Black Hare Valley: The Final Chapter! “The Fight”

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© 2025 Chantelle Atkins. All rights reserved. This work may not be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law.

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1

Mr Bishop is chasing Ralph and Jaime up School Lane towards Black Hare Road.

‘Get back here!’ he bellows after them and the tone of his voice chills Jaime to the bone. He sounds deranged with fury; outraged and incredulous, like he simply cannot believe they have the audacity to run from him.

Running away from an adult, let alone a teacher, let alone the head-teacher, goes against all of Jaime’s good-girl instincts. Her guts are a tight knot of dread and she can’t help picturing her mum and Mark in her head – the disappointment in their eyes when they find out. But she hears another sound, a low rumbling growl and when she looks over her shoulder, Jaime is horrified to see a large feline creature is chasing them.

She lets out a high-pitched scream that ought to wake the dead – but of course, there is no one about – how convenient, she thinks, no one to open a door or even a window to see what is going on. But Ralph grips her hand and holds on tight, and they race up the next road towards the safety of the book shop.

They tear down the back alley and look back to see the cat, a lynx, she thinks, is pounding after them. But suddenly it stops running and slows to a trot. It seems conflicted, its ears twitching, its tail low and stiff. It stops.

At the end of the alley, Ralph and Jaime look back and see the cat is turning around.

‘What’s it doing?’ Jaime whispers to Ralph.

‘I think it’s leaving.’

‘Come on.’ She grabs his sleeve. ‘The treehouse.’

They run towards the Finnis gate and bump headlong into Willow, who is clinging to the gate, her eyes wide and her mouth gaping. She grabs them when they appear, then tugs them frantically over the threshold and into the garden.

‘Mayfield,’ Willow pants, her shoulders heaving. ‘Chased me but then he left.’

‘Bishop,’ Ralph responds, breathlessly. ‘Same. Then changed course.’

‘Why?’ asks Jaime as they huddle together in the darkness and it hits her at the same time it does Willow. Their eyes widen in alarm and startled, they cling to each other’s hands and cry at the same time, ‘Paddy!’

2

Jesse cuts around the back of the town hall but before he can burst out onto Town Road and race across to Black Hare Road, he smells something new in the air – something old and heavy and powerful and hungry, and all his hairs stand on end – but he can’t stop running, can’t stop his legs in time. He runs into something solid and the breath leaves his body as he’s thrown backwards onto the ground.

Winded, he stares up, aghast, as the huge looming form of Sergeant Aaron Mayfield stands over him. The man who has haunted his dreams for as long as he can remember. The man who killed his aunt and his mother. He thinks suddenly, how? How and where did he kill her?

Before he can ask, Mayfield is shoving him down hard and his big black boot collides violently with Jesse’s ribs. Mayfield grabs his right arm and a pair of handcuffs is snapped over his wrist. The man is growling and drooling, his eyes manic and bloodshot as the beast struggles to get out.

Jesse is stronger now thanks to Margaret and as Mayfield reaches for his other arm, he brings up the right one and swipes at Mayfield with the dangling metal cuff. He swings as hard as he can and hears a crack followed by a groan. Jesse reacts fast, scrambling to his feet and aiming a kick at Mayfield’s backside as he rubs at his head. Mayfield staggers forward but does not fall. Jesse waves the knife at him.

‘You killed my mother!’

Mayfield turns slowly and grins at him. His lips lift away from his teeth and Jesse can see saliva strung out between them, glistening in his beard. The man reeks of primal animal hunger.

‘And I’m gonna kill you too,’ he laughs, lurching forward. ‘I should’ve killed you years ago!’

Jesse backs up warily, waving the knife. ‘Why didn’t you?’

‘It was too much fun playing with you!’ Mayfield sneers and runs the back of one hand across his chin. ‘It was fun making you run all over town doing whatever I wanted. But that’s done now. I’m not letting you join us, Archer. No way. Not a useless scumbag like you! You’re not fit to lick our shoes! You’re not one of us!’

Jesse shakes his head. ‘No, I’m not and I never will be. But I am gonna kill you, old man. Something tells me you should’ve died a long time ago.’

Mayfield laughs and lunges again. He grabs Jesse’s arm just above the wrist, close to the knife. He tightens his grip as Jesse struggles and his eyes widen when he takes in the knife. ‘Did she give you this?’

Jesse doesn’t answer. He swings the cuff again, battering Mayfield with it. ‘How do you do it?’ he screams as they both fall to the ground. Mayfield has both hands around his wrist and is trying to free the knife. Jesse hits him in the head again and again with the cuff. He sees blood fly but Mayfield does not seem to feel the pain or the battering. ‘What do you do to them?’ Jesse sputters as they wrestle for the knife.

‘We tie them down!’ pants Mayfield, wincing from another strike and loosening his grip on Jesse’s wrist for one moment. He recovers, using his knee to pin Jesse’s free arm to the ground. ‘In that spot in the cellar!’ he goes on, grappling for the knife as Jesse tightens his fingers around it. ‘We circle them and we all take a part of them, all of us! We take them apart bit by bit with our teeth and our claws and this knife! Give it to me you fucking shit! You’re not worthy!’

Jesse twists away, the knee pressing his arm down but his fingers scrambling at the ground, searching for a rock or a stick. His other hand grips the knife handle with immense strength, with something he didn’t know was inside of him, or something he does not recognise, refusing to let go.

Mayfield growls impatiently. ‘We take every bit of them, Jesse, is that what you want to know? What happened to Paddy and your aunt? Bit by bit, piece by piece and they feel every moment, Archer, every slice and dice and every amputation. Their blood flows and drenches the earth and we all join hands and say the words and their true form is set free… it’s not murder… it’s new life!’

‘Until you chase them down and kill them!’ Jesse yells, his fingers closing on the end of a fallen stick. He swings it at Mayfield but the knee is still in his way. He twists onto his belly and feels Mayfield rise on his back, still clawing at the hand that holds the knife.

‘That’s the fun bit!’ he leers. ‘Hunting them down and tearing them to shreds!’

Jesse lets the stick go and now clings to the knife with both hands. He bucks his back and Mayfield tumbles off and lands heavily behind him. Jesse knows he shouldn’t have that kind of strength, but he does, and he is determined to make use of it. Mayfield is still clutching his arm but Jesse brings up his own knee and boots him in the chest again and again until finally he feels the grip loosen. He rolls away as forcefully as he can and he takes the knife with him.

Mayfield rolls and grins at him through bloodied teeth. ‘Then we drink them, just like you did, Archer. You’ve got them all inside you too now, Paddy, your mother, your aunt!’ He throws back his head and howls laughter. ‘You’re gonna live forever whether you want to or not!’ Mayfield gets on his hands and knees. He lifts the back of one hand and drags it across his menacing smile. ‘But you don’t deserve it. It should have been you that was taken. Iris never liked me. Thought she’d wind me up by forcing our hand, forcing us to take Finnis!’

Rejuvenated, knowing it is now or never, Jesse staggers to his feet and spins around. Mayfield sits back on his knees and Jesse wonders if he should let him change or just go for it. He steps forward, knowing he can do this, knowing he is stronger for now, faster, smarter, knowing Margaret has faith in him and so do his friends. He runs at Mayfield with the knife and he sees where he will plunge it, right into the man’s exposed neck as he throws back his head and howls.

Jesse lunges with the blade and the tip is sailing like ice towards its meaty pulsing target when something comes crashing out of the bushes behind Mayfield. Something large and furry and snarling in rage. He feels huge paws thump into his chest and he is thrown backwards again, further this time and when he lands, not only is he winded but his head throbs from striking the ground so hard and the knife is thrown aside.

Shit, he thinks and closes his eyes.

When he opens them he is staring up into the snarling face of a huge lynx cat and somehow he just knows it’s the other man who has always loathed him, Mr Bishop, the headteacher. His claws curl tightly into Jesse’s clothes and the weight of him is pushing him into the earth.

He thinks, okay, I die now, but Mayfield is on his feet and striding over. The beast on Jesse’s chest releases its hold just long enough for Mayfield to pull Jesse’s wrists back together.

‘They’ve got the book,’ he snaps as he clicks the cuffs back on. ‘So we can’t kill him yet.’

The cat’s green eyes narrow and it stretches open its mouth to reveal what look like hundreds of razor sharp feline teeth. It hisses so loudly Jesse feels the breath whipping back his hair.

‘It’s okay, Mayfield goes on, giving the creature a stroke between its curved ears. ‘I give you permission to drag this piece of shit by the neck and as soon as we get the book back you can finish him off. Then we’ll eat him together.’

The cat seems to smile as it lowers its head and Jesse flinches away from the thick meaty smell of its breath as it stretches its jaws once again to receive him. He is unable to scream as several teeth puncture the skin of his neck and the blood begins to flow.

