Panting she’d crouched on the floor, pulling futilely on the chain where it was bolted to the bench. She rubbed the skin raw on her palms. But she kept on tugging.
What in God’s name was happening in the house? She didn’t want to imagine the scene but she couldn’t help it: Nicole writhing in agony beneath the beasts as they tore off her clothing and invaded her most private places.
When she heard Ellie scream she vomited on the floor.
‘No… no… no…’
She’d wept.
She woke up without any awareness of having slept. Daylight poked tremulous fingers through the chinks in her prison walls. In darkness she’d been spared much of her prison’s appearance, and now she would have preferred for night to fall again. In this weird half-light she was reminded of a haunted house, and every shifting shadow, every creak of wood or shuffling animal became a demonic creature coming to drag her down to hell.
A plate with some scraps of meat and beans sat on the floor next to her. A spoon had been thrust into the food. There was a chipped jar containing water. A bucket so she could go to the toilet. She resisted them all, until thirst won out and she gulped down the tepid water. It was only after downing the water that she realised that, at some point in the night, one of the monsters had come to her. She’d lain there oblivious while he’d stood over her. The thought made her skin crawl.
She again fought her chain, with less success than before. Her palms became a mass of weeping blisters. She wept too.
She must have slept again because the next thing she knew the gargoyle was back. He grabbed at her hands, inspected them with an angry expression. He struck her in the face again. ‘You are an ungrateful bitch. I tried to make you as comfortable as possible, and this is how you’ve repaid me?’
‘Please? Why are you doing this to us? You have to let us go.’
He struck her again, using his curled fist to jab her under the ribs. Jay collapsed on the floor, her arms wrapped around the scalding white heat in her body. Never in her life had she been hurt in such a way. But it was only the start. His fingers dug under her ribs again, probing at the point where her liver nestled, and if she thought that the punch was awful she had to think again. Not that she could string a coherent sentence together, and managed only a groan of agony that had her lips buzzing.
Next the man moved to her neck. She tried to pull away but there was no strength in her. He unlocked the leather collar from her throat, but it was no relief, because in the next instant he’d spanned her neck and sunk his fingertips into the nerves under her ears. Pain jabbed to the tip of her jaw and she drooped in his grip. The man adjusted his hand and now his fingers dug into her carotid arteries. Thankfully she did not experience pain this time, only the billowing black wings of a vulture fluttering through her mind.
When next she opened her eyes she was lying in the wooden coffin set in the desert floor and all three men were standing over her. Each held aloft a tin sheet and a chain. They were talking amongst themselves but she couldn’t make out their words. Someone was wailing and at first she thought it was Nicole or the girl.
‘Shut up!’
Blinking up at the trio of ogres standing over her, she realised the command had been snapped at her. She was the source of the wailing. She shut up, tried to lift her arms to plead with them but found her wrists had been bound beneath the small of her back. She tried to sit up.
Brent leaned into the box and forced her down with a boot heel.
‘Do not move, goddamnit!’
Jay opened her mouth to beg, but knew that these pitiless monsters would only punish her for it.
‘We can’t trust you to stay put in the shack,’ the cowboy said, adjusting his hat with the swipe of his wrist. The chain dangling from his fist rattled like a viper’s warning. ‘So we’re moving you here. Now, if you prove yourself, then perhaps we’ll let you out. But—’
The gargoyle interjected, ‘Try to escape and I’ll do worse to you than you’ve already suffered.’
Carson — that was the cowboy’s name she recalled — chuckled at his friend’s bluntness. ‘By God, Samuel! Say it like it is, why don’t ya?’
‘She’s got to learn to behave,’ he said as though talking about a naughty schoolgirl.
The tin sheets had been piled on top, sealing her in, and Jay lay in stunned silence as the chains locked her in position. Her mind was in a state of close-down. Shock, she realised.
Only when the faint strains of screaming filtered into her prison did she vocalise her terror, but this time on behalf of her friend and young Ellie.
Perhaps it was her screaming that overtaxed her, because she’d drifted then into Stygian darkness and had known nothing until waking, disoriented and bewildered, this morning.
Now, with those memories pulsing in her skull with each beat of her heart, she rubbed the rope on the shard of tin, growing ever more furious at her own ineptitude as for the third time she heard the screams of terror drifting on the desert wind.
12
I found the landscape stunning and surreal at the same time. A breeze was cutting across the valley from the north-east, causing a blanket of umber sand to obscure much of the first hundred feet or so at the bases of the mountains. From the low vantage of my GMC their crowns seemed to grow from the billowing dust, huge edifices sculpted by the elements. They had to be ancient ranges, now stripped of their outer shells that lay in a jumble of boulders at their feet displaying their immortal hearts. Strata laid down during different epochs banded the cliffs in myriad colours and textures the likes of which an artist could never conceive. Further to the north was what the Navajo had termed the Painted Desert: if this little-known area was anything to judge by, then that Mecca for tourists must have been truly remarkable.
Scott Blackstock had given me directions to the Logan homestead, but had also said that he’d never been there so couldn’t describe its layout. Apparently there was only one road in and out, but I detected dozens of minor trails leading through the hills, in older times probably traversed on horseback or foot. I suppose he was referring to an actual highway, because other than the compressed dirt I currently drove over there were no maintained roads. I was off the beaten track: a term that held significance here.
Since leaving the highway, I’d travelled the best part of twenty miles and knew that soon enough I’d have to abandon my vehicle. Not that I couldn’t drive all the way in, but I didn’t want to announce my arrival to the Logans. If indeed they had anything to do with the disappearance of the women, I wanted to discover that without them being aware of my presence. If there was nothing untoward then I’d leave them be. They sounded like arseholes, the type I normally went up against, but I couldn’t indulge myself while the women were still missing.
Two miles out from their ranch, I drove the GMC into a steep gulley that was hidden from view to anyone on the road below. I left the keys in the ignition. I wasn’t thinking about a quick getaway at the time, just being pragmatic. Should I never return to the vehicle, at least someone else might get some use out of it.
Taking a bearing off the sun, I headed due west, choosing to move steadily instead of jogging in. The water was a heavy weight in a rucksack on my back, but I’d secreted my weapons about my person. Within seconds I was lathered in perspiration, and glad that I’d driven here without the aid of the GMCs’ air-con, because I was at least part-way acclimatised to the oppressive heat. Stepping out of a chilled vehicle into this temperature I’d have possibly keeled over in a dead faint. It wasn’t quite Death Valley but near enough.
The going was easy on the road, but soon I veered off and entered the twisting canyons between the towering columns of rock. They weren’t the labyrinth I had assumed, and I could regularly view the sun so kept on track. Here, though, the ground was littered with boulders and drifts of red dirt stripped from the mountainsides and I had to be more careful. Twisting an ankle didn’t concern me, but making a noise did. Out here in the still desert, a falling rock would sound like a gunshot and alert anyone within a mile of my presence. Shaded by an overhang of rock, I chugged down an eighth of my water. It came nowhere near replenishing what had already soaked through my clothing and then evaporated into the overheated air. While there, I took out the Smith and Wesson revolver and checked it and each of the .357 shells thoroughly, for any grit or dirt that could cause it to misfire. Everything was in good order, but I was conscious that the firepower was limited. My usual guns, either a SIG Sauer P226 or 228, were automatics and could — depending on the magazine — lay down up to seventeen rounds without the need to reload. When I’d purchased this old-time gun from the rednecks at the truck stop it hadn’t occurred to me to check for a rapid loader. I was going to have to feed each bullet into the six chambers manually every time I depleted the ammo.