Caw jumped. He glanced up and saw Milky perched in a branch.
Glum snapped his head around. Did you just … speak? he said.
Milky blinked, and Caw stared into the pale film of the old crow’s eyes. “Milky?” he said.
The spider this way crawls , said the white crow again. His voice was like the rasp of wind over dried leaves. And we are but prey in his web.
I told you old snowball’s bonkers , cackled Screech.
Caw’s throat had gone dry. “What do you mean, the spider ?” he asked.
Milky stared back at him. Lydia was still at the door, watching.
“What spider, Milky?” Caw said again.
But the white crow was silent.
Something was happening. Something big. And whatever it was, Caw wasn’t going to miss it.
“Come on,” he said, at last. “We’re following that man.”
Contents Cover Title Page Copyright Dedication With special thanks to Michael Ford Epigraph “Some of the victims were found with tooth marks on their bodies. Others had been dropped from great heights or were bloated with poisons found in their blood. To this day, no one knows what – or who – was behind the strange series of murders that swept through Blackstone that fateful summer.” The Mystery of the Dark Summer by Josephine Wallace, Head Librarian, Blackstone Central Library Chapter 1 Chapter 2 Chapter 3 Chapter 4 Chapter 5 Chapter 6 Chapter 7 Chapter 8 Chapter 9 Chapter 10 Chapter 11 Chapter 12 Chapter 13 Chapter 14 Chapter 15 Chapter 16 Chapter 17 Chapter 18 Chapter 19 Chapter 20 About the Publisher
aw tiptoed along the top of the park wall,keeping pace with Lydia’s father.
This is ridiculous , said Glum. You’ll get us into trouble again, just like last night.
Caw ignored him. They reached the end of the wall, and the man took a right turn towards the prison gates. For a moment Caw panicked. He couldn’t follow without being seen. But then he remembered.
“Meet me on the roof,” he said to the crows, then slipped down and ran across the dark, deserted road. On the far side was an abandoned building, half demolished, with one wall completely gone, the insides exposed to the elements. Caw could see skeletal hulks of old machines within. Whatever they used to make, those days of usefulness were a long-forgotten memory.
Caw scrambled over the rubble up to the first floor, careful not to make a sound. He skirted boxes piled high with old books, their covers mostly rotted away. He climbed two flights of stairs towards a hatch that opened on to a roof of corrugated metal. Then he crept to the highest point, where Glum, Screech and Milky were already perched, just as Lydia’s father reached the prison gates far below on the opposite side of the street.
A dozen men and women in prison-guard uniform were standing in groups, illuminated by the floodlights, looking nervous but excited. Dogs strained at their leads, nosing the air.
The wailing siren cut out suddenly, and the vibrations faded on the air.
“Where’s that plan of the sewers?” said Lydia’s father. His voice carried clearly up to Caw.
One of the men laid a large sheet of paper on the hood of a car.
Caw’s heart quickened. He was right to think that Lydia’s father wasn’t just a guard. He was ordering the others around like he was in charge of the whole prison!
“The police will be here in the next five minutes, but we can’t afford to wait. The clock is ticking. Everyone get into pairs. One dog per pair. Fan out into the surrounding streets. Check every manhole cover. If you see them, call it in. Don’t try to apprehend them – you know who we’re dealing with. And be careful!”
The guards started to disperse, while Lydia’s father peered at the map. In a moment, he was alone.
Can we please go home now? said Glum, fluffing out his feathers. It’s freezing!
Hey, over here! called Screech.
Caw turned round – the youngest of the crows was perched at the other end of the roof. A faint grinding sound was rising up from below. Something’s happening down there , said Screech.
Caw looked at Lydia’s father. His head had jerked up, as though he’d heard it too. He swiftly folded the map and began to pace across the street.
Caw ran over the roof to join Screech, and stared down into the alley below.
It was empty, apart from a few strewn papers and some rubbish bins. One end of the alley forked into a maze of passages running between the buildings. The other, Caw guessed, eventually made its way to the main street near the prison.
With another grinding sound, the manhole cover directly below Caw turned. One side cracked open, then the whole thing lifted free and was tossed aside like it weighed nothing, spinning like a coin, then settling flat. Caw shrank back, peering over the roof’s parapet. Something small scurried out of the dark well in the ground. An insect, or maybe a spider. And then two hands emerged. Big, meaty hands. A huge figure heaved itself into the open. Caw saw a bald head, a great gleaming dome of skin stretched over skull. The man wore an orange shirt and trousers.
Suddenly it made sense. The guards in a panic. The search parties.
“An escaped prisoner,” Caw whispered. “That’s who they’re looking for!”
I can see that , said Glum.
The man tipped back his head and terror caught in Caw’s throat. Something was wrong with the man’s mouth. It was too wide, like his cheeks were split in a hideous grin. Then, after a heartbeat, Caw realised it was a tattoo. A permanent smile.
He’s a looker , Screech muttered.
The prisoner started to tear off his shirt, and called down into the manhole in a muted voice, “All clear!” Then the man tossed the ripped prison shirt aside and turned back around.
As Caw saw the man’s bare chest, he felt his bones turn to ice. A new wave of terror hit him, deeper than anything he’d felt outside his nightmares. Pure fear, straight from the darkest depths of his mind, undimmed by logic and impossible to ignore. It squeezed each of his nerve endings and turned his stomach to water.
Inked across the massive man’s chest was a tattoo that rippled with his muscles, almost as though it was alive. Eight legs, scurrying.
A spider .
And not just any spider. Its body was a looping line, and a spiky M-shape was emblazoned inside it.
Caw gripped the parapet, his mouth dry as dust.
It was the spider from his dream.
Beside him, Milky ruffled his feathers.
The tattooed prisoner leant over the manhole, took hold of a skinny wrist and pulled a second figure into the open – a young woman. She had black hair that fell to her waist and caught the streetlight like a raven’s wing. As she straightened up, she stood even taller than the man. The sleeves of her prison uniform were soiled with dirty water from the sewer, and she began carefully rolling them up. Her arms were lithe and muscled, as though she could wrap them around a person and squeeze their life away.
And then came a third person. He flopped out into the alley and scrambled to his feet, brushing down his clothes. He was less than half the height of the others and hunched over. He looked old, but he moved like a younger man. His eyes darted around in all directions.
“Finally, the smells of the city!” said the short man. “How I missed the delicious stench of rot.”
The big man cracked his knuckles. “Time to get back to business,” he said.
“We shouldn’t delay,” hissed the woman. Her voice was soft and sibilant. “It won’t be long before they work out where that tunnel leads.”
“Freeze!”
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