3

Willow, Jaime and Ralph group together under the treehouse. The bookshop and the flat above are dark and closed up. No help there. No sign of Paddy either. Willow lowers the spell book to the ground and unfolds the cloth.

‘Should we go out there and look for Paddy?’ Ralph wonders, chewing on a nail and looking around anxiously.

Jaime slips an arm around his waist and rests her head on his shoulder. He wonders if now would be a good or bad time to tell her how much he likes her…

Wind and rain are battering the garden around them and the dark town beyond. Everyone has gone inside – gone home – and Ralph thinks of his mother and swallows a small sob.

‘What about Jesse?’ asks Jaime. ‘He should be here by now.’

‘No, we’re all early,’ Willow responds, glancing at her watch. ‘We have to assume he’s safe because Margaret has plans for him. Its Paddy the beasts were after.’

‘But why?’ Ralph wrinkles his nose in confusion. ‘What would they want with him? Especially if Mayfield knew you had the book?’

Willow is flicking through the pages, poring over the Latin words with her brow furrowed in concentration. Jaime leaves Ralph and crouches beside her.

‘What are you looking for?’

‘A way to kill them or  a way to stop it all, but I can’t make sense… I don’t know Latin, damn it, these words or spells, they could mean anything!’

‘What about the protective ring?’ asks Jaime. ‘We might need to strengthen it is all I’m thinking. Or even expand it?’

Willow is shaking her head then thumps the book in frustration. ‘None of it is any use if we can’t read it!’

‘Better give it back to its rightful owner then,’ snarls a voice and they all jump and look up in fright.

Sergeant Mayfield is at the gate and a wild cat about the size of a Labrador is at his side. Bishop, Ralph thinks in dread – and worse – Jesse is with them, handcuffed and dangling by his throat from the cat’s jaws. Willow and Jaime leap to their feet, hands pressed over their mouths in horror. Ralph finds himself moving slowly forward, out from under the treehouse.

He’s staring at Jesse, long and hard and then he sees the boy’s eyes move, along with his chest. He is still alive. Ensnared, trapped, but alive.

‘A fair swap,’ Mayfield growls. ‘Toss us the book and your friend here lives.’

Ralph looks back at the others and Willow looks down at the book. ‘This is proof, isn’t it?’ she asks, lifting her chin. ‘It’s important to you because it’s the only thing that can prove what you’ve been doing for so long.’

Mayfield smiles at her coldly and tilts his head. ‘Clever girl. Give it back and your friend lives and I don’t arrest you for breaking and entering my house, again!’ He roars the last word, making them all jump back a step.

‘Let him go first,’ Ralph says. ‘We need to see he’s okay and then you can have your book.’ He inches closer and feels the girls doing the same behind him. Willow has wrapped the book back up and is holding the bundle under one arm. Ralph slides a hand around to his back pocket and slips his fingers inside to retrieve his pen knife.

Mayfield nods at the cat, at Bishop. ‘All right, drop him.’

The feline beast opens its jaws and Jesse drops to the ground, gasping and coughing. He lays on his front, his head turned to them, his eyes desperate and pleading. Blood surrounds his neck and pours down his front. What if he is dying, Ralph thinks, he’s dying and it’s already too late…

‘Now toss us the book,’ says Mayfield, but suddenly he steps back, eyes narrowed, head turning rapidly to the left, the right, the left again.

Ralph sees that something is moving in swift figure of eights around their feet. Something small and nimble. The cat has noticed it too and it lowers itself, its haunches lifting slightly, its ears flattening on its broad skull, while its chest, flicked with Jesse’s blood, draws breath in and out, and its short tail whips from side to side as if it preparing to pounce.

Ralph frowns – he can’t see what’s got their attention but whatever it is it is affecting Jesse too. As they look on in confused horror, Jesse presses himself up from the ground and sits back on his knees, sniffing the air like an animal. His frightened eyes are different now – keen and alert, hungry. He plants his cuffed hands in the grass and lowers his head, snarling suddenly, then lunging for something dark and fast that scoots out of the way.

Then Ralph understands.

It’s Paddy. He’s distracting them all, teasing their predator instincts so that they can do what needs to be done. It’s Ralph who seizes the moment. He pulls out his knife and flicks up the blade, grabs the book from Willow and tosses it under the treehouse. He shoves the wide-eyed girls towards the gate.

‘Get Jesse in the circle! Get him!’

The girls don’t argue and all three of them rush forward. Jaime and Willow grab Jesse between them, seizing an arm each and dragging him backwards. He struggles, whipping his head from side to side and growling to get free. Ralph sees his jaw snapping and hopes the girls keep their fingers away from his mouth.

They fall over in the struggle but Jaime grabs a leg and yanks hard and Willow wraps her arms around Jesse’s middles and wrestles him violently backwards. The lynx ignores Ralph and Jesse – its focus is now totally on the quick black hare that darts and leaps and twists between them. It’s too fast and agile for the cat and Mayfield, who is still in human form, turns and waves a dagger through the air, his eyes flitting madly as he tries to keep the hare in sight.

It’s all darkness, shadows and confusion but somehow Ralph forces himself forward into the middle of it all and while Mayfield is trying to snatch at the hare or stamp on the hare, he sneaks up behind him. Before he can think twice, before he can hesitate or question himself or back out in any way, he punches Sergeant Mayfield in the side of his thick neck with the small knife. It is only a short stubby knife and Ralph lets go almost instantly, backing away in horror as the lynx pounces on the hare. Mayfield’s hands flutter up to his neck and he tries to pull it out but he can’t; the handle is too short and slicked with his blood.

Ralph staggers away, back within the circle where Willow and Jaime are still wrestling with Jesse. The lynx does not notice Mayfield sinking to his knees, or Jesse writhing in the grass because the lynx has struck at exactly the right moment and has the black hare ensnared between its huge padded feet.

‘Paddy!’ Ralph hears Willow scream behind him.

Ralph continues to move backwards until he trips over Jesse’s thrashing legs and lands on top of him. He spreads out his arms, as if keeping all three of them safe under and behind him. He watches Mayfield fading.

The blood gushes, soaking his police uniform – glistening in the moonlight. His white hair is plastered to his skull by the rain. His hands fall away from the knife and his eyes go dull. Finally, he splutters and vomits blood before pitching forwards, face first.

He lies still. Everything goes still.

The lynx is frozen, facing them now with its prize hanging limply from its jaws. Everything is so still. Even Jesse has stopped fighting and growling.

Everything is still and silent.

Ralph blinks at the scene before him. Sergeant Mayfield with a knife stuck in his neck, blood pooling in the grass around him. The black hare hanging lifelessly from the jaws of a huge cat.

Willow cries out pitifully; ‘Paddy, Paddy, no!’

She disentangles herself from Jesse and Jaime and crawls forward but Ralph quickly blocks her – holding his arms out to both sides – his eyes fixed on the lynx.

‘Not yet,’ he warns her. ‘Mr Bishop is still here.’

4

Jesse pitches forward, his hands still cuffed, his head thick and foggy, he feels like he has just woken from a dark dream and he needs to shake himself. He feels Jaime let go of his arm and he moves forwards a few paces on his knees. The lynx stares right back at him – yellow eyes harsh and unforgiving as its lips seem to curl around the bloodied hare. Around Paddy.

Jesse flicks his hair from his eyes. ‘Put… him…down…’ he says, his voice juddery as tears begin to flow. He glances at the knife sticking out of Mayfield and remembers the one Margaret gave him. He moves forward on his knees until he reaches the body lying on the very edge of the circle.

‘Jesse, be careful,’ Ralph warns him.

He doesn’t care. He reaches into Mayfield’s back pocket and retrieves the dagger, then looks at the lynx, at Mr Bishop.

‘Put him down!’

Just then, a large bird swoops down from the stormy skies – it circles the garden twice, emitting a haunted mewing sound before it flaps slowly down into the alley, aiming its outstretched talons at the cat.

Margaret, thinks Jesse as Jaime turns to Willow and hugs her tightly and Ralph falls back to join them. The huge brown and cream buzzard flies at the cat, raking at its head and back with claws. The cat does not argue – it drops the hare, hisses then turns and lopes away into the darkness.

The buzzard follows it for a moment and then a figure appears in the alley, eyeing them all. Margaret. She looks solemnly at Jesse, who meets her eye before turning his gaze back to the limp body of the black hare.

‘Paddy… no…’ Willow whimpers behind him and he wants to go to her, go to all of them, but he can’t, he can’t move, can’t tear his eyes from the hare. His eyes burn into it, willing it to move, to live.

Margaret crouches and lays a hand upon its side. ‘I’m sorry,’ she says, raising her head to meet his eye again. ‘I am so sorry.’

‘He saved us…’ Ralph murmurs from behind while Willow sobs, wrapped tightly in Jaime’s embrace.

‘Is he dead?’ Margaret nods at Sergeant Mayfield.

