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<title>Chapter 18</title>
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<h2>18</h2>
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<p>Castlebank Distillery is one of the few places in Levenford
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which has night-shift working in winter. The demand for the export
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scotch whisky blend always soared before Christmas. There were
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orders to be shunted out and stacked onto the big containers that
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came and went at all hours heading for the docks in Glasgow for
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worldwide distribution.</p>
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<p>Latta's yard just south along the bank was still noisy with the
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eerie buzz of the welders and sapphire lightning flashes sparked
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and flared along the length of the growing pyramid and steel which
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would be towed out of the estuary and up to the north sea before
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the summer, all things going to plan.</p>
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<p>The distillery is a square set, brick built eyesore of a
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building which towers over the south of the town, next to the tidal
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basin on the river. What it lacks in grace and style and visual
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appeal is more than made up for by the fact that it pays the wages
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of one in every four families and that alone helps generate most of
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the other business in the town. For that, the Levenford folk could
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put up with the stale-towel smell of the maltings and the cloud of
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steam which rose in a plume day and night. They could put up with
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the fact that ten percent of the men had a drink problem because
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when the business involves millions of gallons of high-voltage
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amber liquid it is impossible to account for every drop. Without
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the distillery, Levenford could have rolled up its pavements and
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turned off the lights like many a similar sized town in Scotland
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had done in previous years.</p>
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<p>It wasn't until much later that Elsa Quinn remembered seeing the
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woman in the corridor when she'd taken a break from the bottling
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line to get a drink of water from the fountain. She hadn't been
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paying much attention, mainly due to the fact that she needed the
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water to swallow the tablets for the headache which had been
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building up for the past hour. Elsa was prone to migraines and when
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one of them started screwing its way in behind her eyes, her vision
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would waver and her tongue would feel thick and numb. She only
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recalled the woman in a vague way and couldn't put a name to
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her.</p>
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<p>"I wasn't paying much attention," she was to tell Jack Fallon.
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"I had a splitting headache, but we don't get much time off the
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bottling lines, because they go too fast. I had to wait until a
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supervisor stepped in."</p>
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<p>The incident she was a witness to happened two hours after Jack
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had left Lochend Hospital and less than an hour before he'd woken
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up with a sudden and certain knowledge clanging alarm bells in his
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head. Then the phone had rung, two calls, one after the other.</p>
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<p>Down in Castlebank Distillery the tea-break bell had rung, a
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harsh jangle of sound that grated on everybody's nerves. In the
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staff canteen, the plastic chairs were scraped back from tables,
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cigarettes stubbed out into overflowing ashtrays. The dregs of
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strong tea were quickly swallowed or left to go cold as the
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lineworkers made for the exits and back to work. In seconds, the
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hubbub of noise had faded to the relative silence of the canteen
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girls clattering cups and saucers and sweeping the floor tiles.</p>
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<p>Sixteen-year-old Carol Howard had worked in the building since
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August when she'd left school with a diploma in typing and cookery.
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She was a pleasant girl with long dark hair which hung down her
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back in a tidy and quite elegant plait. She worked on the floor
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above the bottling plant, in the store-room where the pallets of
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cardboard whisky cases were laid flat in library-stack lines and
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where boxes of bottle-tops and labels lined the walls, almost
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twenty feet high. Normally the store-room workers and the bottling
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women had staggered work-breaks, but on the night shift the stores
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department operated on an emergency basis. If a box of labels was
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needed somewhere, or a fresh carton of tops, Carol would take the
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call, mark in the request on her terminal, and get one of the men
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to carry the delivery down to the floor below.</p>
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<p>She'd spent the twenty minutes in the canteen with a crowd of
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girls her own age, three of whom had been in the same class at
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school. The talk was all of discos and boyfriends and how they all
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hated the job already, although Carol was quietly pleased about the
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fact that she'd landed an office job and didn't have to wear the
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sky-blue overalls which marked the rest of the girls as bottlers.
