Authors: Claire McFall
Two voices, Martin and Darren. Calling together. Scared, angry, in pain.
Accusing.
Why hadn’t I helped them? Why
wasn’t
I helping them?
I cried harder, running this way and that.
‘Where are you?’ I yelled.
This time I got nothing back but bawling, screeching, tortured cries.
Where were they? The cove was small. Standing dead in the centre, I was able to see everywhere, everything. Panicked, scared as I was, it took a long time for the truth to sink in: I was alone.
So what the hell was making that noise? I clapped my hands over my head, trying to shut it out. Was this what had happened to Emma, was this what drove her over the edge?
Desperate now to escape, I started to run, palms firmly cupped against the sides of my head. It made me clumsy, unstable. The constant shifting of the stones on the beach beneath my feet was too much for my precarious balance and I tumbled.
I hit the ground hard, skidding. Instinctively I clawed at the undulating carpet of stones and rough sand, trying to stop myself. My hand folded over something smoother and colder than the rest of the pebbles. I turned my hand over, staring at the thing nestled in my palm.
The brooch. How could it possibly be here? Dougie had hurled into the water, back at the camp. The odds against it swirling in the water and being spat out in the cove for me to find were astronomical. But more than that, I was beyond the tideline. I shook my head, disbelieving.
Then another scream rent the air and all thought vanished. I lurched to my feet and hit the narrow path at full sprint, my eyes fixed on the trail, the tiny copper brooch held fast in my palm like it was glued there.
Now
I’m thirsty. It’s warm in the room; I blame that for my dry mouth. My discomfort peaks as I watch Dr Petersen take another sip of his expensive fizzy water, but I don’t ask him for a drink. I swallow; try to eke some saliva back into my parched mouth. Not that I have any intention of talking.
We are taking a break. Not my idea, but I am not about to complain. From the look on Dr Petersen’s face, he’s not happy about it either. I can only guess that this is some sort of requirement – that after so long I have to be given a chance to recuperate, or reflect. I am not allowed out of the room, however, and there has been no mention of refreshment.
Dr Petersen glances at a fancy Rolex watch strapped around his wrist, hairs on his arm silvery grey with age, and I realise my respite is almost up. He goes back to perusing my notes, but he’s no longer reading. Perhaps he’s just counting down the seconds in his head. His eyes stare down at the paper, but they aren’t moving.
At last – and yet, still much too soon – he sighs, pushes away my file and fixes me with a pleasant smile. I can’t help but wonder if he hates me as much as I hate him, if that smile is a struggle for him and if what he really wants to do is scowl. No – I am sure he enjoys our little meetings. I’m like a Rubik’s cube to him, a puzzle he already knows the answer to but he keeps working away at. Because the challenge is in the solving, in making the little coloured blobs bend to his will.
I never managed to solve a Rubik’s cube. I’d get so far, maybe a row of yellows, or four little reds grouped nicely in a square, then I’d get stuck and no matter how much I twisted, I wouldn’t make any progress. I’d get bored, give up. Unfortunately Dr Petersen appears to have more tenacity than me, in this respect at least.
He opens his mouth to speak, and I wonder where we’re going now.
‘Are you a religious person, Heather?’
What does that have to do with anything? I blink but keep my face expressionless, waiting for the rest. Dr Petersen doesn’t speak, but continues to watch me, obviously waiting for an answer. If I don’t say anything, how long will this go on?
Possibly quite a long time, I realise a minute later. It’s awkward, sitting here in silence. The escort’s breathing in the background is loud. Irritating, really. Is it on purpose, so I don’t forget he’s there? Now that I’m tuned into it, it’s even harder to ignore. I want something to cover it. Anything, even if it means I have to speak. Besides, it seems an innocuous question. I am not giving much away by telling him this.
‘No,’ I say quietly.
‘Do you believe in God?’
I fail to see how this is different from his first question, but I answer anyway.
