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Lair

James Herbert




  THE RATS established James Herbert as the leading British writer of horror fiction, and each of his bestselling titles has recieved critical acclaim.

  THE RATS

  ‘What a chiller it is . . . the author knows how to keep a story moving.’ Daily Express

  ‘The effectiveness of the gruesome set pieces and brilliant finale are all its own.’ Sunday Times

  THE FOG

  ‘For goodness sake don’t leave this book on Aunt Edna’s chair.’

  Sunday Times

  THE SURVIVOR

  ‘Brisk and ingenious horror story.’ Sunday Times

  ‘The story moves colourfully to a climax but keeps its secret to the last.’ Manchester Evening News

  FLUKE

  ‘This beguiling tale . . .’ Daily Telegraph

  ‘A marvellous fantasy with insight into the natures of dogs and men.’ Evening News

  THE SPEAR

  ‘. . . violent, creepy and compulsive reading. Certainly a Spear with an edge to it.’ Daily Mirror

  ‘. . . a brutal horror story.’ Manchester Evening News

  Also by this author and available

  from New English Library:

  THE RATS

  THE FOG

  THE SURVIVOR

  FLUKE

  LAIR

  James Herbert

  NEW ENGLISH LIBRARY/TIMES MIRROR

  The two lines from ‘The Teddy Bears’ Picnic’

  by Jimmy Kennedy and John W. Bratton,

  © 1907, are reproduced by permission of

  B. Feldman & Co. Ltd

  138-140 Charing Cross Road, London WC2H 0LD

  First published in Great Britain in 1979 by

  New English Library

  © 1979 by James Herbert

  First NEL Paperback edition July 1979

  Reprinted three times prior to publication

  Reprinted August 1979

  Reprinted December 1979

  Reprinted January 1980

  Condition of sale: This book is sold subject to the conditions that it shall not, by way

  of trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold,

  hired out, or otherwise circulated without

  the publisher’s prior consent in any

  form or binding or cover other than that

  in which it is published and without a

  similar condition including this condition

  being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.

  NEL Books are published by

  New English Library from

  Barnard’s Inn, Holborn,

  London EC1N 2JR.

  Made and printed in Great Britain by

  Hunt Barnard Printing Ltd.,

  Aylesbury, Bucks.

  45004546 3

  ebook created by tardismatrix

  If you go down in the woods today

  Your sure of a big surprise . . .

  from The Teddy Bears’ Picnic

  by Jimmy Kennedy and John W. Bratton

  PROLOGUE

  The rat had been trapped in the basement for five days. It had crawled into a dark corner behind a row of shelves to give birth to its litter and, when it had tried to follow the sound, the sound that buzzed through its head, it had found the way blocked by a heavy iron door. The sound had continued for five long days, almost driving the mother-rat and its tiny offspring mad with its incessant, monotonous pitch. But they had found food in abundance in the basement. The owners had ignored the government warning to leave all doors open so that every building could be cleared, for they knew that when the city's population returned from its short exile, food would be scarce for the first few days, and their shop would be ready to cash in on the short-age. The rat and its litter gorged themselves on the food, for the young ones seemed only to need their mother's milk for the first three days, finding greater replenishment in the food around them. They grew larger and sturdier day by day, dark brown, almost black hairs were already beginning to grow on their bodies. Except for one. Only a few white hairs sprouted on its pinkish white body. It seemed to dominate the others, who brought it food and kept its body warm with their own. A curious lump seemed to be growing on its broad, lop-sided shoulder, next to its head.

  Patiently, they waited for the people to return.

  Signs

  One

  ‘Bloody vermin,’ Ken Woollard cursed aloud, raising his head to examine the 'loop' smears around the rafters of his low-ceilinged barn. The grease marks against the whitewashed walls had been caused by small furry bodies sliding under the beams into the recesses of the rough ceiling. And the only creatures he knew who did that were rodents. Mice and rats. The stains looked too big to have been caused by mice.

