âWhere are you taking him?'
âTo the funeral cart,' Nora said.
âThey'll just throw him in a grave and I'll never see him again.'
âThere's nothing we can do, lad,' Nora bent, once again, to pick up the dead child.
âNo,' Timmy stopped her. âI'll take him.'
They stood back as he slid his arms under the bundle and lifted it. They followed him in silent procession through corridors, up to the main door and outside into the crisp morning air. They could tell from the movement of Timmy's shoulders, that he was crying as he walked. They stayed well back, but vigilant in case he should fall under the weight of his terrible burden. The loaders were already at work and the cart almost full, even at this early hour. Seeing Timmy and the women, the men stopped for a moment before one of them gestured to the bodies stacked up by the gable.
âThrow it there. We'll see to it later.'
âThis is Peter.'
âWhat?' The man looked puzzled.
âThis is a little boy called Peter,' Timmy repeated.
The men looked from one to the other, unsure of what to do, until the man leading the cart came forward.
âGive Peter to me, lad, I'll take care of him now.'
Timmy allowed the bundle to slip from his hands and into the waiting arms. They watched, as he laid the child on top of the pile of bodies that already filled the cart and, taking the reins, he led the horse away. With the movement, the blanket came loose and one small, white hand appeared. The jogging of the cart over the rough ground made it look like Peter was waving one final goodbye. Timmy, overcome with weakness, sank to his knees. Elizabeth and Nora supported one another as the cart passed. No one moved until it was out of sight and Peter's tousled, blonde curls were lost to them forever.
The horror of that day was to be relived over and over as the children succumbed to the fever. It spread rapidly within the confines of the room. Soon Timmy, Katie and Elizabeth were the only ones to remain untouched by it. Nora had disappeared, going over the wall one night within a week of Peter's death. The trip to the burial cart became a daily occurrence, but they no longer cried. Seeing so much suffering numbed them, and they developed a resignation that each day would be filled with sorrow.
No one besides Timmy, Elizabeth and the doctor, would come near the children. They huddled together, vomit forming a thick crust on their clothes, waiting for death. Even Timmy's stories brought no relief to them. All were living skeletons, many blinded as eye infection spread from one to the other. So they lay, in the freezing cold, watching the dark shapes of carers moving around them. They never moved, never cried, as they waited for death. Timmy and Elizabeth were exhausted and in very real danger. The constant minding of the children, coupled with lack of food and sleep, left them open to the fever.
A sad little procession returned to the room after the last child died. They gazed at the empty beds, each lost in private thoughts. Katie held tightly to Timmy's hand and he could feel her shivering from fright and cold. That one so young should witness such heartbreak was beyond understanding. Queues no longer formed at the workhouse gates, as people chose to die on the land or in their makeshift shelters. Others were too sick and weakened by hunger to make it that far. Most of the guardians had died, and there was no longer any order or organisation within. Neither was there any food.
The corridors were strewn with corpses, floors so matted with blood that the worn soles of their shoes stuck as they walked. Drainage gullies outside were packed and stinking with human waste. The air was heavy, cloying and the stench reached everywhere.
âWe have to get out,' Elizabeth said, adamant they would take their chances on the land. Her cousin's letter should have arrived by now, and there might even be enough to pay the passage for Timmy and Katie. It was only because of her genuine concern for the boy and little girl that she had stayed so long in that dreadful place.
They saw no one throughout that day and it was a great relief when twilight fell. It was freezing and they needed warm clothing. Timmy and Elizabeth crept about the corridors and rooms taking whatever they could from those no longer in need of them.
They both knew where they would go. Timmy thought of nothing else, but seeing his family, and Elizabeth would go straight to Maycroft.
All was quiet as they crept away. Keeping well into the shadows, they moved under the archway and towards the gates. No one noticed their going ⦠not even when the gate groaned loudly as they squeezed through. The town was quiet as they walked along, buildings casting dark shrouds across the dead bodies on the road. From somewhere far off came the sound of rifle shots. Later, they would learn the soldiers were shooting at dogs feeding off the corpses. Soon, they were on the outskirts of the town and the road lay bare and open before them. Despite his hunger Timmy wanted to run, to jump for joy. They were free and he would soon be back with his family.
