Read Beyond the Knock Knock Door Online
Authors: Scott Monk
âDid anyone see what the monster looked like?' Luke asked, rewinding his visor's recorded footage, looking for clues.
âNo,' Michael said, swallowing, grateful to still be alive!
âOne thing's for sure: it's more than an animal. It's too smart.'
âAnimal or not, you must show it no mercy,' Lady Isabelle said. âYou must kill it as it has killed. Too many good people have lost their lives, and more are in danger if you fail to stop it.'
âHow many people have gone missing?' Michael pushed, trying to sound in control.
âA dozen â maybe more. Even Father Valentino â the priest of this church â disappeared at its hands. He'd started asking too many questions.'
âWhat kind of questions?'
âQuestions no one seems willing to answer. Questions like, why do the marines deny the creature's
existence yet clearly seek to catch it? Why is Captain Cavalli telling relatives of missing people not to warn others? And why is the Prime Minister not asking other worlds for help? Now tonight, I add a question of my own: who sought to trap me with this note?'
The brothers examined it by candlelight. However, like Michael's diary, it was penned on self-correcting paper and the handwriting was universal. There was no way they could identify the author. Isabelle torched it.
âI fear the fate of my brother, Guido, will soon be mine.'
She sobbed into her gloves. The two boys glanced at each other before Michael eased her to a pew.
âWe don't know what's happened to Guido yet,' he said. âHe's probably still alive, but we need your help in finding him.'
âYes â anything!' she answered, staring up at him.
âTell us what you know about the monster.'
She dried her face with a silk handkerchief then walked towards the candles. âIt came to our world about four years ago. How? We don't know. Some say it's a curse for opening our skies to the galaxy; others believe that it's always lived on the Broken Isles and awakens every few centuries to feed. Most, as you've discovered, pretend it doesn't exist at all. What we do know is that it has grown bolder in its movements over time. At first, a few small ships met disaster while sailing the Western Seas, but these were dismissed as “death by misadventure” by captains who refused to heed warnings about the whirlpool or magnetic
rocks. But then yachts and small cruisers were found drifting on our borders with no crew or passengers â ghost ships, if you like. There would be no explanation and no markings that indicated a struggle or even a shark attack. The marines again reported these disappearances as accidents â possibly there was mutiny among the crew and they had fallen overboard.
âThese past few seasons, though, there have been rumours of the monster stalking our city at night. No one has actually seen it face-to-face, but the stories are similar: nobles waking up to the sound of barking dogs and going downstairs, only to find their front door open and their pantry raided. Sometimes they'd hear a scratching noise on their rooftops; other times the flapping of leathery wings. A young girl who lived on the waterfront is believed to have seen a large creature, but she went missing shortly afterwards.'
âAnd this is when other people started disappearing?'
She crossed herself. âOne or two at first. The marines treated it as nonsense. They told us that these people had left unexpectedly or stowed away on a cruise liner. But then some more well-known citizens vanished â people like Father Valentino, Romano the play wright, Mayor Marcello of the Thirty-eighth Island, Salvatore the sergeant-at-arms, Lord Aldo and â and â'
âYour brother,' Luke finished for her.
âWhy would the monster want him?' Michael asked.
She began sobbing again. âMy brother is a lovely, lovely man. He is well-respected among the Jewellers' Guild for his integrity and knowledge.'
âHas ⦠has he been acting strange recently?'
She blinked at him like it was a rude question, then nodded. âSeveral weeks ago, he returned home early and locked all the doors. When I asked him what was wrong, he said not to worry. Later that evening I found him asleep in his study with letters and drawings detailing the monster's movements. He was also holding a nugget of gold that I'd never seen before. From that night onwards, he became obsessed with finding the creature â even contacting your Hall for help. I believe he learnt a secret that ultimately cost him his life.'
She broke down again.
âDo you know that secret?' Michael asked.
âIs it in any of those letters or drawings?' Luke pushed.
âNo. Guido feared my life would be in danger too if he shared what he'd uncovered,' she said. âAnd all his documents have been stolen. I have my suspicions what was in them, though. I hear whispers among the politicians' wives.'
âWhat are they saying?'
âThat the creature is not acting alone.'
The boys traded glances. She'd just confirmed what they'd learnt that very hour.
âLady Isabelle, this is why your brother was kidnapped,' Michael said. âIt's called a dead man's ring. It receives secret messages from the person controlling the monster.'
âWhat secret messages?' she asked.
âGive me your canteen,' he ordered Luke, who rummaged in his pouches. âHave you ever seen it before?'
âNo. It just looks like a signet ring.'
