Read The Darkest Corners Online
Authors: Barry Hutchison
He began to run, not the slow, awkward lurching I would've expected, but the sprint of a trained athlete. Caught off-guard, I stumbled back, swinging with the baton as he closed the final few metres.
An arm lashed out and I felt fire across my fingers. A spray of blood hit the wall and the baton joined the scalpel on the floor. I looked at my hand, half expecting to see the fingers gone, but the cut had just sliced through the skin across my knuckles.
The glance to my hand was quick, but by the time I looked back he was right at me, and all I could see were his lips and his teeth and the wiry white hairs that stuck out from each nostril.
Is gathered there for certain becauseâ¦
My injured knee gave out and I fell beneath him. His own knee jammed against my chest, pinning me to the floor. I drove a fist against the side of his head, sending his glasses spinning across the floor. I hit him again, and this time his face contorted in pain.
Today's the day the teddy bears haveâ
The music stopped with a
bleep
. Annoyance replaced the pain on Doc's face and he looked over his shoulder in the direction of the operating theatre. âHuh,' he muttered, then a rubber-gloved hand came down hard on my throat and a scalpel flashed before my eyes.
âNow then, my darling real boy,' Doc whispered, and his voice came out in a cloud of white fog. âNo more with the wasting time. I think it best we operate right here and now!'
I
squirmed beneath him, kicking and twisting as I struggled to get free. His full weight was on me, though, and there was nothing I could do to shake him off.
âWhat will I do to you, I wonder?' he giggled, and more misty vapour rolled from his mouth. The floor beneath me felt cold. It chilled up through my clothes and numbed my skin.
Doc turned the scalpel over and brought the point closer to my face. I stopped squirming then and tried my best to stay still. The point of the blade was too close for me to see. It was a greyish blur just millimetres from my right eye. Doc's other hand was still on my throat. Even through the glove his touch was cold.
âShall I take your n-n-nose first?' he whispered, and as he spoke he started to shiver. He pulled back a little and I saw swirls of cold air rising up from his skin. âWhat?' he muttered. âWhat is happâ?'
He stopped moving, his face fixed in a frown. A layer of frosty white crept up from inside his bloodstained shirt. It spread like a rash across his scarred throat and carried on right up to the wound in his scalp.
A boy of around five years old leaned round the frozen Doc and showed me his proudest grin. His silvery-grey eyes sparked with mischief.
âI.C.?' I wheezed. It was the boy I'd met in the Darkest Corners. The one I'd saved from Doc Mortis. He'd had the power to freeze things with his touch, but he'd been unable to control it. Apparently in the weeks since then he'd learned how.
âThat's my name; don't wear it out,' he said. âDo it, Big Nose.'
There was a growl and a huge fist connected with Doc's head. He shattered like glass, and a man in a long coat and a wide-brimmed hat was revealed behind him.
âFor the last time,' said the man in a voice like gravel, â
don't
call me Big Nose.'
âIt's not my fault you've got a big nose,' I.C. said. âYou're so touchy about it. I'd be more worried about my ears if I was you.'
âWhat's wrong with my ears?'
I.C. gasped. âYou mean you don't
know
? They're
massive
!'
I looked past the boy and up to Mr Mumbles. My old imaginary friend glared down at me, and I couldn't quite decide if my day had just got better or worse. Finally, he reached out a hand. I stared at it for a few seconds, like I'd never seen one before. Then I took hold of it and he yanked me smoothly to my feet.
âThanks,' I said.
âThank him, not me,' Mumbles growled. He pointed to his throat. âYou've got something there.'
I felt for my own throat and realised that the frozen hand of Doc Mortis was still gripping on. I yanked it off and threw it to the floor, where it broke into several sharp shards.
âSo, just to be sure now,' I said, âhe's really dead this time?'
Mumbles prodded some of the broken fragments with his foot. âDon't see him getting up from that, do you?'
