Read Land of the Living Online
Authors: Nicci French
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Psychological, #Kidnapping Victims, #Women
Don’t cry, Abbie. You mustn’t cry.
Think of the butterfly, which means nothing but which is beautiful. I pictured the yellow butterfly on its green leaf. I let it fill my mind, so light on the leaf it could be blown away like a feather. I heard footsteps. They were soft, as if the man was barefooted. They padded closer and stopped. There was a sound of someone breathing heavily, almost panting, as if he was climbing or scrambling towards me. I lay rigid in the silence. He was standing over me. There was a click, and even from beneath the hood I could tell he had switched on a torch. I could hardly see anything, but I could at least see through the grain of the fabric that it was no longer entirely dark. He must be standing over me and shining a torch down on my body.
‘You’re wet,’ he murmured, or maybe it sounded like a murmur through my hood. ‘Silly girl.’
I sensed him leaning towards me. I heard him breathing and I heard my own breathing getting louder and faster. He pulled the hood up slightly and, quite gently, pulled out the cloth. I felt a fingertip on my lower lip. For a few seconds, all I could do was pant with the relief of it, pulling the air into my lungs. I heard myself say, ‘Thankyou.’ My voice sounded light and feeble. ‘Water.’
He undid the restraints on my arms and my chest, so that only my legs were tied at the ankle. He slid an arm under my neck and lifted me into a sitting position. A new kind of pain pulsed inside my skull. I didn’t dare make any movements by myself. I sat passively, and let him put my arms behind my back and tie my wrists together, roughly so that the rope cut into my flesh. Was it rope? It felt harder than that, like washing line or wire.
‘Open your mouth,’ he said in his muffled whisper. I did so. He slid a straw up the hood and between my lips. ‘Drink.’
The water was tepid and left a stale taste in my mouth.
He put a hand on the back of my neck, and started to rub at it. I sat rigid. I mustn’t cry out. I mustn’t make a sound. I mustn’t be sick. His fingers pressed into my skin.
‘Where do you hurt?’ he said.
‘Nowhere.’ My voice was a whisper.
‘Nowhere? You wouldn’t lie to me?’
Anger filled my head like a glorious roaring wind and it was stronger even than the fear. ‘You piece of shit,’ I shouted, in a mad, high-pitched voice. ‘Let me go, let me go, and then I’m going to kill you, you’ll see—’
The cloth was rammed back into my mouth.
‘You’re going to kill me. Good. I like that.’
For a long time I concentrated on nothing but breathing. I had heard of people feeling claustrophobic in their own bodies, trapped as if in prison. They became tormented by the idea that they would never be able to escape. My life was reduced to the tiny passages of air in my nostrils. If they became blocked, I would die. That happened. People were tied up, gagged, with no intention to kill them. Just a small error in the binding — the gag tied too close to the nose — and they would choke and die.
I made myself breathe in one-two-three, out one-two-three. In, out. I’d seen a film once, some kind of war film, in which a super-tough soldier hid from the enemy in a river breathing just through a single straw. I was like that and the thought made my chest hurt and made me breathe in spasms. I had to calm myself. Instead of thinking of the soldier and his straw and what would have happened if the straw had become blocked, I tried to think of the water in the river, cool and calm and slow-moving and beautiful, the sun glistening on it in the morning.
In my mind, the water grew slower and slower until it was quite still. I imagined it starting to freeze, solid like glass so that you could see the fish swimming silently underneath. I couldn’t stop myself. I saw myself falling through the ice, trapped underneath. I had read or heard or been told that if you fall through ice and can’t find the hole, there is a thin layer of air between the ice and the water and you can lie under the ice and breathe the air. And what then? It might be better just to have drowned. I had always been terrified of drowning above all things, but I had read or heard or been told that drowning was in fact a pleasant way to die. I could believe it. What was unpleasant and terrifying was trying to avoid drowning. Fear is trying to avoid death. Giving yourself up to death is like falling asleep.
One-two-three, one-two-three, I was becoming calmer. Some people, probably about two per cent of the population at least, would have died already of panic or asphyxiation if they’d had done to them what I was having done to me. So I was already doing better than someone. I was alive. I was breathing.