Jesse, the dagger trembling between his hands, looks down at Mayfield. Suddenly, the rage and grief consume him, washing over him in a torrent and he lifts the knife and slams it into Mayfield’s still body – again and again. He grunts and cries and swears and wants to run to Paddy, pick him up, hold him, save him. He wants to beg Margaret to do something. But he is rendered speechless by rage and grief and useless regret. He never told Paddy what their time together meant to him.

He feels Ralph touch his shoulder and ease him gently backwards. Ralph keeps an arm around him and searching Mayfield’s pockets, comes up with handcuffs keys. He turns to Jesse, takes his quivering hands and releases the cuffs.

Jesse covers his face and sobs.

It’s Jaime who speaks next. ‘What now?’ she asks Margaret in a voice that is surprisingly steady.

‘Well,’ Margaret raises her eyebrows. ‘You four get out of here and let me get this all cleaned up.’

‘What about Paddy?’ Jaime frowns, her voice shaking slightly.

Margaret’s face softens. ‘You can take him.’ She looks to Jesse. ‘Go on, go. You’ve all done enough. Been through enough. Go home. Look after each other.’

‘But what happens now?’ Jaime persists, as she gets to her feet, pulling Willow up with her. ‘With the rest of you? And the town?’

Margaret smiles back at her. ‘We keep going.’

‘You mean you get away with it, with all the missing children, missing strangers…’

Margaret shakes her head sadly. ‘There will be no more strangers. That was Aaron.’

‘Just a sacrifice,’ says Jesse, raising his head. ‘Every generation, right?’ He scowls at her. ‘Could be your baby brother or sister next time, Jaime.’

‘That’s what I’m worried about,’ she replies, glaring at the mayor.

‘Well, maybe not,’ says Margaret, standing and wiping her hand on her jacket. ‘Maybe it is time to change. After all, all four of you know our secrets and that places us in a precarious situation at the very least. But the town does need custodians. The town needs feeding. It will fade otherwise. Iris saw to that a long, long time ago. I’ll tell you everything, in time, but you must understand this, willing or unwilling, the town requires what we give it.’

‘No.’ Jesse shakes his head. ‘It’s not the town, it’s you. You’re all power hungry and selfish and you want to live forever. That’s what it gives you.’

She nods at him. ‘Yes, it gives us that so we can be custodians, but if we knew there would be replacements… willing ones…to do our duties after we are gone, then maybe it could be done differently. We will talk again. We will. But for now, you must go. You must bury your friend while I bury mine.’

Ralph helps Jesse to his feet and looks at the girls. They form a line and move forward together, weak, in shock, shaking as they link arms.

‘I’ll need the book back,’ Margaret says to them as they approach the gate.

‘No,’ Jesse replies first, shaking his head firmly. ‘Not yet. Not until we understand everything. Not until we feel safe again.’ He glances back at the bundle under the tree. ‘That’s our insurance policy.’ He fixes the mayor with a hostile glare before leading the others past her. She does not say a word as Willow crouches and scoops up the hare. They turn right and walk down the narrow alley together, crowded around Paddy’s body.

5

They go to the ruins. It feels safer – the furthest point from town and the closest landmark to Bob Rowan’s farm. The storm has abated and only a slight drizzle patters upon them as they shelter there together. They dig the hole with their bare hands, sending the earth deep into the nails and skin and then Willow lays the hare carefully inside.

They are all weeping as they take turns sprinkling earth on top of the body. They bury him, not talking, and then they reach for each other and hold each other tight in a circle above the grave.

‘This isn’t over,’ Willow promises them through gritted teeth and they all nod in reply.

Jaime and Ralph leave first, trailing wearily through town until the reach the Hare and Hound pub. Jaime is pale, her eyes glassy and she does not speak during the walk but when they reach the black side door, she turns to Ralph and hugs him tightly. He wonders, is this my chance? Is this the right moment or the wrong one?

And when she pulls back, he puts his hands on either side of her face and he kisses her.

At the ruins, Jesse hunches up against the wall and stares dully at nothing. He feels ragged and battered and is fighting to keep his eyes open.

‘Do you want to come back to mine?’ Willow asks him. ‘I don’t think my parents will notice.’

He sniffs. ‘Mine never did. They never stood a chance, anyway.’

‘What do you mean?’

‘My aunt, she was sacrificed, then my mother she was like us, you know, she tried to find out what happened to her sister and her sister came to her, like Paddy did to us.’

Willow jerks forward, eyes wide. ‘Oh my god! And were we right about our parents, Jesse? Were they all trying to find Carol-Anne?’

‘Yes, like us and Paddy, Margaret told me,’ he nods. ‘So, Mayfield killed them both. Bishop was the latest one to change. They killed Paddy so he could change and live forever. Never age. Never get ill. But I’m going to stop them and I’m going to kill Bishop too, for what he did to Paddy.’

Willow feels cold at the thought but nods, understanding. ‘What about the rest of the committee?’

‘They’re all changed,’ he tells her. ‘But they need to replace Iris and Bob. Margaret told me that’s why they want me and Jaime’s mother. Maybe next time will be my turn. But that’s never going to happen. I’d rather kill myself first.’

‘What about what you’ve already had? What she’s already done to you?’

‘I’m not a risk to Paddy anymore.’ He lowers his eyes, lips trembling. ‘But maybe I can use it against them. I’ll do whatever I have to.’

‘What about the book?’

He looks at her, eyes cold and shrugs. ‘Like you said, bargaining power.’

‘Nothing will happen now for a long time,’ she sighs. ‘We’ll be adults by the time it does.’

‘Exactly,’ he seethes. ‘And if any of us have children…’

‘We won’t let it happen,’ she argues. ‘We know too much. We figured it all out and we stopped them and we’re still here, Jesse. They didn’t beat us.’ She opens her mouth to say something else, then breaks off, staring forlornly at the grave. ‘I’m going to miss him so much.’

Jesse drops his head into his hands. He closes his eyes and wonders if he can finally say it to her, to himself – what he has been holding back all this time – what led him to Paddy’s treehouse that day, the day he tried to blow up the school.

He bites his lips, clenches his teeth and feels it exploding inside of him, the need to tell, the longing to share and when Willow crouches softly beside him and brushes his wet hair away from his face, he says it, whispering the words into his folded arms.

‘I… I think I loved him… I think he knew me.’

Willow is silent for a while, brushing his hair, smoothing it back. She wraps an arm around him and sighs softly as she rests her head on his shoulder.

‘I know.’ Jesse responds with a huge shuddering sigh of relief. ‘It’s all right,’ she says. ‘It’s all going to be all right.’

6

The next morning the four of them meet wordlessly at the treehouse and stand around the book. Margaret wants them to take it to Hill Fort Farm and allow her to take care of it, just as she promises to continue to take care of Jesse. But Jesse has packed his things into a bag he wears on his back. He doesn’t know where he will go or where he will sleep tonight, he just knows that it will not be under her roof.

And as for the book, it is leverage. It is security.

‘This town is going to work a little differently from now on,’ Jesse declares and they all agree. The book will remain with them.

7

Margaret sits on a chair on the patio when the work is done. She pours herself a large glass of ruby red wine and lights a cigarette which she raises slowly to her smiling lips. The house behind her is silent. Hilda was fractious when she returned but Margaret made up her favourite bedtime drink, milk with honey, dropped in the extra ingredient and before long her disabled daughter was sleeping like a baby.

Horatio has followed Margaret outside. She can see him sniffing anxiously at the rose garden. He spends a long time sniffing the fresh earth and she watches his ears twitching as his lips pull back from his teeth. Finally, he turns and cocks his leg over the grave of Sergeant Aaron Mayfield and Margaret lets out a great hoot of laughter.

He waddles back to her side, sits down and bangs his thick tail against the patio. She scratches him behind the ears and gazes back at the rose garden. She feels vindicated, she supposes, like a victor. She expects complaint from Bishop, rebellion even, but she knows it will be futile and short lived. His only true supporter was Aaron, and Aaron is gone. Bishop won’t want to upset her, not really.

She has won.

Her two greatest enemies are in the ground and she has secretly consumed blood from them both. It runs through her alongside centuries of other blood, blood scratched and flayed free from helpless victims, from the vital sacrifices they must continue to make. Blood that burst from eyeballs, flowed from slashed bellies and erupted from clawed veins. She licks her lips very slowly, savouring the metallic tang as if it is almost erotic.

Her thoughts turn to Jesse. She saw him leave Willow earlier. She watched him trudge towards Rowan land. The Holloway, she thinks with a chuckle, he thinks he can hide out in the Holloway. She will let him for now. She will let him seek solitude and lick his wounds. She knows he will come back out eventually and then she will pounce. She looks down at Horatio and revels in the idea of owning a very different kind of pet.

The End

Thanks for reading!

Please feel free to leave a comment letting me know what you thought of this last chapter. Thank you for reading along and being part of the Black Hare Valley world and journey! I have written five books in this series so look out for future blog posts, news and extracts on Black Hare Valley. the story is far from over and things are about to get even darker….

