The Patchwork House Read online

Page 8


  And then Derek was calling me.

  “Over here.”

  I had already returned to the corridor, intent on joining Derek in his search. Now I broke into a run, heading towards the dim glow from his torch, illuminating an open door frame in the distance.

  “Did you find them?” I called as I ran, but Derek didn’t reply.

  I became paranoid, as I approached the lit doorway, that the light would go out or the door would slam as I reached it. Then Derek and whoever he’d found would be lost to me too. Instead I burst into the room to find Derek crouched over the prone-positioned body of Beth.

  Relief and concern crashed over me. She was here but was she okay? I hurried over to Derek, my lamp sending shadows scurrying into the corners of the room. Beth was on the floor beside the bed. I knelt beside Derek and cradled her head in my lap.

  “She’s fine, I think,” Derek said. “Just unconscious.”

  “We need to wake her.”

  “You can try, I didn’t have any luck.” Derek left me with her and moved to the doorway, shining his torch up and down the corridor. “I reckon she’s in one of these rooms but in the same state as Beth. We need to search again, every room, and we need to check in cupboards and behind beds. She’s probably knocked out too. She could be anywhere.”

  I nodded to him. “Get started. I have to stay with Beth, okay?”

  “But what about Chloe?” he said urgently. He was obviously losing his mind with worry. I could hardly blame him.

  “Let me try to wake her up. If I can’t, I’ll carry her from room to room looking for Chloe if I have to.”

  “Okay. I’ll start in the games room.”

  “Yell if you find her.”

  And he was gone. I pulled the dust sheet from the bed and grabbed the blanket underneath. I wrapped it around Beth, concerned she might be cold. Then I lifted her onto the bed and held her close to me. I had no idea what had happened to her or why she wasn’t stirring. Whatever it was I hoped it wasn’t permanent.

  “Come on, Beth, wake up. Please. Don’t leave me here on my own.”

  The door slammed. I jumped up. The door to this small room was closed now. I’d not felt a draft.

  “Derek,” I called out. Had he locked me in here?

  I went to the door and tried the handle. It opened with no resistance, which was almost more of a surprise than finding it locked.

  I saw Derek’s torch light coming from the doorway to the games room. Moments later, he emerged.

  “What was that bang?”

  “The door slammed. I didn’t touch it.”

  “Are you okay?”

  I was surprised to hear his concern given how he’d been treating me all this time. It stood to reason though. Without me he would be the only one looking for Chloe.

  “Jim?”

  Beth was awake. The door slamming must have woken her. I rushed over.

  “Derek, she’s awake,” I called as loudly as I could.

  “What’s going on?” she asked, still groggy.

  Derek appeared in the doorway.

  “Beth?”

  “Is that Derek?”

  “Yeah, love. It’s Derek and me. Take it easy for a moment, get your head together.”

  “Screw that,” Derek snapped, coming over to the bed. “Beth, listen to me. Chloe is missing. Do you remember what happened?”

  Beth scrunched up her face in concentration.

  “I don’t know,” she said. “I think I was following her. Derek was calling out for help. She was running along the corridor with no flashlight. I was sure she would run into something or trip. I tried using my flashlight to light her way. Where is my flashlight?”

  She tried to rise but I stopped her, easing her back down again.

  “What happened after that?” Derek said. I wanted to thump him, but at the same time I understood his urgency.

  “She ran in here, I think. I followed her and…”

  She trailed off. Her eyes went wide and she started whimpering.

  “What, Beth? What did you see?”

  “Oh my God,” she whispered. “Oh my God. Poor Chloe. Poor Chloe.”

  Derek was pacing up and down the small room now, going crazy with frustration.

  “What the fuck did you see, Beth? Fucking hell, just tell me!”

  I stood up and placed myself in between the two of us. “Calm down, Derek. If she could she’d be helping you.”

  “Fuck,” Derek yelled. “Keep trying, okay? Keep asking her. Please, I’m begging you. How can I face the kids if she’s not with me when I go home? What am I going to tell them?”

  “We’ll find her, I promise.” I wished I felt so sure. If Beth followed Chloe into this room, then where was she now?

  “Okay, okay, keep calm,” Derek told himself, pacing again. “There’s only one room left to check.”

  “Percy’s room?”

  “Right.”

  “Listen, Derek.” He was already in the doorway, eager to be off and looking, but he paused and turned back to me. “If Chloe was in here and something happened, she might not be on this floor any more. Maybe this thing took her somewhere else. She might be downstairs.”

  Derek tugged at his hair in frustration. “All right, okay, why don’t you two look downstairs then, and I’ll go through the bedrooms again.”

  “We should stick together—”

  “There isn’t time! Please!”

  “Okay, we’ll go down.”

  And with that, Derek was gone. I turned back to Beth who was still clinging on to my shoulder.

  “Honey, can you hear me?”

  “Of course I can hear you.”

  “Good. Listen, do you have any idea what happened to Chloe? We’re going to leave, all four of us, but if we can’t find her then we can’t leave, right?”

  Beth nodded and detached herself from me. She swung her legs over the edge of the bed and put her head in her hands.

  “I think I saw what you saw, on the ceiling.”

