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- Steve Harris
Black Rock
Black Rock Read online
1 - Black Rock
The house wasn’t haunted.
It might have looked as if it had been designed and built solely for the purpose of housing ghosts, and it certainly seemed to have been planted in a landscape crafted to heighten its visually disconcerting effect, but it couldn’t be haunted.
And sitting in her red Ford Sierra estate on the shingle forecourt of the house, Snowdrop Dresden - known to her friends as Snowy or, depending on how recently she’d broken something, Dropsy - began to list the reasons why.
The first of these - There are no such things as ghosts -would normally have been enough. Snowy was not one of those people who lie in bed at night interpreting the noises of the house settling as spooks or creatures that go bump in the night. From the moment her book hit the floor and her head hit the pillow, Snowdrop J. Dresden slept the sleep of the dead. The expression fast asleep when applied to her was a gross understatement. Her ex-boyfriend Martin had coined the far more accurate term, full speed asleep. Consequently, Snowy didn’t often think about ghosts.
But sitting here looking at the big dark house - although the word mansion seemed more appropriate - the simple denial of the existence of ghosts didn’t seem enough. This house - Black Rock according to the crumbling sign at the gate - seemed to argue back.
So Snowy made a rational, and somewhat cynical, list of extras. The place looked as if it had been invented by the world’s most uninspired horror writer: Take one Victorian house, double its size, find a spooky location on the coast of North Cornwall - any outcrop of rock protruding into the Atlantic will do - place house on rock with the wild sea behind it and make it look as if it’s squatting there, ready to pounce. Put a dark, roiling sky above the sea. Two hundred yards to the left you can see the ruins of King Arthur’s Tintagel Castle; for miles to the right the bare cliff winds away. The nearest building, a small farmhouse, is three hundred yards back up the hill towards Tintagel. A narrow path leads towards the ruined castle, which itself is a good quarter of a mile from the village.
That was another good reason the house couldn’t be haunted. Real haunted houses would look just like any other ordinary house. Maybe a sixties semi, or one of those prefabs they made after the war. If ghosts were the spirits of dead people, they wouldn’t be confined to big foreboding houses, would they? People died all over the place so how come only houses like this seemed to feature ghosts?
‘And there isn’t a spooky atmosphere, either,’ Snowy added, nodding.
This might change when she got out of the car, she realized, and, fighting off a tingling in her spine which threatened to become a fully fledged shiver, she pushed open the door.
There was no spooky atmosphere.
It might have been late October and the clouds might have been building up out at sea and threatening lousy weather, but the breeze was warm and welcoming, the air was fresh and clean and, now she was out of the car, the house looked a great deal friendlier. It looked somewhere you could be snug and secure no matter what the weather. It looked like a place where you could make love on a fur rug in front of an open fire while a blizzard whirled outside and glowing coals from the fire wouldn’t even dare to pop and shower your naked bottom with sparks.
Smiling to herself at this unbidden sappy image, Snowy reached back into the car for her briefcase. She was not renowned for her innate special awareness or sense of direction. She was half an inch short. Her fingertips brushed the handle, but didn’t quite grasp it. Her hand came away from the case with the nails of her middle and ring fingers broken.
The two little curves of translucent nail looked like sickles with ragged cutting edges. Snowy looked at them and swore. My best ones yet, she inwardly complained, taking one of the nails between her teeth and tearing it off.
She glanced at the house. No one was watching her and the house itself didn’t feel as if it was watching her either, so that was another one in the eye for the haunted house thing.
She tore off the other broken nail, retrieved the case, slammed the car door and realized she hadn’t taken the key from the ignition.
Some days. Dropsy, she told herself, suddenly irritated, you’re like an old-fashioned Vaudeville act looking for somewhere to perform.
And her irritation grew because her own mind had just seen fit to use one of Martin’s favourite disparaging remarks about her. Now she found herself picturing his face and her irritation grew to anger. Martin had been banished from her mind for over two months now. She did not think about him any more. It was all over and good riddance to bad rubbish.
His face hung there in her mind’s eye, though, his features not a bit blurred by the passing weeks. The first few times he’d gone on business trips to the States, she’d had trouble hanging on to the memory of how he looked. His image would gradually diminish until all she retained was a pink oval face with thinning sandy hair and a gingery moustache. Back then, she’d loved him more than anything else in the world and had dearly wanted to hold on to that fading view; now, when she wanted to forget, he remained more sharply defined than ever, that infuriating ‘told you so’ expression of male superiority fixed to his face.