âYour brother gave it to me. He said to use it to help the lost. I thought he meant poor people, but he really meant the people who are missing. It only works after it's dunked in water. The ring starts to buzz â'
âWhat's wrong?' she queried, when he fell silent.
âIt's buzzing again!'
Luke handed him the canteen and they urgently wet the dead man's ring, which popped open with a new holographic message.
â
Father Valentino's Church. Now.
'
âGet out!' Michael roared as a tile fell from the roof. Somebody was spying right above them.
âGo! We'll hold them off!'
Michael drew his sword as Lady Isabelle fled through the back exit. Luke stepped outside and struggled to get a reading on his radar. âWait! To the left! The monster's chasing after Isabelle!'
The boys screamed into the fog, hoping to alert the marines. No more hiding. It was time to fight.
They cut off the monster before it tried to swoop on Isabelle. It bobbled in front of them, as tall as two men and without fear. It didn't run, lope or crawl. It didn't have a body, arms or feet â just a pair of fluorescent eyeballs hovering above two mouths sawing with fangs.
âLeave her alone!' Luke shouted. âCome and get us!' He powered up his jetpack and clenched his fists. âIt's cannonball time!'
He blasted straight at the creature, focussing his attack on its belly. As he swung a punch, his knuckles failed to connect with anything solid and he zoomed right through. His visor flashed WARNING! COLLISION IMMINENT! as he overshot his mark and sped towards a wall. Only fancy flying saved him from splattering against the brickwork.
Michael was next. Releasing all his fear in one yell, he ran at the monster and lashed out. His blade cut high and deadly. It connected with the creature's head and split it in two. Both hunks of meat thumped to the ground as the other eyeball and mouth spun away.
âYES!'
He'd killed the monster!
âHero' wasn't the first word Samantha used to describe her brothers when she found them at the crime scene. It was âstupid'. In fact, she repeated it so often it gave the large crowd of onlookers the impression it was the only word she knew. Wrapped in her pirate coat and suffering from a bad case of pillow hair, she stood over the beheaded carcass, scratched her beard then snorted. The cobra hissed at her brothers, who averted their gaze. âStupid,' she said, before walking back to the palace.
The brothers wished the snickering rubberneckers would do the same, including the swashbucklers, who stood cross-armed and laughing.
âWhat's the manner of this disturbance?' Captain Cavalli demanded, snapping his marines to attention. âA messenger brought news of a creature being killed.'
âNot the one we were expecting, sir,' his sergeant answered. âIt seems our friends here from the Hall got a fright.'
The captain shone his lantern over the body of the âmonster' cleft in half. Instead of a hideous creature double the size of a man, he found a gruesome fish with fangs and an orb dangling from its forehead. Except now that it was dead, the orb no longer glowed. âIs this a joke?' he asked, kicking half the fish with his boot.
âHow was I supposed to know it was a deep sea angler?' Michael said. âThere were two of them floating together. They looked like eyes.'
Captain Cavalli glared at the brothers then barked, âSergeant, send these people home. I'll personally escort our
heroes
here back to the palace.'
âBut the monster
was
here,' Luke said. âWe saw it. Ask your men.'
âAnd pray tell, what did this one look like? A barracuda? Or a goldfish?'
The crowd laughed as the brothers fell into step behind the captain, each burning with shame.
âFools!'
Captain Cavalli's angry bellow was loud enough to wake the dead. It was a fitting description considering where he held his secret meeting: the royal crypt. Silhouettes of sarcophaguses and their ornamental kings and queens were thrown on the stony walls by a low-burning lantern, which was almost kicked over by the raging marine.
âHow close did our young heroes come to meeting their deaths?'
âVery close, sir,' a teenage boy answered from a darkened corner. âAt the last moment, the sharks chased them in the wrong direction.'
âHow fortunate! Their own stupidity saved them. I guarantee it won't happen a second time!'
Cavalli stopped and double-checked the door to the crypt was sealed from prying ears, then asked, âWhat of Lady Isabelle?'
âTaken.'
Cavalli bared his teeth and pointed at the teenager. âShe brought doom on her own head. I clearly warned her not to ask questions, like her brother. Now she's met his fate.'
âWhat of the swashbucklers? My spy in the Sandcastle Tavern says she hired them and a handful of crab-hunters to investigate the link between Guido's disappearance and the Broken Isles.'
âMy men will deal with those cutpurses â arrest them for loitering or carrying concealed weapons if need be. The monster will dispatch them next if they don't return to whatever unloved moon they travelled from. In the meantime, you continue watching our young heroes, for I suspect they're about to encounter more of the monster.'
The teenager stepped into the light and pulled back his blue hair into a ponytail. âAs you wish,' Aurelio said.
