The House Read online




  Sadie, Fin, and their two children were a perfectly ordinary family. Even if Fin felt taken for granted sometimes. Even if their introverted son, Liam, had terrible nightmares and knew things he shouldn’t.

  But everything changes the night Sadie is viciously assaulted by former client Lance Sherry. Sherry knows where they live, and when the police fail to catch him, Sadie and Fin are forced to run. They think they’ve found the perfect place to start over. The house is everything Fin dreamed of, but as they settle in, Sadie discovers their home may not be what it seems, and daughter Lucy’s imaginary friend might not be imaginary at all. Or even a friend. With Lance Sherry hunting them, the house could be the least of their problems. He’s coming to finish what he started. And he won’t stop until he finds Sadie.

  The House

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  http://www.boldstrokesbooks.com

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  The House

  © 2019 By Eden Darry. All Rights Reserved.

  ISBN 13: 978-1-63555-396-3

  This Electronic Book is published by

  Bold Strokes Books, Inc.

  P.O. Box 249

  Valley Falls, New York 12185

  First Edition: April 2019

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  This book, or parts thereof, may not be reproduced in any form without permission.

  Credits

  Editor: Ruth Sternglantz

  Production Design: Susan Ramundo

  Cover Design By Melody Pond

  Prologue

  I am finished. It is over. Today they arrived at the house again, and their eyes reminded me of flies, barely lighting on one place for more than a second, searching out evidence as if I would be so stupid to leave it in plain sight. They’ll have to work much harder than that to catch me out. I have been here for many years.

  But they know. They must know, and I sense that I don’t have long. I’ve taken all the precautions I am able to, but I worry it will not be enough. They will come for me soon, and I am not ready. I could live a thousand lifetimes, and I would still not be ready. Like God moulded Lilith from clay, I moulded and shaped this house from my darkest dreams, and I am not ready to leave. I will not leave. Never.

  I hear them now on the stairs and they are coming for me.

  Chapter One

  Fin picked up the toys scattered across the living room. She’d managed to get the kids down before eight, something she considered a bit of a feat. On the nights Sadie worked late, they were usually fussy and cranky and impossible to get to bed. Lucy was the worst. She seemed to have taken on the worst traits of her mothers, Fin’s moodiness and Sadie’s stubbornness, and Christ, was she stubborn. The kid would give a mule a run for its money.

  Liam, on the other hand, was quiet and introspective. Unless you got his back up—then he had a temper to rival Fin’s own. She grinned. She wouldn’t change them for anything in the world.

  Fin glanced at her watch and frowned. It was almost nine, and Sadie should be home by now. She worked as a barrister for a chambers in town and sometimes worked late when she was on a big case. Fin got a text from her this afternoon saying some new evidence had come up and she was going to be back about eight tonight.

  Luckily, Fin’s hours were flexible as a self-employed upholsterer, so she’d been able to knock off early and pick the kids up from the childminder. Their next door neighbour Sally looked after them during the week, and she and Sadie took it in turns to be home by six for them. Fin often ended up doing Sadie’s share as well because the nature of her job meant she couldn’t always leave at five.

  It irked Fin a bit, even though she knew she was being unreasonable. Sadie’s job paid a lot more, so it meant Fin’s career took a back seat where the kids were concerned.

  Fin sat on the couch which was beginning to sag in the middle—she kept meaning to sort it out—and dialled Sadie again. This time, it went straight to voicemail without ringing. She pulled one of Lucy’s little plastic unicorns out from under her arse and told herself Sadie probably switched her phone off and forgot about the time. All the same, uneasiness gnawed at her. Sadie was normally good about calling when she ran late. It wasn’t that they lived in a bad part of London, though stabbings and the occasional shooting weren’t unheard of. These days that kind of shit was going on even in the nicest neighbourhoods—just one reason Fin kept bringing up the idea of them moving out a bit further.

  Fin was born and raised on the council estate down the road, and she was sick of dirty, grimy, overcrowded London. She’d move in a heartbeat. Sadie, on the other hand, wasn’t as keen. She’d grown up in London too, but much further west, where the houses didn’t get much below a million pounds. While Fin was stepping over used needles and riffling down the back of the sofa for money for the electric meter key, Sadie was pissing about in ballet classes and having piano lessons. Sadie loved London—or at least, the London she knew. Fin fucking hated it.

  It was well after nine now and Fin was officially worried. She tried Sadie’s phone again, and again it went straight to voicemail. She hung up and dialled the chambers where Sadie worked. Voicemail again. Shit. As Fin was deciding whether to go next door to see if Sally could watch the kids for a couple of hours, she heard the top stair creak. Fin walked into the hall and saw Liam standing at the top looking down at her. He was still small for six, and Fin always felt particularly protective of him. There was a vulnerability about him that Lucy, stocky and noisy, didn’t have.

  “What’s up, mate?” she asked.

  “I had a bad dream,” he answered, picking at the paint on the banister.

  “Yeah?”

  “Yeah.” He nodded.

  Fin walked up the stairs and lifted him into her arms. He was so light. “Let’s get back into bed and you can tell me about it.”

