Read The Darkest Corners Online
Authors: Barry Hutchison
A
meena looked from me to my dad and back again.
âNo,' I said, my voice desperate, pleading, âbut... no. It's not true. Tell me you didn't.'
âToo trusting, that's your problem,' said my dad. âFar too trusting.'
âHe's lying,' Ameena said. âYou're lying. I wasn't helping you. I ran away! Kyle, you've got to believe me, I wasn't helping him.'
âWell, this is awkward,' my dad said.
I ignored him, kept fixing on Ameena. âWhy?'
âHe's lying! I wasn't helping him.'
âOh, but you were, Ameena,' he said. âAlthough⦠OK. So maybe you didn't know it.'
We both turned to face him. âWhat?'
âI knew you'd go running to him, even after I told you not to. I knew you'd betray me. I knew you'd go running off to his little dream hospital and show him the truth.'
He looked at me. âDon't you see? I wanted you awake. I wanted you
aware
. I wanted you to come here and face me.'
A huge sense of relief washed over me. Ameena hadn't betrayed me again. She had chosen me over him.
But still, the final bricks of my world were crumbling around me. Ameena had turned against him. She'd tried to get me to run, but instead I had done exactly as he wanted me to do. âBut... why? Why did you want me here?'
âFor this, of course! For the final showdown!' he said, then he cackled with glee. âOh, sure, I could've just left you lying in your make-believe happy hospital. That would still have been a victory, but where's the drama? Hmm? Where's the sense of closure to it all?'
He ran a hand through his hair and looked me up and down. âThis â all this â has been years in the planning, kiddo. Over a decade of figuring out the fine detail of how best to make you suffer. Like you made me suffer.'
âI didn't,' I said weakly.
âYou were born. That was enough.' His eyes glazed over for a moment as he recalled some distant memory. âShe believed in me, your mother. Really believed. The Bible touched on it, you know? “Faith can move mountains.” It's like all the self-help books say â if you believe in something enough, it'll happen. Your mother believed, and I happened.'
He held his arms to the side, showing himself off. I thought about grabbing for the gun, but he moved it back to me before I could make the decision.
âI know that,' I said. âYou told me. She needed you so much you somehow became real, then I came along and she stopped needing you, so you faded away.'
âWas
torn
away,' he seethed. âTossed into the Darkest Corners with the rest of them. Left to rot.'
âGod. Get over it.'
âOh, I will. Just as soon as all the loose ends are tied up. It's nearly over, son,' he said, and there was almost kindness in his voice. âYour friends out there, they'll soon be dead. I'll be honest, I did not foresee Mr Mumbles switching loyalties like that. I send him to kill you and he becomes your guardian angel. Who'd have thought it?' He smiled. âStill, it all worked out in the end.'
I looked down at the gun. It was fixed on me. Ameena was on the balls of her feet, ready to move, but I caught her sleeve and held her in place.
âYou see, I've systematically set about destroying you, son. I've killed the people you care about, I've terrorised you, I've made you a wanted criminal sleeping on the streets and rummaging in bins just to survive.'
His eyes blazed with dark excitement. âAnd then there're the abilities you possess. I'd like to say they're all from my side, of course, but that's not true. They come from your unique parentage. A real mother and an imaginary father. The ability to dream, and the power to make those dreams come true. I showed you that power, and then I told you what would happen if you tried to use it.'
He laughed and rocked back on his heels. âThat must've really hurt. All those god-like abilities and you couldn't allow yourself to use them. I don't know how you coped with that.' He put his hand over his mouth. âOh, wait, you didn't, did you?'
âYou tricked me.'
âAnd you unleashed Hell on seven billion innocent people.'
âYou killed my family!'
He took a step back and pointed the gun at the centre of my chest.
âAnd now I'm going to kill you. All those years of planning have been leading right to this moment, and it's better than I could've dared hope. Your birth sent me away,' he said, his voice becoming louder, âand with your death, I am reborn as king of this new world!'
âNo, don't! Don't!'
Ameena jumped in front of me. His finger tensed. The roar of the gun filled the hallway and made my ears ring like an alarm bell. My eyes closed at the sound of the shot. When I opened them, Ameena was slumping to the floor, her hands clutching her stomach.
She landed on her back, blood pulsing through her fingers. Her breath came in rasping gasps and her eyes swam with tears, but she didn't scream. Not once.
âOh,
now
look what you made me do,' my dad muttered. I dropped to my knees beside Ameena. The blood pumped out of her. So much blood. So much pain written across her face.
âIt's OK,' I told her. âYou're OK. It's going to be OK.'
