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    Tormenting Lila

    Page 5
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      (possibly) in love with the

      local bad boy, and falling out

      with a dangerous serial killer

      . . .

      Prologue

      I’m running, running blind.

      Into the dark. Into the woods.

      Ricocheting off branches,

      tripping over tangled tree

      roots, gripping my arm as I

      stumble on, sobbing. Are

      those his footsteps coming

      after me or is it the wind? A

      bird? An animal?

      I come to a flying halt and

      crouch down in the dirt,

      trying to listen. Is he

      following me? But my

      breathing is so loud and

      laboured it’s all I can hear.

      That and the wild drumming

      of blood in my ears. My heart

      is no longer a caged bird but

      a dozen bats trying to burst

      free. I close my eyes and try

      to sink down into the dark.

      My fingers burrow through

      sandy soil, damp leaves. I

      want to claw my way deep

      into the earth, roll beneath

      the leaves and bury myself. I

      want to sob and scream and

      melt and turn to smoke and

      vanish. When I open my eyes

      the world spins, recedes then

      rushes back in.

      ‘Ren!’

      His voice yells my name.

      Over and over. Filling my

      head with the sound of it and

      tearing apart the night.

      I need to stand up. I need

      to run. But I’m frozen. My

      back is slammed against a

      tree. My lungs are beginning

      to close down. I try to suck in

      a breath but it gets stuck and

      all of a sudden the sky looms

      darker and larger overhead,

      the stars fuzzing out of focus

      and dissolving into the

      blanket sky.

      A crunch.

      I shrink back as far as I

      can, feeling the bark of the

      tree scratch a bloody trail

      across my shoulder. I bite my

      lip, choking off the scream

      that is fighting to burst out.

      He is out there, holding his

      breath as I hold mine. Ears

      pricked, eyes scouring the

      darkness. I can sense him

      there waiting, just a few feet

      away, his head tilted as he

      listens, and I can no longer

      balance my weight on the

      balls of my feet. My knees

      are going to give, my arms

      are shaking.

      Tears are slipping

      noiselessly down my cheeks

      as my eyes dart left and right

      strafing the darkness. I can’t

      see anything. It’s pitch black

      out here. In the distance the

      roar of the ocean seems to be

      calling to me, whispering my

      name, urging me to make a

      run towards it.

      A twig snaps to my right.

      I haul myself to standing

      in that same second and then

      I am running, ignoring the

      shooting pain in my arm and

      the sting of branches slashing

      at my face. All I can hear

      now is a roaring in my ears.

      And behind me, coming

      closer, his breath, his

      footsteps and the heat of him

      rising like a mist. My feet hit

      something soft. I’m on the

      beach. The trees have given

      way to sand dunes. The ocean

      sounds wild and close. If I

      can only make it there . . .

      because where else is there to

      run to? And then suddenly

      my foot hits something

      sharp, a rock buried in the

      sand, and I’m flying, falling

      fast, and I land hard, my

      ankle twisting, and I let out a

      yell that I try to smother with

      my other hand. I roll onto my

      back, kicking at invisible

      hands. I try to draw my legs

      up to my body, to curl into a

      ball, but my ankle explodes

      in pain and I can’t move it.

      And I whimper, not because

      of the pain but because fear

      floods my tongue and it’s as

      foul as earth and it’s fear

      which is closing up my throat

      as surely as his hands sliding

      around my neck and

      squeezing.

      I want my mum. And I sob

      her name out loud into the

      darkness, and over the sound

      of the ocean roaring I hear

      his breathing, loud and heavy

      and excited, coming close.

      But the thought of my

      mum is enough to push back

      the fear and let the rage in.

      And I’ve never felt such rage

      before. It almost cancels out

      the fear, roaring inside me

      now as deep as the ocean.

      I start scrabbling

      desperately for something –

      anything – to use as a

      weapon.

      My hand sinks into the

      dune, trying to find the object

      I tripped on, and my fingers

      close around a rock, heavy

      with jagged, sharp edges. I

      draw it into my lap and sit

      there clutching it as the tears

      stream down my cheeks.

