by Gary Fry
First Edition
Lurker © 2013 by Gary Fry
All Rights Reserved.
A DarkFuse Release
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This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either a product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
This book is for Michelle James, who keeps me supplied with a variety of local inspirations. Keep being curious, darling.
Thanks to the guys at DarkFuse for taking on a guy from across the deep Atlantic, and for doing it so quickly. You’re faster than the thing from my novella and must have as many hands.
1
He was leaving her again.
Harry had to earn a living, of course—his salary provided for them both now—but even so, Meg missed her husband whenever he returned to West Yorkshire and worked his office hours.
Or did she simply mean that she disliked being alone?
She was unable to decide; it was too soon to have acquired any perspective. Their move to the coast had been her idea, an attempt to flee so many raw memories. And so it would hardly be fair to complain about Harry’s frequent absence.
After he’d moved to the door with his overnight case, she gave him a quick kiss. It wasn’t as if he’d never been away working when they’d lived inland. His job had taken him all over the world, and often for longer than the few days he spent away now. At least she could trust him…or at any rate, she felt she could. After what had recently happened, he’d surely never be cruel enough to hurt her more.
“Have a nice time,” she said, tugging open the cottage door to allow him exit. Morning sunlight streamed through the gap, making her scrunch shut her newly awakened eyes.
Harry looked at her—a little awkwardly, Meg thought. “It is work I’m going to, you know. Pleasure isn’t really on the agenda.”
“I know. I’m sorry.”
But he visibly relented. “Don’t worry, Meg. I’ll call you tonight. And I’ll be home tomorrow evening. We’ll watch a film, shall we? Share a bottle of red?”
He was often grouchy when he returned, a consequence of eight hours in the office and then the two-hour drive home. The wine would be as much about moderating discomfort as it had been when she’d resorted to it recently.
Nevertheless, she said, “Sure. That would be nice. I’ll look forward to it.”
After stepping outside into the cool autumn, Harry turned and held out his luggage-strewn arms. “And in the meanwhile, take advantage of all this.” Once he’d paced aside, revealing the glorious view along the northeast coast of England, his smile grew a little more authentic. “It’s what you wanted, isn’t it? It’s…well, it’s why I’ve made the sacrifices I have.”
If he meant the additional effort it took him to reach his office, she could understand that, but his words had nonetheless sounded unkind in the crisp, clear morning. Sacrifices—what did he know about that? He’d only been the father…But then she realized she was being unfair.
She watched him climb inside his company car and strap on his seat belt before starting the engine. The sound filled all the quiet in the area, which, once the car had backed away and Meg had issued a mechanical wave, was broken only by a few children headed for school along a path leading toward the village. One of them, she noticed, had scooped up a handful of dirt to lob at his companions, which elicited infectious giggles from all three.
Meg stepped back and shut herself inside.
She was still getting used to the cottage, to all its facilities located on one level. Their city-based detached, sustained by two full-time salaries, had required a lot of upkeep, but Meg had found that more difficult here, because they could no longer afford a cleaner. She’d given up work to have a child, but had always harbored a wish to do so. There were other things she wanted to focus on, such as horticulture and English history, interests she’d placed on hold while toeing the profit-making line of a restless institution.
She had her freedom now, of course…but at what cost?
Meg refused to brood, however. Forcing herself to get on with life (as both Harry and a private counselor had insisted she must), she stepped into the pristine bathroom and showered until any negative feelings were rinsed inexorably down the drain. Something gurgled cantankerously in reply—a subterranean beast, ostensibly hungry for grief—but then she dried her aging figure, dressed quickly in casual gear, and returned to the rest of the property.
There were two things she might do to kill time today: prepare a meal for her husband tomorrow or attend to the garden and all its ugly weeds. She thought for a moment, one hand clutched to her lower abdomen, and eventually decided to venture outside. Something about her husband’s behavior that morning—the way he’d appeared to blame her for complicating his life—had lodged in the back of her mind, ruling out a willingness to cook for him. This was probably just residue of the paranoiac state of mind trauma had induced, but she was nonetheless unable to overrule it. Better to get busy with some physical act, her counselor had once advised. In any case, there’d be plenty of time to prepare food during the following few days of solitude.
If she spent a few hours in the garden now, she might reward herself with an afternoon walk around Sandsend. The work ethic was strong in her, and despite a long-held wish to be free of employment, she’d always taken her responsibilities seriously. If guilt underpinned this feeling of being driven, she could at least dignify it with an honorable purpose. Such an attitude stood in stark contrast with her husband’s more cynical view on paid work, as a means to an end, a way of making as much money as possible, whatever the methods involved…But there she went feeling negative about Harry again; she had to remember that without him supporting their move here, she’d have been stuck back in West Yorkshire, with all its depressing social problems.
