The Whisperer (21 page)

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Authors: Donato Carrisi

Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #General

BOOK: The Whisperer
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Three short sounds in sequence brought her back to her senses.

“Fuck,” she said, as her phone battery abandoned her once and for all.

The darkness closed over her like the fingers of a hand.

How many times had she found herself in a mess? After all it had happened before. In the music teacher’s house, for example. But how many times had she found herself in a mess like this? The answer she gave herself caught her off guard.

Never.

Drugged, injured, without her strength and without her mobile phone. That last lack made her feel like laughing: what could she have done with the telephone? Perhaps call some old friend. Graciela, for example. And ask her, “How are you? I’m about to die!”

The darkness was the worst thing. But she had to see it as an advantage: if she couldn’t see Ronald, he couldn’t see her either.

He’s expecting me to head for the exit

She really did want to leave this place behind her. But she was aware that she mustn’t follow her instinct, or she would die.

I’ve got to hide and wait for reinforcements to arrive.

She established that this was the wise decision. Because sleep could have come for her at any moment. She still had the gun, and that reassured her. Perhaps he was armed too. Ronald didn’t look like someone who was good with guns, but then she wasn’t good with them either. But Father Timothy had been good at acting shy and apprehensive. Basically, Mila reflected, he might be able to hide lots of other skills.

She crouched under one of the tables in the huge refectory, and listened. The echo didn’t help: it amplified useless noises, obscure creaks, far off and deceptive, that she couldn’t interpret. Her eyelids closed, inexorably.

He can’t see me. He can’t see me,
she repeated constantly to herself.
He knows I’m armed: if he makes a noise or uses the torch to look for me, he’s a dead man.

Unlikely colors started floating in front of her eyes.

It must be the drugs
…she said to herself.

The colors turned into faces, and grew animated just for her. It couldn’t only be her imagination. Suddenly, flashes were going off at various points in the room.

That bastard’s in here and he’s using a camera flash!

Mila tried to aim her gun. But those blinding lights, distorted by the hallucinogenic effect of the drug, made him impossible to locate.

She was imprisoned in a huge kaleidoscope.

She shook her head, but she was no longer in control of herself. A moment later she felt a tremor running through the muscles of her arms and legs, like an uncontrollable convulsion. However much she tried to banish it, the idea of death kept seducing her with the promise that, if she closed her eyes, everything would stop. Stop forever.

How much time had passed? Half an hour? Ten minutes? And how much time did she have left?

And at that moment she heard him.

He was close. Very close. No more than four or five meters away from her.

Then she saw him.

It only lasted a fraction of a second. In the halo of light surrounding him, she spotted the sinister smile that oozed from his face.

Mila knew he would find her at any moment, and she wouldn’t have enough energy to shoot at him. So she had to do it first, even if it meant revealing her position.

She aimed into the darkness, pointing her weapon in the direction in which she saw him reappearing from one moment to the next in the halo of the flash. It was risky, but she had no alternative.

She was about to pull the trigger when Ronald started singing.

The same beautiful voice as when Father Timothy had intoned his hymn of prayer in front of the team. It was a contradiction in terms, a freak of nature that such a gift should have been stored in the unfeeling heart of a murderer. And it was from that heart that the song of death, high and dismayed, rose up.

It could have been sweet and touching. Instead, what Mila felt was terror. Her legs were finally giving, as were the muscles of her arms. And she let herself slip to the floor.

The glare of a flash.

Torpor wrapped around her like a cold blanket. She heard Ronald’s footsteps getting more distinct as he approached to flush her out.

Another flash.

It’s over. Now he’s going to see me.

It didn’t really matter how he killed her. She abandoned herself to death’s flatteries with unexpected calm. Her last thought went to child number six.

I’ll never know who you were…

A faint flow enwrapped her completely.

The butt of her pistol slipped from her palm. Two hands gripping her. She felt herself being lifted up. She tried to say something, but the sounds remained stuck in her throat.

She lost her senses.

As she awoke she was aware of a springy gait: Ronald was carrying her over his shoulder, they were climbing the stairs.

She lost consciousness again.

A very strong smell of ammonia sucked her from her artificial sleep. Ronald was holding a small bottle to her nose. He had tied her hands, but he wanted her to be alert.

She was buffeted by an icy wind. They were outside. Where were they? Mila sensed that they were somewhere high up. Then she remembered the enlarged photograph of the orphanage that Chang had produced to show her the spot from which Billy Moore had fallen.

The tower. We’re on the tower!

Ronald lost interest in her for a moment. She saw him walking towards the parapet and looking over the edge.