October 2003
Within weeks the first complaints started to filter through to the developer's office. There was nothing specific, no talk of building flaws, as he might have expected, just an overall feeling of uneasiness within the houses; freezing draughts that could not be explained, doors banging for no obvious reason. His men came back puzzled. They could find no reason for any of it. Windows and door seals were tight. The whole thing was bewildering.
Still ⦠no, he brushed the fleeting image of the graveyard from his mind. That was stupid. The dead were dead. He decided he was dealing with a hysterical group of nutters. Upwardly mobile shitheads and aging hippies, who liked nothing better than causing trouble.
He stopped his jeep outside number 26 and consulted his notes. Mr and Mrs Byrne, oh, yes, how could he forget, the brash ex-army sergeant and his timid little wife. He had met them when they put a down payment on the house. Mr Byrne was one of the more persistent complainers; best dealt with first. Everyone else would be a doddle compared to this loudmouth.
He forced a smile as he rang the bell. Byrne, holding tightly to the leash of one of the ugliest dogs he had ever seen, opened the door.
âAh, Richards, about time. I'm sick of the endless trail of cowboys you keep sending. Come in.'
Bob Richards edged his way past the dribbling dog, his back to the wall so that it was in sight at all times.
âNever mind old Brutus here,' Byrne reached down and scratched the ears of the dog. âHe'll not bite you. Not unless he's ordered. Will you old boy?' The dog glanced up at his master, but there was no pleasure in the look. Brutus had been beaten during training and had not forgotten.
Richards was ushered towards the lounge with the dog so close behind that he could feel its breath on the back of his legs. He sat down without being asked, opened his folder and started shuffling papers about.
Christ, the atmosphere in the house was stagnant. The air felt heavy, cloying. He wrote note after note, barely pausing to look up, wanting to be done. He left with promises to call back with a team of specialists, who would check the drains and whatever else they thought might be causing the cold.
It was with great trepidation that he approached number 27. Already he could hear the shrill voice of the woman inside and the whimpering of a small child. Taking a deep breath, he rang the bell. The door was thrown open and a look of anger disappeared from the woman's face, to be replaced with a coy, welcoming smile.
âMr Richards. Do come in.'
He remembered this one all right. Too sweet to be wholesome had been his first impression on meeting her. She had arrived on the arm of a much older man who was, he learned from her gushing endearments, her new husband. He had seen it all before. Men like her husband were easy targets for these women. And she had been showing all the usual signs of desperation. Neckline almost meeting hemline and make-up applied with a trowel.
âGood morning Mrs Mahoney.' He swept past her, but could not fail to notice the tear-stained face that peeped between the banisters. He winked up at the child and she tried to smile.
âDo come in and sit down.'
He hurried into the lounge, wanting to be out of smelling distance of the perfume she wore. It was overpowering and, although probably very expensive, applied in much the same way as her make-up.
âNow, about these problems.' He went through the same routine as before, taking down complaints, asking questions. Once he almost laughed aloud when, despite her advanced state of pregnancy and ridiculously tight dress, she tried to cross her legs suggestively, and almost slid off the couch.
There was a distinct lack of warmth about the place, not just the usual chill of morning. Small footsteps pattered down the stairs and along the hallway towards the back of the house. A door clicked shut. He smiled at the woman, who shrugged and returned his smile.
âChildren,' she simpered, âthey can be so trying at times. Do you have any of your own?'
âNo. I never married.'
There was that smile again. He now knew how a mouse felt under the deadly gaze of a cat.
âSo despite the cold and doors banging, have you noticed anything else?'
âWell, my husband says I'm imagining things, what with the baby and all,' she patted her stomach, âbut I hear whispering and feel as if someone is touching me.'
He had been right, a nutter.
