In the town, he tried to look through windows, but they were covered with black cloth on the inside.
As he hurried to his old home, he saw that figures approached. A man in white, and another dressed in a strange-looking suit with goggles; four more men and women ran with them. They had white, blazing eyes and were eager to reach their destination. In fact, so eager that they brushed Tommy aside as if they'd not seen him. Sam barked furiously. The runners had already vanished into the alleyways.
Tommy wasn't hurt. Nowadays, nothing hurt him, unless you can describe missing your parents and your sister as hurting. After stroking Sam for while to soothe him, he sensed he should leave the town behind for tonight. That hole in the ground at Gallows Crossroads could have been calling his name; its pull became irresistible. So he turned his back on the town. Overhead, black crosses appeared. A mournful drone grew louder. As he passed by a cemetery one of the crosses dropped a silver object: a cylinder, which screamed to earth, to plunge into the graves. An enormous bang followed.
Tommy watched the explosion rip open tombs. Coffin wood, skulls, bones â they all rushed into the sky. Up, up went the dark pall of debris before cascading back down again. The boy observed all this without any real interest. Strange events occurred all the time now. It was as if he'd become separated from the ordinary world and from reality. Nothing really impacted on his life now. That is, apart from Sam, so he hugged the frightened dog. Soft fur pressed against the side of his face as he murmured, âDon't worry, boy. I'll look after you.'
Once the dog had stopped trembling, Tommy left the steaming crater in the cemetery and trudged back to his resting place beneath the stone.
Three
Beth Layne woke the moment the bomb fell. There first came a deep thud. Just after that, something that resembled thunder. Beth sat in an armchair in the hotel basement. Sally had gone to sleep on a bench against one wall. As always, when Sally woke with a start (as she did now), she looked as anxious as a child. The unfamiliar surroundings startled her.
âBeth . . . Beth! Where are we?'
âDon't worry, you're safe. We've arrived at the hotel in Whitby.'
âUh . . .' Sally rubbed her eye. âI dreamt we were still on that train. I thought we'd never get here. Where's the owner?'
âI don't know. The moment I sat down here I fell asleep. I can't believe how exhausted I was by the journey.'
Sally sniffed. âThere must be something in the sea air. I can't even remember closing my eyes. Uh, my shoulder's sore from lying on this hard wood.'
Beth checked her watch. They'd been in the basement for more than an hour. The sirens no longer wailed. The falling bomb, however, had been shockingly loud.
It must have been a close one
, she thought, with a shiver,
but I won't tell Sally that. There's no point in scaring her.
âI hope we won't be down here much longer.' Sally shuddered. âIt's a scary tomb of a place. I keep expecting Boris Karloff to walk in.'
âAt least we're safe from the air raid, that's the important thing.' Yet Beth had to agree. This was one creepy pit, alright. The basement roof and walls consisted of dull red-brick from which cobwebs fluttered.
It would make the ideal dungeon
, she told herself. She could just imagine half-starved prisoners chained to the walls. The only light came from a bare bulb fixed to the ceiling. Even the light didn't want to venture into the corners, lest it find something frightening there. She'd not seen shadows like these before, which pooled in the recesses of the walls. They possessed a liquid darkness.
Shadows in Whitby aren't like shadows found anywhere else
, she thought.
Whitby shadows can pour out of their lairs to engulf victims. Whitby shadows drown you . . .
She clenched her fists.
Why am I letting my imagination run away with me like this?
Her mind swam with the strange events of the day. The Whitby set in the studio that never actually existed. Her being pursued by those demon creatures (which couldn't have existed, either â could they?); then the arrival at this strange coastal town. One that seemed to have landed here from some occult realm. Then she'd found the hair in the entrance to Arguments Yard. What if . . .
âBeth? Anyone home?'
âPardon?'
Sally shook her head. âYou were miles away.'
âSorry. I can hardly keep my eyes open.'
âOnly you could sleep through a bombing raid.'
âThe planes must have gone by now.'
âDid you hear me? When I told you what I'd found? Look.'