He wants to throw me down.

Then he came back and grabbed her by the legs, dragging her to the cornice. With the little strength remaining to her, Mila tried to kick out, but without success.

She screamed. She struggled. A blind desperation filled her heart. He lifted her torso onto the parapet. With her head thrown back, Mila looked at the chasm below her. And then, through the curtain of snow, she made out in the distance the gleaming lights of the police cars approaching along the highway.

Ronald leaned over. She felt his hot breath as he whispered, “It’s too late, they won’t get here in time…”

Then he started to push her. Even with her hands tied behind her back, she managed to grip the slippery edge of the cornice. She battled with all her strength, but she couldn’t resist for long. Her only ally was the ice that covered the floor of the tower, making Ronald’s foot slip every time he tried to give her the final push. She saw his face distorting with the effort, and losing his calm because of her stubborn resistance. Then Ronald changed his technique. He decided to lift her legs beyond the parapet. He planted himself in front of her. And at that precise moment a desperate survival instinct made her put all her remaining strength into her knee, which she landed in his lower abdomen.

Ronald staggered backwards, bending breathlessly over, his hands clamped over his crotch. Mila worked out that this was her only chance before he recovered.

Without her strength, gravity was her only ally.

The wound to her shoulder was on fire, but Mila ignored the pain. She straightened up: now the slippery ice was against her, but she still took a run and hurled herself towards him. Ronald saw her suddenly pouncing at him and lost his balance. He waved his arm around in search of a handhold, but by now he was halfway over the cornice.

When he worked out that he wasn’t going to make it, Ronald stretched out a hand to grab Mila and drag her with him into the chasm that gaped below him. She saw his fingers claw at the hem of her leather jacket in one last terrible caress. She saw him plunge in slow motion, the white flakes seeming to break his fall.

The dark received him.

T
he deepest darkness.

A perfect barrier between sleep and waking. The fever has increased. She feels it on her reddened cheeks, on her aching legs, in her churning stomach.

She doesn’t know when her days start and finish. Whether she has been lying there for hours or weeks. Time doesn’t exist in the belly of the monster that has swallowed her: it dilates and contracts, like a stomach slowly digesting its food. And it’s no use. Here time is no use for anything. Because she can’t answer the most important question.

When will it end?

The deprivation of time is the worst of her punishments. More than the pain in her left arm, which sometimes spreads towards her neck and presses on her temples until it makes her feel ill. Because one thing is clear to her now.

This is all a punishment.

But she doesn’t know exactly what sin she must be punished for.

Maybe I was bad to my mother or father, I’ve thrown too many tantrums, I never want to drink milk at the table, and I secretly throw it away when they aren’t looking, I insisted that they bought me a cat, promising that I would look after it forever, but after I met Houdini I asked for a dog and they got very angry and said we couldn’t get rid of the cat, and I tried to make them understand that Houdini doesn’t like me at all, or perhaps it’s because I got bad marks at school, this year my first report was half a disaster, and I have to get better at geography and drawing, or maybe it was the three cigarettes I smoked secretly on the roof of the gym with my cousin, but I didn’t inhale, no, in fact maybe it’s the ladybird-shaped hair grips that I stole from the mall, I swear I only did it that one time, and I’m very stubborn, specially with Mom who always wants to decide what clothes I have to wear, and she hasn’t worked out that I’m a big girl now and I don’t like the things she buys for me because we’ve got different tastes…

When she’s awake, she goes on thinking of an explanation, trying to find a motive that would justify what’s happening to her. So she ends up imagining the silliest things. But every time she seems to have identified a reason at last, it collapses like a house of cards because her pain outweighs her guilt.

Other times, though, she gets angry because her father and mother haven’t yet come to get her.

What are they waiting for? Have they forgotten they have a daughter?

Then she regrets it. And she starts calling out to them in her mind, hoping she has some kind of telepathic power. It is the last resource remaining to her.

There are also times when she is convinced she is dead.

Yes, I’m dead and they’ve buried me down here. I can’t move because I’m in a coffin. I’ll be here forever…

But then the pain reminds her she is alive. The pain is both a sentence and a liberation. It drags her from her sleep and brings her back to reality. As it’s doing now.

A hot liquid slides into her right arm. She feels it. It’s nice. It smells like medicine. Someone is taking care of her. She doesn’t know whether to be happy about it or not. Because it means two things. The first is that she isn’t alone. The second is that she doesn’t know if the presence near her is good or bad.