  “The black mass?”

  “Yeah. And you’re right, it does have a face but it moves and I can’t tell who it is or really what they look like… It’s like it’s trying to have a face but it’s not sure how. Oh God, it was horrible.”

  “What happened to Chloe?”

  “It was all over her. I’ve never seen anything like it. I didn’t know what to do or how to help. I think I must have fainted or something. I’ve never fainted before in my life! Really, I don’t know what happened next.”

  I looked around the room uselessly. Aside from the bed and a small dresser, there was no space in here for anything else, and no wardrobes or cupboards. Even the bed was a single.

  “Why was Derek screaming?” Beth asked suddenly.

  “He wasn’t. Or at least he says he wasn’t. He says he was in the library when you came upstairs and he didn’t hear you at all.”

  “And where were you? I thought you were right behind me!”

  “I’m sorry, I heard Derek screaming from the kitchen. I called up to tell you but I got no response. Derek sounded in agony, I couldn’t leave him.”

  “But he was in the library the whole time?”

  “That’s what he says. I know he’s mad at me about something but I don’t see a reason for him to lie, do you?”

  “No. He wouldn’t put Chloe through that deliberately.”

  “Maybe he had a plan and it went wrong.”

  Beth shook her head. She shuddered.

  “Try not to think about it.”

  “I wish,” she said, a tear appearing in the corner of one eye. “Oh God, Chloe! I should have helped her.”

  “Nobody blames you,” I assured her.

  “Derek does.”

  CHAPTER 6

  We passed Derek on our way to the stairs, and I made sure he knew we were heading down.

  “Beth didn’t see what happened to Chloe,” I assured him. It was a lie, but what good would the truth do him? He’d just get pissed at Beth an
d he’d be no closer to finding his wife.

  He looked fraught, at his wits end. We left him throwing open cupboards in the biggest guest bedroom.

  Beth and I descended the stairs, holding each other close. We had the one lamp between us.

  “Before we start looking for Chloe, you need light in case we get separated.”

  “I’m not leaving your side,” Beth said.

  “Just in case. The thought of you waking up in that room with no light…”

  Beth shuddered again. “Point taken.”

  So we entered the drawing room.

  And we stood with our mouths open.

  Everything was gone. I held the lamp high to be sure, casting light as far as we could see into every alcove and corner.

  It was as if we had never been in the room. The dustcovers were back on the furniture, and all our stuff was missing. There were no sleeping bags, no charging stations, no phones, no spare torches and no spare lamps. Even the Monopoly had disappeared, presumably put back in its cupboard. We hurried over and opened the door. Sure enough, the game was back in its box with the other games as if we’d never unpacked it.

  “What the fuck?” was all I could manage.

  “Please tell me you still have the car keys.”

  I reached into my pocket and felt their reassuring weight.

  “Yes, but without our phones… Shit. I should never have put them all in the charger together. We should have kept one.”

  “If you had then the battery would be dead by now,” Beth said.

  She was probably right. But I could have turned it off and conserved what little was left. Still, I’d never expected this. Our stuff wasn’t just gone, it was like our presence in this room had been erased.

  “We need to leave,” I said.

  “So let’s find Chloe and go.”

  “Right.”

  We headed back out into the hall.

  “I wish the phones were connected,” I said. “Then I could call my cell and follow the ring.”

  “You’re assuming it would get a signal.”

  “Didn’t Derek leave the laptop at the bottom of the stairs?”

  “I didn’t see it on the way down.”

  We stepped back into the hallway. We could hear creaking floorboards from the upper floor, but most likely this was just Derek charging around up there, looking for his wife. The laptop was gone, assuming that was where Derek had left it. He wouldn’t have had time to put it anywhere else.

  Then we went to the kitchen. Someone had cleared away our abandoned meal too. No dirty plates, no bags or tubs of food, no half-finished drinks.

  “This ghost is damn tidy,” I said.

  “I don’t like this,” Beth said.

  “No argument there. So why are we stopping?”

  I was on my way to the conservatory, but Beth was standing in the kitchen just in front of the door to the upstairs apartment. She was staring at the table with a quizzical look on her face. She clicked on her torch and lit up the tabletop.

  “Come on,” I urged her. “Let’s find Chloe and leave.”

  “Hang on, Jim. This is just weird.”

  “Yeah, the ghost cleaned up. All of this is weird. Let’s go.”

  Beth shook her head.

  “This is not just cleaning up. Look.”

  She kept the angle of her torch low so as to illuminate anything sitting on the surface. There was nothing at all.

  “What’s your point?”

  “Jim, the ghost has cleaned the fucking table!”

  I laughed at that. The image in my head was almost worth the price of admission to this night from hell. And then I realized what she meant.

  We had not been careful eaters. We’d spilled grains of rice, splashes of sauce, flakes of spring rolls, all over the kitchen table. Since we’d never finished our dinner it was certainly odd that the empty bags, the leftover containers and the dirty plates had all gone. But Beth was right, there was absolutely no trace of our meal. The table was completely clean. I took my lamp over and peered in close.

  “Even if you accept that there’s a ghost in the house that can move a bookcase, it doesn’t explain this.”

