Authors: Michael Scott
“We had a report that your alarm had gone off,” the smaller, slightly older officer said.
“Yes ⦠yes, that's right. And there wasâthere isâsomeone here, I saw them. Inside, towards the back of the room.” He pointed toward the guesthouse.
“Thank you. Now, if you'll just go back to the main house, we'll take a look around.”
The officer with the canine was the first to enter, his gun drawn, the dog now anxiously straining at the leash. He moved to the left while his partner, gun held in both hands moved to the right as he entered. They disappeared into the shadows.
Jonathan turned and headed back across the wet grass toward the house. He was almost at the kitchen door when he heard the scream.
The sound was high-pitched and chilling; the cry of a creature in mortal agony. It lasted a couple of seconds and the silence that followed was, if anything, even more frightening.
Jonathan turned back toward the guesthouse, adrenaline pumping through his entire body.
There was a second scream, and this time the sound descended into a recognizable whine of a dog in pain or terror.
Lights moved behind the guesthouse windows, the dancing beams of flashlights. Frazer could follow their progress as they moved from the back of the building. He had almost reached the open door when he saw a flicker from the corner of his eye. He stopped, just as the shape loomed from the doorway. Black against black, it was almost completely invisible. There was a vague oval of a face, the startling white of eye and teeth. And then the shape lunged towards him.
Frazer tried to scream, but his cry caught in his throat. There was a suggestion of movement in front of his face before the night exploded into light and pain. He sailed backwards into the bushes and sprawled on the grass. Rolling on his side, he was vividly aware of the wetness on his face, running down his nose, tasting the copper in his mouth. Then, a booted foot landed beside his head, inches from crushing his skull, and he attempted to cover his head from the kick. But it never came, and he heard the squeak of rubber soles on wet grass as the intruder disappeared into the night.
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D
EATH.
Violent bloody death.
Color in the Otherworld, the soul of a creature ripped from life. It experienced the creature's confusion, pain, anguish ⦠and then the immediate fading of consciousness, of awareness.
An animal then.
The little soul of an animal.
Nothing more than a morsel.
But enough.
The memories were returning â¦
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I
T WAS
dawn by the time the police and the paramedics had left.
Frazer sat in the kitchen, his head cradled in his hands, an enormous bandage around his skull, a thick pad, already faintly stained, in the center of his forehead. He stared blankly at the two painkillers Celia had offered him, moving them to and fro with his forefinger. He disliked taking pills, but he knew if he didn't take something for this headache soon he would be sick for the rest of the day.
Celia moved quietly around the kitchen, wan and shaken after the night's events. She had awakened to hear screaming coming from the guesthouse, and she'd been horrified when she rolled over and discovered that Jonathan was missing. She was actually phoning for the police when the sirens had woken up the whole neighborhood: blue, red, and white flashing lights pulsing in the darkness beyond the window.
However, by the time Jonathan had been carried in, stunned and bleeding from a gashed forehead, her initial fear had turned to anger. Why hadn't he let the police handle it? That's what they were there for. Of course this was typical of him: hire someone to do a job and then do it himself anyway. Stupid bastard could have been killed! Anyway, maybe now he'd think about moving the contents of the guesthouse into some sort of secure storage, and she could turn the building into the home gym she'd wanted when they had first moved in. She sat down across the table from her dazed husband and pushed a mug of coffee over in front of him.
“How do you feel?”
Jonathan attempted a smile. “How do I look?”
“You look like shit.”
“That's how I feel.”
“Do the police know what happened?”
He shrugged, and then winced as his shoulder and neck muscles protested. “It was an attempted break-in ⦠or maybe they actually stole something, I don't know, I haven't been back to the guesthouse yet. The police want to go over it for fingerprints first. The alarm went off⦔
“You should have waited for the police,” she said coolly.
He started to nod, then stopped, blinking with darts of pain.
“You could have been killed.”
“I know. Anyway ⦠and this is the scary part: when I went into the guesthouse, there was someone in there, watching me, waiting.” He shivered, and then wrapped both hands around the mug to steady them. “I was in the guesthouse when the two cops arrived, one with a German shepherd; they were here pretty quickly. They thought I was the intruder and cuffed me until they saw my ID. They went in, and told me to go back to the house.”
Celia nodded.
“There's some confusion about what happened next.” Frazer drank quickly, trying to take the sour taste from his mouth. “Whoever was in the guesthouse killed the dog.”
“I heard the scream,” Celia whispered.
“It was awful,” Frazer muttered.
“But there were two screams.”
“Do you want to hear this?”
“Tell me.”
Staring into the cup, he continued, his voice devoid of emotion. “From what I can gather, the dog was shot through the back of the head with a nail gun. And then its throat was sliced open with a box cutter. The police think it was still alive when its neck was snapped back. The head was almost twisted off.”
“Jesus Christ!”
“So whoever did it was obviously immensely powerful.”
Celia pushed her mug away.
“The second officer was not far behind. Somehow the intruder slipped past him and ran into me outside. He struck me once just here.” He touched his forehead tentatively. “The police say it was probably with the heel of his hand or some sort of martial arts punch. I don't remember anything else.”
“You could have been killed,” Celia repeated.
“I could,” Jonathan said quietly, the realization only beginning to sink in. He barely made it to the bathroom before he began to throw up.
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“J
ESUS CHRIST
Almighty, place looks like a fuc ⦠like a slaughterhouse.” Diane Williams ran her fingers through her shaggy blond hair, pushing it back off her face.
Frazer glanced sidelong at her. “It's a bit of a mess,” he agreed. There were glass fragments from the shattered lights everywhere, covering everything in a fine glittering white sand, crunching underfoot as they moved.
