Trigger Warning: Short Fictions and Disturbances

She looked at him with a face that had grown haggard in an hour. ‘When this happened before, it took a few days, but then he was right as rain. The depression doesn’t stay long. So, just wondering, would you just, well, stick around? I phoned my sister but she’s in the middle of moving. And I can’t cope on my own. I really can’t. Not again. But I can’t ask you to stay, not if anyone is waiting for you.’

 

‘Nobody’s waiting,’ repeated Shadow. ‘And I’ll stick around. But I think Oliver needs specialist help.’

 

‘Yes,’ agreed Moira. ‘He does.’ Dr Scathelocke came over late that afternoon. He was a friend of Oliver and Moira’s. Shadow was not entirely certain whether rural British doctors still made house calls, or whether this was a socially justified visit. The doctor went into the bedroom, and came out twenty minutes later.

 

He sat at the kitchen table with Moira, and he said, ‘It’s all very shallow. Cry-for-help stuff. Honestly, there’s not a lot we can do for him in hospital that you can’t do for him here, what with the cuts. We used to have a dozen nurses in that wing. Now they are trying to close it down completely. Get it all back to the community.’ Dr Scathelocke had sandy hair, was as tall as Shadow but lankier. He reminded Shadow of the landlord in the pub, and he wondered idly if the two men were related. The doctor scribbled several prescriptions, and Moira handed them to Shadow, along with the keys to an old white Range Rover.

 

Shadow drove to the next village, found the little chemists’ and waited for the prescriptions to be filled. He stood awkwardly in the overlit aisle, staring at a display of suntan lotions and creams, sadly redundant in this cold wet summer.

 

‘You’re Mr American,’ said a woman’s voice from behind him. He turned. She had short dark hair and was wearing the same olive-green sweater she had been wearing in the pub.

 

‘I guess I am,’ he said.

 

‘Local gossip says that you are helping out while Ollie’s under the weather.’

 

‘That was fast.’

 

‘Local gossip travels faster than light. I’m Cassie Burglass.’

 

‘Shadow Moon.’

 

‘Good name,’ she said. ‘Gives me chills.’ She smiled. ‘If you’re still rambling while you’re here, I suggest you check out the hill just past the village. Follow the track up until it forks, and then go left. It takes you up Wod’s Hill. Spectacular views. Public right of way. Just keep going left and up, you can’t miss it.’

 

She smiled at him. Perhaps she was just being friendly to a stranger.

 

‘I’m not surprised you’re still here though,’ Cassie continued. ‘It’s hard to leave this place once it gets its claws into you.’ She smiled again, a warm smile, and she looked directly into his eyes, as if trying to make up her mind. ‘I think Mrs Patel has your prescriptions ready. Nice talking to you, Mr American.’

 

 

 

 

 

IV

 

 

The Kiss

 

 

Shadow helped Moira. He walked down to the village shop and bought the items on her shopping list while she stayed in the house, writing at the kitchen table or hovering in the hallway outside the bedroom door. Moira barely talked. He ran errands in the white Range Rover, and saw Oliver mostly in the hall, shuffling to the bathroom and back. The man did not speak to him.

 

Everything was quiet in the house: Shadow imagined the black dog squatting on the roof, cutting out all sunlight, all emotion, all feeling and truth. Something had turned down the volume in that house, pushed all the colours into black and white. He wished he was somewhere else, but could not run out on them. He sat on his bed, and stared out of the window at the rain puddling its way down the windowpane, and felt the seconds of his life counting off, never to come back.

 

It had been wet and cold, but on the third day the sun came out. The world did not warm up, but Shadow tried to pull himself out of the grey haze, and decided to see some of the local sights. He walked to the next village, through fields, up paths and along the side of a long drystone wall. There was a bridge over a narrow stream that was little more than a plank, and Shadow jumped the water in one easy bound. Up the hill: there were trees, oak and hawthorn, sycamore and beech at the bottom of the hill, and then the trees became sparser. He followed the winding trail, sometimes obvious, sometimes not, until he reached a natural resting place, like a tiny meadow, high on the hill, and there he turned away from the hill and saw the valleys and the peaks arranged all about him in greens and greys like illustrations from a children’s book.

 

He was not alone up there. A woman with short dark hair was sitting and sketching on the hill’s side, perched comfortably on a grey boulder. There was a tree behind her, which acted as a windbreak. She wore a green sweater and blue jeans, and he recognised Cassie Burglass before he saw her face.

 

As he got close, she turned. ‘What do you think?’ she asked, holding her sketchbook up for his inspection. It was an assured pencil drawing of the hillside.

