Dark Lakes, Volume One: An Uncanny Kingdom Urban Fantasy (A Dark Lakes Collection Book 1)

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Dark Lakes, Volume One: An Uncanny Kingdom Urban Fantasy (A Dark Lakes Collection Book 1) Page 9

by Matthew Stott


  Wait a gosh darned moment—

  The fox waved, I could see his face smiling back.

  ‘I saw you!’ I cried. ‘When this all started, just before I found Mary Tyler. I had a… feeling. An episode. Like I could sense what the monster was feeling, and then I saw you. Just for a moment. I saw your face.’

  ‘Finally, a flare shot into the dark,’ replied the fox. ‘I’ve been trying to find my way to you for so very long. I was starting to think I never would. But I’m patient, me. I wait. And I wait. And I keep these eyes peeled and my axe sharp, so when the moment comes, I can use it to chop my way through to you. Ten years, it took. Ten years before you finally used your powers again. And there I was, eyes as sharp as knives, waiting on behalf of the Red Woman. And now here I am again.’

  Ten years? Ten years since I woke next to Derwentwater with no memory.

  ‘You know who I am.’

  ‘Of course I do. All of the Dark Lakes knows you. All hail our saviour! All hail the Magic Eater!’

  I lunged at the fox, grabbing him by the scruff of his neck and shaking him. ‘Tell me who I am!’

  ‘What are you doing in here?’ asked a voice.

  I turned in surprise to find Detective Maya Myers. I turned back, but the fox was gone. Only Detective Samm’s corpse remained.

  ‘I said, what are you doing in here?’ Myers demanded.

  ‘Nothing. I’m just, working. Cleaning.’

  She grimaced and walked towards me. For a moment I thought she might be the second woman in as many days to punch me in the face, but at the last moment she stepped past me to look down at her dead partner.

  ‘I’m sorry,’ I said. ‘For your loss.’

  She snorted once.

  We stood in silence for several heavy seconds.

  ‘Do you think…’ Detective Myers started, then hesitated, then carried on, ‘do you think death can follow you?’

  I went to answer, then found myself unable to think of anything.

  ‘Doesn’t matter,’ she said. ‘Now get the hell out of here.’

  Perhaps I should have told her. Told her about what it was that had killed her partner. But what would be the point? Why would she believe me? She’d just lost her second partner in the force – for me to suggest the culprit of poor Detective Samm’s demise was a creature with octopus arms would be insensitive at best.

  ‘Really, Maya. He was a good one.’

  I wanted to say more, to console her in some way, but I felt there was only one thing she wanted from me at that moment.

  I walked for the exit and left her alone with her dead partner.

  19

  I had planned to find Chloe, to suggest we go out and eat something fatty and drink liquids designed to render your brain a trainwreck the next morning, but before I could find her, my phone rang.

  ‘Where’s my Boris!’ screamed Mrs Coates.

  ‘Ah, yes, fear not, I am on the case. Boris is my number one priority.’

  ‘You found him once, find him again. Today! Or you’re off the case. I want my puss puss back!’

  I opened my mouth to reply, but she’d already hung up.

  I carried on looking for Chloe, but Big Marge informed me that she was in one of the nurse’s rooms having a nap, so I decided to leave her to it and find Mrs Coates’ damned cat once and for all. Yes, the world was tilting on its axis, but I was a man of my word. I’d been hired to do a job, and I couldn’t afford another bad review. My service was already down to two stars on Yelp.

  I slipped into the Uncanny Wagon and sped along the empty roads, pulling to a stop in Oldstone some thirty minutes later. Missing posters blew past me across the tarmac, a paper tumbleweed.

  Unfortunately, my plan for finding Boris—or any of the cats for that matter—had not progressed any from last time. I mean, how exactly do you find a cat that doesn’t want to be found? I retrieved the cat box and cat food from the back seat and readied myself for a long, dull wait while I watched my cunning trap.

  The fox knew who I was.

  That was the thought at the front of my mind. As I looked for Chloe, as I drove to Oldstone, as I placed a small pile of cat treats inside the cat box.

  The fox knew who I was and he’d been looking for me.

