Reynolds ran his eyes over the eclectic mix on the bookshelf: Stephen King, Philip K. Dick, sports biographies and psychology textbooks. He recognized university leftovers and wondered who had studied the subject. He tilted a copy of
Not lying at the foot of the stairs with blood bubbling out of her neck.
Reynolds met his own eyes through the mist of the over-mantel mirror. Hazy, and with the light from the window behind him, his hair looked great.
He sighed deeply. If it had only been Steven Lamb who had disappeared, he might have delayed the roadblocks and the immediate request for extra manpower. In the middle of a crisis there was always the chance that children – OK,
But with Jonas Holly apparently missing too, everything became even more serious. Either both of them had been abducted, which seemed bizarre, or Jonas had taken the boy and, by logical conclusion, the other children as well.
Which seemed bizarre.
Reynolds sighed again and stared gloomily into the mirror. Overhead the floorboards creaked as Rice searched Jonas’s bedroom.
The answerphone flashed and Reynolds hit Play on a robot message telling Jonas he had won a holiday in Florida and needed only to call this number to claim his prize.
He moved away, then back again – and played the outgoing message:
Shit.
He’d forgotten what a bloody weirdo Jonas Holly was. For the first time, the idea that he might have murdered his wife and stolen a slew of local children didn’t even seem that far-fetched.
He ordered his team to go through the house and garden again. This time with far more rigour.
36
JESS TOOK WATCHED THE skin peel off a small brown pony like a flesh banana, and remembered the fruit bowl in her mother’s kitchen. The way her mother polished each apple before it was allowed to take its place among the peaches and grapes; the way Jess was only allowed to take a piece of fruit if she rearranged the display so it didn’t look unbalanced.
Jess smiled wryly against the cold block wall. She wished her mother could see her now. See the straw she slept on, the cement she shat on and the filth she ate. See if her mother still thought there was
Jess’s mouth filled suddenly with tangy saliva as her body remembered the fresh, sweet, juicy crunch of a Braeburn.
Her eyes overflowed.
In the past six weeks, her mouth had almost forgotten what freshness was. Her tongue tasted fetid and her teeth were jagged traps for tiny shards of bone and frayed strands of flesh that resisted her constant probing. She tried never to close her mouth now; tried to keep the air circulating. Sometimes she drooled because of it, but it was better than closing her lips on that dank cavern.
The
He sang as he went, like a madman.
Of course he did. He
Jess sighed and turned away.
In the kennel next to hers was the new boy. She didn’t know his name but she had seen him at school. He was in the sixth form. He wasn’t one of the cool kids; he was just an average kid.
Now he was just an average dog.
The older boy stirred and Jess turned away from the breeze-block wall and hung her fingers through the chain link on the other side instead.
‘Hey,’ she said. ‘Hey, you with the ears.’
He blinked and frowned and then opened his eyes and looked at the corrugated plastic sheeting over his head.
‘Hey, what’s your name?’
He turned towards her.
‘I’m Jess.’
He closed his eyes again and ignored her. Jess let him. She’d done that plenty when she’d first woken up here: closed her eyes and tried to go back to sleep so she could wake from this lunatic dream in her own bed.
After a few moments, he opened his eyes and looked at her again. She laughed – a short humourless sound.
‘Yeah, it’s real,’ she said. ‘Crap, right?’
He propped himself on his elbows. ‘Jess Took?’
‘Yep.’
‘You’re alive.’
‘You’re a genius.’
He got slowly to his feet and stared stupidly down at his dark-blue briefs. ‘Where are my clothes?’