She shook her head. âYou're s-such a terrible liar,' she whispered, then she let out a groan. Her eyes swam, then focused. âTried to warn you. Told you n-not to come. Wanted us t-to run away. Together.'
âWe can,' I said. I lifted her hand and pressed it to my face. Her blood was warm against my skin. âWe will. You're going to be OK. All that other stuff, it doesn't matter. It wasn't your fault. None of it was your fault.'
âOh, God, this is sickening,' my dad mumbled. âExcuse me while I puke.'
âShut up!' I spat, hot tears stinging my eyes. âShut up!'
âToo late,' Ameena croaked. âToo late. S-sorry. N-never wanted to hurt you. Wasn't as s-strong as you. Couldn't... couldn't fight him.'
Her face was becoming an ashen shade of grey. The carpet was awash with her blood now. It seeped out around us in a steadily widening circle.
âHold on,' I pleaded. I pressed my hand against her stomach to try to stop the blood flow, but felt her life ebb out through my fingers. Her eyes rolled back in her head. âAmeena!' I shouted, shaking her. âHold on!'
âOh, what's the point?' my dad sneered. âIf you're going to die, just get on with it. Some of us have things to do.'
âD-do you t-trust me?'
âYes,' I said. Despite everything that had happened in the last few hours, despite every suspicion I'd harboured from the start, I said, âYes.'
She smiled, then a jolt of pain made her go rigid in my arms. She was shaking like a hypothermia victim, her body going into shock and shutting down.
âThis s-stings a bit,' she said, when the convulsions had passed.
âI know, I know. But you'll be OK,' I said. I was fooling no one. We both knew what was going to happen. We both knew that this, finally, was the end.
âHave to tell you s-something,' she whimpered. âBeen t-trying to make you realise since the hospital. Y-you're too damn stubborn.' She gestured with her head for me to lean in closer. I felt her breath against my cheek as she whispered in my ear. âThis isn't the Darkest Corners. J-just looks like it.'
It took a moment for her meaning to sink in. I leaned back and stared at her, my eyes two circles of surprise. âBut that means...'
She nodded and her face lit up with that crinkle-nosed grin.
âMeans what?' my dad asked. âWhat did she say? Isn't she dead yet?'
âYou d-don't have to be a-afraid any more,' Ameena whispered, squeezing each word out with the last of her strength. âThere's n-nothing left to lose.'
âWhat are you saying? What are you telling him?'
âGo get him, k-kiddo,' Ameena wheezed, and then the hand on my cheek became limp. Became lifeless. Her head tilted, just a tiny fraction, to the right. Her eyes didn't move, but they stopped looking at me, or looking at anything, for that matter.
And like that, the best friend I had ever had left me.
âFinally,' my dad sighed. âI didn't think she was ever going to go. Now, where were we?'
Ameena's final few words chimed in my head. This wasn't the Darkest Corners, it just looked like it. I'd brought the barrier down, but the world hadn't changed. It had simply been filled with monsters. This was the real world. My world. And it had been all along.
And there it was, like a candle in the darkness. A single spark lit up inside my head.
My stomach twisted. I felt sick. Not because I was powerless to stop what was happening, but because I
could
have stopped it any time I wanted.
Slowly, I stood up. I turned round and saw my dad smirk. âAh, yes, this is where we were,' he said.
His finger tightened on the trigger of the gun.
A hundred billion bright blue sparks roared inside my head.
I
saw the bullet. First the metal, then the structure of the metal itself â not smooth, but pitted and ridged like some grey alien landscape.
Then deeper. I saw chains of molecules all latched together like an intricate web.
Deeper. The very atoms that made up the bullet, spinning like galaxies in a little lead universe.
I saw the bullet's kinetic energy, felt its heat, saw and understood the chemical make-up for the gunpowder that trailed in its wake.
And it didn't stop there. I saw the gun, all its individual components, and I knew how they worked.
I saw Ameena's blood on the carpet, heard Billy's whooshing through his veins.
Above that I heard simultaneously the chittering of microscopic dust mites and the screams of a whole world filled with the dead and the dying. I looked through the eyes of every living creature on Earth, saw what they saw, felt their fear and their panic and their utter hopeless despair.
By the time I'd done all that, the bullet had almost finished travelling along the barrel of the gun. I stopped it existing, then I did the same to the gun itself. Neither one disappeared in a puff of smoke. There was no theatrical flash. Both bullet and pistol simply ceased to be.
My dad looked at his empty hand. Thirty-three muscles in his face conspired to make him frown. Then he looked back at me, his pupils dilating as fear flooded his body with adrenaline.