NOTE: Please remember this is NOT the finished version of Black Hare Valley Book 1. This book has not been to my editor yet or even my beta readers. There will be typos, grammatical mistakes, and sentences that need rewriting.

Black Hare Valley: Chapter Twenty-Nine “The Hunt”

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© 2025 Chantelle Atkins. All rights reserved. This work may not be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law.

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1

Jaime feels like her life has become a dream. From the moment she wakes up with weary confusion dredging through her bones, to the moment her head hits the pillow again that night, her mind is drenched in fog, and nothing feels real. Not home, not school, or the town or her life. She starts to fear she left reality behind when they moved to Black Hare Valley.

She wonders in odd moments, such as during morning assembly or while playing netball or eating her lunch, if she is maybe just in some sort of stupor. Shock. She supposes it would make sense. After all, she moved innocently to a new town and found herself pulled instantly into this hideous nightmare that surely can’t be real…

The realist part of her still won’t fully believe any of it. The journalist in her can’t let go no matter how dangerous or terrifying or confusing it gets. And her logical rational mind still can’t fully grasp what she is trying to deal with.

For surely, it can’t really be true?

That a sinister committee rule the town, that the mayor, the headteacher, the policeman, can all turn into animals? That people go missing here… some never heard of or seen again…. While others… She saw the black hare with her own eyes yet she still can’t believe it.

And now she and her friends are planning to kill someone. Fear grips her whenever she thinks of it. She can’t eat, every mouthful sticks in her throat; she can’t sleep. She certainly can’t concentrate on school and she dreads being called into the head’s office…

But if they don’t do it…

If she’s too scared, too afraid, if she cowers or breaks or lets them down… If they don’t do it, it will all carry on. Missing people, missing children. She does not want that on her conscience because she seems to know that allowing it would ruin her life forever.

Ralph tells her he is going to Rowan Farm after school. Jaime nods back at him before she can say no. ‘Me too,’ she whispers and it is decided.

When they arrive at the farm, Bob Rowan is waiting for them at the gate. It’s a dull grey afternoon; night eager to creep in and steal the town until morning. There are murmurs all over town about the awful weather and how it feels like summer will never arrive. Jaime can’t help feel like it is their fault. She nervously checks the sky as they approach the gate. She’s relieved to see Rowan there. Though her guts churn with dread, at least they didn’t have to risk trespassing again.

‘Better be quick,’ the old man grunts at them, arms resting loosely on the top bar of the gate. He’s wearing dark overalls and wellingtons, all smeared in mud. A scruffy olive green duffel coat hangs open, revealing a blue knit jumper that has seen better days. His woollen cap is pulled low, shielding his eyes. ‘What d’you want?’ he snaps. Then adds with a snarl, ‘Quick.’

‘We’re going to do it,’ Ralph blurts out. ‘When he’s changed. We need to know when and where and how. We don’t want to mess it up.’

‘He’s smarter than you are,’ Rowan retorts, glancing over his shoulder. ‘Faster, stronger, smell you coming, he will. Hear your thoughts. He’ll be ahead of you so how you gonna do it?’

‘You could help us,’ Ralph says, pleadingly. ‘Tell us what to do, so it works!’

The old man laughs at him. ‘Don’t let him catch you. If you’re gonna do it, you’re gonna do it. You’re not gonna get another chance. You gotta weaken him, slow him down, get the upper hand.’

‘Like a drug?’ Jaime askes, brightening.

Rowan waves a hand, looking away. ‘Something like that. You’re not gonna get close enough though, he’ll know you’re coming.’

‘There’s more of us,’ Jaime replies stiffly. ‘And we won’t give up. He needs to be stopped.’

Rowan nods. ‘He’s bloodthirsty. Hungry as hell. Gets worse every year. He’s a devil. Bad seed. Wrong un. Always known it.’

Jaime suddenly wants to ask him so many things. Her head is full of questions she has to know the answers to but she feels panicked knowing he’s already tired of them. So, she reaches out and snatches for the best question, the right question – the question with an answer that will make killing Sergeant Mayfield something she can do.

‘You’re one of them,’ she says. ‘A raven. But how? How did that happen to you?’

He waves a hand again, stepping back. ‘Committee stuff. Old stuff.’

‘How old? Hundreds of years? How long ago did this start?’

‘No date,’ he almost laughs. ‘Just when.’

When?’ she almost screams. ‘How long?’

‘As long as the town!’ he barks back at her. ‘It’s the place, idiot girl. It’s this place.’

‘But what about it? A place can’t turn people into animals…’

‘Don’t understand it.’ He shakes his head. ‘Place is special. Different. The air, the earth, the blood.’

‘Is it some kind of magic?’ Ralph asks then. ‘Iris gave Paddy that book full of spells.’

Bob Rowan breathes in and then out again slowly, as if considering the best way to answer such a question.

‘Called ‘em witches back then,’ he grunts. ‘But I dunno. I think it was here before then, before society, before people, before any of this. She harnessed it maybe. Found the right words or objects, maybe. She was the first. The oldest.’

Jaime gawps. ‘Are you saying Iris started it? But started what? What did she do to the rest of you? You must know! It happened to you! You’re one of them!’

He waves a hand again and looks annoyed. ‘Wasting time! If you want it to stop… the missing ones, the dead…. You got to kill him. That’s it. Talk after.’

Jaime stares at him. It is an enticing thought. One that tickles her investigative mind. One that almost makes her want to go and murder officer Mayfield right now. She feels brighter suddenly. More awake. She licks her lips and turns to Ralph.

‘How will we do it?’

‘I don’t know.’ He shrugs at her helplessly. ‘I don’t even know what he is. Mr Rowan, if we did it, would it be easier to kill the man or the… ?’

Bob Rowan shoves his hands into his pockets and nods once. Ralph nods back.

‘We should do it tonight,’ says Jaime and then feels ashamed and shocked by her own words. She and Ralph look as Bob Rowan lowers his head and walks slowly away.

2

Willow wanders restlessly for hours. She goes home, then leaves again, taking a few orders with her to deliver for her parents. She can’t settle – how can she? Knowing what they must do. And it must be soon, tonight, before any of them chicken out. She’s written another note for each of them and delivers them as discreetly as she can, adding to Ralph’s that he ought to use his mother again to get it to Jesse. It feels risky. As usual, she can’t help fearing who might be watching, who will know what they are planning. It seems like the committee are always one step ahead.

She’s not sure if they’ll all come – Jaime seemed panicked and sickened at the ruins earlier and she still thinks Jesse is in almost constant peril at Hill Fort Farm – then there is whatever is happening to him, changing him. Can they trust him? Willow hopes so. She just knows that she’ll be there, with or without the others.

She flits around town like a shadow – making the deliveries, keeping her eyes open, for what or who, she doesn’t know. Willow eventually finds herself at the police station. She wanders slowly past, glancing in the open door to overhear an old lady complaining that someone has been picking her flowers without her permission.

Willow lingers long enough to hear Sergeant Mayfield’s gruff tones responding. Willow moves on, a sudden plan forming in her head. She doesn’t think, she just moves. She knows she can’t allow herself to pause, plan or consider because if she does, she’ll tell herself that this is too crazy. Too dangerous.

So she runs around to the back of the house and flattens herself against the house wall. Willow blinks away the rain running down from her hood and into her eyes. She counts to three then reaches out and tries the door handle. It’s locked. She sighs. A broken window it is then.

3

Jesse looks up with a start when the library door creaks open. He whirls around with an armful of books to find himself face to face with Margaret. He lowers his arms slightly but holds onto the books.

‘Jesse,’ she says, standing up a little taller and pushing the door gently shut behind her. ‘There you are.’

He glares back at her while his pulse throbs violently in his ears. A smile flutters hesitantly on her lips. ‘What are you doing?’

He turns back to the shelves, running a finger along the ancient dusty spines. ‘You can’t stop me.’

‘Stop you doing what? Looking for a book?’ She gives a little chuckle. ‘Jesse, if you want some reading recommendations I’d be very happy to oblige.’

‘Okay then.’ He swings to face her again. ‘How about a book on how to kill men who can change into wolves? That would be helpful.’

Margaret lowers her arms and her shoulders dip as a puff of air escapes her pursed lips. ‘Jesse… You’re planning to kill Sergeant Mayfield?’

Jesse doesn’t answer. He carries the books over to the small round table and deposits them there on the shiny surface.

‘I can help you…’ Margaret says in a low, soft voice and Jesse’s head whips up, his eyes narrowing.

‘What?’

She comes forward. ‘I can help you. But first, you have to do something for me.’

He shrinks back instinctively. ‘What?’

‘I want you on the committee, Jesse. I need you.’ She comes closer again, smiling gently. ‘You’re right about Aaron. He needs to go. He’s a danger to us all. But the committee won’t like it. Some of them in particular. You might say there is a power struggle… Perhaps there always has been.’

