The next day was like any other in a modern suburban housing estate. The morning began with the usual banging of car doors and shouts of children, hurrying for their rides to school. The air was crisp and cold, but not as cold as the undiscovered bodies of Mike and Ruth Byrne.
At number 25 Sheila Ryan was struggling awake. The two days since the attack were a blur. Tom left for work hours before, in the hope that an early start would mean he could finish earlier and be home before dark. Sheila shivered; despite the central heating, the room felt chilly. She went downstairs in her dressing gown and slippers. She walked to the sitting-room and switched on the log-effect gas fire, which glowed instantly to life and then stood in front of it, relishing the heat. Sheila wondered if Tom would remember to ring the school and make her excuses. It didn't look too good to be ringing in sick, when she had been there so short a time.
Sipping coffee, she realised she felt safer and better now that the alarm and new locks had been fitted. Tom was right. Perhaps, in her drug-induced slumber, she had imagined that her attacker was a monster, a demon of some sort. She really would have to gather her wits.
âThis is the twenty-first century,' she reminded herself, âand I'm living in a new house, not some creaky, old Victorian mansion filled with family ghosts. What I have imagined is the stuff of nightmares, or the imagination of some thrill-a-minute horror writer.'
It was time for action. She would shower, do some grocery shopping, and they could enjoy a leisurely dinner together when Tom got home. He would be relieved to find her looking well ⦠or as well as cosmetics would allow. She could feel the hollows beneath her eyes and knew that they would be dark. She had not yet drawn back the kitchen curtains, wanting to keep the heat from escaping. Now, with a feeling of renewal, she pulled them back, allowing the watery sun to flood the room. It was just like any other day. The trees were still green, the sky was blue and there was no sign of anything out of the ordinary.
Her eyes wandered towards next-door's garden. She wanted to invite Ruth to lunch, and although the thought of having to meet Mike Byrne filled her with distaste, she would brave it for Ruth's sake. There was something swinging from a tree at the bottom of the garden. She leaned across the sink and pressed her forehead against the window, trying to get a better look. It was some sort of upside-down scarecrow. That horrible man couldn't even leave the birds alone.
Sheila was glad she had worn a jacket, even though she was only going next door. The wind was cutting and she dug her hands deeper into her pockets as the doorbell chimes echoed inside. There was no answer, and she frowned. The car was still in the driveway and usually the dog would kick up a racket. She peered through the letterbox. Not a sound, no movement, nothing.
She rang the bell again. Perhaps they had gone out into the back garden. She walked around the side of the house; there was no sign of either of them, so she rapped hard on the patio door. This was strange, the two of them missing at the same time. She had only ever seen Ruth going out in her husband's company on a Friday for the weekly shopping. She turned to walk away. Then, remembering the scarecrow, she went towards it. It would give Tom a good laugh when she told him about it this evening. The breeze had swung it around so its back was towards her. It was very lifelike, even if the head was pulpy and misshapen. She leaned over and touched its legs, swinging it round to face her.
Her screams brought the neighbours running. A couple of women led her home. Her throat filled with bile and her stomach heaved at the horror. She didn't make it inside in time, and had to stand over her freshly planted flowerbeds as the coffee she had so recently drunk spewed from her. To her immense embarrassment, the force with which she vomited, made her wet herself. She could smell the warm urine as it coursed down her legs, forming a pool at her feet. The women fussed and reassured her, helping her to slip off her sodden shoes. She felt she would never get over the mortification as they led her, childlike, upstairs to the bathroom. The shocked man, who rediscovered Mike's body, was running around in panic, screaming for someone, anyone, to call the police, an ambulance.
Sheila was trying to wash the dirt from her body under the spray. The urine was easily soaped away, but her hand, the hand that touched him, she scrubbed repeatedly, as she sobbed her distress. Blue lights were flashing around her bedroom when she emerged from the shower. In the street below uniformed police moved swiftly, taping off next door's garden. Her sedatives were on the bedside table and she quickly, without the aid of water, swallowed two of them, almost choking on their dry chalkiness. She dressed, mechanically, tugging at the clothes that stuck to the still, damp patches on her body.
