Fangtooth Read online




  FANGTOOTH

  By

  Shaun Jeffrey

  Published by Deshca Press

  Copyright © 2011 by Shaun Jeffrey

  First published by Dark Regions Press

  Edited by Stacey Turner

  Cover by Karri Klawiter

  Kindle Edition License Notes

  This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Amazon.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

  Chapter 1

  The trawler Silver Queen plunged through the relentless waves, plaything of the Gods. Wood creaked and squealed, crying like an animal in pain as the boat plummeted from the top of a swell.

  “What the hell is it?” Howser asked.

  Billy Trasker looked up from the echo sounder and shook his head. “It might be a large school of fish … but to be honest, I’m not sure.”

  Howser frowned at the display. It was all do to him. His wife, Maureen, had only recently dragged him into the technological age of mobile phones. That’s why he employed people. But sometimes, a man had to go with his feelings, and this was one of those times.

  He picked up the microphone from the panel. “Blunt, secure that buoy,” he shouted, his voice coming through the speaker outside and fighting to be heard above the cry of the force eight gale.

  The men on deck hurried about their jobs, working with proficiency gained from years of toil at sea. The wind howled around their ears, but they seemed oblivious to its roar.

  Billy scratched his unshaven chin. He indicated a large, jagged line on the colour LCD display. “I’ve never seen a school of fish produce a pattern like that before.”

  Howser glanced at the display, but it still didn’t make any sense to him. Waves as high as double-decker buses crashed against the bow, making the vessel appear about to sink. Howser struggled to keep the boat on course. After months of finding no fish, he wasn’t going to let a little bad weather and a technological blip stop him from landing what looked like the biggest haul the villagers back home in Mulberry would have seen in years.

  Howser rang the alarm bell three times to alert the deck crew he was going to shoot the nets.

  Seconds later the motors whined as the net descended into the icy depths, and Howser slowed the boat to two knots to compensate for the drag.

  “We should get a better indication about what it is from the net recorder now that they’re in the water,” Billy said.

  Howser nodded. He knew the basics of what the equipment did, and the net recorder worked alongside the colour echo sounder to give specific information on the net and the fish moving into it. Experienced skippers could tell not only how much fish they had, but also what kind they were catching. Again, Howser left that to the likes of Billy. All he wanted to know was when to haul it aboard.

  “So what we looking at?”

  Billy frowned and pressed a couple of buttons. He shook his head. “I haven’t got a clue.”

  “Then what the hell do I pay you for?”

  Before Billy could answer, a huge wave swept over the bow, knocking a man on deck off his feet.

  Howser snatched up the microphone. “You okay, Blunt?”

  The man struggled to his feet and gave a thumbs up.

  Without warning, the boat lurched in the water, the net having caught on something. Howser ground his teeth. This was all he needed. The hydraulic clutch to the winches whined.

  The wheelhouse door opened with a clatter and Blunt stepped into the room, his body moving in time to the waves, in tune with the rhythm of the sea.

  “Skipper, we’ve got a problem. The starboard trawl wire’s leading across the afterdeck to port and the spare net’s blocking the freeing ports, so we’re taking on water fast.”

  Howser was about to respond when the vessel lurched to port. He gripped the wheel as tight as he could.

  Wave after wave crashed over the boat.

  Despite the seriousness of the situation, Howser felt calm. He clenched his teeth. “See if you can help free the trawl wire.”

  Blunt nodded and staggered outside.

  Another wave rolled across the boat, smashing down like a giant fist. Through the spray, Howser saw Blunt sliding across the deck, but there was someone beside him. Even with the wipers going, visibility through the windscreen was poor. Who the fuck is that out there? At a glance, the figure didn’t look natural. Although hunched over, even from a distance it looked stocky; the spray distorted the scene further, made the figure look deformed.

  Howser frowned and picked up the microphone. “Blunt,” he shouted. “Who’s that with you?”

  Blunt turned.

  Next minute, the figure beside Blunt lunged forwards. The hands on the end of its stubby looking arms latched onto Blunt and it opened its mouth impossibly wide and bit the deckhand’s throat. Blood gushed out, turning pink as it spread across the deck.

  Howser gagged. What the hell is going on out there?

  In his fright, he let go of the wheel, allowing it to spin like something possessed, and the hull of the boat squealed as the sea contracted against it.

  Regaining his composure, Howser strapped himself into the chair, reached out to grab the wheel and the boat listed violently. The vessel seemed to teeter on its side for a moment, then rolled over like a dog offering its hull to the malevolent Gods to scratch. Unsecured equipment rained down on the ceiling. Hanging upside down, Howser felt the blood rush to his head. The vessel’s lights illuminated the turbulent sea, highlighting Blunt’s face as it smashed against the glass. Scraps of skin flapped on the deckhand’s cheeks like grotesque gills.

  What the fuck has happened out there?

  Next minute something sleek and black snatched Blunt’s body away. Howser stared aghast at the swirl of bloody water beyond the glass.

  He reached up to undo the harness securing him to the chair, and the glass around the wheelhouse shattered as gallons of water gushed in.