âHow strange,' he tried to look concerned. âI'll certainly check this out with the other residents and get back to you if I hear anything similar.'
He knew she was watching as he walked down the path. He had met only two of the residents so far and both were head cases. He went towards the next house thinking there must be an easier way to earn a crust, and wondering if he was too old for prostitution.
****
Once she was safely outside the back door, Jenny ran as fast as she could. There was nowhere to go, except through the bushes at the end of the garden. She crawled through a small gap and into the next field, where the grass was high, and it was hard to see where she was going. The ground felt lumpy and her foot slipped a couple of times into small holes. She wondered if they were rabbit burrows. She would have liked a rabbit or a kitten or puppy. But her mother said animals were dirty, disgusting things and would not allow her to have a pet. The thought of her mother made her scowl. She hated her mother. She hated when she shouted, hated the way her nails dug into her arm when she was angry. Most of all she hated the way she looked when she beat her. Then her face would look like a witch's.
Her mother had been so angry that morning that Jenny shivered, remembering. She went to use the bathroom unaware that her mother was already in there. When she opened the door the wind had whipped all her white powder off the sink unit, and she had screamed bad words, naughty, nasty words. Then her mother dragged her back to her room and hit her. On the head, in the face, scratching, screaming and punching. Her mother had only stopped, when the doorbell rang.
âStay there,' she'd warned, wiping the white powder from her nose. âDon't move until I get back.'
But she knew better. She would hide until Joe got home. Then her mother would be different. She never hit her in front of him. And it was quiet here, she could dream about starships and rockets to the moon.
âOuch,' her foot slid into another hole. Deeper this time and something hard rubbed against her shin. She sat down to survey the damage, rolling down her white knee-sock. Her ankle was skinned. Small strips of flesh bunched here and there, and a trickle of blood stained the sock. That was the last straw. She curled up as tight as she could, her head against her knees and howled.
âIs it the hunger?'
âWhat?' Jenny looked up towards the voice, and shuffled backwards in terror.
âWe've all felt it too.'
What was this thing? It was horrible and weird looking, a monster.
âAre you from up there?' she asked, pointing towards the sky.
âNo, down there,' Katie touched the earth. âWe all live down there.'
âAll who?'
âAll of us,' replied Katie, gesturing behind her. Lots of other monsters crawled towards her through the grass.
âI ⦠I have to go home,' Jenny stammered in fright.
âPlease stay and talk to us. We have no one to play with.'
They all nodded, clustering around her, and this started her crying again.
âIs it the hunger?' Katie repeated.
âDo you mean am I hungry?'
âYes, we used to be hungry all the time.'
âNo, I'm never really hungry. I hurt my leg,' she pointed to her reddened shin.
âI'll get Elizabeth,' one of the monsters said, before crawling away.
No one spoke as they waited for Elizabeth. The dead children were just as fascinated and uncertain as the living one. Soon, there was a shuffling in the grass and they turned towards the sound.
âThis is Elizabeth,' Katie told her. âShe's nice.'
Jenny looked up at the woman standing over her and her crying started again. She didn't look nice, just scary like the rest of them. Cold fingers circled her ankle. Were they going to eat her?
âHave you a mother?'
Jenny peeped up through her fingers and nodded.
âShe will need to clean this in case of infection.'
âI'm a bit afraid,' the child admitted.
âSo are we,' said Elizabeth.
âYou are?'
âNever mind,' Elizabeth said, straightening and casting a fearful glance around the graveyard. So far there was no sign of Carey. This was strange, as he must have been heard the child crying. They could hear every sound, no matter how far away. Timmy came strolling through the long grass. He had been wandering among the living, enjoying all the new sights and sounds. He stopped on seeing the child.
âHello,' he smiled at her, but instead of answering, she cringed.
âI want to go home.'
âYes, of course,' Elizabeth agreed. âYou go home, dear.'
âReally? I can go home?'
âOf course, unless you're lost?'
âAren't you going to eat me?'
âWhy would we eat you?' Timmy asked.
âBecause you're monsters.'