  Fin lowered him into his racing car bed. She’d built the frame herself when he was three, and he refused to go into a proper sized single one yet. It was something that secretly pleased her. She pulled the covers up and tucked him in. “Okay, Liam. Tell me—what happened?”

  “It was about Mummy. Something bad happened to her.”

  Fin’s stomach lurched and she tried to keep her voice even. “Oh yeah? That sounds like a horrible dream.”

  Liam nodded and reached up to hold her hand. “Are you okay, Mum? Did it scare you too?”

  Fin swallowed. It was hard to keep things from him. He seemed to know what you were feeling just by looking at you. “No, I’m okay, mate. What happened to Mummy in the dream?”

  “A bad man got her.”

  Fin bit the inside of her cheek in an effort to stay calm. “It was only a dream, Liam,” she whispered.

  He looked up at her with his big brown eyes, and Fin was struck by how much he resembled Sadie. His brown skin was a few shades lighter than hers and his hair also brown instead of black, but they both shared those gentle, bottomless brown eyes that telegraphed every emotion they felt. Fin loved their eyes best of all.

  She lifted her son’s hand and gently kissed his palm. “I love you, Liam.”

  “I love you too.” He smiled, and that was all Sadie as well.

  “Go to sleep now,” she whispered.

  “Okay.”

  Fin left his door open a crack, so light from the hall would filter in, and went back downstairs. She picked up h
er phone to call Sally next door, but it rang in her hand before she could dial. She didn’t recognize the number and her heart lurched painfully in her chest.

  “Hello?” Her voice sounded steady but her hands were shaking.

  “Is this Ms. Finola Claiborne?”

  The voice on the other end sounded official.

  “Speaking.” Fin gripped the phone so hard she thought it might crack.

  “I’m Detective Constable Helen Lyle, and I’m calling about your wife.”

  Chapter Two

  Fin drove faster than she probably should have, but all she could think about was getting to the hospital. At a set of red lights, she called Sadie’s parents. She didn’t want to, because she couldn’t stand Treven Tate, Sadie’s father, and the feeling was definitely mutual. He acted as though he was always in court. He even looked like a fucking judge—which was to say, down his nose at you. Fin knew he thought she was beneath his precious daughter. What Fin never let him know was, she agreed—she was punching well above her weight with Sadie.

  Corine, Sadie’s mother, was much nicer, and Fin got on pretty well with her. From what she’d gathered, Corine’s beginnings were much the same as Fin’s and she lacked the air of superiority which wafted around her husband. Corine’s parents had arrived from the Caribbean after World War II, the Windrush generation, and she’d grown up poor living in a council flat on a run-down estate.

  Fin already wanted to put down the phone and no one had even picked up yet. She reminded herself this wasn’t about her. It was about Sadie, and she would want her father there.

  DC Helen Lyle hadn’t said much on the phone, except Sadie had been attacked and was conscious and alert. Just the thought of it had Fin’s stomach roiling, and her hands clenched on the steering wheel involuntarily. It took effort to relax them. If someone had hurt Sadie, Fin would track the fucker down and—and what? Kill them? Sadie and the kids would love that, wouldn’t they? Fin tried to calm herself.

  She made it the hospital in record time and was met at the entrance to Accident and Emergency. “DC Lyle?”

  Helen Lyle nodded and shook her hand.

  “Where is she? Is she okay? What happened?” Fin fired questions and simultaneously tried to push around the policewoman and get inside the hospital.

  “Ms. Claiborne, Ms. Claiborne.” Helen Lyle had her hand on Fin’s arm trying to restrain her.

  Fin resisted the urge to push her out of the way. “I need to see my wife,” she said instead.

  “I know you do. She’s in CT having a scan at the minute—”

  “She’s got a head injury?” Fin did push past her this time. She was taller than the police officer and must have outweighed her by a good fifty pounds.

  “Ms. Claiborne. I need you to calm down. Right now.” Helen Lyle caught up with her. “You’re no good to her like this. Please. There’s a family room nearby, and I can fill you in on what we know there.”

  Helen Lyle was right. Fin couldn’t fall apart and her anger was useless. She forced herself to calm down. She blew out a breath. “Okay. Sorry.”

  Helen Lyle nodded and Fin followed her into a room off the main waiting area. It was painted in magnolia and had a few soft padded chairs dotted around. Fin wondered how many families had sat in here, staring at the same walls, reading the same posters about HIV and domestic abuse while waiting to hear about their loved ones.

  She sat in one of the chairs and Helen Lyle in another. She steeled herself and nodded. “Go ahead.”

  “Your wife was attacked coming out of her chambers at about seven thirty this evening. She was dragged into an alley by her assailant. She was threatened with a knife.” Helen Lyle paused and Fin could feel the other woman studying her, probably seeing if Fin would kick off again. She didn’t—she wouldn’t. Right now she was numb, though she knew the anger would come later.

  “What did he do to her?” Her voice sounded calm, as if it came from far away. She felt like she was in a dream and she would wake up any minute.

  “He took her purse and her bag. She told us he attempted to rape her but was disturbed by a group of men coming down the alley. Several of the men gave chase but he got away.”