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Her nails were never broken, nor her hands scadded from the
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constant use of the washers and the incessant drip of whisky. The
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girls on the lines might have been paid more for their manual
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labour, but to Carol, working in an office give her the edge.</p>
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<p>When the bell had jangled, they'd all moved to the corridor,
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surrounded by the raucous laughter of the older women as they
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trailed back up to the third floor by the west stairs. Carol stood
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for a moment at the turn of the stairs, talking to two of the
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girls, making tentative arrangements for Friday night, when one of
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the supervisors called down to the two others, telling them to get
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a move on. One of them shrugged and both of them turned to follow
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the rest along the upper passage. Carol continued up the stairs and
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was about to enter the store-room when she realised she'd left her
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bag slung over the back of her chair in the canteen.</p>
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<p>"Damn," she said under her breath, turned, and headed back along
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the corridor. As she passed the service elevator, she saw the woman
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leaning against the wall and continued past for several steps,
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before she turned. There was something about the woman's posture
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that caught her attention. She seemed to be sagging, as if she'd
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taken ill. Her face was familiar, but Carol couldn't place it. The
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girl came back towards the junction. The light on the ceiling
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beside the broad grey door had gone out. This part of the
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passageway was in shadow.</p>
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<p>"Can I help you?" Carol asked the woman. There was no response.
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The woman turned her body a little, facing away into the shadow.
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The girl noticed there was a rip on her tights and scuff marks on
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what looked like sensible walking shows. There was also a dark
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smear on the back of the woman's coat, as if she'd leaned against a
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wall.</p>
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<p>"Are you alright?" she persisted, but still there was no
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response. The woman mumbled something, but it was too soft and low
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to make out.</p>
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<p>The girl took another two steps forward, about to ask again,
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when the door at the far end of the corridor, round the bend from
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the elevator, swung open. One of the storemen popped his head
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out.</p>
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<p>"Hey Carol. They need some export labels on line six."</p>
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<p>"Right Jim," she called back. "I'll be with you in a
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minute."</p>
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<p>The woman hadn't moved at all. Carol hesitated a moment, torn
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between concern for the stranger and the need to get down to the
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canteen for her bag before it disappeared. She also had to get back
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up and make sure the lines got their labels or she would get the
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blame for a break in production. She turned away and went down the
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stairs two at a time. As she did so, all the lights in the corridor
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went out.</p>
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<p>She hurried to the canteen and opened the door. One of the
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cleaners was sweeping up close to where she'd been sitting at the
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far end. The woman was just reaching out for the small bag on the
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chair when Carol got there.</p>
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<p>"Oh thanks. I knew I'd left it somewhere," the girl said. A look
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of disappointment flitted across the cleaner's face. She shrugged
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and handed the bag over. Carol thanked her again, slung it over her
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shoulder and walked quickly back to the door, her heels clicking
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staccato on the tiles. She started to take the stairs again, then
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remembered the lights had gone out up on the fourth floor. The
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corridor up there was long and narrow, and at this time of night,
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there was little activity, Carol was not scared of the dark, but
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she had a healthy regard for it. Instead of taking the stairs, she
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walked the ten yards to the service lift, hit the up button and
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listened to the whine and clank as the carriage lowered iself to
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the second floor.</p>
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<p>There was a metallic thump and the doors accordioned open with a
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breathless hiss. Carol stepped inside, pressed button four and
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watched as the wall on the other side of the passageway shrank to a
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rectangle, a slit, then disappeared. The lift kicked under her feet
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and rose, rumbling upwards. She opened her bag to make a quick
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inventory, just to make sure nothing was missing.</p>
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<p>Then the lights went out and the lift juddered to a halt so
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suddenly that Carol lurched off-balance. Her bag dropped to the
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floor and her knuckle rapped painfully against the side of the
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cabin, causing her to let out a little high squeal of hurt and
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surprise. Her voice echoed tinnily on the inside of the cage.</p>
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<p>She was alone in the dark.</p>
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<p>For a second, the fact of it failed to register as her mind
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tried to understand what had happened. Then the impact of it
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swooped in on her. The lift had stopped and the lights had gone out
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and she was in the dark. There was not a sliver of light. Her eyes
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widened automatically as apprehension swelled to fright and then
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soared up to panic.</p>
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<p>At the age of three Carol had crawled into the cellar under the
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house in Whiteford Road and got stuck behind a jammed door in the
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dark cobwebby darkness. She'd been there for two hours until her
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mother had finally heard her panicked screams, and the nightmares
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had gone on for weeks after. Time had eventually healed the trauma.
