The Book of Storms (11 page)

Read The Book of Storms Online

Authors: Ruth Hatfield

BOOK: The Book of Storms
12.79Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

He managed to put the thought in the front of his mind, over all the other things. Blackthorn Halt. Blackthorn Halt station, and then a bus up to Sopper's Edge. Repeating the names to himself, he quickened his pace.

*   *   *

It wasn't until he was sitting on the bus, grinding up the lanes toward Sopper's Edge, that the other thoughts forced their way back in: not only had he left Mitz behind, but he'd also left the stick lying there on Abel Korsakof's shed floor.

Good. At least without that stick, he might be safe.

But as soon as the memory came back to him, he couldn't shift it. The piece of wood had stamped itself across his mind's eye; the feeling of it curled in his palm began to worry at his blood, like a collie nagging sheep.

The stick had stuck to him. He closed his eyes, and in the blackness it was still there. Every knot, every splinter.

*   *   *

Night had fallen by the time he trudged up the lane to the farm. The lights of the farmhouse shone ahead: those ones were the living room windows, blazing away, and the one upstairs was Sophie's bedroom. She didn't do much around the farm; she wanted to pass her exams and go to university. In the living room, there'd be Aunt Kathleen and Tom, their heads together over feed bills and stock lists and magazine articles advising them how to improve their grassland. They were always trying to get Danny to take an interest in the cows, asking him to help feed them, check them over for cuts and scratches, and clean out the barns, but he preferred cows in computer games to real live ones that stamped their hard feet and swung their heads about, spraying the walls with sticky snot from their huge noses.

When Aunt Kathleen opened the door, she didn't see Danny for a second. She was a lot taller than most other women, and she had to peer down to make out the slight figure in the navy blue sweater, his brown hair blending into the darkness.

“Danny? What are you doing here?”

“Can I come in?” Danny said. His voice was very small.

“Yes, of course you can. You look fair done in! But where're your mum and dad?”

Danny shrugged hopelessly. Aunt Kathleen looked hard at him for a long second and then stepped back into the hall, letting a cloud of cooking smells waft out into the night air.

“In,” she said.

*   *   *

Aunt Kathleen knew how to do food. Although her family had already eaten their dinner, there was plenty left for Danny. She put plates in front of him: cold roast lamb and potatoes, thick slices of pork pie, bread and jam and half an iced cherry cake. He found, after forcing himself to eat a mouthful, that his appetite had come back despite all the horrible things that had happened.

When at last Danny had stopped eating for long enough to draw breath, his aunt stopped putting more food on the table and sat down. Aunt Kathleen looked a bit like his mum—her hair was the same toffee blond—but her face was much wider and flatter and she didn't smile quite as often. And she was even less of a comfortable motherly sort, tall and broad and a lot like a man, with a voice that seemed to rumble up through gravel stuck in her stomach—but at least he knew her.

“Right. Where're your mum and dad?” she asked.

Should he lie? He'd lied loads of times to his own parents, of course, but he couldn't remember ever having tried to lie to his aunt. She had quite a big nose, as if she'd be able to sniff out lies before you'd even said them.

So he took a very deep breath and said, “I don't know. They've … disappeared.”

“What do you mean ‘disappeared'? Disappeared where?”

Danny shrugged. Really he wanted to say, If I knew that …

“They're not at home?”

He shook his head.

“Are you sure?”

He nodded.

“When did they go?”

“Last night.”

“Last night? In that storm?”

Danny stared down at his food. Aunt Kathleen narrowed her eyes at him.

“Danny, I want you to tell me the truth now,” she said. “Have they really gone, or has something else happened? Are you in some kind of trouble?”

How stupid was it to ask someone to tell you the truth? Like you just assumed that the rest of what they said was a load of rubbish. It was always adults who did it—no one his own age had ever said, Now, Danny, tell me the truth. His friends might say, Yeah, right, when they didn't believe him. But they waited until he'd spoken before they said it.

“No, I'm
not
in trouble,” said Danny, breaking a bit of bread and stabbing it against the plate. “
They
might be, because they've
disappeared
, like I told you.
I
went to school and then tried to look for them, but they weren't anywhere.”

Aunt Kathleen raised an eyebrow. He could tell she was wondering why he'd gone to school when his parents weren't around. But she obviously decided to believe him, because all she said was, “You've no idea where they went? Did they say anything?”

Danny shook his head again.

“I'll try ringing them,” said Aunt Kathleen. “I'll try their mobiles. And if they don't answer, I'll call the police.”

“Don't call the police,” Danny said, before he could stop himself. “Please don't. Please.”

Aunt Kathleen narrowed her eyes again. “We've got to find them, Danny. Something might have happened to them. Why wouldn't we call the police?”

He felt his face go red at the embarrassment of knowing something he wasn't supposed to know. Now that he was fairly certain they weren't dead, there was even more reason to find them himself and not get any authorities involved. “Because … well … they aren't supposed to leave me alone, are they? I don't mind, it isn't a bad thing, I don't care … but the police wouldn't think that, would they? If you call the police and then they find Mum and Dad, they might … they'd send them to prison, wouldn't they? They might…”

“Hmph.” Aunt Kathleen snorted through her long nose, considered him for a moment longer, and then picked up his empty plate. “Of course they won't send them to prison. Don't be silly.”

“But they will! Or they'll at least get into loads of trouble, and it'll be all my fault, and I'll get taken away, and…”

“Danny!” Aunt Kathleen stopped, plate in midair. “Of course it isn't your fault. Your mum and dad shouldn't go off like that—you know they shouldn't. I've told them they shouldn't. Maybe it
is
time someone else told them that they shouldn't, someone they might actually listen to, for a change.”