  I’d often fantasised about someone from my past turning up to say they knew who I was, but not once had that person been an axe-wielding fox. Was he telling the truth? It was hard to say as I hadn’t had much experience telling whether a talking animal was lying to me or not.

  Then there was the homeless woman. She too seemed to know more about me than I did. The old me, at least. A talking fox and a fighty mad woman were, maybe, at last, the keys to unlocking my past. Now, if only they wouldn’t keep disappearing, maybe I could get a straight answer out of them.

  I felt my phone vibrating in my pocket and pulled it out to see Chloe’s name.

  ‘Hello! Hello there. You. Hello you. It is me,’ I said. Smooth as mother-fornicator.

  ‘Hey, where are you?’ she asked.

  ‘On a cat hunt in Oldstone.’

  ‘Are you getting a pet?’

  ‘No, just helping out an old woman. How are you? I came to find you before heading off but Big Marge said you were having forty winks.’

  ‘Yeah, I just needed to crash for a bit.’

  ‘Are you okay?’

  ‘Of course. Will you come over later?’

  Hello...

  ‘Yeah, I can come over. There. To yours. Where you live.’

  ‘You don’t mind?’

  I will literally crawl on my belly across poop-smeared shards of broken glass for this.

  ‘Of course not. I had a thing, but I can probably move it.’

  ‘You can?’

  ‘I can move it. Consider it moved. It was here, now it’s over there. Moved.’

  ‘Thanks. Thank you. I’ll be back a little after seven. Be there waiting for me?’

  ‘Absolutely.’

  ‘Cool. Oh, and Joe?’

  ‘Yep?’

  ‘Bring a toothbrush.’

  And then she hung up.

  I stood statue-still for several minutes, the phone still glued to my ear.

  Perhaps her own toothbrush was broken and Chloe was asking for a replacement? A friendly favour?

  ‘Will do,’ I replied in a tiny voice, several minutes after she’d hung up.

  Well then. Well, well, wellity, well.

  My cheeks ached from over-grinning. I had a few hours before I was due to loiter hormonally outside of Chloe’s front door, so I began to set my cat-nabbing trap at different places around Oldstone. I’d put the food-laden cat box down, watch from a discreet distance for half an hour or so, then move on to somewhere else. My mind should really have still been focussing on the talking fox and the fighty mad woman, but instead my mind was full of Chloe and my eyes full of hearts. So much so that, at the final place I rested the cat box, it took me almost twenty minutes to notice that I was sat, cross-legged on the grass, in front of a dead cat.

  I might not have noticed at all if I hadn’t decided to stretch back, and found myself resting my head on a tiny, furry corpse.

  After a suitable amount of yelping and shuddering, I got down on my knees and gave the deceased moggy a closer look. I wondered how many of the hundreds of missing cat posters pasted all around Oldstone featured this poor cat’s mugshot.

  ‘Bad luck, fella,’ I said.

  It was sad, but a dead cat was not what I’d been looking for. I was looking for, well, alive cats. Boris specifically, but really any live cat would have done. I felt for sure that if the cats had all disappeared over the space of a few days, then it seemed likely all or most had ended up in the same place. For whatever reason. Be it the strange, uneasy atmosphere that hung over the village or, well, some other reason.

  It was then that a thought struck.

  ‘Oh.’

  The strange feelings during the aftermath of the attack on Janet and Mary.

&nbs
p; The things I saw when I touched Detective Samm’s corpse.

  Maybe a dead cat wouldn’t be so useless after all. Maybe it could tell me exactly what I needed to know.

  The fox had said the real me was peeking out. You finally used your powers again. I didn’t feel powerful, and I’d no idea how I’d managed to make what had happened happen. Worth a shot though.

  I looked down at the dead cat and let out a hard breath, preparing myself.

  ‘Okay, magic brain, I am your master, please do your insight thing.’ I punctuated my command with a little hand flourish that felt suitably mystical, then placed my hands onto the dead cat.

  Which was gross.

  Of course, a little earlier I’d been touching a dead man, but that had been an almost unconscious decision, this time it was all me. Really there. Choosing to put my hands on a dead thing.