Beth saw that Sally had bent at the waist to examine an object on the floor. It resembled another of those liquid-looking shadows. Sally's eyes were wide with wonder. And what was happening to her hair? The curls fluttered. Some were straightened out to stream upwards.
âIsn't this weird?' Sally exclaimed. âWhere do you think it goes?'
Fully awake now, Beth left her armchair to approach the puddle of shadow. To her surprise she saw an iron grate set in the floor. The thick rust suggested its great age. And the size of it? Easily as large as a house door, it could have served as the barred gate to a prison cell. Sally crouched in order to gaze down through the bars.
âFeel that air rushing through?' Sally exclaimed. âIt smells of the sea. Do you think it leads down to the harbour?'
A voice cracked across the basement, âKeep away from that. It's dangerous.'
They turned to see the owner of the hotel sweep towards them.
âYou! Sally!' she snapped. âGet back from it. Right back. I don't want you anywhere near it.'
âBut I only wanted to see ifâ'
âKeep away! I won't have your death on my conscience.'
Sally appeared so stung by the flurry of stinging words that Beth flew to her defence. âStop that! Sally was only curious.'
âBelieve me, curiosity in this town gets you into serious trouble.' Eleanor advanced from the shadows, carrying a tray on which there was a silver coffee pot and mugs. She set them down on the table.
Beth continued, âSo you own this hotel, it doesn't give you the right to berate my friend like she's a stupid child.'
Eleanor jabbed a finger at the grate. âI hate that bloody thing. It scared me to death as a child. Every time I came come down here on an errand I convinced myself that either I'd fall down it, or a great hulking Frankenstein thing would push open the grate and grab hold of me.' She steadied her evidently jangled nerves with a deep breath. âThere is a horrible monster down here.' A smile played on her lips. âAnd that monster is Miss Eleanor Charnwood, hotelier, spinster, and thoroughly bad-tempered woman.' She offered Sally a hank of her hair. âGo on, pull. Pull it really hard. I deserve it.'
Sally appeared startled at being invited to torture the woman. Then she laughed when she realized that Eleanor was making a joke of her own outburst. âNo, I'll do no such thing, Eleanor. You were frightened for my safety, that's all.'
âThen we're all friends again?' She positioned the mugs on the table.
Sally gushed, âOh yes, absolutely.'
Beth nodded.
This is an unusual woman
, she decided.
She's got a wacky sense of humour, but she seems to be wearing a mask. The real Eleanor is concealed underneath. I'm sure of it.
Allowing herself a smile, also, Beth decided she must remain on guard. Something didn't ring true about Eleanor Charnwood. Beth glanced around the basement. âSo â this is where you dispose of the bodies?' A joke with a serious question in the centre. Not that Beth suspected Eleanor to be a murderer, but that macabre quip might help dislodge the mask.
âOh, definitely.' She picked up the coffee pot. âAt night I hoist up the big iron trap-door and drop them into the tunnel below. All those men who told me they loved me, but had every intention of sneaking out of the back door, never to return. No coffee, alas, but I have made hot chocolate.' She poured steaming liquid into the mugs.
âEleanor.' Sally beamed. âYou've got a devilish sense of humour.'
âIndeed I have, my dear. It keeps me sane in this insane world. Well, this insane hotel, really. Every night I say a little prayer to the patron saint of bomber pilots to drop a five-hundred-pounder on the bloody roof. Then freedom, delicious freedom.'
âBut you said you lived here as a child?'
âIndeed. Born here, I was. Along with my brother. Hotels are in the Charnwood blood. My cousin runs one in Leppington, just a few miles from here. My brother and I inherited when Mother died.' She tilted her head, listening. The cool flow of air from the iron grate toyed with her hair. âThe bombers must have got tired of Whitby and gone home. Anyway, we should be safe here. The masonry's awful thick. Thicker than a tomb, no doubt.'
Sally accepted the hot chocolate with a grateful sigh. âSo where does the tunnel go? The one you chuck your lovers into?'
