Blood Bonds: A psychological thriller (25 page)

BOOK: Blood Bonds: A psychological thriller
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“It was built in 1886, owned by a bloke whose family made their money in the pottery industry. Like so many of the new middle and upper classes of the time they liked the idea of some sort of lineage, coats of arms, that sort of thing. To put it bluntly they were trying to buy social acceptance by the old money. The family name was Cameron, and, what with the fashion then for all things medieval and Scottish, this particular Cameron thought he’d build himself a castle in the land of his forebears. Shit, this thing’s got Pugin and Ruskin carved all over it. Except my Cameron thought he’d go one better and buy an island on which to stand it. It bankrupted the family eventually. Cameron’s Folly, that’s what they nicknamed it. The thing had been standing empty for the best part of a hundred years, and I guess it was largely forgotten, being so stuck out of the way like it was. But I tell you, Collie, she was built to last. When I heard of it and took a look around it she was in superb structural nick, all things considered. What do you think, huh? Castle Max!”

Castle Max. I laughed, and he laughed too. He darted out of the car door, the wind rushing in. As I reached over to open my side, he yanked open the door and did a mock bow as I stepped out.

“Welcome,” he said in a terrible Transylvanian accent. “Enter, and of your own free will!”

And in spite of the freezing rain and biting wind I smiled broadly, warmed by this regression to our childhood. He wrapped an arm around my shoulder, leading me forcibly to the door as if I might suddenly change my mind and turn around and go home. As if I could. There was nowhere to go. He had me trapped within his island world.

I didn’t know then just how much.

Whatever, I did turn to look back, and then the hillside to my right caught my attention. I stared at it.

“Remind you of anything?” Max asked.

“How’d you know I was thinking that?”

“Because it reminded me of it too.”

“Yeah, but what of?” I said, frowning.

“It’s
The Mount
!” he exclaimed. “Can’t you see it?”

Uncannily it was exactly the same shape as that mound of slag back home on which we’d played out our childhood fantasies. On which he’d beaten me about the head when we first met. “Jesus, so it is!”

“Weird, eh?”

“Weird.”

And quietly disturbing. Something I can only describe as dread seeped into me at the sight of it, like it was an omen of sorts. I don’t believe in that sort of stuff ordinarily, but something clamped its clammy hands around me and I shivered. I heard the door open, felt the rush of warm air from inside waft away the cold feeling, felt Max’s hand grip me firmly on the shoulder and steer me into the doorway. I snapped my head away from The Mount’s brooding twin and thrust myself into the heat.

We were transported by two mere steps into an altogether different world from the harsh landscape outside. Before us reddish-brown marble columns supported three arches; to my left a staircase rose majestically, a golden-brown wooden handrail topping wonderfully ornate cast ironwork in the form of medieval arched windows, and lit by the light from a large stained glass window in which the Virgin Mary cradled Jesus as he lay dying; a plush, exotic carpet, Eastern in design, met my cautious steps. Standing in the carpet’s centre was a round table draped with a heavily embroidered cloth, scattered with loose papers, a small pot of flowers and a briefcase; the picture-filled walls were dusky pink in colour, lined with wooden cabinets and tables on which busts of various sizes from small to life-size, in bronze, marble and  plaster, were dotted here and there, beside vases spilling over with dry grasses and verdant ferns, or some other thick-leaved evergreen. Above my head was a balcony draped with rugs, and on which I heard a door closing and the sound of muffled footfalls.

“Max, this is so…” I lifted my hands in resignation. I had stepped back in time to another age entirely. I caught sight of a figure passing by a doorway further inside. A light-blue shirt. Like a uniform? I couldn’t be sure.

“Striking, eh?” said Max.

I had to agree.

The light footsteps from above were now sounding on the staircase, the boards groaning every now and again, but not distracting enough to draw me away from viewing everything the place had to offer. “I had no idea, Max,” I said. “All this time you had this. I had no idea. Your mother would be so proud of you.”

“Hello, Philip,” a voice said quietly behind me.