  ‘Bloody cats aren't earning their bloody keep,’ he said to himself. Turning and walking from the gloomy building, he examined the floor for droppings. He found none, but it was hardly reassuring. The vermin were there all right, the smears were proof enough. Well, the poison would go down tonight, no messing about waiting for serious damage to be done. Farming the land was hard enough without pests destroying anything edible they could find. Fluoroacetamide should do the trick, no sodding about with pre-baiting. A good dose of it, clear them out right away.

  The bright October sunlight made him narrow his eyes as he paused at the barn door. Have to report it, I suppose, government law after the Outbreak. They'd gassed the buggers then, but they were still nervous it might start all over again. Still, that was the city, a great big filthy breeding-place for vermin -

  animal and human. Unfortunately, Epping Forest was close enough to London for them to get the willies again. They'd be down, snooping around, putting the whole bloody farm into quarantine until they were sure it wasn't the bloody rats.

  Fuck 'em. Got no time for that nonsense. Get rid of them before all the fuss starts. Where's those bloody cats?

  Woollard trudged through the mud of the small farmyard hissing through his teeth to attract the two cats he kept not as pets, but as working animals. Until now they had managed to keep the number of rats down - you could never keep them away altogether but the vermin were now getting into the buildings, and that could lead to big trouble.

  Woollard's weathered face was creased into deep trenches of anger as he turned the corner of an outbuilding, when suddenly he caught sight of a small white object lying in the mud. At first he thought it might just be a bird feather, but the tinges of red along one edge aroused his curiosity. He squinted as he approached, deciding it wasn't a feather at all but a tiny, obviously dead, animal. He was used to finding dead mice around the place, for his cats usually did their job well enough. This time, though, there was something odd about the furry corpse.

  Stooping to examine the body more closely, he suddenly drew in a sharp breath. He reached for the object he now knew was not a dead mouse. Blood had matted the fur at one end and two of the claws at the other end were missing. He dropped the cat's paw in disgust.

  Pushing himself erect, he quickly searched the area around him for the rest of the cat's body. The stupid bloody creature must have got tangled up in some farmyard machinery, or maybe some wiring, and had the paw torn from its body. It must have crawled away somewhere to nurse its wound - or die, most likely. It was then he saw the blood-streaks against the wall of the outhouse.

  They stretched all the way along the wall's length, dark red, clots of black and brown hair sticking to the viscous surface.

  One of the cats - they had no names, he wasn't that sentimental was black and brown, with white paws. Whatever had got hold of the poor bloody creature had dragged it along the wall, and the frantic red scratch marks gave evidence that the cat had still been alive at the time.

  ‘Good bloody God,’ the farmer said in a hushed tone. He followed the gory trail, anger quicken
ing his strides. What manner of creature could do such a thing? A fox? Been none of them around here for years. Anyway, he'd never heard of a fox fighting with a cat before. Some bloody dog's done it! One of them belonging to someone living in the forest. Never kept their bloody animals locked up! Bad enough with horses trotting all over the place! Well this one'll get my bloody shotgun up its arse.

  He reached the end of the wall and hurried round, anger blurring his vision so that he failed to see the object lying on the ground before him. His heavy boot crunched it down into the mud before he realised he had trodden on something hard. He stopped, turned, and once again stooped to examine the object on the ground.

  Two sightless slits stared up at him, mud covering the lower portion of the crushed skull. He pulled at a pointed ear and the cat's head came free with a sucking sound, startling Woollard and making him throw the skull into the air. It landed in the mud again with a plop, and lay half on its side, a wicked, feline grin seeming to mock the frightened farmer.

  The man crawled on his stomach through the damp grass towards the prone woman. She lay unaware of his stealthy approach, her face turned towards the sun, surprised and happy to receive its warmth so late in the year. She flexed her shoulders against the rough blanket, its thickness protecting her from the wetness of the grass which even the sun could not draw out.

  The creeping man smiled and a gleam came into his eyes. A sound behind him made him turn his head sharply and he frowned at his two companions, silently urging them to remain quiet.