Meg gathered a hoe from the garden shed and then advanced upon the borders, like a heroine doing battle with mythic adversaries. She pictured in her mind hideous creatures, all writhing flesh and buzzing sounds…but in the event spotted only a centipede, crawling across the piebald lawn, its multiple legs pumping. She stooped to admire this insect, marveling at how intricately nature built things. Its segmented body was miraculous, all chinking joints and mobile limbs. Its head twitched with an intuitive sense of direction, mandibles or antennae or whatever else it boasted upfront bobbing with haste. She watched it scurry away, amid blades of grass, wondering what its purpose could be. To simply exist, maybe; to just go on and on…Indeed, what was the point of living otherwise?
At that moment, Meg heard more children coming down the nearby country lane, screaming and shouting. Lord, she could live without such racket each morning, despite realizing this was the route most youngsters used to get from a cluster of residential properties farther inland to the school at the foot of the cliff. She’d heard them many times since moving in a few months earlier, but had always managed to shut out their riotous noise. What had altered since? Maybe the fact that, after weeks of staying inside, she’d taken a few tentative steps back into the world…It might be that. Or the change might have more of a psychological basis. And did that mean she was healing? She didn’t know, and was afraid to think about it. She must simply get on with attending to her new garden.
Nevertheless, the longer she rooted out weeds and cultivated fresh blooms, the more this felt like being a parent, modifying nature with nurture. Meg had a first-class degree in history and was aware of rival debates about human action. She’d have loved to craft a person, but her stillborn child had put an end to that aspiration. She
and Harry, both in their early forties, were getting too old to try again, and certainly not without risk. Her pregnancy, a mistake engendered by failing contraception, had been thrust upon her, and her husband had also been concerned about becoming a parent. Harry had been (still was, in fact) a diehard careerist, bent on domination in his field, and had assumed she’d held similar ambitions. But she’d been living in bad faith, and had told him so; the prospect of becoming a mother had changed everything, the synthesis of a new Gestalt. She’d quit her well-paid job in advertising and devoted herself to impending parenthood; Harry had grumbled in that way he had, but had eventually come round to supporting her.
And then that had happened.
It was heartbreaking, it truly was, but she had to face up to reality. She stood from her kneeling position and looked out across the majestic bay. The North Sea was a plane of glittering curls, the beach close by a fringe of gold. All the fine buildings constituting the village nestled around a river running inland, with a small bridge allowing passage to transport. With the tide out, small boats stood moored on muddy banks, while seagulls patrolled the skies, their squawks as fretful as childr—
But Meg killed these thoughts in their cradle. Her task now completed, and well before noon, she returned the hoe to the shed and then headed back for the cottage. The property was one of only several on the cliff side overlooking Sandsend. It had cost a hefty sum, and so she had to remain committed to their decision to relocate. She recalled the other interest she’d been thinking about earlier, her passion for history. She’d bought a concise guidebook to the area only last week, and had already identified several aspects of the past she wished to explore in more detail. After eating a light lunch and climbing into hiking boots, she stepped back out into a cool gray afternoon. And then headed off north along the Sandsend Trail.
2
Meg had often visited Whitby as a girl; her parents had loved the uncorrupted qualities of the area and had been keen to convey these to their only child. For holidays, Harry had always preferred more exotic locations—Africa, Asian, South America: places to brag about during dinner parties—but every year of their fifteen-year marriage, Meg had persuaded him to take a weekend away on the north coast of England, unwinding from work, getting in touch with nature. City life was fine and thrilling, but underneath her cosmopolitan façade, Meg was at heart the youngster she’d once been, fascinated by the origins of existence and how everything had developed the way it had. And when she’d been forced to choose a bolthole after her tragic recent experience, there’d be no competition at all.
The book she carried offered concise guidance to walkers venturing along the Sandsend cliff side. Not that anybody else was out this cool midweek day. The path ahead led between great trees—Hawthorns, Meg thought they must be—and the ground underfoot hinted at the place’s history, the many layers of shale and rock that had been mined several centuries earlier. To one side was a ditch, the guidebook explained, which had once been used as a drainage channel for a railway no longer in place. The track, laid in the late 1800s, had run from Whitby to Middlesbrough, but the line had closed in 1958 through lack of use. Now, where water gathered in the ditch and sunlight fell unhindered, the conditions were ideal for alder, willow and other wet-loving plants. Elsewhere, bearing purple stems and clusters of white flowers, angelica stood, swaying silently in the soft breeze. The intricate combination of all these floral species beguiled Meg, and for the first time that day—since her husband left that morning—she felt content.
Once the trees fell away, she found herself in a vast, open space, where nature had reclaimed all the land sculpted by mining operations. The territory had great scallops carved out of it, with varying strata bearing different types of vegetation. The guidebook reported that a hundred million years earlier, the area had been covered by a tropical ocean, but fine silts had settled on the seabed to form crumbly shale. Meg could see this now, a gray strip of alum crowned by brownish sandstone. This higher layer had been created when the ocean became shallower and then covered by a large river delta that had deposited sand and mud. The top of the cliff was made of boulder clay, formed during the Ice Age when huge sheets had advanced across the North York Moors, bringing with it clay and gravel, before melting and leaving only these substances to cover existing rocks.
