Chapter 2

The tug on the guy’s arm put Remy fully on his knees, the cold water of the burn surging over his lower legs. Worse, much worse, the man’s body toppled back onto his. Suddenly he could barely breathe, suffocated by this fucking corpse that was on top of him.

He leaned back but the body simply came with him, the head falling so it was next to his and staring at him through blank eyes. Oh Jesus Christ, the eyes had been eaten away. Remy stretched his head as far from the other as he could, straining his neck muscles to put distance between him and the flaking, decomposing face that leered at him.

He took it all in at once, the full horror of it. The man’s throat had been cut. From behind by the look of it. Slit from side to side and his front was washed in blood. The blood was rusty and dry, like spilled gravy, all over the white T-shirt and navy-blue fleece. Man, his face was all purples and reds, like a patchwork quilt. There were chunks out of it too, rats probably and whatever the hell else was down here.

And the smell. It was horrendous, like nothing he’d ever smelled before. He knew what it was though. Death. Decay. It filled his nostrils and made him gag.

He was desperate to get the thing, the man, or what was left of him, off him but there wasn’t enough room to extend his arms and push the body away. Instead, he pulled his arms in so that he could push up, not wanting to touch it but having no choice. He shoved at the body and at the same time tried to scrabble out from underneath. The man’s back felt thin and wet and he knew that the cloying, sweet stink was now all over his fingers. Gagging again, he levered the body higher, dragging his own knees along the floor of the burn as he slid away.

He kept his hands under the corpse even once he was free of it, lowering it gently onto the ground in front of him. He took his hands away as quickly as he could and thrust them into the water. He scrubbed at them, rubbing them together as he stared at the body.

He brought his hands out, drying them on the front of his jacket, and all the while edging away from the dead man. The murdered man. He backed up as far and as fast as he could, until he could stand up again. Then he ran.

Remy sat in his car, parked just a couple of hundred yards from the opening to the burn, and shivered. He didn’t know how much was cold and how much was shock. He just knew he couldn’t stop shaking. A puddle of water had formed at his feet and he stared into it, watching the drips land.

Did that really just happen? To him? Remy Feeks, the man nothing ever happened to? He’d never seen a dead body before. Who the hell had? No one he knew. And not just dead, obviously murdered. What the hell was he going to do?

Report it. He had to call it in to the cops. But. He didn’t want to be part of this. He wanted to go back to collecting trolleys at Tesco and looking after his dad. He didn’t want this. He shouldn’t have been down there in the first place. He’d been trespassing. He had the guy’s DNA all over him. Holy shit. They’d think he did it. That’s what they do.

It took him a while to realize that there were tears running down his cheeks and trickling into the puddle at his feet. When it dawned on him, he drew the back of his hand across his eyes then rubbed at his nose. Grow a pair, he told himself. You’ve no reason to feel sorry for yourself: think of that poor bugger killed in the burn. He did think of him and remembered that his hands had been on the man’s rotting corpse and felt sick that they’d just been on his eyes.

He flipped the angle of the rear-view mirror and stared at his reflection. His eyes were red and wide. ‘Arsehole!’ he shouted at himself, then got scared in case anyone had heard him.

He twisted and reached into the back seat where he grabbed his trainers. He pulled off the waders and changed into his proper shoes. With one final look at himself in the mirror, he got out of the car before he could change his mind and went looking for the first phone box that worked.

He walked half of Duke Street before finding one and had nearly given up and jumped in to use the one in the Crown Creighton instead. But that would have been just as stupid as using his mobile. He’d found some guts but not enough for that.

‘Emergency. What service do you require?’

‘Police. And ambulance, I guess.’

‘What is your emergency?’

‘There’s a body. A dead . . . I mean . . . I just . . . found it.’

‘What is your name, caller?’

‘No . . . I . . . I don’t want to . . . Look, someone’s been murdered. I need to go. Just let me tell you where.’

‘Can you give me your name, please, caller?’

‘No. Listen, the body’s in the Molendinar Tunnel. Under Wishart Street. Or maybe further, I’m not sure. You get in at the entrance near the Great Eastern. The man’s been murdered.’

‘Calm down, sir. Are you sure this person is dead?’

‘Yes! He’s very dead. Been dead for ages. Not years but weeks or months. Look, I need to go.’

‘How did you find the body? You were in this tunnel?’

‘I was just . . . I was just exploring. You need to get him out of there.’

‘Please, stay on the line—’

He hung up. And ran like a coward.

He actually started the engine to drive home but he didn’t move. Driving home was the sensible thing but he didn’t do it. He wasn’t sure why but it was like when he made that first step into the tunnel or up a ladder or through a fence. No going back. He wanted to see what happened. Had to, really.

For the longest time, he thought they hadn’t believed him. They got a lot of hoax calls and this must have sounded like one. A body in the tunnel under Wishart Street. Right, sure thing. And he’d been down there for a walk. Sure. Of course they didn’t believe him.

What would he do? Go back down there and drag the body out himself? He didn’t have the balls for that. Maybe he could go down and take a photograph of it, send it to the cops and make them believe him. Maybe he’d just wait and see.

It must have been forty minutes before he saw the police car pull up. It was dark now and he saw the car’s lights as it turned and parked on the other side of the street near where the Molendinar was exposed. Two cops got out, their yellow hi-vis sparking under the street lights. Neither seemed in a hurry. One of them was pointing and shaking his head. Now they were both shaking their heads, not happy.

They pulled waders out of the boot of their car, heaved them on and made their way very reluctantly to the bank. The two cops, one tall and broad, the other smaller and most probably a woman, although he couldn’t be sure from this distance, disappeared from sight.

It was like they’d never been there apart from the sight of the car sitting lonely in the dark. He was tempted to go over, tell them about the tunnel and what they’d find if they went in there. He didn’t. He sat and fretted.

Every few minutes he turned the ignition key over once and watched the time flash about on the dashboard display. He was scared of doing it too often because the battery on his old heap wasn’t in the best of shape. He didn’t want to get stuck there: that would be too tough to explain. The time crawled by and he tried to work out in his head where they might be, how far down the tunnel they’d managed to get. The bigger cop was maybe too big to get all the way to where the body was without getting stuck. The lady cop would need to go on her own. That was a bit unfair.

There they were. Both of them climbing back over the fencing and onto the street again. They were moving a lot quicker than when they’d gone in and one of them was on the radio. They were both still shaking their heads though.


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