My heart lurched. I turned, not believing what I heard. But it was true. Here she was. Still as beautiful as ever. Every inch as beautiful as I remembered her.

“Ruby!” I said.

 

*  *  *  *

30
Friday

 

It all began with a fever.

It hit me on Monday night, following my evening meal. Up till then I must admit I had decided to take Wise’s words as a malicious joke on his part. Surely if I’d been earmarked to die then I’d be dead already. He was just a perverted, sick bastard, one of those who as a kid tore the legs off spiders. He was doing the same to me after a fashion, pulling off my legs of self-assurance and watching me squirm. That was until I had the dry, metallic taste in my mouth, followed by such a severe headache that I thought my head would explode with the pain. I remember dashing my plate of roast beef and potatoes from the table and screaming, “
You’ve killed me! You’ve killed me!

I staggered to the mirror and rattled it hard with my fist in protest, but the sound and the movement caused more pain. In the end I staggered to my bed and flung myself down onto it as my mind slipped further into delirium. I heard a voice, my voice, but detached and whispering from somewhere behind me. “The potent poison quite o’er-crows my spirit!” it said dramatically.

“For Christ’s sake, get the bloody thing right, Philip!”

“Those
are
the words, sir!”

“But you don’t have to say them like you’re going on a daytrip to Cleethorpes, lad! You’re dying!”

“It’s only a play, sir.”

“Only a play! This is Hamlet, young man!”

“It’s not
real
, is it? They know I’m not dying - not really dying. I’m just gonna look stupid. My mum and dad will be there.”

“That’s just the point. If you’re going to die you’ve got to do it good, like you really mean it, for them.”

“Who ever heard of dying good? Dying is not good.”

The teacher shook his head. “Sometimes, all we get in life is a good death, Philip. Sometimes life’s so ignoble that the end is all you’re left with. So get some practice in and make a bloody good job of it, or else you’ll be doing it for real.”

Well I’m doing it good now, sir, I thought.

There followed many protracted hours (days, months?) of mental and physical agony. Every now and then my thoughts became more lucid, and I attempted to raise my sweat-drenched body from the sodden bed, but the pain forced me back down and the fire swamped me all over again, only doubly so, as if in retribution for my feeble efforts to rouse myself. I writhed in mental anguish, screaming aloud – at least, I thought it was aloud – and in tears, my stomach and legs knotted with excruciating cramps, my head feeling as if a white-hot needle had been inserted through the bone of my temple and into the yielding, pulsing mass of my tortured brain. I died a hundred different deaths that night; strangulation, drowning, shooting, crushed by cars, and just when I thought I could endure no more the deaths were repeated. Indeed, I thought this was Purgatory itself.

Then, seemingly abruptly, the pain disappeared and I floated at ease in a lightless universe that might have been the womb or the coffin. I didn’t care. I was enjoying the peace.

Till the visitations.

They’ve been coming ever since.

I am certain now that my mind is going. I’d like to suspect drugs are the cause, my poison-laced roast potatoes perhaps, but it is not, I fear, the true cause. I have noticed my mind disassembling for some time.

It is only to be expected, I console myself. My writing has loosed all kinds of devils and forced me to face each and every one of them. Whether asleep or awake I have been plagued by them during the nights that followed my fever. Dead people filing past my bed – my Uncle Geoffrey, Bernard, Mr Walton and Ruby. Most painful of all is seeing Ruby. It’s as if every page I’ve written is in effect another shovel of earth that has eventually removed them all from their graves, bringing them to life.

I guess thinking back to how Ruby looked when I first met her after all those years has not been a good thing for me. Other restless souls have taken it as a trumpet call. Now they file past my bed every night in various stages of decay. I smell their corruption long before I see them. Only I shouldn’t be able to see them at all in my darkened room, for the dark is total. But see them I do.