âAre you all right, my dear?'
She turned and nodded. âYes, I'm fine now, thank you.'
The woman's eyes strayed towards the open pill bottle.
âSuch a terrible shock for you. Would you like me to call your husband?'
âNo, I'll be fine, thanks, and he's very busy.' She could do this. She could face this demon alone. What had happened next door was real. There were witnesses to that effect.
âWell, if you're sure.'
âYes, thank you.'
âI'm Betty Regan, by the way,' she held out a hand to Sheila, who stared at it blankly. âIt's a terrible way to meet, but I live at number 17, and I'll be there until lunchtime, if you need me.'
Sheila, who desperately needed to be left alone with her shame, managed to nod. The woman was just turning to go when a crash from next-door made them jump.
Betty leaned out of the bedroom window.
âThe police are breaking down the door.'
The thought of her kind neighbour spurred Sheila into action. She raced down the stairs after the woman. She tried to run past a police officer standing by the splintered front door, only to be grabbed from behind and steered away.
âCome on now, miss,' a plain-clothes detective led her aside, holding firm despite her struggles.
âYou don't understand. I'm her friend.'
âYes, yes, I understand. But I just want to ask you a few questions.'
The mutterings of the assembled crowd came to a sudden stop. The silence hummed as she watched the small procession emerging from the side of the house. Two figures in white overalls, stretcher-bearers struggling under the weight of Mike's body. Gasps and shudders came from the crowd, as the stretcher passed by them, and the black body bag was loaded into the waiting ambulance.
âIs Ruth all right?' she asked the detective. âIs Ruth all right?' she repeated. âTell me.'
âI'm afraid not.'
âOh God, no, what happened?'
âWe don't know for sure yet. The coroner will fill us in later, but it looks as though she attacked her husband, and then committed suicide.'
âNo, that's not possible,' she whispered, watching a technician carrying the blood-stained hurley, encased in plastic.
âWe'll be in touch,' the detective informed her.
âIt's just not possible,' she whispered, thinking of the small, frail woman who had befriended her. Mike must have weighed at least a hundred kilos more than his wife ⦠how could she possibly have strung him up like that?
A van marked with the lettering of the ISPCA drew up and its driver, leash in hand, hurried down the side of the house. He re-emerged with Brutus in tow. There were more gasps from the crowd when they saw the dog. His coat was matted with blood and he had to be helped up into the cage that sat behind the van. Sheila moved closer to it, gripping the wire mesh.
âWhat happened to you, boy?' she whispered. What was happening in this place?
âMove aside, please miss.' A police officer ushered her back from the van, and she watched until it disappeared from sight.
âThe dog must have witnessed it all', the whisper ran through the crowd, until a movement in the doorway caught their attention. The stretcher-bearers appeared once again. This time the black bag was too big for the body inside. It could have been a child. Many of the women in the crowd started to cry. The sight of such a tiny figure encased in its black plastic shroud was too much to bear, even for the most morbid among them. Sheila cringed as the ambulance doors slammed shut. It moved slowly away from the kerb, followed by the police and coroner. The blue lights had been switched off. The couple inside the ambulance were beyond help. Sheila went back indoors and lay on the couch in the sitting-room. She had forgotten to switch off the gas fire, and the room felt hot and stuffy, but she didn't turn it off. Still in her coat, she closed her eyes, huddled into a ball, and waited for Tom to come home.
****
âJenny, will you please come away from the window?'
This was the third time he'd asked and Joe Mahoney was losing patience with his stepdaughter. He was rushing about trying to get the house ready for Helen and the new baby's homecoming. The events of next door, though chilling, were not the most important thing on his mind. He had already missed two days from work. An absence that was unplanned for with the baby arriving so early, and at one of the busiest times too.
âJenny, I won't tell you again.'