      My breathing is coming in

      little gasps now. I’m

      struggling to force air down

      into my lungs – they’re on

      fire from the inside, smoke-

      filled and layered with ash.

      My fingers are starting to

      tingle. My lips are going

      numb.

      And then he appears, a

      dark shape against the sky,

      and the rock slides out of my

      hand and falls with a muted

      thud to the sand. I open my

      mouth to scream but I can’t

      because my throat has

      squeezed shut and there’s no

      air left in my lungs.

      And the last thing I see,

      before the darkness drowns

      me completely, is him.

      1

      I’ve never held a baby so

      when he hands me this

      squalling red thing I just

      stare at it.

      ‘Can you take Braiden?’ he

      says.

      The baby has a name. This

      doesn’t make holding it any

      less terrifying. But I reach

      out and say ‘sure’ and next

      thing I know I’m holding a

      baby. And mother of all

      surprises, the baby – Braiden

      – stops crying. He not only

      stops crying, he reaches for

      my hair with fat little fists,

      tugs on a loose strand and

      gurgles happily at me.

      I am holding a baby. I grin.

      The whole way here on the

      plane I have been preparing

      for this moment. The

      moment where my summer

      plan of nannying falls apart

      like a stage set collapsing as

      the people I’m nannying for

      discover that my only

      experience of children is

      having been one once (and

      technically, legally, I

      suppose, still being one).

      But now I’m holding th
    e

      baby and it’s not screaming

      and I haven’t dropped it on

      its head yet and I’m thinking

      as I bounce him up and down

      that maybe, just maybe, I can

      get away with it so they don’t

      throw me out and send me

      back to England on the next

      flight.

      ‘See, he loves you,’ the

      dad says. ‘I’ll be back in just

      one second.’ And he

      disappears.

      I stare after him in a state

      of mild panic. It’s one thing

      to hold a baby and another

      thing entirely to be left

      holding the baby.

      ‘OK, OK, Braiden,’ I start

      to say in a sing-song voice

      that I’ve never in my life

      used before. ‘I can do this, I

      can do this.’ I drop my voice

      back to its normal range. The

      baby’s face is now

      scrunching up and going

      bright red and he’s looking

      kind of startled. Probably, I

      think, because his dad has

      just handed him to a

      complete stranger and

      walked off.

      ‘He’s doing a number

      two.’

      I turn around. ‘Hey,’ I say

      to the little girl with red hair

      who’s just appeared in the

      doorway. ‘You must be . . .’

      ‘Brodie,’ she finishes, then

      points at her brother. ‘He’s

      doing a number two.’

      I glance back at Braiden

      who is now fist-pumping

      wildly and thrashing his legs

      against my stomach. ‘Oh,’ I

      say, as the stench hits my

      nostrils.

      Nice. I think of how I am

      going to describe this

      moment later to Megan.

      Pooed on by a baby within

      minutes of arriving. She’d

      tell me with a wryly arched

      eyebrow that one way or

      another I always get shat on.

      ‘You need a diaper,’

      Brodie informs me, crossing

      her hands over her chest and

      squinting up at me.

      ‘You want to show me

      where they are?’ I ask,

      thinking that maybe I can

      also get her to show me how

      to change it. Because I don’t

      have a clue. I should have

      YouTubed all these things

      before I left but for one

      reason or another I didn’t.

      Brodie leads me into a

      bedroom – belonging to her

      parents, I assume, because

      there’s a double bed on top of

      which are a couple of half-

      unpacked suitcases, a laptop

      case, a newspaper and a stack

      of folders.

      Brodie reaches a freckled

      arm into a changing bag on

      the floor and pulls out a stash

      of diapers, a tub of

      something that looks

      alarmingly medical and some

      baby wipes. She puts them on

      the bed and stares at me

      expectantly.

      I clear space, pushing the

      laptop far, far out of the way

      and wondering silently if the

      bed is the right place to do

      this. The duvet cover is

      white. It feels like I’m

      testing fate.