  With the water came something else. Something that moved with ease through the swirling current.

  The force of the water gushing through the broken windows pressed Howser into his chair. He felt as though he were in a washing machine filled with glass shards slicing his flesh. He tried to move, but the force of water pinned him more securely than shackles.

  Something swam past his face, something that danced in the turbulent currents. Too afraid to close his eyes, he stared through the stinging water. Blood from cuts on his face swirled around his head, hampering visibility. His lungs felt about to burst. He needed to undo the harness and swim to the surface. No way was this captain going down with his boat.

  With a final desperate attempt to move, he managed to raise his right hand and grab the buckle, but the last of his breath gushed out in a gargled scream of absolute terror as the thing that had entered the wheelhouse swam into view.

  He gagged and saltwater filled his lungs, but death didn’t come quick enough to relieve him of the horror of the creature closing in for the kill.

  Chapter 2

  “So what do you think, Jack?”

  When he didn’t receive a reply, Bruce Holden looked across at his son. He’d forgotten Jack had his earphones in, the volume on his mp3 player cranked up. He tapped him on the leg.

  Jack pulled one of the earphones out, the tinny sound of The Prodigy filtering through. “What?” he snapped as he peered from beneath the brow of his baseball cap.

  Bruce pointed at the view. “What do you think?”

  “I t
hink it’s a crock of shit and I want to go home.”

  Despite his son’s sharp rebuttal, Bruce held his tongue. He gazed down through the windscreen of his Ford Focus at the small fishing village. The whitewashed wooden houses looked like a picture postcard, and the array of fishing boats moored to the horseshoe shaped harbour looked almost toy-like from so high up. It had always been his dream to live by the sea; a dream he’d shared with Veronica until the cancer took the light from her eyes and the life from her body. Knowing she wasn’t here to share it with him brought a sudden tear that he quickly wiped away.

  The wedding ring on his finger glistened in the sunlight.

  “It won’t be that bad. Just think, you can meet new people; find new things to do, walk Shazam along the beach.”

  At the mention of her name, the black and white Border Collie barked and sat up in the back. She poked her head between the front seats, her tongue lolling.

  Jack grimaced. “That sounds just great. It’s alright for you. You’re nearly an old man. You’ll enjoy walking on the beach and shit like that. Look at it. There’s nothing here.”

  “For your information, thirty-seven is not old, and if you say shit again, I’ll—”

  “What? Send me to my room? Hit me? I’m sixteen, old enough to do what I want.”

  Bruce sighed. Sixteen going on sixty. “You never know, you might like it.”

  “Like hell I will.”

  Bruce put the car in gear, eased off the clutch and started driving. The lucky horseshoe pendant hanging from the rear-view mirror swung back and forth. He had removed it from Veronica’s neck when she died; now it never came out of the car.

  After three hours at the wheel, his shoulders ached, and he was eager to stretch his legs. He’d known Jack would find it hard moving, but after Veronica’s death, and having found pot in his son’s bedroom, he knew he had to get him away from London. Jack had gotten in with a bad crowd.

  Then two months ago, Bruce noticed the ad for the house while redesigning an estate agent’s website. It was like an omen, a sign from God. Next thing he knew, he’d made an offer, had it accepted, and now he was moving hundreds of miles across the country to a house he’d not yet stepped foot in. There were too many memories in the city, but they had turned sour, left a bitter taste in his mouth.

  The road to the village of Mulberry snaked down the side of a mountain dotted with sheep. Cattle guards set in the road to stop the sheep straying made the car shudder, aggravating Bruce’s aching shoulders and back.

  He glanced at the field, saw the remains of a sheep that had been dragged through a barbed wire fence. A crow sat pecking at the remnants.

  A few houses lined the road into the village, but the remainder clustered together behind the harbour.

  He parked at the side of the road to consult the map the estate agent sent him. “Not far now.”

  “Great.”

  Bruce started driving again. He lowered the window a fraction, inhaled the briny air. Shazam poked her nose through the gap, dribbling saliva down the glass.

  The road ran alongside the harbour where a couple of men sat fishing from the quay, and a couple of other men dragged lobster pots on board their boat. At the sound of the approaching car, the men looked up. Bruce nodded his head towards them as he drove past, but the men ignored him and returned to their tasks.

  “Friendly bunch,” Jack said.

  “They’re probably busy.”

  “Yeah, that must be what it was. Why don’t you admit it? This place is s-h-i-t.”

  “Just stop, Jack. We’re here now, and this is where we’re going to stay.”

  A couple of shops stood on the main road. Buckets and spades decorated the outside of one, along with kites, beach balls, and a whole host of other holiday paraphernalia. Many of the items were faded—as though they had been on display for a long time.

  A couple of narrow side streets snaked off the main road, but Bruce continued on for another quarter mile before taking a right turn onto a narrow, hedge lined lane opposite a small, sandy cove. The house sat a hundred yards further up the lane, recognisable by the ‘for sale’ sign hammered into the garden. No one had even bothered putting a sold sign across it. Of the moving van, there was no sign.