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Yet the memory had lain dormant.</p>
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<p>Thirteen years and five months after the childhood scare,
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something in Carol Howard's mind unlocked and the memory woke up
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and came racing like a black express train out of a tunnel,
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shrieking all the while.</p>
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<p>Her heart did a jittery dance inside her, all out of step and
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her breathing was suddenly all too fast, backed up as her lungs
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gasped for more air than they could hold.</p>
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<p>The darkness was complete. The lights on the buttons had failed
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along with the overhead panel. She could hear her own breathing
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bounced back at her from the bare metal walls of the cage. Inside
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her ears, the fast pulse was a dizzying throb. Carol stepped
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forward and her foot snagged on the strap of her bag. She gasped as
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she tripped forward. For the second time her knuckle hit something
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solid, sending a shard of pain up to her elbow. She twisted and a
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long fingernail caught on the head of a rivet and ripped off to the
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quick. Underfoot something crunched. It sounded as though she'd
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trampled on a large insect.</p>
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<p>Fear swamped her. Carol's mouth opened in an automatic scream
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but no sound came out. In her mind, she could hear herself
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screaming, but her ears heard nothing, and that made the terror
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balloon. <em>She was stuck in the dark and she couldn't call for
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help.</em></p>
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<p>With no visual point of reference she was completely
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disorientated. She took one step and something else crackled under
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her shoe. She lurched to the left and slammed against the wall of
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the hoist, sending a bolt of pain across her shoulder. The force of
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it unlocked her breathing and the girl screeched as she had done in
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the cellar. Her outstretched fingers found the buttons and she
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stabbed and scrabbled at them, hitting none out of the ten.</p>
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<p>Nothing happened.</p>
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<p>Carol shrieked as loud as she could, hearing her cry shatter and
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fragment as it spanged between the walls and roof. She groped until
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she found the slit between the two sliding doors and hooked her
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nails in and tried to prise the edges apart. Another nail gave,
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pulling backwards with a burning twist of pain. The door remained
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shut.</p>
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<p>The girl's scream played itself out, leaving her breathless and
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panting, both hands planted against the wall. In her mind she saw
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the women leave at the end of the shift. If the lift was slow in
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coming, they would just walk down the stairs. She didn't know if
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anyone could hear her from the outside of the double safety doors.
