strong wind he could smell his rancid breath. ‘You mean Sam Regan's place, don't yer?' the man sniffed, for once removing his gaze and looking away. ‘Sam Regan's dead,' Darren said sharply, ‘I reckon you know that. I spoke to you yesterday didn't I? I asked for directions. It seems a bit of a coincidence you turning up here. Anyway it's my farm as of now,' Click here to read the rest of this story (160 more lines)
This is part 10 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 |