âThe way things have been going lately? I'm not going to rule it out. Besides, you were just a pile of dust at one point, and here you are now.'
I.C. wrapped his arms round my waist and hugged me tightly. I could feel the cold emanating from him, but he was beginning to warm up.
âI didn't think I'd see you again,' he said.
âCome on, I promised you you would,' I replied.
âYeah, but Big Nose said you were a⦠what was it again? A back-stabbing weasel, that was it.'
âHe did, did he?'
Mr Mumbles stared at me impassively. Or, at least, he tried to, but there was a hint of a smirk at the corners of his scarred mouth.
âYou're not really a back-stabbing weasel, though, are you?'
âNo,' I assured him. âI'm not.'
I.C. sighed with relief. âGood.' His brow furrowed. âWhat's a weasel, anyway?'
âAn animal. A bit like a stoat.'
I.C. gasped. âLike a
boat
?'
âNo, like a stoat.'
âOh, right. What's a stoat?'
âI'll explain later,' I said.
I.C. finally stepped back and I turned to Mr Mumbles. âThe barrier's gone.'
âI noticed.'
âIt's my fault. My dad tricked me.'
Mumbles nodded. âI tried to warn you.'
âEveryone's dying.'
âEveryone does.'
âBut not like this,' I protested. âThey shouldn't die like this. None of this should be happening.'
âBut it is happening,' Mumbles said.
âHow can I stop it? How can I fix this?'
âI don't know. I don't think you can.'
I had to lean on the wall to stop myself slumping to the floor. I'd already guessed it was too late to stop my dad's plan, but having it confirmed still hit me like a hammer blow.
Was this really it? Was this what the world would be like from now on? Monsters and horror and death at every turn?
âI bet you're loving this, aren't you?' I snapped. I was angry with myself, but Mumbles was a much easier target. âI bet you're loving being out of the Darkest Corners. Being free.'
âFree?' Mumbles growled. âHow am I free? It wasn't the place that was the problem, it was the things that lived there. But they're all over here too.' He shoved me towards a window and gestured down at the town. Flames had very nearly consumed it completely. Even from this distance, through the glass, I could hear the screams of the dying. âI didn't escape the Darkest Corners. The Darkest Corners is here with me.'
I watched the fire dancing until I couldn't watch it any longer. âWhat am I going to do?' I croaked.
âWhat do you want to do?'
âI want to find my dad,' I said. âAnd I want to kill him.'
Mumbles tugged the rim of his hat, pulling it lower on his head. âI could get behind that.'
âWhat? You mean you'll help me? Why?'
âHe messed with my head too, remember?' Mumbles said. He jabbed a thumb towards I.C. âBesides, he'd never let me hear the end of it if I didn't.'
I.C. grinned broadly. He reached a hand up towards Mumbles. The man in the hat hesitated, looked a little embarrassed, then took I.C.'s hand in his.
âHow did you two find me, anyway?' I asked as we headed for the exit.
âLuck. We were after Mortis. Didn't know you'd be here.'
âRight. Well that
was
some good luck then.'
Mumbles grunted. âWho said it was
good
luck?'
We stepped round the broken bodies of the porters outside the cupboard. âWas that you?' I asked.
Mumbles nodded. âThey weren't the only ones. There were a dozen of them in here when we arrived.'
âReally?' I whispered, suddenly alert.
â
Were.
Past tense.'
âOh,' I said. âUm... well done.'
âNever get tired of killing those things.'
I glanced down at I.C., who was two knuckles deep in a nose pick. âRight. Good,' I said, as brightly as I could manage. âShall we go?'
Ameena jumped out from inside the 4x4 as we approached. Her face lit up when she spotted me, then fell when she realised I wasn't alone. When she spotted that one of my companions was Mr Mumbles, she looked ready to jump back in the car and speed away.
âRelax,' I said. âHe's on our side.'