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There was no window on to the corridor.</p>
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<p>The thought that she could be stuck in the dark all night, all
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alone in the lift shaft of an empty ten-storey building sent
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another jolt of panic through her and galvanised her into another
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fit of hysterical shouting. She battered at the door with the palms
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of both hands, a rapid urgent timpani which shook the metal cage
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and sent it clanking against the guide rails. The noise boomed up
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the shaft. The darkness squeezed at her. It felt tangible and
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thick. She couldn't see the walls, only feel the doors in front of
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her. The sides of the cabin could have been yards away, miles away,
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but in her fright, Carol could sense them close and getting closer,
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shrinking down to squash her in the dark. Her dread inflated,
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gripping her stomach, making her heart pound uncontrollably.</p>
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<p>Then, miraculously, somebody shouted.</p>
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<p>"Anybody in there?" The voice was muted, coming from some
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distance, or though several layers, but it was enough.</p>
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<p>"Oh yes!" Carol squawked, suddenly flooded with gratitude. She
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still couldn't see a thing. She was still trapped in a metal box
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eight feet by eight feet, all on her own, but the very fact that
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somebody <em>knew</em> where she was enough to swamp her with
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relief.</p>
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<p>"Down here. I'm stuck. Please help."</p>
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<p>"Where are you?" the thin voice called out.</p>
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<p>"I'm in the lift," she yelled.</p>
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<p>"Which floor?"</p>
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<p>Carol stopped to think. Her heart was still beating fast. She'd
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come in on the second floor. She'd pressed for four and the lift
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had risen. <em>How far</em>? She couldn't recall. People had faith
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in modern lifts. They pressed the button and waited for the bumpy
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stop and the swish of doors, trusting the machinery. Now it had
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failed and Carol realised she did not know whether she had gone up
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one or two floors. Or six.</p>
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<p>"I don't know. Just get me out of here," she called out in a
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jittery voice.</p>
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<p>The instant balm was fading fast. It was still dark and it still
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crowded in on her as if it had weight.</p>
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<p>Then up above, there was a thump and a heavy ringing vibration
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which shivered the floor of the cab and sent it rocking again.</p>
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<p>"What?" Carol cried. The floor lurched under her feet and she
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tripped forward again, arms out groping for the wall.</p>
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<p>"....the hell was that?" the unseen man shouted. It sounded as
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if he was above her.</p>
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<p>"What's happening?" Carol yelped.</p>
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<p>Another booming vibration resonated down to the cage. It
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shivered as if it had been struck a heavy blow, and the cables
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thrummed like deep bass strings. Carol slipped to the floor and
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landed on her handbag. Something sharp dug into the back of her
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thigh and her teeth clicked together with a snap.</p>
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<p>"Who's in there?" the man called out.</p>
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<p>"Me. Carol Howard. Can you get somebody to get me out of
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here?"</p>
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<p>"Alright love, we'll get the serviceman."</p>
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<p>She sat in the dark, hoping the engineer would come quickly.
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There was always one or two men working on the lifts. She didn't
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know if there was anybody on standby at night. The thought of
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spending much longer in the narrow dark squeezed her panic
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tight.</p>
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<p>Then right overhead, something hit the top of the cabin. The
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whole cage jerked and shuddered, rocking Carol on to her back. The
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sound was like a huge hammer blow. Carol squealed in fright.</p>
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<p>"What's going on?" the man called.</p>
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<p>Carol didn't reply. Above her, on top of the cage, she could
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hear movement.</p>
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<p>"Must be the engineer," she thought, grateful for the speed of
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the rescue. She knew there was a trapdoor somewhere on the top of
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the lift. That's how they'd get her out. She wondered if they would
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put a ladder down or just reach down and haul her up. She hoped the
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shaft wouldn't be too dirty or filled with spiders and cobwebs.
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They made her shudder, but she could bear the sight of them as long
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as she could get out of the dark.</p>
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<p>The lift quivered violently again. Overhead there was a scraping
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sound on the cabin roof, then a screech of protesting metal.</p>
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<p>"Hello?" she called out. "I'm down here."</p>
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<p>There was no response.</p>
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<p>Something moved. There was another metallic squeal and a thump.