Diane smiled. She was wearing purple-black lipstick to match her eye shadow, and he found the whole effect rather startling. “That's a bit of an understatement.”
Where the dog had been butchered was a bloody mess. Long tendrils of thick-crusted brown gore were spattered high on the walls, speckling the ceiling, dappling every single object within a six-foot radius. There was a large dark brown stain on the concrete floor where the carcass had continued to bleed.
Jonathan and Diane stood looking at the floor for a few moments and then they both turned away without a word, each absorbed in their own thoughts. Looking at the bloody pool made Jonathan realize that could very easily be his blood on the floor.
Diane was beginning to have second thoughts about working here. She turned suddenly; she had seen something moving from the corner of her eye. But when she looked there was nothing.
Christ, but she was on edge!
Hardly surprising was it? Some madman wandering around butchering animals. The police were treating it very seriously, it could just as easily have been one of the officers. She glanced quickly at Frazer: could just as easily have been her boss.
Diane Williams turned slowly, eyes drawn to stare at the mirror, hands on her hips. She was wearing all black today, partially in mourning for Tony, whom she genuinely liked, though he could be an irritating old bastard, but principally because she usually wore black. She could just about make out her reflection in the warped glass. The young woman turned her head to one side, staring hard at the glass. There was something â¦
“What's wrong?” Jonathan asked quietly, startling her.
“Nothing, nothing really. Have you made any decision about the mirror, Jonathan?”
“No, not really. I haven't had a chance to even think about it.”
“I'd like to work on it.”
Frazer blinked at her in astonishment. “But I thought you saidâ¦?”
“That was then and this is now. I was upset, I wasn't thinking clearly. I'd like to work on it as a sort of a tribute to Tony. Putting everything he taught me into practice, completing the last piece he worked upon. Do you think he'd like that?”
Jonathan swallowed away the sudden swelling at the back of his throat. “I think ⦠I think he would have liked that very much.”
Diane stepped forward and rubbed her hand down the length of the mirror; it came away covered in thick grimy soot. “Hey, I cleaned this mirror before I left the other day.”
“I've noticed that about it too. It seems to attract every particle of dirt and dust.”
“I'll see what I can do about it,” she murmured. “I can put some anti-static polish on it, but let me start with the mess in here first though.”
“I can call a cleaning company, you know, people who specialize in taking care of this kind of thing.”
“No, it's OK. I'd rather do it myself. I was born and raised on a farm, blood doesn't bother me.”
Jonathan looked around the room again, trying to put the pieces together in his mind from the moment the alarm had gone off, to the death of the dog and the attack on himself. Someone had been here last night, someone strong enough and brutal enough to kill the dog. And, whoever had done this had possessed tremendous strength. But what had they been looking for? Granted there were a lot of valuable objets d'art and antiques around, but disposing of them would have been particularly difficult and a cursory examination seemed to suggest that nothing had been taken. The police had dusted for fingerprints but had found none. Jonathan briefly wondered if it might have been some local kids breaking in just for the hell of it, but the police had said that was unlikely; if had been full of electronics, then it might have been something to consider. And they would have run scared from the dog.
He stood up and dusted off his hands. He could understand killing the dogâif he'd had a weapon to hand when he'd first seen the creature, he'd have taken a swing at it himself. But slicing open its throat and breaking its neck was ⦠what? Unnecessary?
And that reminded him â¦
He returned to the mirror and looked deeply into its grimy surface. When he'd been standing with his back to it he could have sworn he'd felt a hand on his shoulder: ridiculous, of course, but it had been so real. Real enough to make him jump with fright. He touched his left shoulder, wincing as his fingers touched bruising. He was almost tempted to push down his shirt to examine his flesh. Would he find the impression of fingers?
Maybe it had been a real hand. Maybe the intruder had crept up behind him and had been preparing to grab him or attack him when the police had walked in and ruined his plan.
“It's only since that mirror arrived,” Diane Williams said quietly, coming up to stand beside Frazer.
That thought had already crossed his mind.
“It could be cursed,” she said dramatically.
He attempted a laugh, but the sound caught in his throat. He was glad he was disposing of it. It made himâin some vague wayâuncomfortable.
“Yes, can I help you?”
He turned at the sound of Diane's voice, the strident quality in it bringing him back to the present. There was a figure standing in the doorway, one of the biggest men Frazer had ever seen, though with the sun behind him, it was almost impossible to make out his features.
“I'm looking for Jonathan Frazer.” There was a curious accent, a lilt to his voice: English, Australian, South African perhaps?
“I am Jonathan Frazer.” He stepped forward, his sense of unease growing. No one was allowed down to the guesthouse. “Can I help you? Can I ask how you managed to make your way back here?”
“I was given your name,” the man said, not answering the question. “I understand you have a mirror here for sale, Mister Frazer,” he said directly, stepping into the room and looking around. And Jonathan knew, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that this was the same man who'd been in the guesthouse the previous night. He looked at the man's size and obvious strength, and his unease turned to fear.
“I'm afraid you're wrong, nothing here is for sale, it is all under ⦠repair. However if you would care to visit our retail store, I'm sure we⦔
“I was told you had a mirror here for sale,” the man repeated doggedly. He took another step into the room, looming larger over Frazer. Now that he no longer had the sun at his back, not only his size, but also his physical appearance was intimidating. His cheeks were deeply scarred, his nose had been broken and badly set, long horizontal lines cut into his forehead. His eyes were coal-black and penetrating, and his mane of pure white hair seemed to make the disfigurement all the more shocking.
“May I ⦠may I ask who told you?” Jonathan asked, turning the tremor in his voice into a cough.
“Anthony Farren.”
And Jonathan immediately knew he was lying. Tony had never been known as anything other than “Tony.”