âBeneath the grate is a pit that goes down seven feet, or so. It connects to a tunnel that runs about twenty yards in that direction.' She pointed at a wall. âIt opens out under one of the harbour quays. In years gone by, boatmen used it to deliver French brandy into the vaults of the hotel. Whitby was a haven for smugglers way back when. At high tide the sea comes rushing in to fill the tunnel â don't worry, it doesn't come up the shaft very far. You won't wake up to find your beds floating, or sharks biting your toes.' Beneath the ironwork, those liquid shadows filled the pit. âMy grandfather used to joke that you could dangle a baited line down there and catch a fish for your supper. Come on, drink your chocolate while it's hot. Brrr, cold as the grave down here, isn't it?'
âIt must be lonely living in a hotel when it's not in use,' Beth said.
âOh, I'm not on my lonesome, dear. Theo, my brother, lives here, too.'
Sally's eyes widened in shock. âThen why isn't he down here? We don't know for sure if the bombing has stopped.'
âWild horses won't drag him down here.' Her smile became artificial.
Ah ha, Eleanor, the mask is starting to slip.
The woman covered her change in expression by topping up their mugs again, while telling them it was difficult to get drinking chocolate, now the rationing of groceries was becoming severe. She added it was also near impossible to buy timber, because she wanted to lay stout boards over the iron grate in the floor. âIt's badly rusted. I don't want my guests falling through.'
âAnd joining your old lovers.'
âSally, my thoughts exactly.' The easy smile returned. âAnd you're to star in a film? And my hotel will be home for an entire troupe of actors? How exciting. Have you learnt your lines yet?'
Beth said, âWe've got the scripts, but Sally and I also have the task of finding locations for the filming.'
âBy all means, use the hotel. And let me know if I can be of any help in helping you scout suitable places to shoot your picture.'
âPerhaps you could be in it?' Sally gushed.
âReally?'
âAnd your brother.'
Again, a slip of the mask. âAh, no, he's not the acting sort.'
âCamera shy, Eleanor?' Beth wanted the question to dig through the mask.
Eleanor simply shrugged. âHe's not in the best of health, unfortunately. He stays in his own place. A little cottage in the hotel yard.' She set her mug down. âSo what's your film about, ladies?'
Beth told her, âIt's called
This Midnight Realm
. The government want to show the rest of the world how ordinary British families cope with day-to-day life in wartime. In this case, the families will be from Whitby.'
âAnd you'll be playing these ordinary Whitby folk?'
âYes.' Sally grinned. âI'm playing a wayward daughter â she lives for dancing the night away.'
Eleanor gave a long
Hmm.
âI would be careful what you tell the locals. One thing they won't take kindly to is what they see as pampered actors and actresses from London pretending to be them.'
âI'm not from London,' Sally protested. âI'm from Wakefield, and that's Yorkshire, too, like Whitby.'
âNevertheless. I'd keep the film's plot a secret, if you can, otherwise the locals will think you're making fun of them. Then, believe me, they'll turn hostile.'
âWe'll deal with it,' Beth told her.
âGood, because once they turn nasty on you they'll try and wreck your filming.'
âWe saw some of the hostility tonight,' Beth said.
âAh, Mrs Brady and her daughter.'
Sally exclaimed, âThe poor girl's teeth. They looked so strange. I mean . . . they were really tiny in her mouth. Like a baby's milk teeth. And I've never seen teeth as white as that before.'
âAh . . .' Eleanor collected the mugs on to the tray. âWhen Victoria was eighteen she got some kind of fever. She never fully recovered. There was an outbreak of it in the town about twenty years ago.'
Beth raised an eyebrow. âTwenty years ago? But Victoria didn't look much more than twenty herself.'
Another siren sounded. This one differed to the rising and falling cry that warned of imminent attack. The alert started with a very low note that rose into a sustained call across the town.
âThere goes the all clear.' Eleanor clapped her hands together. âI'll get you to your rooms.'
Sally checked her watch. âTwo o'clock in the morning. At least we should be able to get a few hours' sleep. God willing.'