Выбрать главу

Adam Slater

Hunted

Prologue

Rain drills the surface of the black canal. It’s too dark to see properly, but the girl can hear it. Ahead of her, the narrow footpath is nearly blocked with rubbish tipped over the motorway embankment. The girl doesn’t go any further. She’s waiting for someone.

This is a bad place.

She knows it in her bones. She doesn’t want to be here. Every nerve is telling her to run the other way. She peers ahead into the gloom, looks up at the dark windows of the warehouses, looks down in the gutter, looks over her shoulder. Her hands tingle as if they are on fire. She can’t shake the feeling there is something or someone watching her.

But she waits anyway.

*

It hungers, always.

It takes shape after shape as its own, and each body it puts on is as hungry as the last.

It crouches on slick tiles above the black canal. In the faint glow of the motorway lights, it can see the prey it has been seeking for the last three days. It makes the leap from slippery rooftop to wet street without a sound.

*

The rain is relentless: the thunder of it louder than the swish of invisible traffic passing high above. The girl shivers. Water is seeping down her neck. She pulls up the collar of her jacket and looks behind her again. Nothing there. She waits with hunched shoulders and wide eyes, straining to see in the dark.

The girl jumps when the silent shape comes towards her along the footpath. For a moment, instinct tells her to run. But then she sees the face. She gives a little cry of joy and relief.

‘You took long enough! What a place to meet!’

She holds out her hands as she steps forwards. It’s a face she loves, a face she’s missed. How long has it been? More than a year. But he’s here now. He’ll know what to do.

He holds his hands out to return her greeting as he approaches. They are nearly within touching distance before she can see him properly in the dim light. And then, in an instant of confusion, she realises something is not right. She knows the face, but not the eyes. She does not know the savage twist of the mouth, nor the hands that are growing black talons as they reach towards her. She does not know this creature wearing her friend’s face.

But she knows it has come to take her life.

The revelation is like a jolt of raw electricity, shocking her so much she can’t think straight. Her mind tells her to run, but her body can’t move. When she opens her mouth to scream, no sound comes out. At last, she manages to make one foot take a step backwards.

But by then it’s too late.

*

The Hunter looks down at its fallen quarry. The hunt is less satisfying when the prize is taken so easily.

It turns and walks away in its borrowed shape.

It is still hungry.

*

The girl lies by the black canal, her face turned upwards to the sky like a stargazer. But she will never see the stars again. Her eyes have been torn out. The rain fills the empty sockets until they brim over, spilling bloody tears down her cold, white cheeks.

Chapter 1

Callum Scott was miserable and cold. He sat hugging his rugby kitbag while he waited for his train, trying to ignore the ghost that stood beside him on the empty station platform.

The pale, blank figure didn’t surprise him. Callum had always been able to see ghosts. Lately they seemed to be everywhere he went.

Callum clutched his bag more tightly. The ghost couldn’t see him – they never could – but it still felt rude to stare. Even so, it was hard to take his eyes off the horrible figure.

It was a man, his body grey and insubstantial, as if it had been drawn in chalk on the empty air. He wore an army uniform that looked almost as old as the half-derelict Victorian station itself, but the jacket was tattered and frayed, and covered with dark stains. Through one gaping hole, Callum could see the wet glisten of torn skin and muscle, and the white gleam of exposed bone. Below his jacket, the soldier’s legs ended in ragged stumps just above the knee.

Callum shuddered. How had he lost them? In one of the wars? Falling under a train? Is that what killed him? Did he die down there on those very tracks?

These dark thoughts always seemed to fill Callum’s mind whenever the spirits were near him, but tonight he would have been gloomy enough without them. He’d missed his train home after an away match and now he was stuck with a long, cold wait. Callum shivered as the wind whistled and moaned around him. He willed the time to go faster.

At last he heard the modern Sprinter train coming down the line, all bright lights and noise. For an instant the ghost’s gaze seemed to meet Callum’s. Then it was gone, like a blown-out candle.

The train was crammed with tired, grumpy people coming home from work. But even though he had to stand wedged between elbows and shopping bags, Callum was glad of the human company. Already his stomach was tightly knotted at the thought of the long, lonely walk down the hill from Marlock station to Gran’s little cottage in Nether Marlock. Callum especially dreaded the stretch of woods by the abandoned stone shell of Nether Marlock church – the dead always seemed to gather there.

When the train reached his stop, Callum forced himself to set off down the hill, through the housing estate at the edge of town. It was getting dark and the wind seemed to whisper an unearthly warning. The streetlights were already on, their acid-yellow glow casting inky shadows up the driveways. There were never any spirits in the tidy front gardens of these houses, though. The estate was too new to have ghosts. Well, except the one house, halfway down, haunted by the little girl who had been run over by a post van – but she could be avoided by staying on the other side of the road.

Callum trudged from streetlamp to streetlamp, drawn to the pools of light. He walked slowly, putting off the moment when the row of lights would end, leaving him alone in the darkness of Marlock Wood.

Beyond the estate, the road continued on, narrowing to one track as it disappeared into the blackness beneath the trees. Hardly any cars used this stretch of road through the woods, and Callum cursed under his breath as he realised that his torch was still hanging on the back of his bedroom door. He normally packed it when he knew he was going to be walking home in the dark, but of course he hadn’t expected to be getting home so late tonight . . .

Callum glanced longingly over his shoulder, back at the well-lit street behind him. A car pulled out of a driveway and headed up the road towards Marlock, tail-lights glowing red.

‘Just get it over with!’ Callum muttered to himself.

Gritting his teeth, he stepped forward.

It was like stepping into another world. Beneath the trees, the night crowded in on him. He looked back again. The road was empty now. He edged forwards into the darkness, stepping off the end of the pavement and on to the old, crumbling tarmac.

When he looked over his shoulder a third time, Callum swore aloud to himself.

‘For God’s sake, stop it!’

There weren’t any ghosts back there. He knew that.

But every bone in his body was telling him that there was something. Something else.

Callum knew better than to doubt his instincts. He didn’t know why, but they were always right. Sometimes it felt like he had some kind of sixth sense that warned him about trouble and danger – his Luck, he called it. He walked on quickly, shivering. He couldn’t see anything now, neither on the narrow road in front of him, nor in the inky depths of Marlock Wood on each side. But he wasn’t alone on this ancient path, he was sure of it. Something was watching him. Somewhere in the dark. He didn’t know if it was good or bad, but it was there.