The boulder clay, rich in nutrients and moisture, boasted lush vegetation, such as sycamore. The exposed shale, unstable and acidic, supported only sparser growths like heather and bracken. At the bottom, where conditions were damp, marsh-loving plants like birch and willow scrub grew in dense profusion.
This was an astonishing, even awe-inspiring place, and Meg could only pity the fact that Harry took little interest in such matters. He’d always preferred gaudy Hollywood films to TV documentaries, as if manmade spectacles could ever match up to those decreed by the natural world. For some unfathomable reason, her husband liked horror movies, especially those involving hideous creatures. In Meg’s opinion, however, few could challenge the kind of marine life often filmed for fascinating shows. She’d observed giant squid and other tentacled monstrosities, prowling waters with alien sentience. Some crackled with life, as if their bodies were infused with electricity. There was certainly something distasteful about such slimy beings, many of which could achieve the size of human-serving transport.
Meg believed the scent of the sea, crashing unseen against the cliff to her right, had brought these thoughts to her attention, and so she switched her gaze back to the mainland, where less unpleasant wildlife lurked.
In front of her was a pond, in which frogs and newts croaked. She saw at least one of each amphibian lurking in mud along the banking. Meg’s guidebook claimed that in summer, dragonflies could be spotted here, and she made a mental note to look out for them the following year, giving her something to look forward to. Elsewhere in the disused quarry was more wood- and grassland, occupied by butterflies, birds and small mammals. Tits and warblers flitted from tree to tree, while a stoat searched for prey amid variegated fronds. Meg thought she spotted a goldfinch seeking greater open spaces, but couldn’t be certain she’d seen an oystercatcher pecking the ground nearby; they’d more likely be found beneath the cliff, cracking open mussel shells or dislodging limpets from rocks.
At that moment, she heard a frantic rustle of something moving in the undergrowth. If this was too loud to belong to anything as small as a rabbit or hare, she could reassure herself that deer had occasionally been sighted in this area. At any rate, she switched her gaze elsewhere, at a sky presently occupied by freewheeling herring gulls. The way they fled as if in sudden fright could also be explained by the guidebook: the cliff tops, where sandstone lay, was an ideal roosting place for kestrels, a mighty bird of prey that provided the gulls with imperious competition for mice, voles and insects.
If none of this could make her feel good to be alive, she had no idea what would. But she’d now reached part of the trail that evoked less positive aspects of the place’s history. Where alum shale constituted the ground, no plant life grew at all. A great barren plane led all the way to the cliff’s edge, resembling recorded footage of moon landings. This thought, coupled with earlier images of revolting sea creatures and the noise she’d detected in the woodland, made Meg feel uneasy. But it was surely her knowledge—again, derived from the guidebook—of working conditions once suffered by miners in the area that caused her the greatest discomfort.
In the 1730s, approximately 150 workers had worked here, using shovels, picks and wheelbarrows for a daily wage of about five pence in today’s money. The task had been onerous, gouging out tons of shale containing aluminium sulphate, which was processed to produce alum, an important chemical used for dyeing cloth and making leather supple and more durable. The alum was produced by piling shale up to thirty meters and using brushwood underneath to burn it. These immense stacks could smoulder for up to a year, with more being added to their vast bulks as it was excavated. The burnt shale was then place
d in water-filled tanks to generate a mineral-rich liquid.
Noticing a vast mound of exposed shale to her left, Meg tried to imagine how demanding this task had been for the miners, grafting hard for such negligible pay. One thing Meg disliked about her husband was his dismissive attitude to junior colleagues, people under his managerial stewardship. Harry worked for an insurance company, and recently its CEO had taken a slash-and-burn strategy to unwanted personnel. Mass redundancies were about to follow, with Harry tasked with deciding who and when. This was a role he’d seemed to take a little too much pleasure in accepting, though Meg had kept her disapproval to herself. She knew what the alternative was, after all: another pious lecture about how her husband was now the main breadwinner and how she should have considered her rights to complain before quitting her own job and ceasing to bring in money herself.
She looked ahead, struggling to tell herself that her unhappiness during the months since it had happened was only that, and nothing else.
And that was when she spotted the entrance to a railway tunnel.
Suppressing subterranean material she didn’t wish to explore right now, she paced forward, along the leaf-strewn path for the shadowy mouth of the tunnel, most of which had been bricked up. A gap at the top, above head height, gave onto a darkness that resounded with nascent sounds. Meg, curiosity making her wonder why only part of the entrance had been sealed, went up on tiptoe, trying to see above the makeshift wall’s crown. But all she could do was reach one hand over the brim. She felt dead things lying there, but these were surely just cold stones dislodged and sent skittering down the other side with a flurry of whispering echoes. The image of something behind the wall snatching its own hand away was fanciful, and in any case, even if the dweller had been a child standing on a pal’s shoulders, his or her flesh had felt too cold to be alive…