do with him. With my old mate andâas of very recentlyâneighbor, Benjamin Daniels. He told me about
a younger sister, once. Half sister. Something of a tearaway. Bit of a problem case. From his old life, however much heâd
tried to sever himself from all that. What he definitely didnât tell me was that she was coming here. But then it wouldnât
be the first time heâs kept something from me, would it?
The girl appears briefly at the windows, looking out. Then she turns and moves awayâtoward the bedroom, I think. I watch her
until sheâs out of sight.
Saturday
Jess
My throat hurts and thereâs an oily sweat on my forehead. I stare up at the high ceiling above me and try and work out where
I am. Now I remember: getting here last night . . . that scene in the courtyard a couple of hours ago. It was still dark out
so I got back into bed afterward. I didnât think Iâd be able to sleep but I must have drifted off. I donât feel rested though.
My whole body aches like Iâve been fighting someone. I think I was fighting someone, in my dream. The kind youâre relieved to wake up from. It comes back to me in fragments. I was trying to
get into a locked room but my hands were clumsy, all fingers and thumbs. SomeoneâBen?âwas shouting at me not to open the door, do not open the door ,but I knew I had to, knew I didnât have any other choice. And then finally the door was opening and all at once I knew he
was rightâoh why hadnât I listened to him? Because what greeted me on the other sideâ
I sit up in bed. I check my phone. Eight a.m. No messages. A new day and still no sign of my brother. I call his number: straight to voicemail. I listen to the voicenote
he left me again, with that final instruction: âJust ring the buzzer. Iâll be up waiting for youââ
And this time I notice something strange. How his voice seems to cut off mid-sentence, like something has distracted him.
After this thereâs a faint murmur of sound in the backgroundâwords, maybeâbut I canât make anything out.
The uneasy feeling grows.
I walk out into the main living space. The room looks even more like something from a museum in the light of day: you can see the dust motes hanging suspended in the air. And Iâve just spotted something I didnât see last night. Thereâs a largish, lighter patch on the floorboards just a few feet before the front door. I walk toward it, crouch down. As I do the smellâthe strange smell I noticed last nightâcatches me right at the back of the throat. A singe-the-nostrils chemical tang. Bleach. But thatâs not all. Somethingâs caught here in the gap between the floorboards, glinting in the cold light. I try to wiggle it out with my fingers, but itâs stuck fast. I go and get a couple of forks from the drawer in the kitchen, use them together to pry it loose. Eventually, I work it free. A long gilt chain unspools first, then a pendant: an image of a male saint in a cloak, holding a crook.
Benâs St. Christopher. I reach up and feel the identical texture of the chain around my neck, the heavy weight of the pendant.
Iâve never seen him without it. Just like me, I suspect he never takes it off, because it came from Mum. Because itâs one
of the few things we have from her. Maybe itâs guilt, but I suspect Benâs almost more sentimental about stuff like that than
me.
But here it is. And the chain is broken.
Jess
I sit here trying not to panic. Trying to imagine the rational explanation that Iâm sure must be behind all this. Should I
call the police? Is that what a normal person would do? Because itâs several things now. Ben not being here when he said he
would and not answering his phone. The catâs blood-tinged fur. The bleach stain. The broken necklace. But more than any of
this itâs the way it
J.A. Konrath, Jack Kilborn