  Nothing happened.

  I raised my hands to the sky. ‘Show me your death!’ I commanded, then grabbed the cat again.

  Zilch.

  Not a thing.

  I didn’t have powers, that was absurd. There had to have been some other explanation for my earlier “insights.” The fox, perhaps. A talking fox is a pretty magical thing, maybe he had the powers and that’s what affected me.

  But then why would he say that I was using my powers at last?

  I grunted in frustrated confusion—not an unfamiliar emotion for me—and placed my hands on the deceased family pet without thinking. No daft commands, no great thought behind it or hand gestures, I just touched the thing with no expectations.

  And that’s when it happened.

  Scents, sounds, everywhere. A new world of information, so vivid, a feeling of poise, of strength, of hunger of...

  Show me where, show me where...

  I am low to the ground, moving at speed, need to hide, need to go back, fear. I feel fear. My heart is beating so fast. It’s not safe, not safe. I see the streets rush by. People, sounds, smells, the giant world around me, and something else, something else. I don’t like it. I don’t like it. Run, run, run. Back to the safe place. This is not safe. Back to the safe place—

  I gasped as the connection was broken, my eyes blinking rapidly as I found myself in a different place to where I’d started. I was out of breath. I think I’d been running. I could see Oldstone a good half-mile away, and in front of me a large barn.

  For a moment or two I let the fact that I’d just experienced the emotions, sights and smells of a cat wash over me. Because that’s weird. That’s very, very weird. And no fox around, so… it was me. I’d done that. I’d touched the dead body of a cat and been given a glimpse into its life.

  That was exciting. Or terrifying. One of the two. I wondered what else I might be capable of.

  The barn in front of me didn’t look like it was in use anymore, in fact it looked as though a strong gust of wind might reduce it to kindling. The door screeched a rusty-hinged complaint as I opened it and stepped inside to be greeted by a hundred glowing pricks of light. It was like I was looking into the night sky and stars were twinkling back at me.

  I blinked, and as I became more accustomed to the gloom, I saw that these weren’t impossible stars, they were eyes, shining bright. The barn was absolutely packed to the rafters with Oldstone’s missing cats.

  ‘I don’t suppose any of you are talking cats and can tell me just why it is you’re all hiding out in this stinky barn? Daft question I know, but I have recently made the acquaintance of a very talkative fox.’

  None of them answered.

  Maybe they didn’t feel like a chat.

  20

  I was able to spot Boris amongst the crush, but having failed to bring my cat box with me, I settled for taking a picture or two as evidence. Of Boris, and of the rest of the cat-filled barn.

  I still didn’t know for sure why the cats had run away from their homes, or why they’d felt the need to huddle together for safety, but at least I knew where they were.

  I told the cats to stay put and headed off towards Mrs Coates’ home to bring her the good news.

  I’d been an investigator of the peculiar for years now, but my ratio of solved to unsolved was pretty poor. By which I mean I rarely ever came out on top. That’s the thing with the bizarre and inexplicable, it rather likes to stay that way. So here I was with a genuine “solved” under my belt, and I’d done it all by myself. Just me and my brand new superpowers.

  I walked towards Mrs Coates’ home with a spring in my step, I can tell you. Cats located, things of an adult nature waiting for me at Chloe’s later, the gratitude of a village of cat lovers, this was turning into quite a day.

  So of course something had to come along and turn it all to dung.

  It was Mrs Coates’ front door that did it.

  As I pushed open the gate to her well-tended garden, bursting full of brightly coloured flowers and expertly manicured bushes, I saw that the door was slightly ajar. Now, this in itself shouldn’t be a cause for concern. Perhaps she’d been doing something in the garden and had stepped back inside for a moment. That’s a normal enough thing to have done.

  So why was my heart starting to increase its rhythm? Why was a knot forming in my stomach? My body knew something was wrong, even if I had no real evidence for it.

  ‘Mrs Coates?’ I said as I reached the door. ‘Hello, Mrs Coates? It’s Joseph Lake, here about your cat. Well, all the cats.’

  A cold, empty silence.