‘No.’
‘What about life after death?’
I squint a little, still trying to puzzle him out. Just when I think I have my ducks all in a row …
‘Everyone wants to believe in an afterlife,’ I tell him. ‘They want to think that death is not the end.’
‘Do you?’
‘I don’t know.’ I make my voice deliberately short, curt. Because I think I might be starting to see where he’s heading, and I want to cut it off here and now.
‘Ah,’ he says, as if he hasn’t heard me say this before. Then, ‘And that’s the problem, isn’t it? The not knowing.’
I pin on my smile. I am right. The smile doesn’t last long, however. This theory that Petersen has tried to convince me of again and again isn’t something I want to talk about. Not that there is much I
do
want to talk to Dr Petersen about, except maybe my release, and I’m pretty sure that isn’t a conversation we’ll be having any time soon.
But the escort is still breathing; slowly, loudly. Constantly.
‘Nobody knows,’ I say, striving for disdain, as if this should be obvious.
Petersen smiles.
‘Is that what so fascinates you about it? About death?’
‘I’m not fascinated by death,’ I answer. It’s the truth.
‘No, you’re right,’ he agrees. I blink in surprise at Petersen’s admission but he isn’t done. ‘It’s not death, is it? It’s dying. Those precious moments when you can watch life drain away. Wonder where it goes.’
There is something very wrong with this man.
I clamp my lips shut and attempt to do the same with my ears. Just to cover the sound, wheezing in and out and in and out, I start drumming loudly on my knee with my good hand. Dr Petersen will think it’s a sign that he’s getting to me, but I will just have to live with that.
‘Heather?’
Death, dying. It’s not fascinating: it’s terrifying. Unexplained, uncharted. Unexplored. Nobody knows what the final journey will be like, not until you’re so far down the path you’ll never be able to turn back and tell anyone what you saw.
Deep, deep down, it’s why we’re all really afraid of the dark. Because there’s nothing worse than not knowing what’s out there.
But I’m not going to try to explain that to Dr Petersen. I don’t care how long he waits, how loud that damned guard breathes. I clamp down on my tongue with my teeth, squeezing so hard it hurts.
Perhaps Petersen sees the determination in my face, because he quickly moves along to the next question on his little list.
‘Do you believe in spirits, Heather? Demons, creatures from another world?’
I chew down harder. I must have drawn blood because my mouth is suddenly filled with a metallic taste that’s both alien and familiar.
This is what Dr Petersen brings up when he really wants to elicit a response from me. If I was thinking straight I would be surprised he’s waited so long in this session to spring this one on me. But I’m not. I’m not thinking at all. I’m concentrating all of my efforts on staying right here. Right in this room, right now. It should be funny, because that’s something I’ve never wanted before, but I’m not laughing.
Because I do believe. I believe in spirits, demons, whatever you want to call them. Creatures that shouldn’t exist in this world but do, beings that don’t have to live by the same rules as the rest of us. Things that you can’t fight, can’t kill. I do believe in those.
The druids, who made their horrific sacrifices to appease the beasts, they knew what they were doing. They knew what would happen if the demon’s hunger went unfulfilled.
So do I.
Then
‘Dougie!’ I hit the beach at full tilt, my breath coming in ragged gasps. Forgetting that he was ill, forgetting his injured ankle, I threw myself at him, collapsing, still half-sobbing, into his arms.
‘What? What is it? Heather, what’s wrong?’
‘It’s … it’s …’ But I didn’t know how to describe what had happened at the cove. Instead I just gripped him harder, locking my hands around his neck, burying my face in his shoulder. Though the beach was quiet, I could still hear their screams echoing in my head. The terror I’d felt refused to lessen and I was shaking violently. My pulse thumped round my system, and even with my soaking wet clothes I was overheating.
Warm as I was, Dougie was hotter. His skin seemed to radiate heat, reminding me that he was sick. He was in no shape to be holding me up. Though it was the last thing I wanted to do, I pulled back, put the space of a footstep between us.
