The Magic Cottage (36 page)

Read The Magic Cottage Online

Authors: James Herbert

Tags: #Fiction, #Horror

I shook my head, bewildered and upset, the grief I felt not unlike, I’d imagine, having your pet dog run over.

A soft breeze blew in from the window I’d left open a few inches days before to freshen the room (maybe a stronger breeze had nudged over the classical) and played across the over-tightened strings, the vibrations picked up by the soundboards of each and amplified. The echo was more like a sighing groan than a musical shimmer.

I banged my thigh with a clenched fist and swore, then swore again. Although the guitars were irrevocably ruined (the necks might be replaced, but that would prove expensive and no guarantee that the tone would be as good), I nevertheless counter-turned the nuts on both instruments, loosening the remaining strings. It was with some nervousness that I opened my Fender case and examined the electric guitar lying inside (the feeling of opening a casket to take a peek at the corpse therein was strong). Thankfully, my jobbing machine was in good order.

After that, I could only squat on the floor and stare at my invalided – no, mortally diseased – instruments, while Rumbo had a fine time skipping around the room, oblivious to my misery. I let him romp, glad at least one of us wasn’t concerned about anything.

I sat there gloomily for some time and wasn’t exactly sure what had finally roused me – it might have been the squirrel’s shrieking chatter, or the sensing of movement over my head. It had been a morning of distant noises, so I was neither disturbed nor surprised to hear further sounds. And of course, on this occasion the source was fairly obvious; the bats were fidgety.

But it wasn’t curiosity about them that caused me to drag a chair over to the centre of the room so that I could reach the hatch. I’d dumped Midge’s painting of Gramarye up there on the same day we’d discovered the grotesque change – just lifted the hatch and tossed it in, out of sight, out of mind. Burning the picture would have been too much like a ritual. Still mystified about that transformation, now I wanted to take another look. Maybe I thought it might have returned to normal, optimistic fool that I am; anything seemed possible in that place. Whatever, I wanted to study the painting in more detail than last time.

I balanced on the chair, one hand flat against the hatch cover, the other holding the flashlight I now kept in the attic room specifically for loft visits (usually made by Midge to check on our protected species up there). Straightening my knees, I heaved at the cover, nervous of our night friends but believing, as I’d been informed so often, that they really were harmless.

The hatch opened with an eerie ‘Old Dark House’ creak, causing Rumbo to shriek and disappear down the stairs. I promised myself I’d oil those hinges at the earliest opportunity. Flashlight on, I used the back of the chair for wobbly support and hauled myself up with my usual lack of dignity. Sitting on the edge, I cursed myself for having slung the painting with such force: I could just make out the rectangular shape before beaming the light on it, and realized I’d have to crawl across joists to reach it.

Before doing so, I swung the light around the loft and shuddered at the black hanging shapes, certain that they’d become denser than last time I’d looked. They filled every inch of space on the beams and rafters. Just like that first time.

But at least they were still and quiet, as though my intrusion had brought their previous activity to a halt. I wondered how they regarded my presence. With fear? Hostility? Or did they sense by now that Midge and I meant them no harm?

A single tiny squeak drew my attention to a crossbeam to the left of where I was sitting. I spotlighted a particularly thick cluster of bats; one, near the centre, was making small juddering movements, its head arched upwards towards its stomach. Jagged teeth were picked out by the light as the bat opened its ugly little mouth and emitted another barely audible squeak.

A few more squeaks answered from the darker regions of the loft, all single and somehow pathetic.

Drawing my legs up, I started making my way towards the painting, not wanting to stay in that inky cavern for a moment longer than necessary. The joists were hard against my knees as I crawled, and the smell of bats’ excrement was stronger and more unpleasant than the last time I’d been up there; I comforted myself with the thought that the droppings might at least provide a natural form of loft insulation. I tried to keep my free hand out of it as I went, using the flashlight for guidance, but the stuff was everywhere and I was soon wiping my palm against my jeans to get rid of the sludge. I decided walking across the joists, bending low and keeping a steady balance, would be less of an ordeal, so I rose, swaying awkwardly for a couple of seconds with feet spread on separate sections.

I immediately brushed against one of the creatures.

That bat squealed and flapped thin wings at me, and I recoiled, wobbling on unsteady legs, hand flailing air. Half bent and still a little rocky, I stabilized and shone the torch at the offended bat, making sure it wasn’t readying itself to attack.

What I saw created a clogging in my chest, a thick ball of softness inside there threatening to erupt up my throat and splatter the loft. I swallowed hard.

Only inches away from my head, the bat I’d bumped into was jerking in small spasmodic movements, wings flexed inwards, membraned tail curling downwards. Something flushed and shiny and repugnant was emerging from between its legs.

I watched mesmerized, repulsed yet horribly fascinated.

The pink, hunched thing grew in size, frail shape glistening in the light from the torch. The tiny body oozed out, smoothly and wetly, taking form – an unsightly form – discharged from the womb like an oval blob of pink topping squeezed from an icing bag, to plop onto the mother bat’s stomach, caught there and suspended by its life-cord. The mother immediately wrapped wings and pouched tail around the newborn, its head striving upwards and tongue flickering out to cleanse the sticky fresh body.

The birth might have been wondrous to a nature-lover, but to me, in those dark confines, among a mass of suspended gargoyles, it was an abhorrence.

I tried desperately to shuffle away, careful not to slip between the joists, and only succeeded in disturbing those behind me. And as I turned, the light sweeping around the loft, I saw others giving birth, more and more pink blobs surging forth to dangle at their mothers’ breasts. Not just one or two, but
dozens
. I swear I saw
dozens
oozing out. Everywhere I swung the flashlight I caught the same nauseating movement, the shiny gooeyness on the minute bodies reflecting the beam. They looked like transparent bags of pus squeezed from open wounds.