I was lying down now, with my ankles tied and my wrists tied, my mouth gagged and a hood over my head. I wasn’t tied
to
anything any more. I struggled into a squatting position, then very slowly stood up. Tried to stand up. My head bumped against a roof. It must be just under five foot high. I sat down again, panting with the effort.
At least I could move my body. Wriggle and hump along, like a snake in the dust. But I hardly dared. I had the sense that I was somewhere up high. When he came into the room, he was underneath me. The footsteps and his voice came from down below. He climbed to get at me.
I stretched my feet in one direction and felt only the floor. I swivelled painfully around, my T-shirt riding up and bare skin on my back scraping along the roughness beneath me. I stretched my feet. Floor. I humped forward. Slowly. Feet feeling. Then not feeling — not feeling the hardness underneath. Stretched over a space, a blank. Nothing underneath. I lay down and moved forward again, bit by bit. Legs hanging over, bent at the knee. If I sat up now, I’d be sitting over a fall, a cliff. My breath juddered in my chest with panic. I started shifting backwards. My back hurt. My head crashed and banged. I kept wriggling and scraping backwards until I was pressed up against a wall.
I sat up. I pressed my bound hands against the wall. Damp coarse brick against my fingertips.
I shuffled upright along the wall in one direction, until I met the corner. Then in the other direction, my muscles burning with the effort. It must be about ten feet wide. Ten feet wide and four feet deep.
It was hard to think clearly because the pain in my head kept getting in the way. Was it a bang? A scrape? Something in my brain?
I was shivering with cold. I had to keep thinking, keep my mind busy, keep it off things. I had been kidnapped in some way. I was being held against my will. Why did kidnaps happen? To take hostages, for money or for a political reason. My total wealth, once credit card and storecard debts were deducted, amounted to about two thousand pounds, half of it bound up in my rusty old car. As for politics, I was a working-environment consultant not an ambassador. But then I didn’t remember anything. I could be in South America, now, or Lebanon. Except that the voice was clearly English, southern English as far as I could tell from the soft, thick whisper.
So what other reasons were there? I had argued myself towards an area where everything looked really, really bad. I felt tears bubbling up in my eyes. Calm down. Calm down. I mustn’t get all snotty, blocked up.
He hadn’t killed me. That was a good sign. Except it wasn’t necessarily all that good a sign — in the long run it might be a bad sign in a way that made me feel sick even to think about. But it was all I had. I flexed my muscles very gently. I couldn’t move. I didn’t know where I was. I didn’t know where I’d been captured, or when, or how. Or for what reason. I couldn’t see anything. I didn’t even know anything about the room I was lying in. It felt damp. Maybe it was underground or in a shed. I didn’t know anything about the man. Or men. Or people. He was probably close by. I didn’t know if I knew him. I didn’t know what he looked like.
That might be useful. If I could identify him, he might… Well, that might be worse. Professional kidnappers wore hoods so that the hostage never saw them. Putting a hood over my head might be the same thing, the other way round. And he was doing something to his voice, muffling it somehow, so that he didn’t sound like a human at all. It might even be that he was planning to hold me for just a little while and let me go. He could dump me in some other part of London and it would be impossible for me ever to find him again. I would know nothing — nothing at all. That was the first bit of remotely good news.
I had no idea how long I had been here but at the very outside it couldn’t be more than three days, maybe even two. I felt dreadful but I didn’t feel especially weak. I felt hungry but not ill with hunger. Maybe two days. Terry would have reported me missing. I wouldn’t have turned up at work. They would phone Terry, he would be baffled. He would have tried my mobile phone. Where was that? The police might have been called within hours. By now there would be a huge hunt. Lines of people scouring wasteland. All leave cancelled. Sniffer dogs. Helicopters. Another promising thought. You can’t just grab an adult off the street and hide them somewhere without creating some sort of suspicion. They would be out there, knocking at doors, marching into houses, shining torches into dark places. Any time now I’d hear them, see them. All I had to do was stay alive as long as… Just stay alive. Stay alive.
I had shouted at him before. I’d said I’d kill him. That was the only thing I could remember having said to him, except I’d said, ‘Thank you,’ when he gave me water. I hated the fact I’d said thank you. But when I’d shouted, I’d made him angry. What were his words? ‘You kill me? That’s a good one.’ Something like that. That’s not promising. ‘
You
kill
me
?’ That might seem good to him because in fact he’s going to kill me.