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A splinter snapped off and clanged to the floor, followed by
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droplets of dust.</p>
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<p>"Can you put the light on?" she asked.</p>
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<p>The cables thrummed again and the lift lurched. Close by, she
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heard a grunt, then all of a sudden, the cage was filled with a
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foul, choking smell. Carol coughed, shuddering, and then for some
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reason her panic expanded on a bubble of dread. She felt the hairs
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on the back of her neck twist and shrivel as the skin puckered. A
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truly cold sweat soaked out of the pores under her arms and on her
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back. She felt her bladder give.</p>
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<p>Above her, something snuffled like an animal scenting the air
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and then let out a low growl.</p>
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<p>"Who's there?" Carol whimpered. She crawled backwards until her
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shoulder blades were against the door.</p>
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<p>Something came down from the roof.</p>
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<p>In the tight claustrophobia of the service lift, she could sense
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its presence. It forced its way through the hole in the roof,
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scraping against the metal sides. She could hear the grating sound
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as it reached against the metal sides. Something metal whirred in
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the air and tinkled on the floor.</p>
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<p>She could see nothing, but her fear-heightened senses could pick
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out the presence like a biological radar. The putrid stench
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engulfed her, making her gag.</p>
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<p>Something rasped again on the wall. She got a mental picture of
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a big scaly spider, then without warning she was hauled from the
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ground.</p>
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<p>Just in front of her, whatever it was snarled, so low and
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menacing she felt the vibrations shiver through her.</p>
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<p>Carol tried to scream. She tried to shout and holler, but as
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before, no sound came out. Something had lifted her with shocking
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force from the ground and she could not make a sound.</p>
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<p>Dimly, far off, she heard the voice: "It's alright love. The
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engineer's on his way."</p>
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|
<p>The unseen thing wrenched her upwards. Her shoulder hit off the
|
||
|
edge of the trapdoor and she heard something crack under the skin.
|
||
|
There was no pain, but there was an enormous pressure on her other
|
||
|
shoulder. It felt as though it was trapped in a huge vice.
|
||
|
Everything had happened so quickly that she didn't even have time
|
||
|
to think, to consider what had come down in the dark and snatched
|
||
|
her from the floor. The tremendous fear had driven her mind into
|
||
|
shock overload. Dimly she was aware of her blouse snagging on a
|
||
|
jagged piece of metal, then, even more dimly realised it was not
|
||
|
her blouse, but the skin of her left breast. Warm wetness flowed to
|
||
|
her waist.</p>
|
||
|
<p>The shape snuffled and grunted, the sound of a bloodhound, or a
|
||
|
pig in a trough. It heaved her through the narrow opening with a
|
||
|
violent jerk. She felt the skin of her leg peel off right down the
|
||
|
outside of her thigh to her ankle. The sensation seemed very far
|
||
|
away, as if it could have been happening to someone else.</p>
|
||
|
<p>The girl felt herself dragged upwards, swinging like a rag doll.
|
||
|
Whatever held her leaped from one side of the well to the other.
|
||
|
Her feet banged against the brickwork, sending off clouds of dust
|
||
|
and pieces of loose concrete to rain on the roof of the elevator.
|
||
|
For a second the motion stopped. Carol hung suspended in the void,
|
||
|
her feet pointing down. She was lifted up slowly and something
|
||
|
turned towards her. Two eyes opened and flared a poisonous
|
||
|
yellow.</p>
|
||
|
<p>At that moment, Carol plunged through the other side of the
|
||
|
shock paralysis. She saw the great eyes glare at her and suddenly
|
||
|
she could see and feel and breathe. Enormous pain rampaged through
|
||
|
her shoulder where the thing held her in an incredibly powerful
|
||
|
grip. Her leg felt as if it was on fire and the side of her breast
|
||
|
was a sunburst of agony.</p>
|
||
|
<p>The eyes glared at her with such hunger and hate and malevolence
|
||
|
that Carol simply screamed.</p>
|
||
|
<p>Her ear-splitting screech cascaded and resonated all the way
|
||
|
down the lift shaft, on and on and on.</p>
|
||
|
<p>Out on the corridor on level four, Peter Cullen shrank back from
|
||
|
the door.</p>
|
||
|
<p>"What in the name of Christ was that?" Beside him, a crowd of
|
||
|
women in their overalls instinctively reached for each other,
|
||
|
moving close together.</p>
|
||
|
<p>The terrified screams came reverberating down the holeshaft,
|
||
|
magnified and amplified in the enclosed space.</p>
|
||
|
<p>Outside the door on the fourth floor, everybody heard the sound.