  “Jesus Christ.” The words came out on a breath and Fin leaned forward in her chair. She was sick and dizzy.

  “Ms. Claiborne? Finola? Are you okay?”

  Helen Lyle was standing over her with a hand on her shoulder, gripping lightly. The touch helped. Fin sat straighter in her chair. “I want to see my wife.”

  “I know. She should be back from CT shortly, and then I’ll take you to her. She did suffer several blows to the head—hence the scan—and she has some nasty bruises to her face. Other than that, physically, she’s fine.”

  “Okay.” Fin felt relief at that. He hadn’t stabbed her and he hadn’t raped her. There was that, at least. “I called her parents. They live in Kensington so they won’t be here for a bit, but—”

  “I can wait for them, no problem. I’m your family liaison officer. That means I’m here to support you and Sadie and the rest of the family. I’ll give you my card, so if you have any questions, you can call me any time.”

  “You’ll tell me when you’ve caught the piece of shit?”

  “I will. I can keep you updated on the investigation, as much as I’m able to. I’ll also need you to answer a few questions when you’re ready.”

  Fin’s head came up. “Why?”

  “It’s nothing to worry about. Just routine stuff about your habits, whether you’ve noticed anyone following you. Anything unusual.”

  “I thought this was a mugging and attempted rape? Isn’t that sort of thing random?” Fin’s eyes bored into Helen Lyle’s. She looked away.

  “At this stage, we have to investigate every—”

  “Bollocks. You think someone targeted her?”

  “Ms. Claiborne, I can’t give you anything at this stage. We don’t know.”

  Fin didn’t believe her, but she’d deal with that later. Right now, she wanted to see Sadie.

  Helen Lyle’s phone went off and she answered it. She nodded a couple of times. Fin watched her, trying to gauge what was happening.

  She hung up and turned to Fin. “They’ve recovered the knife.”

  “Knife? You said she wasn’t—”

  “He used it to make her comply. He didn’t use it on her. We might be able to get some useable prints.”

  “Okay. Okay, that’s good.”

  “Your wife should be back by now. I’ll take you to her.”

  Fin stood and willed herself to be calm. Sadie would need her to be solid, which meant no angry outbursts. Except Sadie always knew what she was feeling. She knew Fin’s moods better than Fin did herself.

  Chapter Three

  Sadie closed her eyes—well, one of them anyway. The other had been closed for her by that bastard. She tried not to think about it, but she couldn’t get the smell of his body odour out of her nostrils. Or the way he felt, pushed up against her, one rough hand pulling at her trousers while the other held a knife to her throat. She shivered and opened her eyes again—well, one of them.

  She kept telling herself she was lucky. Lucky those men came along and scared him off. Lucky he didn’t stab her right away, although she knew it was because he wanted more than just her purse. Lucky she would live to see her children and Fin again.

  Fin. Sadie sighed. She hoped Fin was behaving with the police. She had a temper, and Sadie knew she was capable of lashing out when she was scared. Especially if it was to do with Sadie or the kids. She hadn’t changed much from the angry twentysomething Sadie met at her twin sister Rena’s party when she was nineteen.

  She’d been drawn to her immediately. Back then, Fin was scruffy and looked like she needed a good meal and a bath. Sadie had thought she was a musician too, like Rena, and it was only when they started talking, Sadie realized Fin felt as out of place as her at the gathering. Sadie was in her first year of law school and about as uncool as you co
uld get. She found out Fin was a trainee upholsterer and only there because a friend was nervous about going alone. The friend ditched Fin immediately for some hipster playing bongos in the corner.

  She and Fin spent most of the evening sitting on the balcony smoking hand-rolled cigarettes and sipping from a cheap bottle of vodka Fin smuggled from the party in her worn out jean jacket. Fin told her later she was too nervous to kiss her that night, and Fin had shaken her head ruefully when Sadie confessed she’d been dying for her to. But Fin didn’t bottle it the next time, and Sadie remembered it was the sweetest kiss she ever had.

  She smiled at the memory despite the shooting pain in her jaw which was swollen from his punches.

  She glanced up as the door opened and Fin came striding in. She looked at Sadie, her face full of horror that she quickly hid. Her short blond hair was tousled as if she’d been pulling at it and her blue eyes were glassy. Sadie reached out her hand and Fin took it gently.

  “Thank God you’re okay.” Fin sat by the side of the bed and reached out with her other hand to smooth Sadie’s hair. Sadie sighed and leaned in to the touch. “I mean, I know you’re not okay, but—”

  “I know what you mean.” Alive. “I am okay. How are the kids?”

  “Sally came over to watch them. They don’t know about what happened,” Fin said.

  “Good. I don’t want them to know.”

  “Babe, they’re going to know something’s wrong. Your face…” Fin trailed off, and Sadie saw the worry flit through her eyes.

  “We’ll think of something. Liam already has bad dreams. This will just make things worse.”

  “He had one tonight. He said a bad man…” Fin cleared her throat. “A bad man hurt you.”

  “Psychic Liam strikes again. He was right,” Sadie said quietly.