Now, though, he could see my face. I worked hard to mould it back into its ordinary shape, but my chin was trembling and my eyes were screwed into slits as I tried to hold back the tears. I sniffed deeply, trying to get a grip on myself.
‘You should sit down,’ I quavered.
Dougie ignored my advice. Closing the distance I’d put between us, he gripped my arm.
‘Heather, what happened? Did you go to the cove?’
Not really capable of talking, I made do with a couple of jerky nods.
‘Did … did you find anything?’
‘I don’t know.’ My voice came out oddly distorted, choked with emotion. ‘It was …’ I broke off again, breathing hard. Just thinking about it was bringing the fear back, tight around my chest like a steel band. ‘There was something there.’
Dougie caught the strange emphasis in my words.
‘What do you mean,
something
?’ he asked, his face intense.
‘I … I’m not sure.’ I shrugged in apology. I was beginning to calm down, to regain my senses. What had happened seemed … impossible. I was no longer sure about what I’d seen, heard. Had I imagined it?
But then …
‘Dougie, I found –’ I presented him with my left hand.
Dougie’s eyes narrowed, then widened as he saw what I had. Slowly he prised my fingers loose and pulled the brooch from my grasp.
‘Where the hell did you get this?’ he asked.
‘It was on the beach. At the cove.’
‘Washed up?’ He looked dubious. ‘I guess it could happen.’
But I was shaking my head.
‘No, it was up above the tideline. It was buried beneath some pebbles.’
‘That’s not possible,’ he murmured.
I took a deep, steadying breath. ‘I know.’
Two dark green eyes stared deep into mine.
‘Heather, what happened?’
I told him. Told him about the body that disappeared, the screams that came from nowhere. How I’d accidentally come across the brooch, fallen right on top of it. I didn’t look at him as I spoke, afraid I’d see the same thing in his face that Emma must have seen in mine: disbelief.
When I finished, there was a long moment of silence. I managed to wait all of ten seconds before I had to look.
Doubt was written across his face.
‘You don’t believe me,’ I accused.
‘I don’t think you’d lie,’ he hedged.
I scowled. That wasn’t the same thing.
‘You think I imagined it.’
He made a face that was easy to interpret: yes, but that’s not what you want to hear.
No, it wasn’t.
‘How are you feeling?’ he asked. His hand reached out to press against my forehead; a pointless gesture as his skin was so much hotter than mine. ‘Do you feel chilled? Overheated? Sick to your stomach?’
I pulled away from his touch.
‘No,’ I replied, somewhat frostily.
He chewed on his lip as he considered me.
‘I’m sorry, Heather, it just sounds a bit –’
‘Crazy,’ I finished for him.
He grimaced at me, his eyes apologetic.
‘But this …’ He turned the brooch over in his hands. ‘This is weird. How did it get there?’
‘I don’t know,’ I said, watching the way the light reflected on the coppery surface. ‘Don’t you think it’s a bit of a funny coincidence?’
‘What do you mean?’
‘It being there, right there, at the cove. Maybe … maybe it’s linked.’
‘Linked?’
I paused, not sure I was ready to admit my theory. Even to me it sounded nuts.
‘Think about where we got this,’ I said, hoping he’d guess what I was thinking so I wouldn’t have to say it.
‘The cairn?’
‘The
burial
cairn,’ I reminded him.
‘But it was just left there,’ he argued. ‘It can’t have been there long, it’s not even old.’
‘It looked old when you pulled it out,’ I argued.
‘Yeah, but, that must have just been dirt. Look at it now. Metal doesn’t stay all shiny like this, not for that length of time. Not left outside.’
I knew he was right, but I still couldn’t let it go.
‘But everything that’s happened, it’s all been since we found it.’
‘You think –’ His lips twitched and I knew, even with everything that was going on, I knew he was laughing at me – ‘you think the brooch is causing all of this?’
