Nightshade: The Fourth Jack Nightingale Supernatural Thriller

Read Online Nightshade: The Fourth Jack Nightingale Supernatural Thriller by Stephen Leather - Free Book Online Page B

Book: Nightshade: The Fourth Jack Nightingale Supernatural Thriller by Stephen Leather Read Free Book Online
Authors: Stephen Leather
Ads: Link
door. Just give it a ring and I’ll come down and let you in. How’s the room, by the way?’
    ‘Perfect,’ said Nightingale. ‘No lock on the door, though?’
    ‘You’re the only guest,’ said the landlord. ‘And you can trust me and the wife.’
    ‘I’ve nothing worth taking anyway,’ said Nightingale. He let himself out and lit his cigarette as he walked down to the beach. There were thick clouds overhead blocking out the moon and stars, but there was enough light spilling out of the pub windows for him to see. He walked onto the sand and stood watching the waves break onto the beach. A bitterly cold wind blew in from the sea and he shivered.
    The sound of the waves was almost hypnotic and he found himself being lulled into a trance-like state, though that could have been a result of all the beer he’d drunk with his new-found Northumbrian friends. He finished his cigarette and flicked the butt towards the water, and was just considering lighting a second when something hard walloped against the back of his head. He fell to his knees and gasped, then something pounded between his shoulder blades and he fell forward. His face was pressing into the sand, and he coughed and spluttered and then something, probably a foot, slammed into the small of his back.
    He twisted his head to the side and saw a pair of heavy mud-splattered workboots and frayed jeans. The foot was still in the middle of his back, so there were at least two of them. He tried to turn his head to the other side but as he did so the foot pressed down, pushing his face into the sand again.
    ‘You don’t want to be asking too many questions around here, Mister Private Detective,’ said one of the men. ‘You’d best be heading back to London.’ His accent was Scottish and didn’t sound like any of the men that Nightingale had spoken to in the pub. ‘Be easy enough to knock you out and drop you in the sea. You wouldn’t be the first southerner to fall foul of the North Sea.’
    Nightingale managed to turn his face to the side and he spat wet sand out of his mouth.
    ‘Do you hear what I’m telling you, Mister Private Detective?’
    Nightingale spat again, and grunted.
    The foot between his shoulder blades gave a final push, and then he heard the two men jogging away across the sand. He rolled onto his back, gasping for breath, but by the time he’d got to his feet they had disappeared into the night.
    He stood up and wiped his face on his sleeve. As he lit a cigarette with trembling hands he heard a car start up and drive away. ‘Bastards,’ he muttered under his breath.

16
    C andy slid back the bolts and opened the door to the bedroom. ‘Breakfast,’ she said, brightly. She picked up the tray and carried it into the room. Bella was in bed, the quilt pulled up around her neck. The princess dress was lying over the chair in front of the dressing table. Bella didn’t react as Candy put the tray on the bed. ‘I made you Cocoa Krispies,’ she said. ‘And toast.’
    ‘I’m not hungry,’ Bella said.
    ‘You have to be hungry.’
    ‘I feel sick.’ She curled up into a ball under the quilt. ‘I need to go to hospital.’
    ‘Don’t be silly.’
    ‘What Eric did, it hurt me. Inside.’
    ‘It doesn’t hurt. Every girl in the world does that. It’s natural.’
    Bella sniffed. ‘He hurt me.’
    ‘And I’m telling you it doesn’t hurt. That’s what girlfriends do for their boyfriends.’
    ‘I’m not his girlfriend.’
    ‘Yes you are, baby.’
    ‘I want to go home.’
    ‘And you will go home. But you have to let Eric do what he wants.’
    ‘Please don’t let him hurt me again, Candy.’
    Candy sat down on the edge of the bed and stroked the little girl’s hair. ‘Eat your breakfast, baby.’
    Bella rolled over and looked up at Candy. ‘Please let me go home. I have to feed Floppy.’
    ‘Floppy?’
    ‘My rabbit. I have to clean his cage. It’s Saturday, and Saturday is the day I have to look after my rabbit. My dad

Similar Books

Penalty Shot

Matt Christopher

Savage

Robyn Wideman

The Matchmaker

Stella Gibbons

Letter from Casablanca

Antonio Tabucchi

Driving Blind

Ray Bradbury

Texas Showdown

Don Pendleton, Dick Stivers

Complete Works

Joseph Conrad