âAh, so that's what she told you.'
âYou killed her,' I said. I watched the sound waves ripple lazily away from my mouth. They wriggled like tiny snakes through the air. âYou killed Ameena.'
âFor your own good,' he said. âI did it for you, son. Don't you see? I've done everything for you. To help you unlock your full potential.'
âStop talking,' I said, and he did. He had no choice in the matter. âThe power. You said it was god-like.' I flexed my hands and felt whole ecosystems thriving between the cracks of my skin. âYou have no idea.'
I allowed him to speak again. âExactly, son! There's nothing we can't do together. Nothing we can't accomplish.'
âI could take you apart,' I told him. âOne atom at a time, I could take you apart and spread you across the world. I could do that, you know? Just by thinking it.'
He shook his head and laughed. âYeah, but you wouldn't. You're a
good boy
, Kyle,' he said, using the words as an insult. âYour mother brought you up soft. Even after everything I've done, you haven't got the guts to kill me. Oh, sure, you say you're going to. You come looking for me, but you don't have the stomach for it. You're weak. You're
pathetic.
'
âI'll do it,' I said.
âGo on then,' he barked, fury suddenly etching the lines of his face. âDo it. Kill me. I murdered your mum, turned your grandmother into a monster, shot your girlfriend right there in front of you! So come on, tough guy. Kill me. Do it.'
I clenched my fists. I wanted to kill him. More than anything, I wanted to.
But I couldn't. I couldn't just slay him in cold blood. That would make me no better than he was. The screechers in the church, the monster I'd battered with that rock â I had no choice. That was survival. This would be different. This would be murder.
He chuckled at the back of his throat and stepped past me. I flinched as he patted me on the shoulder. âDidn't think so,' he said, then he trotted down the stairs, hands in his pockets, as if he didn't have a care in the world.
âI can't kill you, but I can stop you,' I told him, following. He did a twirl at the bottom and made for the door.
âYou could, but what would be the point? You don't have the guts to finish me off.' He stopped and met my eye. âDo you really want me around? Whispering into your ear, telling you about every terrible thing I've done?'
I had no answer for that. His smile widened. âThought not.'
He skipped on the spot, then carried on towards the door. âIt's not over, you know. I'll think of other ways to make you suffer. You may be all-powerful, but you've still got a heart beating in there, and I can still break it. And you'll still be too much of a goody two-shoes to stop me.'
The door opened and I.C. came staggering in, breathing heavily. He crashed right into my dad, who hissed with annoyance.
âWhoops. Sorry, mister,' I.C. said.
My dad grimaced. âYou will be, you little runt,' he said, and he swung a clenched fist at I.C.'s cheek.
A hand clamped round his wrist, stopping his arm dead. My dad looked up into the narrowed eyes of Mr Mumbles. Mumbles forced him back into the room and kicked the door closed behind him. Outside, the howls of the monsters rose in volume.
âLet go of me,
freak
,' my dad spat. Mumbles twisted his grip and my dad yelped in pain. His hand bent in towards him, forcing him to his knees.
âName-calling is bad. Isn't that right, I.C.?'
âThat's right, Uncle Mumbles.'
My dad snorted. âUncle Mumbles? You've got to be kidding me.'
Mumbles raised his eyes to me. I stood on the stairs watching. For all my power, I felt completely helpless.
âThought the plan was to kill him?'
I lowered my gaze. âI⦠I couldn't.'
âHe's too weak!' my dad snarled. âToo pathetic. He couldn't do it. Can you believe it? After everything I did, he couldn't finish me off!'
Mumbles looked at me for a long time, then his eyes went down to the man kneeling before him. âHe's a good kid. Even after what you've done, he's a good kid.' He leaned down so his face was next to my dad's. âMe? Not so much.'
With a roar, my dad's free arm lashed out. I saw the blade in his hand, but he moved too quickly, taking me by surprise. It sliced upwards, stabbing straight for Mr Mumbles' stomach.
âLook out!' I yelped.
There was a blur of movement. I saw Mumbles' hands on my dad's head, and then they jerked sharply. I heard bone splintering and the knife thudding on to the carpet. Mumbles stepped back and my dad's broken body slumped face-first on to the floor.
âSorry you had to see that,' Mumbles said.
I stared at him, then at the man on the carpet, his head twisted at an impossible angle. My father, maybe, but not my dad. Never my dad. I shrugged and drew in a shaky breath. âI'm not.'