  Bruce parked the car in the single drive and switched the ignition off. “Well, this is it.” He crouched in his seat to look up at the detached house. It looked fantastic. The photographs hadn’t done it justice. It needed work, the paint peeling and the wooden façade cracked in a couple of places, but what a bargain. “Isn’t it great?”

  Jack reinserted his earphones and turned the volume up.

  Bruce clucked his tongue and exited the car. He stretched his arms and rotated his shoulders a couple of times.

  A bark from the vehicle alerted him to Shazam, and he reached down and opened the back door. The dog bounded out and started sniffing around the ground before relieving herself.

  A low hedge separated the house from the lane, which served to hide the weed riddled front garden from passersby. From his vantage point he could see the small cove, and in the distance, the harbour. The perfect scene quite literally took his breath away. His only regret was that Veronica wasn’t here to share it with them.

  Sometimes when he looked at Jack, he saw Veronica looking back. He had the same brown eyes as his mother, the same cheeky grin, and the same lustrous, black hair, although Jack liked to keep his cut short. With so much of Veronica in Jack’s features, Bruce felt there was no room left for any of his aspects. The only thing he thought his son inherited from him was his stubborn streak.

  He quickly wiped his eyes and then turned his attention back to the house.

  Bruce took the key from his pocket and tapped on the car window. When he remembered Jack had his earphones surgically inserted, he opened the door.

  Jack looked up and removed his earphones. “What now?”

  “I just wondered whether you’d like to open the door to our new home.”

  “Whoopee. I can hardly contain myself.” He slid out of the car, snatched the key and loped towards the building.

  Bruce smiled. Given time, Jack would grow to like it here. Hell, he might even appreciate it one day.

  “The door’s already open,” Jack said, stepping into the house.

  Bruce frowned. Talk about security. Anyone could have broken in. A moment later, he followed Jack inside. The first thing he noticed was the smell, an aroma of dampness and mildew.

  Despite the price tag of his new home, he still had money in his pocket from the sale of his house in the city, which sold on the first day.

  He stood in the hallway and ran his hand down the old-fashioned, flowery wallpaper. It felt damp, almost slimy. Old newspapers littered the bare wooden floorboards and junk mail had bred behind the door.

  “You don’t really expect us to sleep here?” Jack said.

  “It won’t be that bad.”

  “That’s what you said about Tenerife, remember?”

  Bruce couldn’t forget. In an attempt to bond with his son, and to cheer them both up after Veronica’s death, he had arranged a holiday. It had been an unmitigated disaster from start to finish. The flight had been delayed by a day, the hotel was next to a work site where the workers never seemed to put down their tools, and there was an all-night disco situated next door, out of which spilled a succession of drunken youths intent on making as much noise as possible. On top of that, the Spanish food upset Bruce’s stomach and he was confined to bed for two days, leaving Jack to his own devices. He never did find out what that girl had been doing in their apartment at four in the morning.

  Bruce waved his hand dismissively. “Well, this time I mean it.”

  A couple of doors lead off the hallway, and at the end, a staircase sat draped in shadows. Bright oblongs on the walls revealed where pictures had once hung. Bruce located the light switch, but when he flicked it, nothing happened. “They mustn’t have turned the electricity on yet.”

 
; “Great. We haven’t just moved to a village at the edge of the universe, but we’ve also gone back in time to the Stone Age.”

  “It’s not that bad.”

  “Nothing ever is with you.”

  Ignoring the sarcasm in his son’s voice, Bruce walked towards the first door when he heard a sharp bang that froze him in his tracks. The sound originated from the room to his right. He remembered the unlocked door. There was nothing worth stealing in the house, but what if some kids had broken in? His heart started beating faster.

  “Who’s there?” he shouted. Receiving no reply, he grabbed the door handle and braced himself.

  “What was it, dad?”

  Bruce held his hand up to indicate silence. Another bang reverberated from the room.

  He imagined it might only be a bird or another animal that had taken up residence in the house, anything rather than thinking there was an intruder. He took a deep breath, exhaled and opened the door.

  The room was empty. Bruce sighed with relief. He needed a drink. The bang rang out again, making him jump, and he looked across to see an unfastened window.

  “It was just the window banging.”

  Watermarks and bits of underlay marred the bare floorboards. Someone had daubed black doodles on the blue painted walls. Upon closer inspection, the doodles became grotesque faces with elongated teeth. Bruce shivered. The sooner he started decorating, the better.

  Bruce stepped into the room and a floorboard creaked underfoot. He had a sudden recollection of the film The Money Pit, and wondered whether he had bought a similar white elephant.

  He turned to walk back out, when a figure stepped out from behind the door and grabbed his wrist.

  Bruce’s heart almost stopped. His eyes failed to adjust in time to identify his attacker, leaving the figure a blur of orange and green.

  He gagged, raised his free arm to defend himself.

  “So you’re the one,” a woman’s harsh voice said.

  “Who the hell’s that?” Jack shouted as he ran into the room.