Ameena didn't look convinced, but she didn't make a run for it, either. She shifted her gaze to I.C. and he smiled broadly up at her.
âHello,' he chirped.
âUh, hi. You're the ice kid I've heard so much about?'
âThat's me!' he said proudly. âAnd this is Uncle Mumbles.'
â
Uncleâ?
' I began, but Mr Mumbles stared daggers at me.
âShut it.'
âThey've already met,' I told I.C. âShe broke a baseball bat across his face.'
âIt's OK, his nose would have blocked it,' I.C. said, then he jumped sideways to avoid a dunt from Mumbles.
âHow's Billy?' I asked. I could see him sitting in the back of the car. His eyes were staring straight ahead as his fingers prodded at the stitches in his lips.
âWell, he's not his usual chatty self,' Ameena said. âTried to find something to cut the stitches, but no luck.'
I handed her a scalpel. âTry this. Grabbed it when Doc was on top of me. Was going to use it, but I.C. took care of him before I had to.'
âGive it to me,' Mumbles said. He took the knife and wiped some frost from the blade. âI'll do it.'
âIs that a good idea?' Ameena asked. âHe's already pretty freaked out. Having you come at him with a scalpel mightâ'
âI'll do it,' Mumbles growled, and Ameena didn't argue any more.
We climbed into the car, Ameena and me in the front, Billy sandwiched between Mumbles and I.C. in the back. He didn't freak out like I expected him to â and like I probably would've in the same situation â but he did shoot me a worried look.
âHello, I'm I.C., what's your name?'
For obvious reasons, he didn't get a reply.
âHe's Billy,' I said. âBilly, I.C. and Mr Mumbles.'
Billy let out a high-pitched groan when he saw the scalpel. âRelax, kid,' Mumbles said. âI know what I'm doing.'
I could feel everyone in the car holding their breath as Mumbles leaned in with the blade. Everyone expect I.C., who was quietly singing a song. I didn't catch many of the words, but from what I could gather it was about Mr Mumbles' nose, and the sheer size of it.
Mumbles clamped one hand on the top of Billy's head, and brought the blade closer to the stitches. Billy closed his eyes and did his best to control his shaking. Mumbles breathed out, then held it. Then he placed the razor-sharp steel against the first stitch.
âCareful,' I said, and everyone jumped.
Mr Mumbles scowled at me, then tried again. I didn't interrupt this time. The blade tugged. Billy whimpered. And then the first stitch popped loose.
âDrive,' Mumbles said. âThe rest should be easy.'
âShouldn't we wait until they're all done?' I asked. Billy tried to nod, but the hand on his head held him steady.
âThe rest should be easy. Drive.'
Ameena looked to me for guidance. I shrugged, and she fired up the car. âWhere to?'
âWherever my dad is.'
âI don't know. He didn't tell me where he was going. I ran away before I found out.'
I leaned round to Mumbles. âAny ideas?'
âHere's one: shut up and let me concentrate.' Another stitch was sliced open and Billy's lips loosened a little.
âYou sure you don't know?' I asked Ameena. âHe didn't even give any hints?'
âNo, he never really told me anything. Bump
coming!'
Mumbles pulled the scalpel away from Billy as the 4x4 bounced back down on to the road.
âGreat, so he could be anywhere,' I sighed.
âYeah. Except...'
âExcept what?'
âExcept I think he'd want to rub it in. You know? That he's won. He knew he could never really escape the Darkest Corners. He knew he could never get back to the real world the way it was. That wasn't the reason he was really doing any of this.'
âHe wanted to hurt me,' I said, my voice hushed. âHe told me he was doing all this just so he could hurt me. He wanted me to bring the Darkest Corners here so I'd have all this death on my conscience.'
âExactly. And I reckon he'd want to revel in that. He'd go somewhere that'd always remind him that he won. Somewhere he could gloat.'
âCan't you sniff him out?' I.C. suggested. âYou know, with your big nose?'