 

‘You’re very good. Are you a professional artist?’

 

‘I dabble,’ she said.

 

Shadow had spent enough time talking to the English to know that this meant either that she dabbled, or that her work was regularly hung in the National Gallery or Tate Modern.

 

‘You must be cold,’ he said. ‘You’re only wearing a sweater.’

 

‘I’m cold,’ she said. ‘But, up here, I’m used to it. It doesn’t really bother me. How’s Ollie doing?’

 

‘He’s still under the weather,’ Shadow told her.

 

‘Poor old sod,’ she said, looking from her paper to the hillside and back. ‘It’s hard for me to feel properly sorry for him, though.’

 

‘Why’s that? Did he bore you to death with interesting facts?’

 

She laughed, a small huff of air at the back of her throat. ‘You really ought to listen to more village gossip. When Ollie and Moira met, they were both with other people.’

 

‘I know that. They told me that.’ Shadow thought a moment. ‘So he was with you first?’

 

‘No. She was. We’d been together since college.’ There was a pause. She shaded something, her pencil scraping the paper. ‘Are you going to try and kiss me?’ she asked.

 

‘I, uh. I, um,’ he said. Then, honestly, ‘It hadn’t occurred to me.’

 

‘Well,’ she said, turning to smile at him, ‘it bloody well should. I mean, I asked you up here, and you came, up to Wod’s Hill, just to see me.’ She went back to the paper and the drawing of the hill. ‘They say there’s dark doings been done on this hill. Dirty dark doings. And I was thinking of doing something dirty myself. To Moira’s lodger.’

 

‘Is this some kind of revenge plot?’

 

‘It’s not an anything plot. I just like you. And there’s no one around here who wants me any longer. Not as a woman.’

 

The last woman that Shadow had kissed had been in Scotland. He thought of her, and what she had become, in the end. ‘You are real, aren’t you?’ he asked. ‘I mean . . . you’re a real person. I mean . . .’

 

She put the pad of paper down on the boulder and she stood up. ‘Kiss me and find out,’ she said.

 

He hesitated. She sighed, and she kissed him.

 

It was cold on that hillside, and Cassie’s lips were cold. Her mouth was very soft. As her tongue touched his, Shadow pulled back.

 

‘I don’t actually know you,’ Shadow said.

 

She leaned away from him, looked up into his face. ‘You know,’ she said, ‘all I dream of these days is somebody who will look my way and see the real me. I had given up until you came along, Mr American, with your funny name. But you looked at me, and I knew you saw me. And that’s all that matters.’

 

Shadow’s hands held her, feeling the softness of her sweater.

 

‘How much longer are you going to be here? In the district?’ she asked.

 

‘A few more days. Until Oliver’s feeling better.’

 

‘Pity. Can’t you stay forever?’

 

‘I’m sorry?’

 

‘You have nothing to be sorry for, sweet man. You see that opening over there?’

 

He glanced over to the hillside, but could not see what she was pointing at. The hillside was a tangle of weeds and low trees and half-tumbled drystone walls. She pointed to her drawing, where she had drawn a dark shape, like an archway, in the middle of a clump of gorse bushes on the side of the hill. ‘There. Look.’ He stared, and this time he saw it immediately.

 

‘What is it?’ Shadow asked.

 

‘The Gateway to Hell,’ she told him, impressively.

 

‘Uh-huh.’

 

She grinned. ‘That’s what they call it round here. It was originally a Roman temple, I think, or something even older. But that’s all that remains. You should check it out, if you like that sort of thing. Although it’s a bit disappointing: just a little passageway going back into the hill. I keep expecting some archaeologists will come out this way, dig it up, catalogue what they find, but they never do.’

 

Shadow examined her drawing. ‘So what do you know about big black dogs?’ he asked.

 

‘The one in Shuck’s Lane?’ she said. He nodded. ‘They say the barghest used to wander all around here. But now it’s just in Shuck’s Lane. Dr Scathelocke once told me it was folk memory. The wish hounds are all that are left of the Wild Hunt, which was based around the idea of Odin’s hunting wolves, Freki and Geri. I think it’s even older than that. Cave memory. Druids. The thing that prowls in the darkness beyond the fire circle, waiting to tear you apart if you edge too far out alone.’

 

‘Have you ever seen it, then?’

 

She shook her head. ‘No. I researched it, but never saw it. My semi-imaginary local beast. Have you?’

 

‘I don’t think so. Maybe.’

 

‘Perhaps you woke it up when you came here. You woke me up, after all.’

 

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