Always it is my Uncle Geoffrey who comes up first, his skin a phosphorous greenish-yellow, and always he appears as a head bobbing around like some grinning full Moon in a starless night sky. “I’m not alone,” he says. “I have company now.” I should be glad, because he hated being all alone, which was sad really, because he died alone in his own hallway. “I’m a spokesman,” he chimes proudly, and if he had a chest it would probably be puffing out. He says this every time, and yet as spokesman he delivers nothing on the others’ behalf. He just bobs. Anyhow, he’d make a bad spokesman, I think, because his breath smells something terrible. At first I used to blink hard, nip myself to assure myself I wasn’t sleeping. But of course I wasn’t. I admit they have come so regularly now that I don’t much mind them. All except for seeing Ruby. That hurts. But I have even learned to endure Uncle Geoffrey’s stinking breath to some degree. He stands – or floats – at the foot of my bed, and the others gather round. It is a little like I’m back in that hospital bed, surrounded by friends and relatives who once loved me, except for Mr Walton, who never loved anyone.

Bernard is next. He never says a word, which I guess is in keeping with his character; he merely stands (Bernard is lucky to have a full body and legs to stand on) and grins, his teeth looking like one of those reflective strips they sew onto children’s school bags or coats. Both his wrists appear to be smiling too. He shows them to me and I’m afraid I have to look away. It is no use closing my eyes, because I tried that early on and they were still there, so I figure they’ve got to be in my head and not standing in my room at all. Maybe it’s the after-effects of a drug after all. Who knows? And I ask Bernard what is it he wants, but he never answers. He grins. It’s nice to see him look so happy though, even if he is long dead.

Mr Walton then steps forward, his eyes blazing white from a blackened face with skin peeling off it like damp wallpaper, wisps of grey-blue smoke still rising from it, which smells a little of fried bacon. He always carries in his hand half a coconut dangling from a piece of string, and a hefty walking stick smeared with blood. His expression is one of blame, and he points the stick at me threateningly, though he never does any more than this so I take it all lightly.

Then it’s Ruby’s turn, and this always makes me burst into tears. Her face and chest are covered in thick, drying mud. “I’m sorry, Ruby. It’s all my fault,” I say. She says it doesn’t matter, but I can tell from her face she thinks it does. I mean, she’s dead; it’s got to matter, hasn’t it?

“Is it revenge, is that what you want?” I ask them all, but they fade away.

I could put up with this, if that’s all that happened, but last night it went further, because I was visited by the Devil himself. True, believe me, he sat on the end of my bed, so heavy his weight stopped the blood flowing in my legs and gave me pins and needles. He’s not bad looking for the Devil, quite dapper really. He dresses in a suit and splashes himself with aftershave. It’s not even expensive aftershave, but I don’t rightly know what that’s saying about his character. I can just make out his horns under his combed-back hair, but they’re not as pronounced as I thought they’d be. But he’s evil all the same. It comes off him like putrid fumes from a bloated, week-old cadaver in the Sun, and it makes me want to gag. He takes me by the hair and yanks it hard, causing me to cry in pain, and he’s jabbering on about something, but I have to stare him in the eyes and say, “I’m sorry, but I don’t understand demonic,” at which point he screams another series of expletives in no language I’ve ever heard of and then vanishes in a puff of smoke, like a stage devil. It leaves me feeling quite unsettled.

So what do you reckon? Poison? Or madness? Or both? I can’t even begin to work it out.

 

*  *  *  *

 

“Ruby!” I said, equally confused and overjoyed.

I made a move towards her, but Max beat me to it and put his arm around her shoulder.
He put his arm around her shoulder
. I must have looked quite stupid then, grinning but without humour, my hand held out in mid air towards Ruby, my body looking awkward and unbalanced because I’d started to move towards her and was arrested in my steps by Max’s movement.

“My wife,” he said.

I blinked, glancing from him to her and back again. “It’s so nice to see you again, Philip,” Ruby said, breaking free of him and floating over to me. She touched my arm, bent forward and kissed me on the cheek. I swear it left a burning sensation there. Her smell was the same. Just the same. The memories came crashing back. The smell of goulash and damp wallpaper. She paused for a second to look into my eyes with her own troubled orbs. Yes, troubled. And then the image vanished and she was no longer troubled, but wore an expression of utter contentment. She gripped me tight and hugged me again, this time with more fervour, perhaps to try and allay some of my obvious bewilderment. “You look shattered,” she said, leading me out of the room and through double doors. “You ought to rest. Can we get you something to eat? Drink?”