She has learned to wait. She knows when it will manifest itself. For example, she has understood that the weariness filling her at all times and the sleep into which she suddenly plunges are not autonomously decided by her body. It’s a drug that dulls her senses.

Only when the drug takes effect does the presence come.

It sits down next to her and feeds her patiently with a spoon. The taste is sweet, there’s no need to chew. Then it gives her water to drink. It never touches her, never says anything. She would like to speak, but her lips refuse to form the words and her throat won’t make the necessary sounds. Sometimes, she feels that presence moving around her. Sometimes she feels as if it’s there, motionlessly watching her.

A new stab of pain. A strangled scream that bounces off the walls of her prison. And brings her back to her senses.

It’s then that she notices.

In the darkness now a small light has appeared, far away. A little red dot has suddenly appeared, to limit her small horizon. What is it? She tries to get a better look, but she can’t. Then she feels something under her hand. Something that wasn’t there before. An object with a rough and irregular consistency. It seems to be scaly. It’s disgusting. It’s stiff. It must be a dead animal. It’s stiff because it’s made of plastic. It’s fixed to her palm with sticky tape. And those aren’t scales, they’re keys.

It’s a remote control.

Suddenly everything’s clear to her. She just has to lift her wrist a little and point the object towards the little red light, and press a key at random. The sequence of noises that follows tells her she isn’t mistaken. First a gap. Then the tape quickly rewinding. The familiar sound of the mechanism of a video tape recorder. At the same time, a screen lights up in front of her.

For the first time, light illuminates the room.

She is surrounded by high walls of dark rock. And she is lying in what looks like a hospital bed, with handles and a steel head and foot. Beside her there’s a stand with a drip feed ending in a needle in her right arm. The left is completely hidden by very tight bandages that hold her whole torso immobile. On a table there are jars of baby food. And lots and lots of medicine. Beyond the television, though, there is still impenetrable darkness.

Finally the video tape finishes rewinding. It suddenly stops. And then it starts again, but slower this time. The rustle of the audio heralds the beginning of a film. A moment later some cheerful, strident music starts up—the sound track is slightly distorted. Then the screen fills with blurred colors. A little man appears in dungarees and a cowboy hat. There’s also a horse with very long legs. And the man tries to get on, but can’t. His attempts repeat and always end in the same way: with the man tumbling to the ground and the horse laughing at him. It goes on like that for about ten minutes. Then the cartoon finishes without end titles. But the video cassette goes on playing static. When it reaches the end, the tape rewinds automatically. And starts again from the beginning. Always the little man. Always the horse he will never be able to climb up on. And yet she goes on watching him. Even though she knows how things are going to go with the scornful animal.

She hopes.

Because that is the only thing left to her. Hope. The ability not to abandon herself completely to horror. Perhaps whoever chose that cartoon for her had an opposite intent. But the fact that the little man won’t give up and keeps on trying in spite of the tumbles and the pain gives her courage.

Go on, climb back in the saddle! she tells him in her head every time. Before sleep overwhelms her once more.

District of ••••••
Office of the District Attorney
J. B. Marin
Dic. 11—c.a.

 

For the Attention of the Director, Dr. Alphonse Bérenger.
c/o Prison of •••••.
Penitential District No. 45.
Subject:
in reply to the “confidential” report of 23 November.

 

Dear Dr. Bérenger,

I am writing in reply to your request for additional investigations into the individual imprisoned in your penitentiary and so far identified only as prisoner number RK-357/9. I regret to inform you that the latest research into the man’s identity has produced no results.

I agree with you when you state that the suspicion exists that prisoner RK-357/9 may have committed some serious crime in the past, and is doing everything he can to keep it in the dark. At this point, DNA examination is the only instrument at our disposal to confirm or deny it.

However, as you know very well, we cannot force prisoner RK-357/9 to carry out the test. In fact, this would expose us to a serious violation of his rights with regard to the crime for which he has been sentenced (refusing to supply identification to public officials).

This would be a different matter if there were “substantial” and “unequivocal” indications that prisoner RK-357/9 was responsible for a serious crime, or if there were “serious motives for thinking him a danger to society.”

At present, however, this is not the case.

In the light of this, the only way we have of getting hold of his DNA is to take it directly from matter of organic origin, with the sole condition that this has been
casually lost or left spontaneously
by the subject in the course of his normal daily activities.

Taking into account the hygienic obsession of prisoner RK-357/9, this Office authorizes prison guards to enter his cell without warning to inspect it with a view to retrieving the said organic material.

In the hope that this expedient is adequate for the achievement of the purpose, I remain yours sincerely,

Vice District Attorney

Matthew Sedris

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