- Adams Guy
- The House That Jack Built
- Torchwood_The_House_That_Jack_B_split_018.html
TEN
It was almost as if the ghostly water
had frozen Rob, stuck on his knees staring at the spare bed that
had reasserted itself in the room. It seemed solid enough. The
creases of the off-white sheet, the loose silken threads on the
embroidered base, a plastic badge with the brand-name on it turned
yellow over the years. It seemed ridiculous to think that an old
bathtub had occupied the same space only a few minutes
ago.
He looked down at his wet shirt, a
hint of pink in the damp of the white fabric. That was real enough.
He heard Julia leave the room, but his mouth felt soft and useless,
and he couldn't believe it would ever be used for speaking again.
This proved untrue, as the minute he heard her scream he was
shouting her name and getting to his feet.
She was standing in the hallway,
staring down at a man in a three-piece suit who lay unconscious at
her feet.
'He's real,' she said, nudging him
with her foot.
Rob dropped to his haunches and
rolled the man onto his back. There was a white sheen to his hair
and eyebrows, small crystals on his cheeks and forehead. Rob
touched the skin gently. 'Ice,' he whispered. 'He's covered in
bloody ice.'
Julia made a slight groaning noise
and leaned against the airing cupboard door. 'What's going on?' she
said, not expecting an answer.
Rob didn't feel up to giving her one.
'He's alive,' he said, feeling the man's pulse. He frisked through
the man's pockets, pulling a wallet out of his jacket. The wallet
was sparse and ordered, unlike his own graveyard of receipts and
store benefit cards; there was a crisp twenty-pound note, a plain
black credit card and a business card featuring a simple message:
'The bearer of this card is Ianto Jones. If found, please dial 000
and wait for a response.'
'That's not even a proper number,'
Julia said, reading over Rob's shoulder.
'One way to find out,' he replied,
pulling his mobile out of his pocket and dialling three zeroes.
Someone answered almost straight away, and Rob raised his eyebrows
at Julia. 'Hello, erm... My name's Rob Wallace, and I've just found
someone called Ianto Jones in my airing cupboard.'
The other person obviously commented
on this. Julia watched a flash of embarrassment cross her husband's
face before anger reasserted itself. 'I know it sounds bloody mad,'
he replied, 'but it seems to be the night for that around here.
There was a... ghost...'
It was the first time the word had
actually occurred to Rob, and the minute it fell out of his mouth,
he wished he could swallow it again – it sounded stupid and
embarrassing, the sort of thing a child would say. 'Look, it
doesn't matter. He's alive but he's out of it. Freezing cold and...
well, I don't know... he seems OK, but he shouldn't be here, that's
for sure. I'm in Penylan, a house called Jackson Leaves...' Rob
looked startled, holding the phone away from his head.
'He hung up on me,' he said. 'Says he
knows where we are, and he's coming over.'
'Is that a good thing?' Julia
asked.
Rob didn't know, shaking his head and
trying to think of what to do next.
'We should try and warm him up,' said
Julia. 'Maybe...' She'd been about to suggest a bath but had then
been unable to face the idea. 'I don't know, get a fire going or
something... Wrap him in blankets.'
Rob thought for a moment, unable to
decide whether he was happy helping this stranger or not. He gave
an irritated growl as he realised he couldn't not. 'All right then, let's get him downstairs. You
grab his legs...'
Julia did. 'God,' she exclaimed
before letting him go again. 'He's freezing.'
'I know.'
Rob was gritting his teeth, hooking
his arms under Ianto's armpits and trying to lift the man's dead
weight. 'Heavy, too.'
Julia took the hint and grabbed
Ianto's legs again, ignoring the cold feel of him on her
palms.
She went backwards, shuffling
awkwardly, feet splayed out for balance as Rob grunted his way
after her.
'Going to put my back out,' Rob
muttered, trying to get a better hold of Ianto. He didn't notice
the shadow that fell across them from the top of the stairs, but
Julia did. She knew who she would see when she looked up, could
tell by how wide the shadow
was.
'Weird,' Rob said. 'I can smell
onions...'