I scrambled towards the square patch of daylight, slipping off the timbers and cracking my knees against them, but not stopping, collecting wood splinters in my hands as I crawled, the flashlight bobbing wildly, agitating the bats so that they squealed in protest or alarm, probably both.

One fluttered by my face and I felt dank air waft against my cheek. Something thumped softly against my back, lodging there for a moment before dropping away.

I almost screamed.

Then I was at the opening, swinging my legs over, falling through, my hands and elbows saving me from plummeting to the floor. My feet found the chair below and I snatched at the hatch cover, ducking my head as a small body flew out of the darkness to skim against my arm.

I pulled at the cover and only just withdrew my fingers before it slammed shut.

I stood on the chair, hands on knees, flashlight rolling in an arc on the floor where I’d dropped it, and gasped in a huge lungful of air, hoping it would bypass my breakfast which was on the way up.

Page Twenty-Seven

I drove away from Bunbury feeling angry, mixed-up, and I don’t know what else. Mystified, I suppose. Oh yeah, and somehow
used
.

The late Flora Chaldean’s solicitor had agreed to see me with considerable reluctance, and really he didn’t have much choice. He had some responsibility regarding the sale of Gramarye and I was insistent on a meeting between us. Could be he felt some pangs of guilt, too.

I wanted to see him because there were certain matters concerning the old lady and the cottage that needed explaining, and Ogborn was probably the most important link (if not the only link). I wanted information. I wanted to learn more about Flora Chaldean. I wanted to know more about Gramarye. I wanted to find out what the Synergist connection was.

Well, I’d been given answers, but I can’t say they were explanations. Now I was confused in a different way.

Bickleshift, the estate agent who’d sold us the property, was the first one I’d tried to contact after my sickening (literally) experience with the bats in the loft, but he’d been away on a two-week vacation. You might think, incidentally, that I’d over-reacted to that particular incident – after all, they were only small winged mammals with pointed ears having babies – but you had to be there to understand there was more going on, that there was nothing Bambi about those tiny, pulpy offspring, nothing cute about them,
that this new-life emergence was more akin to an excretion than a spawning
. You see, it was like witnessing the propagation of disharmony, the assertion of malign influences, rather than just a natural delight of nature, because it had become very plain to me by then that there were two sides to Gramarye, two climes, or latitudes, whichever way you’d choose to describe these opposing atmospheres. Different zones, maybe. Positive and Negative. We’d experienced the good, the Positive, when we’d first moved in. Now something was elbowing that aside. In the words of Dylan (Bob), times they were ‘a changin’’. And thinking back, the changes had started at the first appearance of the Synergists.

And these newborn bats somehow represented the unwholesome metamorphosis Gramarye was going through, a change that couldn’t be sudden, that was a creeping thing, slow like a monster crawling from the ocean to slime its way up the shore, learning to breathe, gathering strength to rise. Urged on by those who could have use of its power.

Absurd? That’s only the half of it.

But I’m getting ahead of myself, and I only mention these things because that’s how insights were coming at me, like random droplets of awareness falling from some high place, spattering my head in tiny shocks before soaking through to my brain. Driving back to the cottage that day, I remembered exactly what I’d told Midge a couple of nights before, how I’d suggested she was some kind of catalyst or intermediary. I wondered if the Synergists, and more specifically Mycroft, were a different form of catalyst.

Anyhow, Bickleshift was away, so I’d rung the solicitor, who’d ummed and aahed and finally agreed an appointment for late afternoon the following day.

I hadn’t said anything to Midge when she’d returned from the village, hadn’t even mentioned how my guitars had warped, their strings, steel ones and all, shrinking inexplicably. I wanted some facts before presenting my case. She seemed too preoccupied with her own thoughts anyway and today she thought I’d gone into Bunbury to buy sheet music.

I’d spent an uneasy night and Midge had been restless too, but in her sleep. She’d murmured and tossed, her hands clutching at the bedcovers as though she were afraid of plunging into some dream-abyss.

My half-hearted attempts to break through her continued reserve next morning came to nothing, as much my fault as hers: we were like two punch-drunk protagonists, a little too dazed to see one another clearly, let alone throw a punch. Only when I was driving away from the cottage later that afternoon did my thoughts (and my energy) shape up again. Yeah, it was a relief to be away from the place.

Cantrip appeared almost deserted on the way back and I checked my watch. Nearly six – I hadn’t realized it was so late. The shops were closed and the villagers were probably settling down for evening meals. The sun had decided to head for the hills.

Through the village, moving into the forest lanes. Soon to be home. And the question begged: What kind of home was it? Mycroft might know better than anyone.

I kept a steady speed, keen to be with Midge again, hoping this time she’d listen to what I had to say, to what Ogborn had told me. No, I’d
make
her listen. Whatever attitude she had, she would be forced to listen. Then we’d explore Mycroft’s sinister motives together.

I was strangely nervous of the forest’s louring deepness on either side of the road.

Gramarye came into view, walls still beacon-white in the slowly cooling rays of the sun. The garden was beautifully coloured. Only when I drew close did the flowers begin to appear faded, did the building’s brickwork reveal its sneaking blemishes. I parked the car in its grassy space and vaulted over the fence.

I could hear the phone ringing inside the cottage.

The door was closed, and I was surprised at that; Midge loved the fresh air to waft through the rooms, up the stairways, and she adored the framed view of the garden from the kitchen. The phone was still ringing.

Quickly unlocking the door, I pushed against it, meeting with some resistance at first. Firmer pressure sent the door inwards and I stopped momentarily on the threshold, eyes adjusting to the gloom inside. That gloom seemed unreasonably slow to give way to the brightness surging past my shoulders.

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