      I lay the baby down

      carefully on top of a plastic

      mat thing which Brodie has

      helpfully laid out for me.

      Braiden blows a bubble out

      of the side of his mouth. It’s

      kind of cute. And then I catch

      another waft and my eyes

      water. I do a quick study of

      his outfit, locate the handily

      placed poppers and peel it

      back. There is poo. There is a

      lot of poo, oozing like mud

      out of the sides of his nappy

      (let’s not call it a diaper) and

      who knew poo could ever be

      that consistency? Or that

      colour? I’m stunned. Too

      stunned to move.

      ‘Do you even know what

      you’re doing?’ Brodie asks,

      her eyes narrowing at me in a

      disturbing display of

      suspicion coming from a

      four-year-old.

      I weigh my answer. ‘No,’ I

      finally say, glancing quickly

      at the open door. ‘But if you

      help me out on this one I will

      do my very best to make it up

      to you.’

      She studies me like a

      lawyer and then bounces over

      to me, grinning. ‘Deal.’

      She unsticks the nappy and

      opens it and we both stagger

      backwards.

      ‘You’re cleaning the poop

      though,’ she says, handing

      me the wipes.

      I wipe and smear and then

      I wipe some more. Babies’

      thighs have all sorts of

      crevices, I discover. And the

      instinct I had over not doing

      this on a white duvet turns

      out to have been correct, so I

      end up trying to wipe up the

      smears on that too.

      When I’m done, Brodie

      hands me a clean nappy and

      shows me how to do it up. I

      reseal the poppers on the

      Babygro feeling more proud

      of myself than when I passed

      my driving test.

      ‘Oh my goodness.’

      I spin around. There’s a

      woman in the doorway and I

      am guessing from the red

      hair that she is the mother of

      the pooing baby and the

      precocious four-year-old, and

      therefore my new boss.

      ‘Did Mike leave you to

      change Braiden’s diaper?’

      she says. ‘I am so sorry. And

      I’m sorry I wasn’t here to

      welcome you when you

      arrived. I just had to run to

      the store. We only just got

      here ourselves.’

      ‘That’s fine,’ I say. ‘Don’t

      worry. Brodie here helped me

      out.’ I wink at Brodie and she

      grins back at me.

      ‘It’s Ren, isn’t it?’ she

      asks, putting her handbag

      down on the bed and shaking

      my hand. ‘It’s so lovely to

      meet you. I’m Carrie Tripp.’

      ‘Hi,’ I say, shaking her

      hand. ‘Nice to meet you too.’

      ‘Did my husband at least

      show you to your room?’ she

      asks.

      I shake my head.

      ‘Mike!’ Mrs Tripp yells at

      the top of her voice. She

      turns back to the bed and

      picks up Braiden. Mr Tripp

      walks into the room at that

      point.

      ‘Hey, honey,’ he says,

      seeing his wife. ‘You met

      Ren, then? I was just taking a

      quick call.’

      Carrie raises an eyebrow.

      He gives her an innocent look

      as if to say, what? And then his wife shakes her head and

      laughs and I think to myself

      that I’m going to like these

      people. I’m going to like

      being part of their family for

      the summer. Even if poo-


      filled nappies are the trade-

      off.

      ‘Brodie, can you show Ren

      to her room, please?’ Carrie

      says.

      ‘Sure,’ Brodie says and she

      slips her hand into mine.

      Sumário

      Title page

      2

      Copyright page

      3

      Contents

      7

      Tormenting Lila

      9

      Three days later

      138

      Meet Ren, Tyler,

      Parker and Jesse

      this summer in The 145

      Sound, out August

      1st.

      Prologue

      148

      1

      161

      Document Outline

      Title page

      Copyright page

      Contents

      Tormenting Lila

      Three days later

      Meet Ren, Tyler, Parker and Jesse this summer in The Sound, out August 1st.

      Prologue

      1

      Table of Contents

      Tormenting Lila

      Three days later

      Meet Ren, Tyler, Parker and

      Prologue

      1

      Title page

      Copyright page

      Contents

     

     

     



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