âWe're not monsters. Look at me. I'm just like you,' Katie bent down beside her, but the child squirmed away.
âGo away. You're horrid.'
Katie started to cry, and Elizabeth picked her up.
âAm I a monster, Elizabeth?'
âNot at all,' Elizabeth reassured her. âYou're the prettiest little girl in the whole wide world.' Turning towards the living child, she spoke curtly. âPlease go home now, child.'
The others backed away as Jenny got up, and limped towards the bushes. She turned before crawling through.
âI'm sorry. I didn't mean to make you cry.'
They ignored her, all busy fussing over the little girl. Except one, he was looking at her, the boy-monster.
âI'm really sorry.'
He nodded, and waved to her.
Jenny crawled into her own garden and looked back into the graveyard. They had all gone, disappeared. She pulled the leaves aside to get a better look and came face to face with two glowing, red eyes.
âHello, little girl.' Black Jack reached through the bushes and tried to grab her.
But she was too quick. She ran down the path towards the back door screaming for her mother, willing to trade one monster for another.
****
Bob Richards had just finished with his last complainant and was outside the door saying his goodbyes, when they heard the screaming. They ran towards the sound, just as other doors opened and the neighbours peeped out. No one answered the doorbell and they ran around the side of the house and through the open back door. They found the child huddled shaking and crying under the kitchen table, and the mother shouting at her to come out.
âWhat on earth happened?' Bob asked. He crawled under the table. Jenny remembered the nice man who had winked at her and allowed him to put his arms around her.
âWhat happened?' he asked, but she couldn't answer. She could still see the big, red eyes and the white hands that tried to catch her.
âShe'll need a doctor. Something has scared her badly,' he said, noticing her blood-stained sock. His stomach lurched. Dear God, no! Surely she couldn't have been attacked. Not out here, in the middle of nowhere.
Helen's condition did not allow her to pick up the child, so Bob carried her upstairs to wait for the doctor. He tried to ignore the mother's feigned mutters of concern as she followed closely at his heels. Jenny was trembling and her small fingers gripped the sleeve of his jacket tightly. They had to prise her away from him, so the doctor could check her over. Bob went downstairs and waited with a few of the neighbours, each thinking the same thing, that this was the work of a paedophile. Already their idealistic little world was starting to crumble.
The sobbing from overhead filtered down to a gentle crying, as a sedative took effect. The doctor appeared, shaking his head. Bob got up and went to meet him.
âWhat happened?'
âAre you the father?'
âNo, I'm ah ⦠a friend.'
âVery well,' the doctor misconstrued his meaning of the word. âShe says she saw a monster.'
âA monster, are you sure?'
âWell that's what she said; very strange.'
âYes, very.' Bob's mind was racing; freezing cold, doors opening and closing, and now monsters.
âI'll call back later.'
He realised that the doctor was speaking to him. âYes, yes, of course. Thank you.'
The neighbours had all filed into the hall, waiting for an explanation.
âShe thought she saw a monster,' Bob told them. âProbably fell asleep in the garden and had a bad dream,' he shrugged, smiling. âChildren, eh?' Then he realised he sounded as insincere as the child's mother.
The residents walked away in silence. Those with children would keep them indoors until the truth was known. Bob went upstairs and looked in on the sleeping child. Her mother was busy filing her nails, but looked up smiling when she saw him.
âLittle terrors, eh?' she nodded towards the bed. âI was having a lie down, I need my rest. It was her screaming that woke me.'
âYes, gave us all a fright. Will her father be home soon?'
âYeah, any time now. She's always had a very active imagination,' she jerked the nail file up at the rockets and spaceships dangling overhead. âShe'll be fine in the morning, don't worry about her.'
âThat's good. I'll be off so.'
âGood of you to take the time.'
Nodding, he almost ran down the stairs and out to his jeep. He felt safer once inside and relaxed when he heard the comforting thunk of the locking mechanism. The place now seemed very quiet, even for a suburban housing estate where most of the couples went out to work.