  ‘Mrs Coates?’

  I pushed the door open and stepped warily into her home.

  ‘Hello, Mrs Coates? I’m just coming inside now. Is there any reason why my brain is telling me to turn tail and run for the hills?’

  Staircase to my right, two doors on the left, and a third at the far end. Which way to go? Dealer’s choice.

  I made my way towards the nearest door and stepped inside.

  The front room was neat, but a riot of clashing floral patterns. The carpet, the wallpaper, the furniture. This woman liked her flowers. And a headache, if the way it was all affecting had anything to do with it. Perched on the fireplace was a picture of a much younger Mrs Coates and a beaming man. Ex-husband? I hadn’t noticed a wedding ring.

  I left and made my way to the second room. This back room was more subdued than the first, and contained a couch, plus a desk with an old foot-pedal powered sewing machine on top.

  Kitchen next.

  ‘Mrs Coates?’

  There was a cup of tea on the kitchen table. I placed my hand against it. The porcelain was still warm.

  I turned back and made my way to the staircase, peering up into the dark second floor.

  ‘Hello? Please say something reassuring so my stomach will stop doing somersaults, Mrs Coates.’

  I began to make my way up the stairs, each one creaking under my weight. This was an old house. Well, all the buildings in Oldstone were old. Old Oldstone.

  It was halfway up that I noticed the smudges of dark red on the stairs. Splatters against the pristine white of the staircase carpet.

  Blood. Crumbs leading me up and up.

  I stepped onto the landing and saw the door to one of the bedrooms was open. A foot poked out into the corridor, its sole facing me.

  ‘Mrs Coates?’

  I ran to her, pushing the door open to find her stretched out on the carpet, her throat torn out and the strange occult-looking symbols daubed onto the carpet around her.

  ‘Oh, Christ…’

  I crouched, feeling for a pulse as if the truth of the matter wasn’t self-evident. Mrs Coates was very, very dead.

  I stood, reaching into my pocket to retrieve my phone and call the police, then froze as a dark shape twitched in my periphery. The thick, lined curtains were drawn, lights off, and much of the room was in shadow. A perfect place for a monster to lurk.

  I backed away as an octopus limb curled out of the shadows.

  ‘Bastard. You bastard,’ I said, my anger at Mrs Coates’ death trumping my legs’ demands
to turn and run. Instead, I stepped further into the room as though I’d meant to fight the creature that had killed this poor woman.

  The monster screamed and lunged out of the black at me. I stepped back, my heel catching something, and realised with horror that I’d been tripped by Mrs Coates’ prone body.

  I landed hard, bones jarring, wind jerked out of me, but there was no time to count my bruises. I scrabbled backwards on my hands and feet as the creature bent to grab at me, my boot kicking out and catching the thing in the head.

  It reeled back, limbs thrashing in fury. Meanwhile, I turned, stood, and ran. The door at the other end of the landing erupted in a blizzard of wooden needles as a second octopus man burst from inside.

  ‘Shit—’

  I bolted for the staircase. I was closer, I could make it, I could escape, I could run from the house and not stop running until I was back in the Uncanny Wagon, stomping on the accelerator.

  The stairway greeted me. I placed one foot down, then a fleshy limb struck my back foot and the world turned over and over, hard edges assaulting me, until my painful whirl of a journey was brought to a sudden stop. My vision blurred and spat stars.

  ‘Up, get up, move,’ I said, my voice a slur.

  I looked up, time now moving at a crawl, to see the two octopus creatures descending towards me, beaks snapping hungrily. One walked down the stairs, the other clung to the wall with its suckered limbs, making its way down.

  ‘Get up!’

  Body aching, knees treacherous, I pushed myself to my feet and opened the front door to find a third monster stood in its frame.

  I rocked back on my heels, one octopus man before me, another behind, the third now slithering obscenely across the ceiling above. I was a fly, caught in a web, as three spiders raced to claim me as their dinner.

  ‘Get back!’ I yelled, a pointless cry of defiance, as I knew full well I was dead. I was dead and that was that. There was no way out. This was it, three live monsters and one soon to be dead me.

 

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