  “You know what it’s like?” Beth said.

  “What?”

  “It’s like we were never here.”

  A chill gripped me when she said that. The gravity of her words settled on my shoulders and I realized she was completely right.

  “Are we ghosts?” I asked. It seemed a logical conclusion.

  “Well you don’t look like Bruce Willis.”

  “And you don’t look like Nicole Kidman.”

  Neither of us laughed.

  “Maybe that’s the answer,” Beth said after a moment’s pause.

  “The answer to what?”

  “The answer to what happened to Chloe.”

  I blinked. “I don’t get you.”

  “Maybe she’s gone, just like our stuff, and our food and the fricking crumbs on the table. Maybe she was never here.”

  “That’s ridiculous.”

  “Then where the hell is she?”

  “Well you mentioned the alternative back in the drawing room.”

  “Did I? Oh, the bottom of the lake?”

  My grim expression told her she was now thinking what I was thinking. But we had to keep looking, and calling. We could hardly abandon her.

  Footsteps came crashing down the stairs in a serious hurry. Beth and I flashed alarmed glances at each other and then we moved back to the hall door. Derek was running towards us, a determined expression on his face.

  “She’s in the apartment,” he said as he pushed past us.

  “Are you sure?” I asked.

  “I heard her, through the wall.” He didn’t wait for us. He burst through the door to the upstairs apartment and bounded up the steps two at a time, torchlight swinging wildly in his wake.

  “Chloe?” he called, even as he disappeared around the turn half way up the stairs. “Chloe, are you there?”

  Beth and I hurried to follow. What a relief to know where she was. Maybe now the four of us could jump in the car and leave.

  But it wasn’t to be.

  As Beth and I reached the top of the stairs, we saw Derek run back from the small living space to the bedroom.

  “Chloe,” he called. “Where are you?”

  “Chloe?” I said. Beth and I joined the search.

  We must have checked both rooms a dozen times. We threw open cupboards and closets, checked the tiny bathroom and even looked under the bed. Chloe wasn’t here.

  “Maybe you heard an echo of her voice coming through pipes or something,” I said. “Like what happened earlier when I thought you were screaming in the kitchen but you were in the library upstairs.”

  Derek shook his head. His torch was still sweeping over every single item in the room.

  “She told me, I heard her through the wall. She said she was trapped in the apartment.”

  “Shit,” I said.

  “So either she was lying,” Derek said, smacking his hand against one solid wall in frustration, “or she was lost, or she was moved after I spoke to her.”

  “Well the only entrance is via the kitchen, and we were in there for a while. The apartment door never opened.

  “Maybe there’s another way in?” Beth said.

  I shook my head. “What does it matter if there is? She’s not here. We need to keep looking and we need to hurry.”

  Beth caught my expression. “You’re worried about the light aren’t you?”

  “I’ll search this place in pitch darkness if I have to,” Derek spat, although he did click off his torch. Now the only light came from my lamp. It had been using the same canister since the sun went down. I had no idea how long one canister would last but I was guessing it was nearly exhausted. And when the lamp went out we would have to rely on our torches. We each had one, but given the drain on the other batteries earlier that evening, it was likely they wouldn’t last too
long either. I didn’t want to be in this house when we ran out of light.

  Beth was clearly of the same mind. Derek looked angry with us for even considering abandoning the search, but then his face turned grim and he moved away. I guessed he too had taken a moment to realize how fruitless—and terrifying—it would be to search for Chloe without light.

  “We should search the kitchen cabinets for matches, torches, candles, anything we can use,” Beth said.

  I nodded. “I’ll come with you. Are you staying here?”

  Derek shook his head. “I heard her calling from somewhere. I have to keep looking.”

  “Voices carry in this house,” I told him. “Keep looking and we’ll join you when we’ve found more light.”

  Reluctantly, Derek followed us down the stairs and back to the kitchen.

  “Did you clean up in here?” he asked when I set the lamp down on the centre counter.

  “Wasn’t us. Even the crumbs have been swept away.”

  Derek didn’t respond to this. Clearly it was information he just didn’t know what to do with right now. He clicked on his torch. “I’m going to the ballroom.”

  “We’ll go via the living room and meet you there, okay?”

  But Derek had already pushed through the door to the conservatory and didn’t acknowledge me.

  Beth and I turned our attention to the various draws and cupboards. We opened each in turn, searching for anything useful.

  “Next time I invite an old friend on holiday with us, remind me not to, okay?”

  “Our next vacation will be in Hawaii,” Beth said.

  We found some string and a half-used book of matches, but no candles or torches. I considered taking one of the large kitchen knives with us, but in the dark it was likely more of a hazard to us than to any entity we could or couldn’t see.

  Holding hands for moral support, Beth and I ventured back into the hall. We both gazed at the front door as we passed by, dully lit from a distance by the gas lamp. How much we wanted to just open the door, get in the car and drive away.

  But then I thought of Chloe, all alone, in the dark, somewhere in this house. One glance at Beth told me she was thinking the same thing. We couldn’t leave with Chloe still missing. Despite how he’d treated me, it wouldn’t be fair to Derek to abandon him without the car also.