main menu | youngsters categories | authors | new stories | search | links | settings | author tools |
Three Mile Drove, Chapter Twenty Four (standard:horror, 1872 words) [25/29] show all parts | |||
Author: Brian Cross | Added: Jan 30 2008 | Views/Reads: 2803/2176 | Part vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
Darren Goldwater is captive in a world he never knew existed. Approaching the conclusion of a serialisation of Three Mile Drove | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story Goldwater, pop musician turned hero in her eyes. There he lay, groping her daughter in full view of the whole ghastly herd of morons that were assembled like a weird audience watching a grotesque cabaret. ‘You bastard.' She pushed past Tomblin to set about Darren. She would have placed her hands around his scrawny neck and squeezed for all she was worth, but Darren had seen his chance. He rolled away from the girl and out of Claire's reach, and springing to his feet grabbed the gold chain that hung around Tomblin's neck. It pulled Tomblin forward and he lost his balance as Darren brought his head down hard on the bridge of his nose. ‘I'll explain, but this isn't a good time,' he shouted at Claire. He'd seen the wild look on her face but with Tomblin grounded, his face splattered with blood, he was more concerned with Joseph, who came screeching at him, egged on by the wailing of his kindred. He was no match for Joseph's power, but he grabbed the only weapon to hand. The oil lamp. He smashed it into the bulbous face just as the thing mounted its frenzied attack. Cries of anguish and spittle came out of its twisted mouth, flames lit the air around them and thunder and lightning crashed, before it went eerily dark. Darren, dazzled by the glare and contrasting darkness, saw only spots before his eyes, while all around came the sound of moaning and wailing. He heard the child whimper, and as his eyes began to recover, searching the darkness for what little light there was, he saw Claire's silhouette crouched beside it, he saw the whites of her eyes. She seemed like a cat preparing to pounce. He swung round. Joseph, shrieking with pain had bolted for the door, the other creatures, crying in alarm followed close behind. Tomblin murmured something. He was coming round. Darren raked his boot into the side of Tomblin's face. Suddenly all was silent. He turned back to face Claire, arms outstretched, ‘Look, I know what it looks like, but it isn't like that.' He met the girl's wide-eyed stare as she turned towards Claire, ‘He told me not to worry, that he wouldn't hurt me, just to trust him.' The girl's voice broke the silence, ‘I couldn't do it. I was too frightened, but I think he meant it.' Darren was gob smacked at her fluency, and suddenly the anger in her eyes subsided a little. ‘They tried to make me have intercourse with her. I wouldn't have done that I promise you. I was just trying to play along, hoping that something would happen. Something like this I suppose.' He looked hard at Claire, willing her to believe his words, ‘I couldn't do it with a child.' Darren sensed that she wanted to believe him, but wasn't certain that she did. Despite the awful sights, the frightening scenes he'd witnessed, it was important to him that she believed that. Her eyes met his for a long second, then remembering that she still had McPherson's torch she searched her pocket, then finding it, shone it on Tomblin. ‘You put the boot in well there, he's out cold. But what do we do now?' Darren swung round; the torch threw its beam on the barn support to which he'd been roped. He stretched an arm out towards Tomblin, beckoned to Claire to do the same. ‘We'll turn the tables on him I think. Lend a hand.' They dragged Tomblin across the barn floor, his feet trailing in the muck, grime and faeces that had accumulated there over years, perhaps decades, Darren thought. ‘I should thank you for coming to my aid,' he said, thankful for her resourcefulness. ‘I was coming to the aid of the girl,' Claire blushed over the partial lie, but Darren had not seen it, though it wasn't only the poor light that had caused that. ‘Yes of course,' Darren glanced at the young girl behind them, stared at the similarity between them, realising why the face had seemed so familiar, coincidence of course, but a striking likeness all the same. Thunder boomed from above, so loud it shook the rafters, as Darren clamped the rope around Tomblin's hands and secured it to the support, while Claire held him rigid. ‘I called the police on Tim's radio,' she said, ‘they should be here any minute.' Darren gave her an awkward glance, checked the knot. ‘Let's get out of here, I can't stand the stench a moment longer,' he paused, ‘where is McPherson then?' Claire shone the torch towards the open door where Joseph and the other creatures had fled, ‘He fell down a ditch and broke his ankle.' ‘Just as I thought,' Darren got to his feet and offering a hand, pulled her up, ‘the sort of guy you can count on in a crisis.' ‘If that was supposed to be a joke Darren, it's not the time, and it's in rank bad taste.' He saw the glare in her eyes return and experienced a mounting resentment that she should be sticking up for him. He fought it back. ‘So you came alone. You're one very brave lady.' He led Claire, her own hand trailing her daughter, to the barn entrance, and then as lightning flared continuously onto the circular clearing outside, they froze. In the clearing stood Joseph, his face bloated from the impact of the oil lamp, his twisted mouth open, his hooded eyes fixed firmly upon them. He was ringed by at least a dozen of what were supposedly his family, whose number seemed to have been swollen by the contents of the huts. Darren glanced at Claire and swallowed heavily, ‘We can slip past them if we're quick, lose them in the dark, as well as you know this place.' ‘No we can't,' Claire shot Darren an agitated glance, ‘There's somebody else there, I saw him in the lightning.' ‘So what? Things can't get any worse than they are now.' ‘Can't they, I'm not so sure.' ‘Why?' But Claire wasn't listening. Taking her daughter's hand she edged back into the barn, Darren following, a cautious eye on the clearing but seeing only darkness. He shut the barn door as Claire shone his torch into the darkness, checking that Tomblin was firmly secured. ‘I don't think we should run, that's just what they'll be expecting us to do. Darren, these people might seem as if they haven't a brain cell between them, but they aren't totally stupid, they know the area as well as I do. We won't make it,' she lowered her eyes to her daughter, ‘especially not with her.' ‘We can't just stop here either,' Darren said edgily, feeling his way in the darkness. ‘We're sitting ducks. And anyway, who or what was it you saw.' Claire raking her fingers through her daughter's tousled hair, seemed to evade his question, ‘I've told you. It's only a matter of time. The police are on their way.' ‘It seems to be taking a hell of a long time. I don't understand all this. It's like being dropped into another world. And you know more than you're letting on, don't you. How did you get mixed up in all this?' Claire sighed, ‘It's a long story. I don't feel up to it right now.' ‘Perhaps I can help then,' a gruff voice spoke. Tweet
This is part 25 of a total of 29 parts. | ||
previous part | show all parts | next part |
Authors appreciate feedback! Please write to the authors to tell them what you liked or didn't like about the story! |
Brian Cross has 33 active stories on this site. Profile for Brian Cross, incl. all stories Email: briancroff@yahoo.co.uk |