“Dad–”
“Even on the way home you were hardly paying attention to your friend. Let alone to me.” The bags under his eyes had grown, tiredness made him look older. “I just wanted a nice meal out, to spend some time together and you couldn’t even do that. I know why you made us leave early.”
“There was a–”
“This is getting out of hand.” He rubbed his trembling fingers through his hair. “Do you treat Hannah like this all the time? She didn’t even know about your mum having the same skin condition.”
“It’s not something I talk about,” I snapped.
“Not even with your best friend?” Dad glided forward. “I know what women are like and I know how important friends are. Your mum had her sister. She didn’t share her illness, but she knew about it. You don’t have a sister. As far as I can tell, you only have Hannah.”
I hung my head. “What am I meant to say? By the way, I see ghosts.”
“Of course not.” Dad sighed. “There’s no such thing and don’t be clever. Maybe I can speak to her. I can tell what we know: that it’s genetic, that you have hallucinations. You don’t want to lose her.”
“Right, and telling her I have hallucinations, that won’t freak her out.”
“It’s
“Dad!”
“You aren’t giving her enough credit.”
“Leave it.” I glanced towards the upstairs bathroom. “I’m handling this.”
He shook his head. “I’m worried about you. You’re going to end up alone.”
“I mean it. If I want Hannah to know, I’ll tell her. But right now I’m not taking the risk.”
“I’m ready.” Hannah’s voice called out from the bathroom. “Check it – neon pink and we’re going to try frosted tips this time.”
“Coming.” I glanced at Dad and sighed. “I really didn’t mean to ignore you.”
Dad looked at his dead feet. “Like I said, Taylor, I’m used to it.”
That night I fell asleep to the memory of words from Oh-Fa’s journal. I clenched my fists as I curled up in bed. If only I had enough of me left to keep my dad from feeling so alone.
“This is your early warning.” I looked sideways at Hannah. The candyfloss of her hair finished with platinum ends that caught the sun like puffs of cloud. “You look great, by the way.”
“I know.” She fluffed it with her fingers. “Mum hated it.”
“Excellent,” I grinned.
“So – early warning?” She swung her bag higher on her shoulder.
I cleared my throat. “I’m skipping out at lunch.”
“What?” Hannah stopped in front of me. “Why?”
“It’s an eczema thing.” I flashed my gloved hand briefly in front of her. “Doctor’s appointment.”
“You have a letter?”
I blinked. “I don’t have to show you a letter, do I?”
She sighed.
“I’ve got a letter.” I’d been forging Dad’s signature for three years. Mum always took me out of school when the Marks made it necessary, but Dad, not so much.
“You didn’t mention it last night.”
“It’s boring. I’ll be back in tomorrow, probably.”
“Probably? They’re not going to keep you in, are they?”
“No, nothing like that. I’ll let you know as soon as I do, promise.”
“Fine.” Hannah stepped to one side so we could walk to class. Her feet dragged all the way.
Getting hold of Justin’s address had been a matter of getting hold of Tamsin’s phone. I’d simply waited until she was showering after second period gym and snagged it from her bag. As I suspected, her contacts were up to date with email addresses, phone numbers, Twitter and all sorts, including physical addresses. Quickly I memorised Justin’s postcode and house number, and stuck the phone back in her bag when her hags weren’t looking.
Then at lunch I headed over there.
He lived in Brook Green, or he had, and his house was not actually that far from mine, which explained why I’d seen him down at the river a few times.
It was a smart Georgian townhouse. Justin had only been in the country five years, so his parents must have bought at the height of the market. They were well off. Not a huge surprise.
Unfortunately, it wasn’t the kind of area that was good for loitering; no benches or bus shelters anywhere nearby and a police car was parked at the end of the road. I walked up and down the street half a dozen times, keeping my eyes on the blue front door. There was no sign of Justin.
Movement in the living room caught my attention and I increased my speed. A tall woman was standing at the window, one hand on the curtain, slow and elegant in grief. With the other she clutched a phone to her chest. Even from a distance I could see that she hadn’t slept in days. It had to be Justin’s mother, waiting for a call that would never come.
Was he in there, watching her?
I considered going up to the front door and knocking. I could offer my sympathies and try to get inside.
But I couldn’t face her. Not knowing what I knew.
I tugged at my glove, pulling it free. The black Mark staining my hand seemed to mock me. I had to ask Justin who killed him and put that look on his mother’s face. Still, I had time left; time to stake out the house and local area. And there was another obvious place for me to look.
Bothering his mother would be a last resort.
I texted Hannah swiftly. “
It turned out that Tamsin lived in a portered apartment on the other side of the borough, an easy walk from High Street Ken tube. I curled my lip. She’d have parquet flooring and downstairs a gym, maybe even a swimming pool. I leaned in the shadows of the building opposite and my eyes darted. The day was getting busy and any one of the people milling past me could be dead. Every minute I spent out here I was opening myself to the possibility of gaining another Mark and hastening the arrival of the Darkness.
The porter buzzed in a woman with an armful of shopping bags, calling her by name. It wouldn’t be easy breaking in and Tamsin certainly wasn’t going to be inviting me over any time soon. Again, my best bet would be to hang around outside until Justin turned up.
I closed my fist. The black Mark seemed to throb and the shadows around me grew darker. Breath held I