She sighs and slips into the chair beside the table.

‘What do you mean?’ Jesse asks her.

‘Bob Rowan.’ She rests her head in one hand and looks up at him. ‘The reason he left us was Aaron. He didn’t like him, didn’t trust him. Saw the direction his bloodlust was pulling us in, I suppose. Bob left us a long time ago, Jesse, but that only made Aaron stronger and I know you know how he keeps control over so many people.’

Jesse nods stiffly. ‘The cameras.’

‘Indeed. Cameras everywhere. Secrets and lies and blackmail. He doesn’t have anything on me – well, no more than I have on him obviously, but the others are afraid of him.’

‘Then let me kill him.’

She smiles. ‘I will. Before Aaron joined us there were no deaths, you know, no kills.’

‘There were missing children though?’

‘Yes,’ she nods. ‘There always were. Once in a generation we have to feed. But our feeding doesn’t kill the child. You’ve seen that for yourself.’

Jesse feels his stomach muscles tightening. ‘Paddy.’

‘Exactly.’

‘You change them to keep you alive? To stop you ageing?’

‘It’s complex,’ she sighs. ‘But you’ll understand it all once you’re one of us.’

He shakes his head even though he knows it’s too late. ‘I don’t want to be.’

‘Well, I’m sorry but you already are. There’s no turning back, no undoing what’s already been done. You need to keep going, keep trusting me and then we can take on Aaron together.’

‘I’m going to get a gun.’

She shakes her head. ‘I’ll give you a knife. It has to be a silver knife. You’ll need to wait for him to change.’

‘Okay.’

Now she leans closer and takes his hand. ‘Come on,’ she whispers. ‘Come with me now. I’ll give you the knife and you’ll do something for me.’

He swallows tightly. ‘What if I don’t want to?’

Her smile stretches. ‘Jesse, do you want to find out what happened to your mum?’

His mouth falls open slowly. Time stops.

The mayor takes his hand again. ‘Come on. It’s time.’

4

Jaime and Ralph have both received the message from Willow. They were about to go their separate ways but the message tugs them together again. Ralph suggests they call the pub and tell Jaime’s mother she is staying for pizza at his house.

‘It’s not even a lie,’ he smiles as he picks up the phone. ‘Mum left me money to order in. She’s working late.’ 

Jaime nods unsurely and slips wearily into a wooden chair in the small kitchen. ‘Okay then.’ She takes the phone and starts to dial.

Ralph walks into the lounge. ‘I’m gonna pack some stuff,’ he says over his shoulder and she gives him a thumbs up as the phone starts to ring.

Ralph leaves her to it and hurries up to his room. He finds his school bag and empties it on to the bed. He grabs whatever he thinks could be useful in taking down a human/wolf hybrid. Rope from the shed, a hammer, an axe, a first aid kit, a bottle of water and a roll of thick tape.

Jaime finishes her call and watches him carefully. ‘Best to be prepared,’ he shrugs at her. ‘Just in case.’

‘What will we do with the body?’ she asks him.

He winces. ‘I don’t know. He’ll be an animal though, right? We could just bury it or throw it in the river. I don’t know.’

‘We need to get it all worked out,’ says Jaime, a note of exasperation creeping into her voice. ‘It needs to be a proper plan. We need to be sensible. Careful.’

‘We will be,’ nods Ralph. ‘Once we’re all together at the treehouse.’

Jaime drops her head into her hands. ‘If we get there!’ she exclaims. ‘If something or someone doesn’t try to stop us.’

5

Willow waits for a terrifying few minutes, convinced someone at the station would have heard the breaking glass. She thinks of Sergeant Mayfield and his super senses and closes her eyes tightly for a moment, willing herself to stay strong and not panic.

No one comes whirling around the corner so she reaches through the glass and turns the handle from the inside, letting the door swing open. Now she knows she must be fast. She remembers the cameras – will he have access to them while he’s next door? There’s no time to think about it – no time to think twice or worry. She takes off, running into the house, clattering, breath held, up the stairs and into his surveillance room.

Oh, how she would love to sit and watch each screen. Learn his secrets and unravel the hold he has over the town and everyone in it. But no, she’s here for one thing and one thing only. Willow recalls what Jesse told them about the loft door and she does as he must have done; climbing onto a desk and balancing on one leg while she stretches her fingers towards the hatch door.

She grunts, straining, reaching the latch and shoving the door to one side before flailing around for the book. For a horrible heart-stopping moment she fears that it’s not there. That she has risked everything for nothing. Then, her thumb brushes over the soft material of the cloth it was wrapped in and she reaches in further, gripping it, yanking it.

At that moment, she leans out too far and suddenly she’s falling. She’s shorter than Jesse and has overstretched. She hits the floor on her knees and elbows and the cloth bound book thumps down beside her. Winded, electrified, terrified, Willow grabs it and runs.

6

Margaret leads the way through the kitchen with Jesse in tow. She holds his hand tightly and does not even glance at Hilda or Horatio who are sharing ham sandwiches together. They enter the large pantry and Margaret closes the door behind them, perhaps indicating that they must not be disturbed.

She strides forward to the cellar door and Jesse feels colder, fear prickling across his skin while his pulse continues to roar in his head and his heart starts to hammer thunderously. Outside, the storm is picking up pace again – not finished with the town just yet. He catches a glimpse of tall dark trees shaking wildly from side to side outside, and then Margaret unlocks the door and nods for him to go on.

He steps down and cold air hits his face; makes him draw back. Under the cold air is something else though, something low and warm and alive. Margaret bumps into his back so Jesse takes the steps down until his feet meet the hard compacted earth floor. He looks around, peering into the shadows – his lips trembling as he forces his teeth together to prevent a scream from escaping.

Margaret picks up an old lantern and lights it with her lighter. It provides enough light to guide their way into the centre of the space. Jesse turns his head, taking in the cell doors and the stains on the ground. There is that buzzing in the air again – electricity thrumming in waves, making his hairs stand on end and his teeth chatter.

‘What happened to my mum?’ he hears himself ask in a small young voice.

Margaret lets go of his arm and walks away a few paces. He sees her come back with the same bottle she had at the meeting – the one he drank from. He shakes his head.

‘I’m not drinking anything until you tell me.’

He realises then that he can’t move. He’s in the same spot – frozen in place – limbs and muscles locked by some awful ancient primal fear. Fright or flight he thinks helplessly. Predator or prey.

Margaret stands before him clasping the bottle. He sees something glinting in her other hand. ‘This is the knife that will kill him,’ she says in a low, soft hypnotically gentle voice. ‘And you can kill him, Jesse. You can do it. But you must drink this first.’

‘Why? What will it do to me?’

‘It’ll find you. That’s what it does. It goes to the very core of you and finds who you really are. And then in time, sometimes lots of time, you can truly become what you really are.’

‘I’ll change,’ he murmurs. ‘Into an animal, like you can?’

‘In time,’ she repeats. ‘You take the drink to start the process, to give it time to find you. And then, once in every generation a child from town is sacrificed in order for a committee member to fully change. And that, Jesse, means you can in theory, live forever.’

He stares back at her. ‘Why would you want to?’

‘To protect the town,’ she replies. ‘That’s all this was ever about. A town born from war and battle and blood and death, and grief and revenge. There were hill forts on either side. Many, many bloody battles were fought here. The earth drenched in blood. Generation after generation through time. There is a special energy here. No one knows what or why. Everyone has a theory. If you ask the vicar, he would say God, I suppose. Maybe Aaron would say the devil. Maybe Iris would say witchcraft, for she was one. Maybe everyone is driven by their own inner force, Jesse. Bob Rowan would say nature. I’d say loyalty and protection, family and blood, but it doesn’t matter what causes it or where the power comes from. What matters is what it can do.’

‘How do you do it?’ he asks quickly. ‘How do you change?’

‘I told you, you take the drink until it’s your time. When it’s your time, a child must be chosen.’

‘But not killed?’

‘The body dies,’ Margaret replies smoothly. ‘Paddy Finnis does not have a human body he can change back to. He was a sacrifice. But he lives on, like Horatio and the others.’

‘Horatio was a child?’

‘Not just any child,’ Margaret smiles. ‘My son.’

If Jesse could move, he would stagger backwards away from her. But he can’t. He is frozen to the spot. Trapped. ‘Wh-what?’

‘Ugh.’ She clicks her tongue and rolls her eyes. ‘It’s a long, long story. I was too old. It wasn’t supposed to happen. I’ve never been maternal, and he was handicapped, mentally. It was cruel, really. I suppose if you could have combined Hilda’s mind with his body, he would have been normal. But it wasn’t to be. He was sacrificed a long time ago. He’s far older than Hilda. He’s forgotten, Jesse. He’s not trapped. He’s forgotten who he was.’