She guided me towards a plush sofa and I sat down. The room was every bit as luxurious as the last, but perhaps not as ostentatious. “I’m fine,” I mumbled, trying to smile at her, finding it profoundly difficult.

Wife? What did he mean wife?

“You two are…” I began, but found the words choked me.

Max entered the room, closing the doors behind him. “We’ve been married five years,” he admitted.

“I…I didn’t…Well, I didn’t know,” I said.

Ruby cast a fiery glance at Max. “You didn’t tell him?” her voice was quiet, controlled, but I detected annoyance there.

“I guess I forgot,” he said, shrugging and walking to a drinks cabinet. He flung open the doors and removed a bottle. “Collie?” he said, raising a glass.

“No. No thank you.”

“He should have told you,” Ruby said apologetically, her body language signalling embarrassment.

“That’s OK,” I said, though it wasn’t. I wouldn’t be here if I’d known, I thought acidly. With great difficulty I avoided looking at Max, who had come round to sit opposite me in an armchair, a drink in one hand.

“I think I’ll show Philip his room,” Ruby declared stiffly.

“Give him chance, he’s only just sitting down.”

“All the same, he looks tired and would perhaps like to freshen up. Isn’t that right, Philip?”

“I wouldn’t mind.”

“That’s settled then. This way. Let’s leave Max to his drink.” She smiled at him, but it was a passing thing that barely made an impression on her lips.

Max lifted his drink in a salute, as if to sanction her decision. “Behave yourself, Collie,” I heard him say to my back.

I followed Ruby dumbly to the staircase. She turned. “Are your bags in the car?” My bewilderment had slowly crept towards anger. But I nodded and held it back. “I’ll have someone bring them in for you.” Here she offered a genuinely warm smile. “I think you’ll like your room.” She set off at a pace, nimbly climbing the stairs with me in tow behind.

“How could you, Ruby?” I said, the words spilling out in spite of my better judgement.

She paused, a hand on the stair rail, turning her head slowly. “How could I what?”

I looked away. “Nothing.”

“We’re divorced, remember?”

My head nodded sheepishly. “Yeah, forgive me. It’s just that I didn’t expect any of this. With Max. It came as a shock, that’s all.”

“I can imagine. If it’s any consolation I didn’t know you were coming until yesterday.” She turned and ascended the stairs.

I was about to say something as we reached the wide landing when the sight of a uniformed man held my words in check.

Standing rigidly by a wall, flanked by oil paintings of naked Victorian women posing as voluptuous Greek goddesses, he regarded me suspiciously, his arms folded across his broad chest. I hadn’t expected a store detective. As we passed he nodded once to Ruby, who avoided looking at him and didn’t reciprocate. He gave the same greeting to me, which I, infected with politeness as I was, returned. The light flashed off his cap badge. I was aware of him watching us as we passed down the landing, doors on either side of us like an upmarket hotel, I thought.

“Who’s the guy?” I asked quietly when I was certain he was out of earshot.

“Security,” she returned shortly. “We have all kinds of valuables here.”

It wasn’t, I imagined, the kind of place you’d ordinarily think of as vulnerable to break-ins. But I was in no mood to argue the point. I’d forgotten the guard as soon as we reached the door that Ruby opened. She stepped into the room beyond and I followed. To say it was huge was an understatement. However, it was significantly different to the rooms downstairs, being largely Art Deco in style. I walked in and sat on the edge of the large bed, but my interest in the room’s contents had vanished with my good humour. I stared at a bronze Art Deco figurine with ivory head and hands, but for the present it was the only thing I even half noticed. I spent more time studying my feet. Ruby wandered over to the curtains and pulled them wider.

“You’ll find the bed’s aired off. It should all be very comfortable for you. This is a terrific view, you know. You can see right to the ocean from here.”

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