‘Don’t you think it’s a bit strange that we steal this, then just after it – and I mean, like, just hours after it – everything starts going wrong?’
‘It’s just a coincidence, Heather,’ he said quietly. ‘Nothing more.’
‘I don’t think so,’ I said obstinately. I felt stupid, my cheeks flooding with red, but I ploughed resolutely on. ‘Right after we find it, Martin goes AWOL, the Volvo dies and you sprain your ankle. Then you chuck it away and Darren goes missing at the beach it washes up on, Emma goes crazy and I –’ I broke off, ground my teeth together.
I was getting angry; annoyed that Dougie wouldn’t even consider my words. He hadn’t been this derisive when Emma had told her insane story. Why wouldn’t he even consider mine?
‘Heather –’
I didn’t let him finish, sure he was going to try to persuade me I was talking nonsense.
‘Dougie, what if we’ve … woken something?’
‘Heather, there’s nothing here.’ Dougie leaned forward in his chair, forcing me to meet his gaze. ‘It’s just us. Maybe –’
‘I didn’t imagine it,’ I hissed. ‘It could be … what you were saying. About the druids.’
‘That was a story, Heather!’ Dougie exclaimed. Then he took a deep breath, obviously reining in his emotions. ‘Look. I believe you think you saw what you say you did,’ he said, and I glowered at his careful wording. ‘But maybe you’re not able to separate what’s real and what’s not right now. I mean, when I was dizzy before I didn’t even know where I was for a minute.’
‘I’m not getting sick,’ I repeated stubbornly.
‘You might be and you just don’t know it yet,’ he insisted. ‘I was fine right up until I wasn’t. Heather –’ He reached one hand up to rub his forehead, which was shiny with sweat – ‘Heather, you’re talking about the supernatural here. Spirits and entities and stuff. I mean, just last night you said Emma was losing it. Now you, what, agree with her?’
‘I don’t know,’ I muttered. I wasn’t quite ready to align myself with Emma. I certainly hadn’t seen anything like she’d described. But I was maybe willing to think about it with a more open mind. But she just … she just seemed so unstable right now. It was difficult to believe anything she said.
‘I’m not crazy.’
I hadn’t heard Emma coming out of the tent, but when I whipped my head around at the sound of her voice she was standing just a few feet behind us.
‘Emma, you’re awake,’ Dougie commented, his voice falsely cheerful, and I knew he was wondering the same thing I was: how long had Emma been standing there listening?
‘I’m not crazy,’ she repeated, moving forward, footsteps silent in the sand. ‘That thing I saw, it was real, and it was there.’
We watched in silence as she rounded the fire pit and lowered herself slowly into the one of the remaining chairs. She was wearing the clothes I’d helped her dress in earlier, but now they were creased, her jumper hanging messily from one shoulder. Her hair was tousled, not in the casual, I-just-got-out-of-bed style that I knew she spent hours creating, but as if she didn’t know what she looked like and didn’t care. The make-up she’d put on at least a day before was now halfway down her face.
She looked older than I’d ever seen her. It was in her eyes: as if she’d witnessed true horror. They were frightened and sad and resigned all in one, and I didn’t like looking at them. I couldn’t seem to tear my gaze away, though.
‘Tell me again what you saw,’ I demanded.
Now that she was calmer, I hoped I’d get something a little more concrete than the hysterical fragments Dougie and I had had to piece together the night before.
But Emma didn’t answer. She was looking at me oddly, head cocked to the side, eyes slightly tightened.
‘What happened?’ she asked me.
‘What?’
‘Something happened to you. What was it? Was it the cove, did you go back there? Did you see something?’
‘I’m … not sure.’
‘Tell me,’ she ordered.
I recounted my story again. Emma’s eyes widened in surprise and fear, then settled into a mixture of satisfaction and resignation.