|
||
|
It was more than a girl afraid of the dark. The shattering wails
|
||
|
came crashing down from above, an incessant torrent of pure
|
||
|
terror.</p>
|
||
|
<p>In the lift shaft, the thing moved and flexed. The girl felt the
|
||
|
grip on her shoulder abruptly loosen. There was a popping sound as
|
||
|
her skin puckered outwards and whatever had been holding her pulled
|
||
|
out. Warmth drenched her back in a stream and under the noxious
|
||
|
stink that filled the gallery, she could smell her own blood.</p>
|
||
|
<p>Suddenly, she felt herself fall, and just as instantly, she was
|
||
|
jerked back. This time, the grip was on one thigh. She felt hard
|
||
|
points drive into the thick muscle and a fresh pain detonated in
|
||
|
her hip. The darkness swooped alarmingly. One second she was
|
||
|
dangling feet down, and the next she was upside down in the shaft.
|
||
|
The thing stated to climb again, jerking from side to side on the
|
||
|
walls of the duct, moving with ferocious speed. Carol's piercing
|
||
|
screams followed it up into the dark heights.</p>
|
||
|
<p>Down by the lift door, they heard the ululating, echoing cries
|
||
|
diminish. One of the women crossed herself.</p>
|
||
|
<p>"What's going on out here?" somebody barked from along the
|
||
|
corridor. The stores supervisor, a stout man with thick bottle-end
|
||
|
glasses came waddling briskly towards the group.</p>
|
||
|
<p>"It's wee Carol. She's stuck in the lift," Peter Cullen told
|
||
|
him.</p>
|
||
|
<p>"So call for service and get her out, for goodness sake," his
|
||
|
boss said impatiently. Despite his officious appearance, George
|
||
|
Hill was a kind enough soul.</p>
|
||
|
<p>"But she's not there any more," Peter continued as if he hadn't
|
||
|
heard.</p>
|
||
|
<p>"What do you mean?"</p>
|
||
|
<p>"Something happened in there, one of the women said in a
|
||
|
tremulous voice. "We heard her screaming. It was
|
||
|
<em>awful."</em></p>
|
||
|
<p>Hill pushed his way through the crowd, leaned forward to put an
|
||
|
ear at the line where the door edges met. He banged the flat of his
|
||
|
hand on the panel.</p>
|
||
|
<p>"Carol. Are you in there? Are you hurt?"</p>
|
||
|
<p>A faint noise vibrated the door, a distant bang. The lift
|
||
|
clanked against the rails.</p>
|
||
|
<p>"I can't hear anything," he said.</p>
|
||
|
<p>"She was in the lift alright," Peter Cullen declared. "We could
|
||
|
all hear her. Then there was a lot of noise. I thought it must have
|
||
|
been the engineer going down the shaft. Then she started to scream.
|
||
|
I think something's happened."</p>
|
||
|
<p>"Right. Get some of the men out here and get these doors open,"
|
||
|
George Hill snapped.</p>
|
||
|
<p>"Shouldn't we wait for the engineers?"</p>
|
||
|
<p>The portly little man turned towards the storeman and glared at
|
||
|
him, magnified eyes widening impossibly.</p>
|
||
|
<p>"I don't care about the damned door. I'll take the
|
||
|
responsibility. Just get in there and get that girl out."</p>
|
||
|
<p>Peter Cullen and two of his workmates arrived with packing case
|
||
|
crowbar just as the engineer came panting up the stairs. The four
|
||
|
men wedged their way through the throng of women and George Hill
|
||
|
had to tell the bottling line workers to clear a space. The
|
||
|
serviceman used a punch-key to trip the door mechanism and he and
|
||
|
another of the men managed to force one side open. The lift well
|
||
|
gaped blackly. The engineer directed his flashlight into the void.