  The woman sighed and raised a knee provocatively; the smoothness of her legs caught the man's attention. His smile widened and he felt the pressure of the earth against his loins.

  He was close now, close enough to reach out and touch that wonderfully soft body. He tried to control his breathing so that she wouldn't hear.

  Bringing his arm forward, he snapped off a long blade of grass, then pointed its quivering tip towards the woman's face.

  She twitched as the fine point ran down the side of her nose, then twitched again as the tickling sensation persisted. She suddenly sat upright, vigorously rubbing at her skin as though to dislodge an errant insect.

  ‘Terry,’ she shouted when she saw his shaking body, and grabbed a handful of grass and threw it into his face.

  The two children behind the man laughed excitedly, the small girl jumping on his back and pounding his head with the palm of her hand.

  ‘Oi!’ he yelped, reaching behind and toppling her over his shoulder. ‘S'enough of that!’

  The woman smiled as her husband rolled the four-year-old over in the grass. ‘Mind her clothes, Terry. She'll get wet.’

  ‘All right, monkey, you heard what your mother said.’ Terry tossed the girl onto the blanket where she immediately jumped into the woman's arms.

  ‘Game of football, Dad?’ the boy asked, eyebrows raised in anticipation.

  ‘Okay, Keith, get the ball. It's in the back of the car.’

  The boy, seven years old, and ready to play for England -

  maybe West Ham would do - scampered off towards the red car parked fifty yards away on a hard piece of ground not too far from the road.

  ‘This is nice, Terry,’ the woman said, allowing her daughter to scramble free and chase the boy.

  ‘Yeah. We should do it more often, you know.’

  The woman looked at him meaningfully. We could always do it on weekends. It would be better than keeping Keith away from school for the day. Wouldn't do any harm to take them down to Southend now and again. They like the sea.’

  Terry grunted noncommittally. He didn't want to make any promises just because he was in a good mood. ‘Come on, you two, hurry up,’ he shouted after the children.

  The woman knew there was no point in pursuing the subject.

  ‘When do you think you'll go back?’ she asked.

  Terry shrugged. When the Union says so, I suppose.’

  ‘I don't know how they get away with it. It's a wonder the company don't go bust. It's the fifth dispute this year.’

  ‘Sixth. We were on a go-slow last month.’

  The woman groaned. ‘How you get any cars out at all beats me.’

  ‘Leave it alone, Hazel. I have to follow the Union rules.’

  ‘Yes, you all do, don't you? You're all bloody mindless.’

  ‘They get us more money, don't they? And better conditions.’

  ‘And what are they going to do when there's no car plant left?

  When the Americans pull out?’

  ‘Leave off. That'll never happen.’

  ‘No, not until it does.’

  The couple sat in silence for a few moments, each annoyed with the other.

  ‘At least it gives me more time with the kids, don't it?’ Terry said finally.

  Hazel sniffed.

  The two children returned, the boy kicking the ball ahead and the girl running after it, trying to smother it with her body.

  Terry leapt to his feet and ran towards them, kicking the ball away from the girl who shrieked with glee.

  Hazel smiled at the three of them and pushed thoughts of strikes and unions and weekends spent indoors away from her mind. ‘Lazy bastard,’ she said softly, still smiling, as she watched her husband kick the football with his knee onto his head.

  ‘Okay, Keith, in goal,’ Terry told the boy who immediately pulled a disgusted face.

  ‘I'm always in goal. Can't you go in for a change, Dad?’

  ‘Yeah, I will. When I've scored three, all right? In between those two trees, go on.’

  The boy slunk off and stood between two horn beams hands on his hips, facing his prancing father.

  The girl tried to grab the ball from her father's feet and giggled when he pulled it away from her with the underside of one foot.

  ‘No you don't, Josie. You're up against a pro here.’ Terry kicked the ball clear of his daughter then gave it a hefty kick towards the makeshift goal. Keith met it with a kick of his own and sent it skimming back past his father.