Jenny climbed down from her perch on the window seat, scratching her head. The people next door must be very sick. There was an ambulance and police cars and everything. She felt quite sick herself, and was still feeling too hot and her throat hurt. She wanted to tell Joe, but he was so busy.
âI'll go up and clean my room.'
âGood girl,' he smiled at her, as he struggled with the vacuum cleaner.
Jenny could hear him muttering and grumbling as he tried to steer the machine across the carpet. Her bed was easily made. She just pulled the quilt into place and ran her hands along it. She would tidy her books next. Sitting cross-legged in front of the bookcase, she was soon lost in pictures and words.
âAre any of those books on the afterlife?' She turned to find her alien friend sitting on her bed. He really did smell very bad.
âWhat's an afterlife?'
âIt's the life after death. Do you have any books on that?'
âHow can you be alive after you're dead?' Jenny knew all about death. Her goldfish, Jerry, had died and her mother flushed him down the toilet. Her mother said when you're dead, you're dead, and that was that.
âNever mind. Just find me some books that deal with that subject.'
âWhere will I get them from?'
âWhere do you normally get books from?'
âFrom the shop or the library.'
âThen get them from there.'
âOkay, but I can't go today, because my new baby brother is coming home from the hospital.'
The whore had a son after all. Black Jack paced around the room, angry at having to wait.
âThen go tomorrow. Go to your library and get me the books I ask for.'
âYes, I will.'
âJenny!' She jumped as her name was called. âJenny, get ready. We have to go and collect your mother and the baby.'
âOkay, I'll be down in a minute.' She quickly tidied the remaining books. Her mother would be angry if her room wasn't neat. She almost forgot about her alien friend in her hurry.
âDon't forget what I asked of you,' he said.
âI won't. I promise.'
Black Jack was left to wander the house once the front door had slammed shut. He pulled the books that Jenny had so carefully tidied, from the shelves and threw them around the room. The clothes from the airing cupboard were scattered along the landing and down the stairs. He wanted the books and he wanted them now. There had to be some way to escape this place, this limbo. He had seen the pictures on the talking box, heard others speak of an afterlife. Going into the main bedroom, he pulled the covers from the bed, tore open drawers and tipped their contents into a pile. The whore's clothes smelt sickly-sweet. Like Elizabeth she had elevated her status by marriage to a rich man, but this one was not finding the transition easy and he would make sure that her new-found lifestyle would not last. Downstairs, he made just as much mess. In the sitting-room he yanked cushions from their covers, ripping the material in half, allowing foam to spill along the seats and across the carpet.
The kitchen was next. He flung food from the larder, fridge and freezer; cutlery drawers were upended onto the pile. When he was finished the house was a shambles and Black Jack, for now, was satisfied.
****
The journey home from the hospital had been an uneasy one. Helen was suffering withdrawal symptoms from the cocaine. The few grams she had taken with her had soon gone and she had been prevented from stocking up by the sudden onset of labour. Jenny knew her mother was angry the minute she saw her. Joe made her wait in the car while he went inside the hospital. He returned carrying a case and bags. Her mother marched grim-faced behind him, with a nurse by her side carrying the wrapped bundle. The fighting started the minute Helen entered the car. She sat in the front passenger seat, and waited for the nurse to place the baby in her lap.
âDon't you think it wiser, dear, if you sat in the back?' the nurse suggested.
âMind your own business,' Helen grabbed the baby from her and slammed the car door.
âShe is only thinking of your own good and that of the baby, dear,' her husband said, patting her arm.
âAnd who asked you?' she turned in her seat and deposited the baby into the car seat.
âDo up the harness,' she ordered Jenny, who could hear her mother's nails drumming on the dashboard, as she strapped the baby in.
The baby made small sounds as they drove and Jenny kissed his face and whispered to him. In the front her mother and Joe were arguing. Her mother was saying nasty things, and Joe's eyes looked bright and shiny when he looked back to check on Jenny and the baby. She wished that her mother would go away and be dead like the goldfish.