I returned to the upstairs landing and looked down to where Ameena lay. I couldn't bring her back. I knew that. I could restore her to life, yes. Reanimate her so she walked and talked like Ameena, but it wouldn't be her. Not really. Just like it wasn't my mum earlier. The dead stayed dead, and there was nothing I could do about it.
But there were other things I
could
do.
Billy was still unconscious, but he'd be awake in a few minutes. That was more than enough time.
I walked down the stairs and stood between I.C. and Mr Mumbles. I made a point of not looking at the body on the floor.
âWhat now?' asked Mr Mumbles.
The front of the house folded up like a map, revealing the world beyond. A near-perfect circle of snow blanketed a patch of the street. Several dozen creatures stood frozen atop it, their bodies encased in frost and ice. But hundreds more raced for the house, leaping and bounding and slithering and scampering, all closing in for the kill.
âYou broke your house,' I.C. said.
âNice trick,' Mumbles added.
âI can feel them,' I said. âEvery one of them. I know what they are, who they were, where they came from.'
âWhat, all of them?' Mumbles asked, unable to hide the surprise in his voice. âThere must be two hundred out there.'
âNo,
all
of them,' I said. âEverything that came from the Darkest Corners. I'm inside their heads.'
I.C. jabbed a finger in his ear and wiggled it about. âHello? Hello? Are you in there?'
The things out in the snow were moving at a fraction of their actual speed now. I held them in slow motion until I was ready to deal with them.
âI can send them back,' I said. âAll of them. I can send them back to the Darkest Corners and rebuild the wall.'
Mumbles nodded. âThen do it.'
I hesitated. âBut there'll be nothing to stop it happening again. If I send them away, then use my abilities, I'll reopen the gateway and they'll all come straight back through.'
âThen don't use your abilities.'
âI... I'm not sure I can stop. I don't know how to switch them off. I've got the power to save the world, but my next thought could destroy it all over again.' I looked to Mumbles for help. âWhat do I do?' I pleaded. âWhat do I do?'
There was a lingering, drawn-out silence. I.C. was the one who finally broke it.
âYou could come and live with me and Big Nose,' he suggested. âHe smells a bit funny, but he's nice.'
Mr Mumbles and I exchanged a long look. He ground his teeth together, as if chewing the idea over. âYou'd be powerless,' he said at last. âHelpless. And they'd all be after you. They'd all want revenge.'
âBut we'd look after you. Wouldn't we, Uncle Mumbles?'
My old imaginary friend regarded me impassively. And then, finally, he gave an almost imperceptible nod of his head. âYeah,' he said. âWhy not?'
I remembered the photograph I had found in Joseph's wallet, back when I was trapped in Doc's hospital in the Darkest Corners. It was a photograph of me, Mumbles and I.C. together. It had confused me at the time for all kinds of reasons, not least because I looked older in the picture than I was at that moment.
How many years would it be, I wondered, before that photograph was taken?
âMaybe⦠we can make it better,' I said. âThere are good people there, I can feel them. They're scared. They have to go back, but maybe we can help them. Maybe we can fix things.'
âThe Sheriff of Monster World,' Mumbles said. He shrugged. âI'm game if you are.'
I closed my eyes and time returned to normal speed, but the things outside didn't move. Blue strands of electrical light trailed from my fingertips. They spread out like an endless web, passing through the bodies of the creatures in the village, the town and beyond.
On and on they went, streaking through countryside, through cities, across countries and continents until a network of shimmering blue crisscrossed the whole world.
I would send them back, but there were some things I had to do first. Some things I had to fix. I focused.
Upstairs, a door opened. A little girl emerged to find her brother lying fast asleep on the floor.
âBilly? Billy, wake up.'
I heard the scraping of Billy's eyelids flicking open, the tightening of his throat, the racing of his heart.
âLily? Lily, you're OK? You're OK!'
I smiled. I couldn't bring back the dead, but I could fix the living. I could undo the damage that had been done. Not just Lily; the others too. All the screechers, human again, back to the people they once were. The fires extinguished too, the burned-out buildings restored, all with just a thought.
I turned my attention to the fiends I held frozen.
âYou are not supposed to be here,' I said, and my voice carried silently around the globe. âIt's time you all went home.'
I imagined a door thrown open wide enough for us all to pass through.
I imagined a door leading through into an eternity of darkness.
I imagined a door closing behind us, sealing us off from the world where I had once belonged.
The blue strands disappeared. Something inside me went
whoosh
, and I suddenly felt very small. I could no longer hear atoms rubbing together. Could no longer see through any eyes but my own.
Angry shapes moved in the gloom around me. A swirl of frosty mist prickled goosebumps on my skin.
âWhat now?' I whispered.