'Just keep going,' Julia replied,
refusing to look at the fat man above them as he licked his lips
and wiped the sweat from his palms on the shiny breast of his
pinstripe suit.
They got to the foot of the stairs,
and Rob turned around, stretching his back and dragging Ianto into
the lounge.
He laid Ianto on the sofa and then
came dashing towards her.
'I think I saw some fire stuff in the
cupboard under the stairs,' he said, rubbing his hands together
from the cold. He saw a look on her face that worried him. 'Don't,'
he said, shaking slightly. 'If I stop, I'll lose it. Seriously,
I've got to keep moving, don't think... just do.'
He pushed past her and jogged to the
cupboard, yanking the door open and rifling through the junk
inside. They were going to have to throw most of this crap away,
whatever Julia might say. There were boxes of newspapers and
magazines, a stack of yellowing paperbacks, an old croquet set
(though one of the mallets had clearly been damaged at some point,
as the shaft was wrapped in plastic tape), an old Dansette record
player... so much rubbish. He grabbed a box of the newspapers and
spotted a couple of carrier bags of dried kindling. No coal or
larger logs, though; no doubt they were outside. They could stay
there. He'd build the thing out of sticks and newspaper, rather
than go hunting for them; there was plenty of it, after all. He
took it all through to the grate, closing the lounge door behind
him, and began snapping fire-lighters over scrunched-up balls of
decade-old newspaper.
'What are we doing?' Julia
asked.
Rob shook his head. 'That man will be
here soon.'
'So?' Julia responded. 'For all we
know he's... I don't know.' She hugged herself. 'He might be no
help at all. I mean... Jesus... What's
happening, Rob?'
Her voice was getting more
high-pitched, she was losing the numbness that had kept her going,
and now she just wanted to start lashing out.
Rob was sinking into himself, his
fingers slowly ferreting around in a matchbox for a fresh match to
light.
'Why are we even still here?' she
asked.
Rob couldn't give her an answer,
slowly striking a match against the crumbling sandpaper. The match
snapped, unlit. He hunted for another.
'Seriously,' Julia continued, 'this is ridiculous.
Please tell me you have the van keys? We could be driving up the
road and away from here...'
The second match flared.
Julia walked towards the lounge door,
determined to get out of the building.
The door began to vibrate in its
frame, wood hammering against wood, hard enough to bring dust from
the ceiling. Julia gave a surprised yelp and Rob dropped the match
to the floor, running to her side and grabbing her protectively.
They squeezed each other as the banging continued, a pounding that
seemed to move from the door across the walls and ceiling, like a
colossal hammer being brought down on the house all around
them.
The television switched on, its
screen filled with static, the white noise of the speaker drowning
out the faint crackle of a building flame where the dropped match
was setting fire to the rug. Anything
can be heard in the chaos of white noise, whispers and the delicate
shapes of words beneath the crackle and pop. If Rob and Julia had
been feeling rational, they would never have believed they heard
voices in the speaker.
They were not feeling
rational.
Rob's fingers dug into the pale flesh
of Julia's shoulder, pressing bright white crescents into the pink
of her skin as the house continued to beat around them. Julia
wasn't in the least surprised to catch the smell of onions on her
tongue, she had no doubt the fat man was pressing his weight
against the other side of the door at that very
moment.
It was Ianto, opening eyes crusty and
chill with the rime of frost, that spotted the danger coming from
the lit rug. He rolled off the sofa, an awkward grunt knocked out
of him as his limbs refused to hold him up, dragged himself by his
elbows and rolled onto the tiny fire, his damp suit hissing as it
extinguished the flames. His mind was slow to function, but
somewhere right on the periphery of his awareness – and even above
the noise of the television – he heard a familiar engine outside
the house, the heavy wheels grinding gravel beneath them. He heard
two doors slam closed, and the sound of boots running towards the
front door. He tried to move but pins and needles rioted through
his body, as frantic as the TV static that threw its light onto his
face.
'They're here,' he whispered, as the
pounding in the walls suddenly stopped to be replaced by a far more
comforting knock on the door.