‘Hilda’s not really your sister, is she?’

‘No, she’s my daughter. But as you’ve probably noticed, she looks older than me these days. She’s very good really. And we are more like sisters than mother and daughter.’

‘So, why? Why him and not her?’

‘You can only choose one child,’ she explains patiently. ‘Every generation, which loosely speaking is every thirty years, give or take. And Horatio… it was best for everyone. Best for him and me, and the town. And he’s happy, you’ve seen that yourself. He’s better off. And he’ll live forever unless something or someone kills him.’

‘Tell me about my mum,’ Jesse says, watching in horror as she unscrews the cap to the bottle.

She nods. ‘Of course, we have a deal. I’ll tell you whatever you want to know, but take a sip first, just one…’

Jesse doesn’t want to – she could be lying – but he doesn’t see he has a choice. He opens his mouth and she pushes the rim of the bottle between his lips. He draws in a sip, a taste – it’s warm and rich and earthy. It slips down his throat like silk, burning and fizzing. His pupils dilate and his mouth falls open.

‘You aunt was a sacrifice,’ purrs Margaret. ‘She became a cat. A beautiful dainty black cat.’

Margaret lowers the bottle and he swallows again, drinking down the residue. He is already craving it and supresses a whimper to beg for more.

‘Aaron killed her,’ Margaret explains. ‘He had his reasons. She rejoined the family, you see, grew close to your mother, her sister. Your mother in time began to, well, she was very much like you and your friends, Jesse. She became a problem, a threat and she was drawing in others. Your father, Nicky we called him back then, he was obsessed with Angie Radley. He’d do anything for her. Frankie Maxwell and Willow’s mother, Lizzie, also got mixed up in it all.’ She reaches out and caresses his cheek.

‘They were a lot like you and your friends, I suppose. Anyway, Aaron’s reasons for killing Carol-Anne were legitimate but not agreed on. The committee had not voted yet. It did, however, solve the problem. At least for a while. Your mother grieved – but then she picked up where she had left off, nosing around, making accusations. People laughed at her, of course. No one believed her. She was scorned and ridiculed. The town turned on her, Jesse, like it’s turned on you, until now. She was an outcast really.

‘Your father tried to look after her but she could not cope with motherhood, I’m sure you’ll remember. She did indeed run away. She intended on escaping town and raising her alarm somewhere else. Maybe she thought she would come back for you and your brothers. But she never made it out of town. At the border, Aaron caught up with her and killed her. He ate her and brought her bones here to share with us – to add to the ancient drink that’s coursing through your veins right now, Jesse.’

She lifts the knife and shows it to him. ‘Aaron killed your aunt and your mother because they were onto him. He acted alone. After that, the committee was uncertain, fragile and divided. Bob Rowan was appalled – he wanted Aaron cast out – they fought, then Bob left us. He hates us. Despises us all.

‘Iris was similar to Aaron, but in many ways it was all a sadistic game to her. And with Aaron and Bishop it’s all about survival and fulfilling the inner, primal need. With the rest of us it’s about the town, nothing else. Protecting and saving this town. Whatever that means. Whatever it takes.’

Margaret lifts his hands and presses the knife handle into his open palm. ‘Aaron has a taste now. He’s killed more since. Not sacrifices, not even people who are on to him, just anyone, strangers and passers-by. He will only get worse, more bloodthirsty and out of control. We need to stop him and the committee are in agreement, Jesse. You can do it with this knife. It’s almost as old as us. Take it and go and kill Aaron Mayfield.’

She closes his numb fingers around the handle and eases him gently from the centre of the room. He staggers, blinking, emerging from the spell but with just one more drop racing around inside of him, he knows it is too late for him. But he doesn’t have to be like them. He doesn’t have to join them. It’s horrible and terrible and wonderful that his mother is now a part of him.

He stumbles to the light surrounding the closed door then he pauses and looks back at the mayor. ‘Is that where you do it? That spot in the middle where it feels different.’

Margaret nods. ‘Yes. Generations of blood, bone, flesh and fear and sorrow have sunk into that earth. It ensnares you. It keeps you there. Then you drink from it.’

‘Not me,’ he says again, his voice a croak as he reaches weakly for the door. ‘Not again.’

‘For now, just worry about Aaron. Can you do it, Jesse? Because it’s you or him. You know that, don’t you? If you don’t kill him, he will kill you.’

‘Yeah. I know.’ Jesse pulls down the handle and warm light floods his eyes, making him feel dizzy. He lowers his head and moves sluggishly through it.

7

Willow scrambles her way out of the house. She is panicked beyond reason gripping the cloth bound book to her chest as she races down the stairs and flies at the still open door. She expects to run straight into him there but the coast is still clear. She feels something though. A shift in the atmosphere. A change around her. He knows.

She runs.

8

Ralph and Jaime finish the last crust of pizza and close up the cardboard boxes. Jaime wipes sauce from her chin and licks her fingers one by one. ‘Time to go?’ she asks Ralph.

He looks away, his chunky shoulders rising as he inhales slowly – then dropping as he breathes out – the weariest of sighs. ‘I think so.’

He stands and shoulders his backpack. He has checked it dozens of times and has added some food, more tools and spare clothes, just in case. Jaime doesn’t know why – she supposes he is preparing for any and every outcome. Before they head to the door, he passes her a baseball bat and she takes it silently, swallowing her horror and guilt.

She follows him to the door and they slip out silently, side by side. The town is dark and still and the air around them feels charged, like anything could happen. And something does almost instantly; a large brown owl swoops soundlessly down from the roof and startles them.

‘Shoo!’ Jaime cowers from it, recalling Bob Rowan’s relentless claws. She covers her head with her arms and looks up fearfully. The owl has flapped away but it is already turning around.

Ralph scowls at the house next door. ‘Eugenie,’ he mutters darkly and pulls the hammer from the side pocket of his bag. ‘Head for Paddy’s,’ he hisses at Jaime. ‘And be ready.’

Jaime grips the bat and nods grimly. The owl swoops again, but this time Jaime is ready for it. She swings the bat and feels the satisfying whomp as it collides with the feathered body. The bird spins in the air, wings flapping wildly, feathers spilling across the street.

‘Jaime Perry! Ralph Maxwell! What the hell do you think you’re doing?’

They spin around in shock.

‘Shit,’ Jaime whimpers.

‘Bishop,’ growls Ralph.

Their headteacher is stood at the end of the road, blocking the direction they need to go.

Ralph grabs Jaime by the arm and moves back. ‘Run,’ he says.

9

Jesse is running. Whatever was in that drink is setting his insides on fire. His muscles are exploding. He feels like is growing and changing – getting stronger and faster with every step, every breath.

He races from Hill Fort Farm and onto Hill Lane at top speed, hurtling through the pouring rain – untouched by the gusts of wind charging up and down the hillsides. He runs and does not think once about his brother waiting for him in a car park with a gun. He clutches the knife tightly and follows his instincts. He has to get to the treehouse. He has to kill Aaron Mayfield. Aaron Mayfield slaughtered his aunt and his mother and if he has his way, Jesse will be next.

He runs on towards town, past Black Woods where he swears he hears a low thin wail following his progress. He runs faster and outruns it. All of his senses are amplified. He can smell the coffee someone is drinking in the caravan park on Hill Lane and even the engine oil on their hands. He can hear the bins being scraped out in a kitchen on Town Road as he tears across the fields behind the town hall, towards Black Hare Lane.

10

Weighed down by the book, Willow staggers blindly through the back alley adjacent to Black Hare Lane. The grass is so long and whips and twists around her ankles, her knees buckling with almost every step – the book feeling heavier and heavier in her grasp.

She is almost at the gate when she hears the thud of great paws landing nimbly behind her and although she cannot stop, or look around, she knows it is him. Mayfield. He snarls and hot meaty breath coats her neck and pushes her forward. She scrambles on, tripping and falling and rising and running in a chaotic chain of movements. He bears down on her but in the moment she feels her breath snag in terror in her throat and the creature’s breath brushing her hair it suddenly falls back.

Willow keeps going, lengthening the distance between them and when she finally reaches Paddy’s open gate, she clings to it, her chest heaving in panic and she turns and looks back. She sees a large dark grey wolf slinking back the way it came, picking up speed steadily, then breaking into a run. Breath held in horror that prickles across her flesh, Willow watches it vanish into the shadows.

Thanks for reading!

Please feel free to leave a comment letting me know what you thought of this latest chapter.

NOTE: Please remember this is NOT the finished version of Black Hare Valley Book 1. This book has not been to my editor yet or even my beta readers. There will be typos, grammatical mistakes, and sentences that need rewriting.

COMING NEXT THURSDAY THE FINAL CHAPTER!: Chapter Thirty “The Fight”

Black Hare Valley: Chapter Twenty-Eight “The Storm”

image is mine

© 2025 Chantelle Atkins. All rights reserved. This work may not be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law.