Well, Martin could ‘go fucking whistle’, as he’d been so fond of saying of other people. Snowy now told him so, aloud. She also told him that she might be a little scatter brained and clumsy occasionally, and she might have trouble telling her left hand from her right, or north from west but she was intelligent, compassionate, loving, caring, generous, a distinguished seller of personal computers, a damned good-looking woman, an animal in the bedroom (no thanks to ‘Call me Mr Missionary’) and perfectly able to exist in a world where there was no such thing as a freelance science fiction editor, bigot and male chauvinist extraordinaire called Martin Dinsey.
Snowy glanced at the house again, turned away and told Martin’s image (now looking distinctly pale and shocked, the way he had the day she’d stood before him armed with that mother of all weapons, a wooden rolling-pin) that she wouldn’t pee on him if he was on fire and that he could take. his Ferrari Dino (which she’d never been allowed to drive because, 1, she was a woman, and, 2, it was his car and he’d paid for it and wasn’t going to share it) and get out of her life before she did him some serious damage.
I could have killed you, Martin, Snowdrop called after her ex-lover’s fading image. Could have and would have. Now go away and stay away. It’s all over!
She straightened her skirt and dusted off her jacket, rearranging her face into its proper professional expression of poli�
�te confidence. Inside this big, old haunted house was a someone called Mr Winter, who wasn’t going to be a ghoul at all, but a perfectly nice (and possibly rich) man who wanted to buy a personal computer system. A very expensive one. And he would buy from her because she was incredibly good at her job and was going to offer him exactly the system he required. Then she could go home happy and spend the evening pleasing herself.
Snowdrop Dresden walked up the shingle forecourt towards Black Rock smiling, because feeling good about herself came much more easily since Martin’s passing than it had ever done before. Snowy thought she was going to like it inside the house. It felt a little as though she was going home.
She stood in front of the big oak front door looking for the bell while she treated herself to a quick fantasy in which her destiny had brought her here. Snowy had done a lot of fantasizing over the past year while her relationship with Martin had decayed. They had begun as fantasies which could have been entitled, How it’s going to be when I’ve sorted out my life, and turned into epics concerning Martin and violent death. Like an unused muscle in need of exercise, her mind had been loath to accommodate this mode of thinking at first, and then had gradually become toned. These days it had quickened to the point at which it could provide her with a story and background whenever she fancied; on the road, in the office, or alone in her bed and feeling randy. Sometimes these were short vignettes, and sometimes they came to her so rounded and rich in detail she thought she might be able to write them up into a novel one day.
The one that came to her now painted Mr Winter as a tall, good-looking man in his mid or late thirties, assertive and craggy faced. He would be warm and welcoming, like his house. His eyes would be ice-blue, his smile melting. He would take her to a large, white room with a huge oak desk and piles of electronic equipment and Snowy would imagine him pushing her gently down on to that desk and blush. He would explain that he was a freelance computer software designer or playwright or screen writer and show her his credits. He would laugh a lot and seem shy and hustle her down to the lounge where that log fire would be burning and that inviting fur rug would lie before the hearth. He would make her tea with pure Assam leaves and they would sip while she sold him a top-of-the-range Pentium system. As she closed the deal, he would ask her if he could take her to a restaurant some time when she wasn’t too busy…
The part of Snowy’s mind which wasn’t busily turning an ordinary working day into a perfect future, and Mr Winter into Mr Right, informed her that a sharp fireman’s hatchet would make barely a dent in Black Rock’s solid front door. Rapping on it with her knuckles made no discernible sound at all. There was a huge brass knob in its centre and one of those little spy-hole things set in the wood at head height, but there was no letter box, no bell and no knocker.
And no keyhole or lock, either, Snowy added, frowning to herself.
This last observation unsettled her a little. The fact that there was no apparent method of opening the door from the outside was odd, to say the least.
Maybe the brass knob opens it somehow, Snowy told herself, bending forward to inspect it. A lion like animal with a gargoyle face was embossed on it. The creature was truly ugly. The part of Snowy that always noticed cobwebs and dust in other people’s houses realized that the knob was unbelievably clean. There were many corners and angles in that representation of a demon, and in the real world, in houses that weren’t haunted, these would be the places that didn’t get clean when you polished.
