Outcast (The Darkeningstone Series Book 2) (33 page)

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Authors: Mikey Campling

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BOOK: Outcast (The Darkeningstone Series Book 2)
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“All right, it’s a deal.” Alan stepped away from the edge, but he didn’t put the phone in his pocket. “But listen, you’d better tell me the truth, because if you don’t, I’ll be able to tell, and I can still throw the phone from here.”

“I know,” Tom said.

“You’re going to tell me what happened?”

Tom swallowed. “Better than that,” he said. “I’m going to show you.”

Chapter 31

3650 BC

“WHAT ARE YOU DOING?” Kaine demanded. “Are you just going to let him go?”

Morven didn’t reply. He stood, his hand over his mouth, his eyes glazed, and stared as the prisoner made his way through the circle of men as though they simply weren’t there.

“This isn’t right,” Kaine snarled. He strode toward Morven and grabbed him by the arm. “This isn’t right. You can’t just let him go.”

Morven looked at him as though noticing him for the first time. “He has no talisman. The stone doesn’t want him.”

Kaine narrowed his eyes. “I don’t care,” he hissed. “
I
want him.”

“No,” Morven said. “He isn’t…He has no spirit.” He pulled his arm from Kaine’s grip and pushed the younger man away. Kaine spat a curse at him, but Morven took no notice; his mind was in a whirl. Deeply buried memories clambered through his thoughts, dragging themselves to the surface, mingling with half-forgotten dreams. In a daze, he followed in the prisoner’s footsteps. He watched him walking away.

Behind him, Kaine drew his axe. “I’ve had enough of this,” he growled. “If you won’t kill him, I will.” He strode forward, barging into Morven as he passed.

“No,” Morven said, but he was too late. Kaine was already taking aim with his axe and drawing back his arm. From this distance, his throw would not miss.

Suddenly, Morven sprang forward. He pushed Kaine roughly aside then ran toward the escaping prisoner, hurtling down the hill as fast as he could. He hoped he’d knocked Kaine from his feet, but he didn’t have time to make sure of it. He’d stopped the younger man from throwing his axe for a moment, and that would have to be enough. Morven ran on, breathing hard, pumping his arms, making every moment count. There was no time to think, no time to fear for his own safety—he had to do this, before it was too late.

He heard a yell from behind. No doubt it was Kaine cursing him, but he ignored it. The prisoner was almost in reach. One stride, two, then Morven launched himself into the air, his arms outstretched. The prisoner must not escape.

 

I didn’t turn when I heard them shouting at each other. I put my head down and I walked faster.
I should’ve known
.
I should’ve known they’d never let me just walk away
. And then I heard it—the unmistakeable sound of someone chasing down the hill. “No,” I muttered. I started to run but I’d left it too late. There was a yell from the hilltop and then a man slammed into me, knocking me to the ground. My hands were still tied and I landed heavily on my front, my attacker on top of me, pinning me down. I tried to squirm and struggle but it was hopeless. I twisted my body and managed to turn onto my side, but then my attacker grabbed me by the arms and stopped me moving. But at least I could now see who’d brought me down. It was the old man, and if he’d been afraid of me before, all that had changed. He stared into my eyes, and this time there was no hint of fear, only grim determination.

I opened my mouth to speak, but he didn’t give me the chance.

“Listen,” he said, “and you just might live.”

I stopped struggling. The man’s words washed over me like a bucket of iced water. I’d understood what he’d said. And I don’t mean I’d picked up on his tone. No. I’d understood because, for the first time since I’d woken up on the black stone, someone had spoken to me in perfect English.

Chapter 32

2018

ANDREW DUCKED, but not enough to stop the top of his hard hat grating against the roof of the tunnel. Again. “Thank God for Peppa Pig,” he muttered.

Cally looked back over her shoulder and gave him a smile. “Are you all right?”

“Fine,” Andrew said. “It’s just a bit
smaller
in here than I expected.”

“This is nothing—the ceiling used to be a lot lower. In some places you can see the line where they dug the floor out.”

“Right.”

Cally raised an eyebrow. “Try not to get too overenthusiastic.”

Andrew held up his hands. “No, it’s fine. I’m enjoying myself. Really. It’s just, I’m quite tall.”

“You don’t have to explain,” Cally said. “But don’t worry, we’re heading back to the entrance now. The ceiling is a bit higher in this next bit.”

“Thank God for that. Peppa Pig has suffered enough.”

Cally couldn’t help but laugh. “Come on—we’d better not get too far behind the others.”

“No, I wouldn’t want to upset the charming Helen.”

Cally led the way. “This part here,” she began, “is particularly interesting, because…”

Andrew let her words wash over him. It was churlish to tune her out when she was so obviously enjoying herself, but he had more important things on his mind. He glanced back over his shoulder. The tunnel was empty behind him. Perhaps, if he could persuade Cally to hang back from the tour group, he could get her on her own and try to explain the situation. He ran his eyes over the damp stone walls, felt them pressing in on him.
If she freaks out down here
,
at least she’ll be contained
.

“…and that’s the place I was telling you about,” Cally said. “You can clearly see where the floor level used to be.”

“Oh yeah,” Andrew said. “It must’ve been awful for the men.”

Cally half turned and flashed him a smile. She returned her attention to the uneven floor, watching her step as she walked on. “Just wait until you see this next bit. I’ve got a surprise for you.”

“Sounds intriguing,” Andrew said.
It’s just as well she’s got her back to me
, he thought, because even in the dimly lit tunnel, he couldn’t hide the grim irony in his smile.