NO AI TRAINING: Without in any way limiting the author’s [and publisher’s] exclusive rights under copyright, any use of this publication to “train” generative artificial intelligence (AI) technologies to generate text is expressly prohibited. The author reserves all rights to license uses of this work for generative AI training and development of machine learning language models.

1

The storm kicks in late afternoon. By that time, Ralph has made it safely back home. He threw stones at Willow’s bedroom window and left her a note by the back gate on his way.

Meet tomorrow at ruins. 8am. I’ll get others. From Ralph.

And he will. Because suddenly Ralph is less afraid. As he stands at the front window and stares out at the rain washed streets, he feels something else creeping steadily over him. He knows what they need to do and it all makes a horrible kind of sense.

2

Jaime also watches the rain as it lashes against the window panes in her bedroom. Downstairs, the pub is full of regulars and rain-soaked townsfolk who have rushed in to take shelter from the deluge. Someone is playing a ukelele and someone else, an old woman, she thinks, is singing along. Every now and then a loud crack of thunder makes her jump and her teeth, nibbling nervously at her lower lip, sink too far and draw blood.

She swears to herself and to her room which feels like a prison and she puts one hand gently against the side of her wounded face. There has been no sign of Ralph and she is terrified.

She supposes she will have to find Willow and together they will track him down, starting at his house and moving on from there. She is already feeling sick at the thought of trying to sneak out or explain this to Mark when she receives the phone call from Ralph.

‘Meet tomorrow at 8am,’ he says before hanging up.

That’s it. Nothing else. But she smiles in relief and almost sobs because it means he is okay. He got in and out and he knows something, something worth telling them. And then there is Willow, who went to see Jesse….

Jaime closes her eyes and sighs. They’ll meet tomorrow. She feels safer already knowing her friends will be with her.

3

Willow made it back home just as heavy rain began to pummel her head and shoulders. She went in the back way, not keen on seeing her parents or their dopey expressions – and ran up to her bedroom, discarding her sodden cloak on the floor. Something clattered against the window, drawing her over.

The skies were a deep purple black bruise, swollen storm clouds rolling fast. Ralph was out there, soaked to his skin, pointing to a piece of paper he had left by the gate. Willow rushed back outside but there was no sign of him.

Now she stands back in her bedroom, with the note clutched in one hand. The rain is heavier; pelting the shops and the roofs of the vehicles sailing by. It’s such a small world, she thinks, and a sudden bright fear grips her. She feels small and watched, like prey – she thinks, Paddy, where are you? Are you safe? She wonders what she would be if it happened to her; a bird? A mouse? Who decides?

She pictures Jesse’s pale haggard face and her heart aches for him, for all of them. She gazes out the window to see the clouds are ginormous, blanketing the town, swallowing it whole. It’s going to be one hell of a storm, she thinks.

4

Jesse is watching Margaret from his window. She’s heading to her car, waterproofs on, hood up, walking briskly as usual as if she is always off to see to the most important business. He feels a hot sick hatred for her that clutches at his guts and makes him want to spit.

His head still aches, but its duller. He still feels groggy – half-asleep almost, like all his thoughts could scatter at any moment and he will be left weak and floundering and unable to collect them back up.

Margaret gets into her Land Rover and turns on the engine. Yellow light spills across the driveway, and her wipers start sweeping frantically back and forth. He watches her reverse, and turn around before trundling steadily down the lane. He hopes she loses control, skids in floodwater and crashes into a tree.

But would that end her?

He doesn’t know. He sits on his bed and knows he will have to find the others tomorrow.

He has to end this.

5

Lightning ignites the sky as Margaret parks around the back of Station House and turns off the engine. She opens the door and steps straight into a huge puddle. Cursing under her breath Margaret slams the door and hurries towards the house. Angry rolls of thunder boom on the horizon and the rain is relentless as she raps urgently on the door.

‘It’s open!’ Aaron calls from inside and she tries the handle to discover that it is unlocked.

Margaret hurries inside, instantly peeling off her soaked raincoat and hanging it over the back of a kitchen chair. Small puddles begin to form around the chair as the rainwater runs off the coat.

‘Kettle’s hot!’ Aaron shouts from upstairs. ‘Unless you want something stronger?’

Margaret glances irritably at the silver kettle perched on the stove, before marching through to the small living room. ‘Something stronger!’ she replies.

She grabs a bottle of whiskey from the drinks cabinet and pours herself a double. Then she goes upstairs and finds Aaron in his special room. It makes her smile, a small cynical smile that flashes up and then fades away just as quickly. Like a little boy with his favourite toys, she thinks in amusement.

Aaron is sprawled casually in his comfy swivel chair, the one that rolls along on little wheels, so that he can glide effortlessly from screen to screen. His head rests in one hand while the other moves a mouse around on the desk before him,

‘Anything I need to know?’ she asks him.

He rolls forward slightly and points to a screen. ‘The Harrison girl just got home. The Maxwell boy was throwing stones at her window and left her a note in the rain.’

‘Oh? They must be planning to meet up. She came from mine. Hilda let her in. She gave Jesse a trinket of some kind. I think she has a thing for him.’

Aaron grunts. ‘They’re all at home.’

‘Nothing to report then?’

He shakes his head then shrugs and points to another screen. ‘Unless you want to watch the vicar and Sylvia eating each other’s faces off in the car park behind his church?’

Margaret chuckles. ‘Ew. No thanks. I’d rather not. Still at it then? Pair of idiots.’

‘Or,’ Mayfield rolls himself along to another screen. ‘The Cotton boy has just arrived at the community centre. Hewlett is there alone, locking up.’

Margaret sips her drink. ‘Doesn’t he run a group there on Saturdays?’

‘Some sort of book club,’ Aaron confirms. ‘Then, like clockwork, young Nathan Cotton turns up to help tidy up. How very sweet.’

‘He’s like that,’ nods Margaret. ‘Volunteers everywhere. Do you think there’s more to it?’

Aaron considers this for a moment, then sighs. ‘I don’t know. Obviously we know what him and Neville get up to, but the library? The church? He could just be bored or just helpful. Or it could be something else.’

‘Like a spy, maybe?’ sighs Margaret. ‘Digging around. He might be wondering about Iris.’

‘She despised him,’ growls Aaron. ‘And quite right too, snivelling little snake. It’s those other damn kids you’ve got to watch out for. The new girl was talking to Nathan just today. So, I’d keep an eye on that.’

‘Yes we will, of course, keep an eye on everything.’

Aaron looks at her for the first time. ‘Good,’ he says softly.

She drinks more whiskey. ‘I don’t think we need to worry about those kids.’ His bushy white eyebrows shoot up as he turns to stare at her. ‘It’s fizzling out. What can they even do, Aaron? That’s what you need to ask yourself. It’s really no different to last time.’

He regards her silently, his face doughy and craggy behind the facial hair. She feels small for a moment – as if he is looking down on her, seeing her as inferior, an idiot, even. Maybe he does, she thinks, probably he does.

They have always worked well together, the mayor and the policeman. Though opposite in many ways, they have always entertained the same ethos where Black Hare Valley is concerned; and that still binds them now, despite the rising animosity. The town must always come first. It is a special place, a sacred place and it must always come first, above all else, above everyone, even themselves.

When he rubs her the wrong way, Margaret reminds herself of this. They both love the town, they both live to serve and protect this town. She hopes this means they can get back on the same page. She hopes they can reconcile their obvious differences.

‘What can they even do?’ he repeats her question back to her in a slow, sarcastic tone.

Margaret stiffens and closes her eyes briefly, attempting to muster the patience she needs to deal with him.

‘What can they even do?’ Aaron says one more time as he swivels the chair around to fully face her. ‘You mean, except for what they have already done?’

She rolls her eyes. ‘Oh, come on. What have they actually done? Really?’

His eyebrows climb higher. ‘You mean apart from all the sneaking around, lying, breaking into my house, stealing, hiding, more lying, causing a power cut, trespassing and killing Iris?’

To this, Margaret laughs. ‘They didn’t kill Iris! What on earth are you talking about?’

Aaron drums his fingers against the padded arm of the chair. ‘Jesse Archer’s criminal brothers killed Iris.’

‘She shouldn’t have been out there!’ Margaret argues. ‘She shouldn’t have been form like that out there. It was an accident. Believe me, I’m keeping an eye on those two, but it was an accident, Aaron. They didn’t know, did they?’

‘Jesse did.’ He glares back at her.

‘No, not for sure. Not then.’

‘But now? How much does he know now, Margaret? How much trust are you placing in a feral and filthy outlaw like him? A boy who has been nothing but a stain on this town!’

Margaret finishes her drink and places the glass on the desk. She straightens up and smooths her damp hair away from her face. ‘It’s a two way thing, Aaron and it is not being rushed. It never is.’

‘He’s too young, too rebellious. It’s too risky and yet for some reason, you refuse to see it!’