Danny felt his heart begin to beat faster. This was what happened when you got stupid adults involved. They did everything wrong.

“If you call the police, I'll run away!” he said, half shouting, half getting up from the table. “I will! Don't call them! I'll run away right now. You can't stop me!”

Aunt Kathleen grabbed his shoulder and then put the plate back on the table with a tight hand that stayed clenched around the white rim. Her fingers dug into Danny's shoulder, making him wince.

After a moment, she relaxed and took her hand off the plate but still held on to his shoulder. “All right,” she said. “Calm down. I'll make a bargain with you. You stay here tonight, safe where I can see you, and I'll try calling them on their phones, now and in the morning, and if they haven't come back by then and I still can't get hold of them, we'll call the police. Agreed?”

He was going to say, I've tried calling them and they don't answer, but it was better for her to think she was doing something useful. At least it would keep her mind off calling the police. So he said, “It's probably nothing, really. I mean, they're always going off to look at storms. It probably isn't anything bad at all.”

She snorted again, quietly this time, and as her hand released his shoulder, a tingling rush of warmth shot down his arm.

*   *   *

Tom came wandering in to keep Danny company while Aunt Kathleen used the phone in the study. He was supposed to be studying for exams but instead had his face buried in a copy of
Farmers Weekly
.

“Hiya, Danny,” he said, sitting down and reaching for a cold potato without looking up from the page. “Whatcha doing here?”

Tom was always eating, although he never seemed to get any fatter. He was tall and broad like Aunt Kathleen, but with much paler blond hair, and his arms were longer than Danny's legs. He was the kind of powerful big that Danny wanted to grow into, but whatever his parents promised him, Danny had a suspicion that he was never going to be as tall or as strong as Tom. What was nice about Tom, though, was that he wasn't always trying to prove how great he was. He'd chucked Danny over his shoulder and thrown him into the duck pond a couple of years ago, but he'd never tried it again.

Danny said, “My mum and dad have gone. No one knows where they are.”

“Mum'll find them,” said Tom, taking another potato.

In about three seconds, thought Danny, he'll ask me if I want to see the cows. One, two …

“D'you want to come and see the cows?” asked Tom. “We've got some nice calves at the moment.”

“It's dark,” said Danny.

“S'okay, there's lights in the barn. I'm going to do the last round in a bit. Come round with me.”

Danny really didn't care about the cows. He quite liked feeding bottles to the orphaned calves, but there was something about the way cows looked at you that made you think they were plotting something.

“I'm all right,” he said. “I'm kind of tired, actually.”

“Okay,” said Tom. He never really talked for the sake of it.

There was silence for a few moments.

“Tom?” Danny asked eventually.

Tom turned a page. “Yep?”

“What would you do if you woke up and your mum was missing?”

Tom raised his eyes and looked at Danny. His bangs had grown too long; he had to peer out from underneath them.

“Dunno,” he said. “Well, I'd get the milking done, obviously.”

Really? But then, Danny had gone to school, hadn't he?

“You wouldn't, like, have a party or something?”

Tom grinned. “Yeah, maybe later.”

“Would you call the police?”

Tom shrugged. “Dunno. I guess I don't know what I'd do. What did you do?”

“I … went to school.…” said Danny.

“Dork,” said Tom.

“And then I found this notebook and it said about this old guy, so I went to see him.…” Danny trailed off, no longer sure which bits of his conversation with Abel Korsakof had been unacceptably weird and which ones hadn't.

“And he didn't know anything?”

“Well, he sort of did.…”

He could show Tom the map, see if Tom knew where it was and how to get there, and then Tom might come along with him too, just to keep him company.

It was sort of a plan. He was just trying to work out the best way to introduce the idea when Aunt Kathleen came back into the room.

“No answer,” she said. “Sounds like their phones are off. And as for you, mister, if you're not going to help Tom on the evening rounds, I think it's high time for bed.”

For once, Danny didn't wait to be told a second time, or to argue over the hands of the clock. The day had been long enough. He stumbled upstairs to the little yellow guest room where he always stayed at the farm, and Tom found a pair of old striped pajamas that were huge on Danny even though they hadn't fit Tom for years. Then, too tired even to be haunted by thoughts of Abel Korsakof's scarlet face or the blood that had dribbled from his leathery nose, Danny sank into bed, closed his eyes, and let sleep overpower him in one huge, snapping gulp.

CHAPTER 7

THE ACORN

“Wrong!” Sammael snapped, striding into the shed. “He's mine. Put him down!”

The short woman paused. She had already gathered up the corpse of Abel Korsakof into her arms and was cradling him like a baby, her tangled silver hair falling onto his face.

“Er … no?” she said, flicking her hair back and double-checking the corpse's eyes. They had the full amount of soft humanity left in them. He was definitely hers.

“I bought him fifty years ago,” said Sammael, thrusting an open notebook under her nose and indicating a line with one of his slender fingers. “Abel Korsakof. He's mine, not yours. You might be Death, but you don't get them all, not even in the end.”

Death read the entry, her scarlet eyes hardening to crimson. Sammael didn't usually get things wrong. In fact, she made more errors than he did, which she blamed on relentless overwork. The entry was all correct, signed by Abel Korsakof himself. He'd received something called the Book of Storms and fifty years to read it in.

“But the date's wrong,” she said. “The fifty years aren't up until next month. He shouldn't be dead. He shouldn't
be able
to be dead. What did you do to him?”

Other books

Steady by Ruthie Robinson
Forbidden Legacy by Diana Cosby
Deception by C. J. Redwine
Worth the Trouble by Becky McGraw
Black Smoke by Robin Leigh Miller