The first warnings of disaster came just past noon. Buoys chimed as the harbour grew restless and the horizon turned purple then black. Lightning split the sky and boiled the sea, drawing tourists from the marketplaces and galleries on the western islands to the waterfront. Choruses of excitement rose with each thunderclap until a hard grey rain fell and people sprinted for cover. Waiters rescued table umbrellas. Merchants threw tarpaulins over their gondolas and shouted at others to move. Painters snapped shut their easels, and zoo animals shrieked in their cages. Busking harlequins watched as their afternoon crowds streamed away.
Buffeted by the strong winds, Luke touched down outside a bait shop on a southern island close to the volcano. He hopscotched over puddles and fresh horse manure to reach a small white building with a green dome and round windows.
â
Phwoar!
What is this place?' he asked, cupping his nose. The main chamber was square and high with
faded mosaics of dolphins, starfish and seahorses swirling around a large staid pool. Wooden benches rotted along all four walls, next to dead ferns shrivelled up in terracotta pots. âAnd what is that smell?'
âIt's the public pool,' Samantha said, walking in from an adjacent room, also holding her nose. âAlthough I don't think it's been used in ages.'
Unable to breathe in any more of the putrid stench, Luke rummaged through his pouches until he found eucalyptus balm to smear across his top lip. His mum had told him some police detectives used it to deal with the smell of corpses. He threw the small blue tub to Samantha.
âLook! Something's dead on the bottom of the pool.'
âI think it's a stray dog.'
âGlad I left my swimming costume back home then. Why are we even in this dump?'
âFirst, where's Michael?'
âHe wasn't in his bed and the chair was moved when I woke up.'
âWhat? He's still sleeping with that wedged against the door handle? It's bad enough that you're sleeping in his room now. Hasn't it been a week since you supposedly killed the “monster”?'
âMock us all you want. Lady Isabelle has been kidnapped.'
âDon't tell me he's still trying to find her.'
âI think that's what he's doing now.'
âThen you'll have to bring him here. This is our Knock-Knock Door.'
âIn this hole? No way!'
Lightning whitened the room, followed by thunder. Then, unexpectedly â
Fish attack!
Hundreds of purple-pink creole wrasse hurtled through the front door, fleeing the rain, darting straight for Luke. He crouched into a ball as they ricocheted off his hips, shoulders and arms. Some flopped on the ground next to him, stunned, while most cowered deep in the change rooms.
âAre you all right?' she asked, helping him off his backside.
âNow I know what it feels like to be hit by a hundred golf balls.'
âAt least you didn't kill any this time.'
âHardy har-har.'
She disappeared into an adjacent room then returned with a cracked pitcher of water.
âWhat's that for?'
âTo find a Knock-Knock Door.'
âAre you kidding?'
âThink about it. What do we know about these Doors? First, they're well hidden. Second, they ask riddles. Third, they're found near lots of water. And most importantly, fourth, their one giveaway is their weird magnetism. If we go through all these rooms and tip out this water, then hopefully it'll lead us to another Door, just like that cola bottle we smashed.'
âThat's a dumb idea.'
âNo, it's not. It's quite smart.'
âIf it's so smart, wouldn't the rain be streaming in here too?'
Stunned, she looked at the window. After another flash of lightning, she dribbled out the water to prove herself right. It just puddled at her feet. She repeated the experiment in the change room with the same results. More thunder hammered the city and she screamed in frustration. âAt least I'm trying! We'd get home quicker if you and Michael weren't wasting time fishing.'
âWe're doing what we were sent here to do, Sam: catch the monster. Isn't saving lives just as important?'
âPeople die every day back on Earth. I don't see you trying to rescue them.'
âWhen was the last time you saw a monster walking down the main street?'
âNot monsters. People die in wars or of starvation or disease.'
âThis is different. We can do something about it here.'
âYou're wrong. You can do something about it on Earth, too, but you chose not to. There's no difference at all.'
He wrestled with a smart comeback â one that never came. Smugly, she explored deeper into the building, finding more pools and scaring the wrasse. âOkay, so you're right about the Door not being here. We'll try looking elsewhere. I need you and Michael to find a map of the city so we can mark off all the places that â Luke? Luke!'
But he was gone. Turning from the main doorway,
she kicked a bench, chopped a terracotta pot then tossed dead ferns into the water. She grabbed the pitcher and threw it against the brickwork then stood in a corner, controlling her breathing. When a silhouette appeared behind her, she whirled on it, thinking it was Luke, only to hesitate when she faced a teenager with wet blue hair and a coral pipe.
âBegging your pardon, Captain Sam,' panted Aurelio, drenched with rain. âIt's Sir Michael. He's in danger.'