 

Crawford checked the contents of his slim leather briefcase as his car drew to a smooth halt at the kerbside. He looked out of the window. The Exeter Passages; the one place he’d tried to keep this damned woman away from. All his hard work, his planning…and for what? He rolled his eyes.
I suppose it doesn’t really matter.
I can still make this whole thing go away
. He smiled to himself. Yes. It needn’t be too much trouble. This was exactly the sort of thing he excelled at. He pushed the car door open, then paused and turned to his driver, Peterson. “Wait for me in the lobby,” he said. “Be ready to leave at a moment’s notice.” He climbed out of the car and closed the door without waiting for a reply. Peterson knew his business. Crawford had chosen him for his proven field skills and his discretion. He could be relied upon.
Unlike some
, Crawford thought bitterly. Andrew had muddied the waters completely, and the extraction team, who should still be waiting nearby, had failed to take the initiative.
No imagination, no finesse
, Crawford thought as he strode toward the entrance to the Passages. Fortunately, he had plenty of both.

 


Ta da
,” Cally said, waving her arm theatrically toward an iron barred gate. “What do you think to that?”

Andrew stepped up to the gate and peered through the bars, into the gloom of an unlit tunnel. To him, it looked much like the rest of the passages, although the ceiling was much higher and the floor was littered with loose rocks. He had to admit one thing though—the heavily chained and padlocked gate gave the place a certain sense of foreboding. “Very mysterious. Why is it locked?”

“Well that’s just it,” Cally said, her voice an excited whisper. “They say it isn’t safe, but I don’t think that’s true. It’s been there for hundreds of years, I don’t think it’s going to fall down now.”

Andrew frowned and fought off the urge to argue with her faulty logic. “Well, there are stone blocks all over the floor, so maybe—”

“Exactly,” Cally interrupted, “stone blocks. But look here.” She pointed to the tunnel wall at her side.

Andrew squinted at the wall. “Stone blocks,” he said.

Cally gave an exasperated sigh. “Don’t you see? They’re the wrong size.”

Andrew tilted his head to one side and looked first at the wall, then at debris on the floor of the locked tunnel. “You’re right,” he said. “The blocks on the floor look bigger.”

“I’m
certain
they are,” Cally said.

“But surely, they’ve just fallen from a different part of the wall, or the ceiling.”

Cally folded her arms across her chest. “Can you see where they’re supposed to have fallen from?”

Andrew looked through the bars again. He couldn’t see any obvious holes in the walls, but the ceiling was high and wreathed in deep shadows. “I’m not sure,” he said. “It all looks quite neglected.”

Cally took a step closer to him. “Maybe that’s what someone wants us to think,” she murmured.

Andrew tried hard not to roll his eyes. In his line of work, conspiracy theories usually led to long hours of wasted effort and mountains of paperwork. He sighed under his breath. “And what makes you say that?”

Cally pointed through the bars. “See that block down there? Can you see those marks on its side?”

Andrew could just make out a series of vertical marks, scored into the stone. “Er, OK.”

“It’s called feathering,” Cally said. “They pounded an iron rod into the rock and then split it off.”

“So that means, what, exactly?”

“There’s no feathering on the tunnel walls, so the loose stones on the floor were cut in a different way to the stone they used to build the tunnels. They don’t match.”

“Oh, I see,” Andrew said. He glanced over his shoulder. The guided tour had moved on without them. They were alone. This might be his only chance to talk to her. “Listen, Cally—” he started. But she didn’t let him finish.

“So
why
won’t they let me in?” Cally hissed. “I’ve written letter after letter. I’ve called time after time. But this jumped up busybody, this high and mighty Crawford, he won’t even return my calls.”

At the mention of Crawford’s name, Andrew’s stomach muscles tightened.
It couldn’t be the same man. It’s a coincidence
. He shook his head and tried to push the thought away. But it didn’t work. He knew now, with a bitter certainty, that his superior had a hand in this. He’d manipulated them both; playing them, drawing them. And now it was too late. They were already entangled in some twisted scheme that only Crawford could see.
Get out of here, now
, Andrew told himself.
Walk away—while you still can
. But he had to know more, he had to find out what he was up against. He took a breath and tried to keep his voice steady. “You wrote a letter to a Mr. Crawford?”

“Not exactly. I wrote to every authority I could think of, though most of them never replied, or just sent a standard letter. But then somebody screwed up.”

“What do you mean?”

“I had a letter—all very official-looking and supposedly from the British Museum—but someone had accidentally sent me the wrong copy. I guess it was the copy they should’ve filed away, but they’d put the wrong one in the envelope. It had a slip of paper stapled to it:
All enquiries to be diverted to Crawford
. And there was even a phone number. I couldn’t believe my luck.”

Andrew closed his eyes for a moment. Someone would’ve been in very hot water when their mistake was discovered. And it
would
have been discovered.
So Crawford knew all about Cally
.
He knew she wanted to go into this tunnel and he had done his best to stop her. Why?

“It’s just typical, isn’t it?” Cally said. “Faceless bureaucrats messing things up for everybody but themselves.”

“Yes,” Andrew said, and he couldn’t keep the anger from his voice. “Bloody typical.” He looked at Cally. In the half-light of the tunnel her blue eyes glittered with a passionate fire and the shadows sculpted the soft skin of her cheeks, transforming the fresh-faced young student into a darkly beautiful woman.
How dare that bastard Crawford threaten her? How dare he?
He took a breath. “What did you want to do?” he asked, his voice hoarse with emotion. “In the tunnel—why did you want to go in?”

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