Derek Landy

Desolation


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was the only place to stay in the area, not counting a few bed and breakfasts, and the sign said there were vacancies.

      They parked outside and got out. It was the beginning of May and there was a startlingly blue sky and yet Amber’s breath still crystallised in the air. She doubted it was much above forty. On Main Street there had been no snow, but up here, elevated slightly, it was still packed tightly at the sides of the road.

      Amber had spent her whole life feeling miserable in the heat, so she wasn’t about to start complaining about the cold. Even so, the temperature was making her hands throb with a renewed vigour, and she hurried into the motel while Milo carried in their bags.

      Inside, it was warmer. The wooden floorboards creaked under her weight. A moose head hung over the front desk, its terrific antlers rising to the high ceiling. A man came out of the back room. He looked young, in his thirties, but his side-parted hair had already gone grey and he held himself so stiffly that a sudden draught might possibly have snapped him in half.

      He saw them and looked confused. Amber smiled, and led Milo to the desk. The man wore a little badge that identified him as Kenneth.

      “Hi, Kenneth,” said Amber.

      Kenneth didn’t answer. He had a mole under his right eye.

      “We’d like a couple of rooms, please.”

      Kenneth looked at them for quite a long time before speaking.

      “I wasn’t expecting visitors,” he said.

      This struck Amber as a somewhat strange thing to say.

      “This is a motel, isn’t it?” Milo asked.

      “Indeed it is,” said Kenneth.

      “And you rent out rooms to visitors, don’t you?”

      “Indeed we do,” said Kenneth.

      “So do you have any spare rooms to rent out to us?”

      “Indeed I have,” said Kenneth. “I just wasn’t expecting you, that’s all.”

      Silence threatened to descend.

      “Should we have called ahead?” Amber asked.

      Kenneth blinked at her. “We don’t take reservations over the phone.”

      “Online?”

      “We don’t have a website,” he said. “My mother never approved of the internet. She said the internet was a filthy place for perverts and degenerates who only want to watch pornography.”

      “It also has cats,” said Amber.

      “We don’t allow animals,” Kenneth said quickly. “My sister is allergic to animal hair. If you have cats, you can’t stay here.”

      “We don’t have cats,” Milo said. “We don’t have any animals. Is there anyone else staying here right now?”

      “No.”

      “Then could we please have two rooms?”

      Kenneth hesitated.

      “I’m a little puzzled,” said Amber. “You don’t take bookings online or over the phone, and obviously you don’t like it when people turn up unannounced … so how does anyone actually stay here?”

      “The motel is not very busy,” Kenneth said.

      “I’m not surprised.”

      “I can let you stay,” Kenneth decided, “but only until Wednesday. On Wednesday you must leave. We are fully booked up for Wednesday.”

      Amber frowned. “How?”

      “I’m sorry?” said Kenneth.

      “How has anyone been able to book for Wednesday, since you don’t take reservations over the phone and you don’t have a website?”

      “A long-standing arrangement,” said Kenneth. “You must be gone by ten o’clock on Wednesday morning.”

      “I guess we could stay at a bed and breakfast,” said Milo.

      “You misunderstand,” Kenneth said. “You must leave our town. On Wednesday we have our festival.”

      “I like festivals,” said Amber.

      “It is a private festival,” Kenneth said. “For invited townsfolk only. You must leave by ten in the morning.”

      At no stage did Amber think Kenneth was joking, and yet she waited for the punchline all the same. When it didn’t come, Milo spoke up.

      “Sure,” he said. “That’s fine.”

      Kenneth hesitated. “Maybe you shouldn’t stay,” he said.

      “Of course we should,” Amber assured him. “We’ll be gone by the time the festival starts – it’s all good. We totally understand. Today, tomorrow, Monday and Tuesday and then we move on. You got it. How long does the festival last?”

      “One night.”

      “Then how about we come back on Thursday?”

      “Thursday and Friday are for clean-up.”

      “Then Saturday,” Amber said, smiling. “If we leave and come back for the weekend, would that be okay?”

      “Yes.”

      “Excellent. We’ll do that. So put us down for four nights now, and then Saturday. If we like it here, we might even stay longer.”

      Kenneth nodded. “Very well. Welcome to the Dowall Motel. This is a family business.”

      Amber gave another smile. “Well, okay then.”

      Kenneth showed Amber to her room, and Milo dropped off her bag and followed Kenneth to his. Amber shut her door. The room was old-fashioned but clean, and smelled of fresh air and green trees. It had a fireplace that wasn’t to be lit and a good-sized bed. It had a bathroom with a bathtub and a window that looked out over the town. It was a good room. A fine room.

      Amber stood at the window. From here, she could almost see the road they had come in on, the one with the sign. That would be the road the Hounds would use. They were anywhere between ten and fifteen hours away, but it took Amber a long time to stop watching for their arrival.

       Chapter 6

      VIRGIL FOUND THE NUMBER scrawled in an address book that had slipped down the back of a file cabinet. He tried to ignore the other names – seeing them brought pangs of recognition and regret – but despite himself he glanced through them. Here was Erik Estrada’s number. Good kid, that Erik. Burt Reynolds. Lynda Carter. Ah, Lynda Carter. Robert Culp. Farrah Fawcett’s number was here. He’d never managed to get with Farrah because of his (strained) friendship with Lee Majors – but he’d wanted to. Oh my, how he’d wanted to.

      Then he found the number he was looking for, and he took out his ridiculous phone and eventually figured out how to make a call.

      It was answered by a woman who told him the person he was looking for no longer lived there. She went off for a few minutes, eventually coming back with another number. He called that, and it was answered by a man who gave him the number of a retirement home. Virgil rang the home, gave them the name, and waited.

      “Yeah?”

      The voice on the other end sounded old, frail and ill-tempered.

      “Javier?” said Virgil.

      “Yeah?”

      “It’s Virgil. Virgil Abernathy.”

      There was a silence, and then,