I tried to seize some other kind of comfort. It might just seem funny to him because I was so much in his power that the idea of me getting back at him was completely ludicrous. I was taking a risk being rude to him. I’d made him angry. He could have tortured me or hit me or anything. But he hadn’t done anything. That might be useful to know. He had kidnapped me, he had me tied down and I’d threatened him. It could be that if I stand up to him he feels weakened and unable to do anything to me. If I don’t give in to him, that may be the best way of playing him along. He might have kidnapped a woman because he’s frightened of women and this is the only way to control at least one woman. He might expect me just to be begging pathetically for my life and that would give him the control he wants. But if I don’t yield, then it’s not going according to his plan.
Or it might be the opposite. It might have shown nothing more than that he’s in control. It doesn’t matter to him what I say. He just finds it funny and is proceeding with his plan, whatever that is. Surely the point is to be as much of a flesh-and-blood person for him as possible so that he finds it harder to do anything to me. But if that is threatening to him, then it might make him angrier. I couldn’t do anything. I couldn’t fight, I couldn’t escape. All I could do was slow him up.
What was the best way of doing that? Making him angry? Happy? Scared? I lay on the floor and stared into the stifling darkness of my hood.
There was a change of texture in the blackness around me. There was a sound and a smell. Once again there was that hoarse, croaking whisper. ‘I’m going to take your gag out. If you shout I’ll bleed you like an animal. If you’ve heard and understood what I’ve said, nod your head.’
I nodded frantically. The hands — large, warm hands — fiddled behind my neck. The knot was untied, the cloth pulled roughly from my mouth. As soon as I was free I coughed and coughed. A hand held my head down and I felt the straw pushed into my mouth. I sucked the water until a bubbling sound told me it was gone.
‘There,’ he said. ‘There’s a bucket here. Do you want to use it?’
‘What do you mean?’ Get him talking.
‘You know. Toilet.’
He was embarrassed. Was that a good sign?
‘I want to go to a proper one.’
‘It’s the bucket or you can lie in your own piss, sweetheart.’
‘All right.’
‘I’ll put you by the bucket. You can feel it with your feet. I’ll stand back. You try anything funny I’ll cut you up. All right?’
‘Yes.’
There was the sound of him going down some steps, and then I felt his arms under my armpits, then as I slithered towards him, around me. Hard, strong hands. I was pressed against him. An animal smell, sweat, something else. One arm under my thighs. Nausea in my throat. Swung across and put down lightly on a rough floor, gritty. I raised myself up straight. My legs and back felt terribly sore. My hair was seized by a hand and I felt something hard against my neck.
‘You know what this is?’
‘No.’
‘It’s a blade. I’m going to untie the wire holding your hands together. Try anything and I’ll use it.’
‘I won’t. I want you to leave me alone.’
‘It’s dark. I’ll step back.’
I felt pressure as he freed a knot behind my back. He stepped away. For just a second I thought of trying something until I saw the absurdity of it. Partially tied up, hooded, in a dark room with a man carrying a knife.
‘Go ahead,’ he said.
I hadn’t really meant it. I just wanted to be moved. I felt my clothes. T-shirt, slacks. I couldn’t do this.
‘You’ll have the bucket again tomorrow morning.’
Tomorrow morning. Good. Some information. All right, all right. He said it was dark. I unfastened my trousers, pulled them and my knickers down and sat on the bucket. Nothing but a dribble. I stood up again, pulled the trousers up.
‘Can I say something?’
‘What?’
‘I don’t know what this is about. But you mustn’t do this. You won’t get away with it. You may not realize what’ll happen when they find me. But you can let me go. Drive me somewhere. Turn me loose. That’ll be it. I’ll have been reported missing, they’ll be looking for me. I know you can do what you like to me and it probably won’t do me any good but you’ll be caught. If you let me go, we can just go back to our lives. Otherwise, you’ll be caught.’
‘That’s what they all say. When they say anything.’
‘What?’
‘Stand still.’
‘All?’
The sensation of knots being refastened. The sensation of being lifted up high, set down like a small child being put up on a high shelf. Like a doll. A dead animal.