‘I told you,’ she said when I finished. Then, with more feeling, ‘I
told
you!’
‘I didn’t see a …
thing
,’ I insisted, uncomfortable corroborating her story when it still seemed so unbelievable.
‘But you think there’s something going on. I heard what you said before,’ she added as I opened my mouth to argue.
‘I don’t know,’ I mumbled pathetically, aware of Dougie’s eyes watching me closely. I took a breath. ‘I think we should just get the hell out of here.’
Nobody argued with that.
Though it was tempting to hide out our final hours on the beach in our tent, none of us wanted to leave the fire. It wasn’t just for the heat, though I was so cold it had settled right into my bones and Dougie was shaking uncontrollably, fever tricking his body into thinking everything was cold, even my arms around his shoulder, desperately trying to warm him.
We huddled by the fire. The world around us was cloaked in ominous shades of grey. Slowly that darkened into unfriendly, threatening black.
We didn’t talk much. After appearing almost normal earlier, Emma had retreated back inside her head and was quietly humming to herself as she gazed into the flames. Dougie looked like it was all he could do to stay awake, although he’d resisted my attempts to get him to go and lie down. I didn’t push the matter. His presence, even weak and dizzy and barely conscious, was a comfort. As for me, I spent my time scrutinising every inch of the brooch. Tilting it an angle, I used the flickering glare from the flames to throw the engravings into sharp relief. Twisting it this way and that, I tried to make sense of the squiggles and shapes. I wasn’t sure why, but I remained convinced that the little circlet, small but big enough to almost fill my palm, was somehow, if not responsible, then at least connected to everything that was going on.
They were so strange, though, those markings. Unrecognisable, but not random. Undaunted, I continued to try to decipher them, spinning the brooch round, peering at it from different perspectives, attempting to force the loops and irregular angles to become something that made sense.
‘You know,’ I said slowly, squinting down at it, ‘if you look at this the right way, that bit kind of looks like a man.’
‘What?’ Dougie turned to me, his eyes half-shut, jaw juddering. He sniffed, pulled his second jumper tighter around his shoulders, but looked down at where I was pointing.
‘The brooch,’ I said, ignoring when he sighed. ‘This bit here.’
I held it out for his inspection. Rather than straining to see across the short space between us, he pulled it from my grasp. I watched him rotate it this way and that.
‘Maybe,’ he said. ‘You mean this bit, in the middle of the flames?’
‘Flames?’ I blinked. ‘What flames?’
‘Yeah, these bits.’ He pointed to jagged scratches that I hadn’t been able to decipher. ‘They’re flames, right?’
I wasn’t sure – they didn’t look very flame-like to me – but I remembered how easily Dougie had interpreted the cairn when I had seen nothing more than a jumble of stones.
‘Sure,’ I mumbled.
‘And these look like gifts.’
Gifts? I snatched it back from him. I hadn’t seen any ‘gifts’.
‘Where?’
‘Here.’ He stretched over, ran his finger around the lower half of the brooch, opposite the man apparently surrounded by fire. ‘See? That’s a pot or something, and that’s maybe a spear or an axe … it’s hard to tell. Definitely votive offerings, though.’
‘Votive offerings?’ I echoed, trying not to sound like I’d never heard the phrase before in my life.
‘Yeah, you know, sacrificial offerings to a god or whatever.’
‘Right.’ How the hell did he know all this stuff? ‘So then … this might be a god?’ I pointed to the man I thought I’d found.
Dougie made a face. ‘Doubt it, not with all the flames. Not unless it’s the Devil. Or a demon, perhaps.’
‘Something evil …’ My thoughts were racing. I looked back down at the scratched figure of a man, the jagged shapes Dougie said were flames. ‘Or could they be –’ I squinted, connected lines in my head – ‘wings?’
‘Yeah.’ Dougie lifted one shoulder in a shrug. ‘Flames, wings.’ He paused, thought about it. ‘Might even be waves.’