  ‘Show off!’ Terry called out and ran after it, slipping and falling onto his back as he stretched a foot out to halt the ball's progress.

  Hazel and the two children laughed aloud as Terry struggled to his feet, a rueful grin on his face.

  ‘All right, you asked for it,’ he called back to Keith. ‘Get ready for this one!’

  He retrieved the ball, placed it firmly on the ground, took a few steps back, then kicked it high and hard towards the goal-mouth Josie bravely jumped up and tried to catch the ball, but the boy was older and wiser: he ducked and let it sail over his head. The ball disappeared with a rustle of protesting leaves into the heavy clump of bushes behind the trees.

  ‘Oh, Dad!’ Keith moaned.

  ‘Terry, that's too hard,’ said Hazel, reproachfully.

  ‘Well, go and get it, son,’ said Terry, unabashed.

  But Keith squatted on the ground, arms folded across his chest, a set expression on his face.

  ‘I get it, Daddy,’ Josie cried out, scurrying towards the bushes.

  ‘Watch her, Terry, don't let her go out of sight,’ Hazel said anxiously.

  ‘She's all right, it didn't go far.’ Terry stretched his arms and gazed at the greenness around him. ‘Beats bloody working,’ he muttered under his breath.

  Josie peered into the bushes, then jiggled her body through the small opening she had found. She squirmed further into the undergrowth, her eyes darting from left to right in search of the lost ball. Her mother's voice followed her through the tangle of leaves and branches, but the girl's mind was too concentrated on her quest to listen. She squealed in excitement when she saw the white round object of her search nestling beneath a leafy bush, and pushed herself forward, wincing as the branches scratched at her legs.

  She reached the ball in a final determined rush, then squatted on her haunches to retrieve it. Something moved just beyond the football. Something dark, hiding in the darker shadows of the thick undergrowth.

/>   Josie's fingertips reached for the ball and flicked it free, rolling it back towards her. She hugged it to her chest and was about to rise when her sharp little eyes caught sight of the animal. She moved closer, ducking beneath the leaves to get a better view. The football was forgotten for the moment and left to one side, shiny and wet. Josie crawled forward on all fours, oblivious to the damp earth which muddied her hands and knees. In the dimness she could just distinguish a black, stiff-furred body and two close-set highlights reflected in the creature's eyes. It did not move, but waited for her to draw near.

  ‘Good doggy,’ Josie said happily. ‘Come here. Come on.’

  A thick branch blocked her way and she pushed at it impatiently, but it would not budge. She reached over, wanting to stroke the animal's head.

  The pointed head jerked once, then stretched forward towards the approaching fingers. The girl giggled, overjoyed that the animal wanted to be friendly, and pushed even harder against the branch so that she could touch the furry body. Hot breath from the creature's mouth warmed her pudgy hand.

  The sudden crash of broken undergrowth from behind startled her and she drew her arm back in a reflex action.

  ‘Josie? Where are you?’ came her father's concerned voice.

  ‘Here, Daddy,’ she called out. ‘Got a doggy.’

  Terry brushed the leaves and branches aside and found his daughter on her knees in the mud, the white football near her feet. Her face beamed up at him in excitement.

  ‘You wait till your mother sees the state of you,’ he scolded, and reached down to scoop her up in his arms.

  ‘Dog in there, Daddy. Can we take him home?’

  Her father peered into the gloom behind her, but when she turned to point to the spot where the animal had been hiding, it had gone.

  The horse, chestnut in colour, cantered easily along the hoggin path, its rider immaculately clad in a light brown uniform and dark riding cap. Charles Denison, Head Keeper of Epping Forest, was content on this fine, October morning.

  It was the season he loved best: the greens, yellows and browns of autumn gave the forest new life, changed its personality in a most beautiful way. The dying leaves replenished the earth, the golden, myriad carpet it formed on the woodland floor injecting the soil with fresh vitality which would be slowly processed through the winter months. The air was fresh, its sharpness exhilarating. And best of all, the people were gone.