Scott Mariani
Bring Him Back
Prologue
Deep in the snowy pine forest, a young girl was running barefoot for her life.
She was almost fifteen. Her name was Kristina Braun, but for the last several months, she’d barely been aware of her own identity.
They had taken it from her.
They would strip your soul away, if you let them. They would steal your mind.
They. She had no idea who it was who’d been holding her captive for so long and doing all these horrible things to her. She only knew that she must get away — and now, suddenly, after all these months of pretending to go along with them while secretly planning her escape, her one chance had finally come.
Except that they had no intention of letting her get away so easily. As she stumbled wildly through the snow, tree branches whipping her face and her bare arms torn by brambles and thorns, she could hear the voices of her pursuers close behind.
‘I see her!’ yelled one of them. An instant later, there was a muffled crack and something thwacked into a pine trunk just a few inches from her. Not a bullet, but some kind of dart. All she could do was keep on running. The trees seemed to thin out ahead. Could there be a road? Could there be a village?
Then, suddenly, there was nowhere to run. She skidded to a halt, teetered on the edge and almost fell, sending a shower of powdery snow down the sheer face of the ravine to the wooded valley far below. There was no road. No village. Just the stark, wintry emptiness of the mountains and forests all around her.
Shuddering with cold and fear, Kristina glanced desperately around her for another escape route. It was too late. The voices of her pursuers seemed to come from all sides. They’d cut her off.
She turned back to face the edge of the ravine. The freezing mountain wind whistled about her.
She knew what these people would do to her if they caught her, if she let them take her back to that awful place. The same thing they’d done to Angie. Perhaps something even worse.
No. She wasn’t going to let that happen.
Kristina closed her eyes. Visualised the faces of her parents. These last months she’d often thought about how frantic and desperate they must be, wondering where she was, sometimes hoping she’d come back, perhaps sometimes thinking they’d never see her again.
And now she knew for sure they never would.
Kristina said goodbye and stepped out into the void.
1
The sun was melting into a golden shimmer on the water as another long, warm May day came to an end. As usual, the family who lived in the big house overlooking the bay were eating a late dinner at the long table in the conservatory dining room. As usual, too, these days, the fair-haired boy had said little during the meal. His mother sat opposite him, frowning as he toyed listlessly with the food on his plate.
The boy was twelve, and his name was Carl Hunter. The man sitting to his right with his back to the window wasn’t his real father. And as the boy saw it, this wasn’t a real family. It was a stupid pretend family and it wasn’t the same any more. In all kinds of ways.
Carl laid down his cutlery and shoved his half-empty plate away from him. ‘Finished. I want to go and watch TV.’
‘You’re not finished, Carl,’ his mother said. ‘And there’s pudding to come. I made apple crumble.’
Carl shook his head and started getting up. ‘Don’t want any.’
‘You should ask your mother properly if you can leave the table,’ said the man who wasn’t Carl’s father.
‘Please can I leave the table?’ the boy muttered sullenly.
‘No,’ his mother said. ‘You can’t. This family sits down to eat together.’
Carl let out a short laugh. ‘Yeah, right.’
‘You keep on like that, young man, and you won’t have a TV to watch,’ his mother warned him. Her face was turning paler, like it always did when she was about to erupt.
The man laid down his fork and gently touched her arm. ‘Jessica, it’s okay.’ Turning to Carl, he smiled and said, ‘Hey, you know what I did today? Fixed the plug on your Novag. There was a broken connection inside. I’ve soldered it all up, so it should work fine now. How about that, eh?’
The Novag chess computer was one of Carl’s favourite things, but he’d accidentally damaged the plug a few days earlier. If he was pleased it was fixed, he didn’t show it.
‘What do we say, Carl?’ his mother said. ‘That was very nice of Mike, wasn’t it? Carl, what do we say?’
The boy gave Mike the frostiest scowl he could manage. ‘Thanks, Mike.’
‘It’s on the table in the study,’ Mike said in the same soft tone. ‘Maybe you’d like to go and try it out, hmm? On you go, then.’
The boy left the room without a word. They heard him go stumping off towards the study to retrieve the repaired plug, then a moment later his footsteps on the stairs as he hurried up to his room. The door banged shut.
‘Thanks so much for undermining me like that,’ Jessica Hunter said tersely.
‘I didn’t mean to undermine you,’ Mike told her. ‘And I don’t mean to spoil him, either. But he’s been through a lot, you know? All the changes he’s had to adapt to. Can’t be easy for him.’
Jessica sighed and laid her hand on his. ‘And you’re trying so hard. I’m sorry.’
‘Me too. I’m just trying to be a dad to him, that’s all. I love him as if he was mine.’
‘I know,’ she said, and smiled.
From two floors above, they could hear Carl’s music playing.
‘Oh, I just remembered,’ Jessica said, brightening up. ‘Alison called earlier. We’re invited to a party at their place next Saturday. I said we were free. Already booked the sitter. That okay?’
‘Sounds great,’ Mike said as he started clearing the plates. ‘I’ll fetch the pudding, shall I? You want cream or custard?’
‘Better go easy on the cream,’ she said. ‘Have to get into a size eight by next week.’
He was about to make his usual ‘you’re not fat, Jessica,’ remark when the sudden noise cut him short.
They both froze. Mike dropped the plates on the table. ‘What the—?’
It had come from down the hall.
‘That was the front door,’ Jessica said in alarm, looking at him with big eyes. It was a thick, heavy door. Despite the almost nonexistent crime rate on Jersey, they kept it locked and bolted.
Carl’s music was still blaring upstairs.
Before Mike and Jessica could say anything more, they heard the sound again.
A heavy thump. The splintering of glass. Someone was smashing their way inside the house.
They exchanged horrified glances, then Mike rushed out of the dining room and into the hallway. ‘Stay there,’ he yelled back at her. The crashing had stopped as suddenly as it had begun.
‘Mike! No!’ For a second she stayed in her chair, paralysed by fear. Then she leapt to her feet and ran out of the room after him. ‘Mike?’
Mike was standing in the hallway, staring towards the wrecked front door. There was a man in the entrance. A ragged figure. Crazed-looking. His beard and hair were long and straggly, like a tramp’s. His eyes were wild and his fists were tight around the handle of the sledgehammer he’d used to break the door in.
‘Oh my God,’ Jessica gasped. ‘Drew!’
The sound of music from Carl’s room stopped.
The intruder let the sledgehammer drop from his hands. It hit the shiny hardwood floor with a clang. ‘Hello, Jessica,’ he said in a strangled voice.