|
||
|
Hawsers and cables dangled past the open door and disappeared into
|
||
|
the murk. He swung himself carefully out, and shone the beam
|
||
|
upwards.</p>
|
||
|
<p>"I see it," he announced. "It's between floors. I'll have to go
|
||
|
upstairs and in through the top." he turned to George Hill. "Keep
|
||
|
everybody away from here. It's a fifty foot drop."</p>
|
||
|
<p>Everybody stood back to let the man get upstairs. About fifteen
|
||
|
minutes later, the serviceman was easing himself down to the top of
|
||
|
the cabin, five feet below the fifth floor. In the beam of the
|
||
|
flashlight, he could see the hatch was missing. There was some
|
||
|
damage around the edges of the rectangular hole, but he didn't
|
||
|
consider that then. His feet boomed on top of the cage and it swung
|
||
|
under his weight, but that was normal. He squatted down then dipped
|
||
|
his head in through the opening, angling the light inside.</p>
|
||
|
<p>The box was empty.</p>
|
||
|
<p>He let himself through the hatch and hung by his hands before
|
||
|
dropping the few inches to the floor.</p>
|
||
|
<p>The place stank. Later he remembered the smell and described it
|
||
|
to the police.</p>
|
||
|
<p>"It was like something had been dead a long time. It was pretty
|
||
|
bloody awful. I could feel it at the back of my throat. It made me
|
||
|
want to boak."</p>
|
||
|
<p>It was only once he'd cranked the elevator down to the fourth
|
||
|
floor, and he stepped out into the corridor that he realised what
|
||
|
the other smell had been, the warm and metallic scent that had
|
||
|
thickened the air in the shaft. Both his knees were dripping with
|
||
|
rapidly congealing blood from where he'd knelt on the top of the
|
||
|
lift.</p>
|
||
|
<p>There was no sign at all of Carol Howard.</p>
|
||
|
<p>Somebody called for an ambulance. Somebody else called the
|
||
|
police.</p>
|
||
|
<p>Jack Fallon had dozed off. He was tangled under the eiderdown
|
||
|
when something snapped him completely awake, his mind suddenly
|
||
|
alert.</p>
|
||
|
<p>"Shit," he said.</p>
|
||
|
<p>He put both hands to his head, trying to hold the thought before
|
||
|
it faded and fragmented. He'd been dreaming, or half dreaming, and
|
||
|
something had come to him. He kept his eyes tight closed and tried
|
||
|
to recreate the dream.</p>
|
||
|
<p>It had started quite normally. He'd been down at the quayside,
|
||
|
at the stairs on the river end of Rock Lane, watching as they
|
||
|
hauled the body of the woman out of the river. It didn't matter
|
||
|
that he hadn't actually been there when it happened. He'd seen
|
||
|
grey, clay-featured cadavers raised from the water before. It was
|
||
|
not unusual for him to flesh out events in his dreams. He'd done
|
||
|
that with little Julie, picturing her over and over again in the
|
||
|
shop window in nightmares so vivid he could see every minute detail
|
||
|
in clear focus, though he hadn't seen his daughter die. The dreams
|
||
|
had come on the back of guilt and horror and shock and despair and
|
||
|
whatever else lurked inside his head to spawn the black
|
||
|
nightmares.</p>
|
||
|
<p>This dream had seemed real. The mist was spiraling off the
|
||
|
surface as if it was heated by underwater pipes. Upriver, the
|
||
|
rigging of a small boat's mast clanged against crossbeam. Cold
|
||
|
water slapped against a hull and up in the clear air, early
|
||
|
seagulls wheeled and wheedled. The body was hauled out on two ropes
|
||
|
which had been fed underneath. The woman was bent and rigid. One
|
||
|
leg was sticking out, granite coloured, grotesque. Jack walked
|
||
|
away, thinking about the grey foot without a shoe. He walked into
|
||
|
the mist of the lane and came out round on Bankside Road, a
|
||
|
geographical impossibility, but exactly the way things happen in
|
||
|
dreams. Bankside Road was on the far side of the town centre,
|
||
|
beyond the maze of alleys and vennels. Here the old shunting yards
|
||
|
were hidden behind the green doors where Neil Kennedy had played.