So it’s new, she told herself.
But she didn’t think it was new and she didn’t even think it was brass any more - for one thing, its colour was too deep.
The knob appeared to be solid gold.
Bullshit! Snowy told the wide-eyed little girl inside her, who was threatening to leap out and take over. Get on your bike and ride!
Fingerprints! The awed little girl cried in a mixture of astonishment and delight, and for a few moments Snowy did not understand what she meant.
If Snowdrop J. Dresden had not been the kind of woman who refused to believe in ghosts or haunted houses, at this point she could well have decided that perhaps discretion was the better part of valour after all, and left Black Rock… because for the past twenty seconds or so she had been handling the demon door knob and there wasn’t a single fingerprint upon it.
Snowy reached for it again, watching closely this time. The moment before she made contact with it, the warmth of her approaching fingers misted the cool metal. She laid her hand on it. The misted area spread around the edge of her hand, then vanished. She took her hand away quickly. The door knob was totally unmarked.
Snowy suddenly realized she’d been standing here for quite some time. She rapped on the door again and while she was waiting, took her Ultraglow compact from her handbag and opened it. She checked her face in the mirror, told herself - as she always did - Yeah, that’s the same face you had when you left home this morning and my God, it’s still beautiful, then placed a thumb firmly in the centre of the mirror, rolling it and peeling it away carefully, the way the cop did it after she’d been busted for the one and only joint she’d ever smoked in her life.
Vi-o-la, mad-man, she thought, ein fingerprinten!
The print, made with the same thumb that wasn’t greasy enough to mark the door knob, was perfect. Like the ones she’d given the police in Exeter all those years ago, this one wasn’t an oval dab, but almost rectangular where she’d rolled it. The whorls, hooks and twists of her print were clearly visible.
She applied the same thumb to the door knob.
The knob misted as her thumb approached. She rolled it and removed it. There was no mark whatsoever.
Used up all your finger-grease?
Snowy tried the mirror again.
Nope, still plenty of that left.
She tried the door knob again.
Then she shook her head. ‘Well, that’s a bit of a mystery,’ she said aloud.
But it wasn’t necessarily a mystery of the genus Supernatur-alis, or even Bermudus Triangalis, it could be one of that arcane art Electronic Engineering. Lurking in Snowy’s past, along with the drugs bust and several other things she would rather not remember, was her crowning achievement, a degree in electronics. Because of this, she favoured the latter explanation of the door knob’s refusal to accept her finger -prints. It was obviously some pressure-sensitive gizmo used to open the door and probably coated with some grease-resistant stuff. The fact that she’d never yet heard of such a thing didn’t necessarily preclude its existence. Electronics, although difficult to wrap your mind around when you started trying to understand strange things like Josephson Junctions and the Double Slit experiment, was a practical science: the odd actions of minute particles might not be easy to underst
and, but someone who did could harness an effect and do something useful with it (like making the computers she sold, for example).
Snowy rapped out a few Morse code messages on the hard door: Let me in, Hello, it’s me, and Open Sesame but none had any effect.
Except that when she looked again, something had happened. To the were-lion embossed into the knob. She was (almost) certain it had been open, the last time she looked; now it was closed and the creature’s gargoyle head wore a self-satisfied smirk.
Snowy looked at it for a second, feeling a variant on the old deja-vu sensation - which she knew was caused by an occasional glitch in the optical pattern-recognition part of your brain. This feeling wasn’t so much, I have lived through this before, but rather as if the world about her had subtly altered - as if to accommodate her within an alternate history it had prepared earlier.
There was a sharp metallic click! from behind her and Snowy spun around, suddenly certain that Mr Winter was out on the forecourt, watching her.
No one was there.
Way up on the hill where the nearest farm building stood, a black dog leapt up on to a trailer and froze, facing in her general direction. It was so far away Snowy could not make out the breed but she got the distinct feeling that it was some kind of a pointer and that it was pointing at her.
She looked back at the long, steep track she had driven down to get here, then at the black clouds which were sweeping in off the sea and wondered how you would get back up that track in a vehicle if it rained. The track - which was barely more than a widened footpath - was unmade and had been pretty muddy on the way down. If it rained hard, she was going to spend a good long time sitting in the car and listening to the wheels spin while she fought to keep the car from sliding off the edge of the track and falling down to the rocky ground below.