|
||
|
Though the snow had turned to ice on the pavements and crackled
|
||
|
underfoot, in the dream, the snow was fresh and unmarked.</p>
|
||
|
<p>Two pairs of footprints led away from the green door.</p>
|
||
|
<p>There was something odd about them, though in the rationality of
|
||
|
the illusion, Jack did not question them. The larger set, both left
|
||
|
and right narrow like a woman's foot, were different in one
|
||
|
respect. The left gave an imprint with wavy lines of a walking
|
||
|
shoe. The right was a clear shape of a naked foot.</p>
|
||
|
<p>Alongside them, a small trail of a child's footprints were
|
||
|
embedded. The left one bore the tyre-track marks of wellington
|
||
|
boots. The right was a child's bare foot, each toe clearly
|
||
|
delineated.</p>
|
||
|
<p>He followed the lines, his own feet making no noise. The air was
|
||
|
suddenly quiet. The wind had stopped. No seagulls shrieked. It was
|
||
|
as if he was in a cocoon of his own consciousness. He walked
|
||
|
on.</p>
|
||
|
<p>The prints halted maybe three hundred yards along the curve
|
||
|
where Bankside Street joined Artizan Road, close to the old engine
|
||
|
works. There was an old building here. The red-brick Victorian
|
||
|
railway style construction of the warehouses.</p>
|
||
|
<p>They'd been closed even when Jack was a small boy. He remembered
|
||
|
exploring every inch of them with Tom Neeson and Paul Hamilton when
|
||
|
he was eight or nine. They'd been littered with broken glass then.
|
||
|
The old shutters had been locked and barred, but there was always a
|
||
|
way in through a window at the back, or the old cellar at the
|
||
|
basement where a coal-hole gave access. They used to climb the
|
||
|
stairs then scale up to the rafters where the pigeons had their
|
||
|
nests. Tom Neeson's father had been a pigeon fancier and Tom
|
||
|
himself had started his own loft with the young birds they'd stolen
|
||
|
from the line of dirty shit-ridden scoops along where the ceiling
|
||
|
sloped down to the rafters.</p>
|
||
|
<p>In the dream Jack walked inside, still on silent feet. He went
|
||
|
along the narrow passage, turned and looked up.</p>
|
||
|
<p>There it was.</p>
|
||
|
<p>Bold letters in the old fashioned fonts.</p>
|
||
|
<p><em>STEW</em>.</p>
|
||
|
<p>Despite the dust on the glass and the rime and grime of decades,
|
||
|
the letters still stood out clear. Seen from inside, that's how
|
||
|
they read, although the S was turned backwards.</p>
|
||
|
<p>He'd seen it before, all those years ago, and now it had come
|
||
|
back to him.</p>
|
||
|
<p>He took the stairs slowly, one at a time, though the glass did
|
||
|
not crackle and crunch under his feet. He scanned the whole
|
||
|
lettering from just underneath, mouthing the words right to left,
|
||
|
like a child.</p>
|
||
|
<p><em>West Highland Railway Company</em>.</p>
|
||
|
<p>He stood staring at the antiquated window sign for some time,
|
||
|
then turned slowly, retraced his steps, and walked to the rear of
|
||
|
the building where the stock-room ran the length of the warehouse.
|
||
|
From here, almost the whole of the gable wall was visible. At the
|
||
|
far west end, heading towards the river where it curved on its way
|
||
|
down to the estuary, there was a gaping rectangular hole in the
|
||
|
wall.</p>
|
||
|
<p>The day they'd stolen the pigeons, they'd clambered down the
|
||
|
rope which hung from the block-and-tackle pulley. As Jack stood in
|
||
|
the echoing silence, the mist billowed in through the space on the
|
||
|
wall.</p>
|
||
|
<p>Something moved in the mist, just out of sight, a dark outline
|
||
|
obscured and hazy. Jack felt his breath start to back up in his
|
||
|
throat.</p>
|
||
|
<p>And he woke up hauling for breath, with the image of the
|
||
|
swirling mist still reeling in the front of his mind.</p>
|
||
|
</div>
|
||
|
</div>
|
||
|
</body>
|
||
|
</html>
|