‘Look.’ She breathes in and out slowly. ‘I trust him a bit, I give him a bit, then he trusts me a bit, and gives a bit. Slowly, slowly. He’s got a predator inside of him. Just like you. That’s half his trouble, plus he’s just like his mum. All that hunger can drive a boy crazy. You should know, Aaron. Maybe you and him are more alike than you realise.’ Aaron groans as if in pain and Margaret holds up her hands to placate him. ‘I’m just trying to help him and direct him, all right? He could actually be an asset and we’ve lost Bob and Iris along the way. We need to replace them at some point.’

‘Thought you were sniffing around Mark’s new woman,’ Aaron snorts. ‘Or was that just a waste of time?’

‘No, of course not! Again, Aaron, you know these things can’t be rushed. It always takes time. And time is something we really do have a lot of.’

He grunts, still drumming his fingers. ‘Those kids are still prying. You’re really not worried about that? They have parts of the book, the spells. That didn’t happen last time.’

‘No, but they don’t have enough,’ she laughs. ‘They’d need the whole book to cause a problem and even then, they wouldn’t have a clue…’

‘But Jesse,’ he insists. ‘If you bring him in, he’ll know more and he’ll tell them!’

‘He’ll be one of us by then. Loyal.’

‘Never.’ Aaron grits his teeth and shakes his head. ‘Never. And what about Rowan? Look how that went.’

‘He’s not a threat. Never has been. Just wants to be left alone and he’s been like that since it was his turn.’

‘Says it turns his stomach,’ replies Aaron, his tone snide and mocking. ‘Didn’t bother him so much in his day though, did it?’

‘He’s a hypocrite,’ agrees Margaret, ‘and I’ve no time for him, but as I said, he’s not a threat to us.

Aaron does not answer. He just stares at her through dull, sulky eyes.

Outside, a clash of deep thunder seems to rock the house. Margaret flinches and eyes the door. She has the urge to make this quick and get back to her farm.

‘What can they do?’ she says again. ‘Answer me that right now. Whatever they think they know, who would they tell? No one, or they would have already. And even if they told the whole town, who would believe them? And even if anyone did listen to them, what could they do? Where is the proof for anything? They have some scraps from a book that can do nothing. They have a hare that cannot talk or change form. And, by the way, Jesse’s predator is getting very hungry where that hare is concerned. What else, Aaron? What else do they actually have? They can’t stop us or even interfere. You know that deep inside, admit it.’

Aaron looks to the ceiling. ‘Of course I know that, Margaret. That’s not the point.’

‘What is then?’ she demands, angry now. ‘Your blood lust?’ He doesn’t answer and she knows that she has him. ‘That’s what this is really about, isn’t it, Aaron? Be honest for once. It’s about your blood lust – your need to feed!’

‘I am the biggest. The hungriest.’ He swivels back to face his screens, scratching at his beard.

‘Well, just keep it under control, that’s all I’m asking. Let me at least try with Jesse and stop worrying about those other kids. Okay?’

‘And if it doesn’t work? If Archer becomes a problem?’ He side-eyes her, one eyebrow cocked.

Margaret sighs and turns away. ‘Yes, Aaron, yes. Only then.’

6

The storm rages overnight. Thunder groans across the hilltops and flashes of lightning ignite the black night sky. Willow awakes the next day to a rain drenched town and the storm is not finished yet. It’s still raining heavily and gusts of vicious wind are whirling up and down the high street. Her alarm didn’t go off so Willow is in a hurry, dressing quickly as her parents are moving around in the kitchen, flicking on the kettle and opening the fridge to retrieve milk. She calls out a hurried hello and goodbye then trots quickly down the stairs.

She grabs another coat, slides her feet into wellies and leaves through the back door. Willow marches through the wet grass and disappears among the trees, keeping the valley hills in sight. The rain pummels her as she emerges on the other side and starts to climb. She bows her head, pushed back by the wind that powers down from the top.

When she finally reaches the ruins she feels exhausted. It has taken all her energy climbing that hill with the rain and wind hammering her the entire time. She stumbles breathlessly towards the ruins and scuttles behind the exterior walls to find Jaime, Ralph and Jesse there waiting for her.

Instantly, there is a fraught and frantic atmosphere – a stillness, frozen, icy with terror and anticipation. She swallows the cold air and braces herself. Jesse looks pale and jittery – he is hunched against the wall with his knees pulled up to his chin. He looks like he is barely holding on. She longs to go to him, her old enemy, a boy she has loathed and scorned for so long – but her eyes are drawn to Jaime. She is sat next to Jesse – probably about as close as she can get and does Willow feel a sudden stab of jealousy? Perturbed and disgusted with herself, she shakes it away.

She turns to Ralph. ‘Sorry I’m late – my alarm…’

‘It’s okay.’ He jumps to his feet, hands up, calming her. ‘I got my mum to pass the message to Jesse this morning, but we need to talk fast, so, just listen. We don’t know who else is listening but if I see any bloody bird or animal…’ He leaves the threat hanging in the air and they all glance about anxiously, determining that they are indeed, alone. ‘Okay,’ says Ralph, certain now that he has their full attention.

‘Paddy…’ Jesse suddenly bursts out, talking over Ralph. But his voice is thin, shocked.

‘What about him?’ asks Willow, crossing over to join him and Jaime against the wall.

He looks around nervously. ‘Will he be…?’

‘Joining us?’ prompts Willow and Jesse nods miserably. ‘No, I don’t think so,’ she tries to reassure him. ‘Why? What’s wrong?’

He shakes his head, his cheeks burning as he looks away. Ralph is standing over them all. Willow examines him and thinks the boy she sees now is a long way away from the eager to please, friendless boy she had seen around school. But of course, she didn’t know him then, just like she didn’t know Jesse or Jaime.

‘We’ve got to be quick,’ Ralph reminds them, his face intense. ‘I spoke to Bob Rowan.’ They all gasp at hearing this and he smiles, proud. ‘He was actually pretty reasonable in his human form. The raven form…’ Ralph rolls up his sleeves to reveal the scratches which are similar to the ones on Jaime’s face. ‘Not so much. But I fought him off and I convinced him to talk to me!’

Willow swaps an astonished look with the others – then they all turn back to Ralph, nodding to encourage him to continue. ‘He said what I think we’ve known all along, guys. Sergeant Mayfield is the problem. He’s the one we’re in danger from. Especially Paddy. We have to stop him. We have to kill Mayfield.’

‘What?’ Jaime utters a single whispered word. She looks at Willow and Willow stares back, open-mouthed. She turns to Jesse to gauge his rection but he’s frowning back at Ralph, a look of grim knowing in his eyes. Ralph stares back and a look passes between them before they nod; Jesse first, followed by Ralph.

Willow feels a flutter of panic in her chest. ‘Kill him?’ she sputters, barely able to believe the words escaping her lips. ‘Are you serious?’

‘Yes.’ Ralph nods grimly. ‘And I think we all know it – deep down inside. It feels… right, somehow. Inevitable.’

‘You’re talking about killing a person!’ says Jaime, as the colour drains from her face.

‘Not a person,’ Ralph corrects her gently. ‘A monster. A beast. We’re all in danger while he’s out there.’

‘And Bob Rowan said this?’ asks Jaime, incredulous. ‘He said we had to kill Sergeant Mayfield?’

Ralph nods regretfully. ‘He said Mayfield was a mistake. He said the mayor hates him. He said he’s the danger.’

‘So, what does that make the rest of the committee?’ demands Jaime. ‘Innocent? Are you saying they didn’t all somehow do this to Paddy? They didn’t hurt or kill anyone?’

‘We don’t know that for sure,’ Ralph reminds her, his eyes shifting to Jesse. ‘Jesse? Have you found anything out?’

‘No, not really,’ he says in a low, lost voice, his eyes on the stony ground. ‘But you’re right… Margaret does hate Mayfield, and Rowan, he must have been one of them once. I think they’re all old. Ancient, I mean. Whatever it is they do, whatever they do to people, it keeps them alive. I think it keeps them younger. I don’t know.’ He lifts a sluggish fist and rubs it into one eye. ‘I don’t know for sure. But if you put it all together…’

‘They can turns into animals,’ says Willow.

Jesse nods at her. ‘But they’re stronger, different to Paddy. He’s stuck, whereas they’re in control somehow. It must be some kind of… I don’t know… old magic? Maybe something connected to this place.’

‘She told you this?’ asks Jaime.

He shakes his head. ‘No. Not really. But that drink they gave me, I think…’ He screws his eyes shut for a moment, then shakes his head again. ‘I think it was blood. And…’ He pauses to look at them all. ‘I’ve felt different since then.’

‘Different how?’ wonders Ralph.

‘Like my senses are in overdrive… Like, I can hear and see and smell and taste a hundred times better than before. I have these weird dreams and I feel like I know stuff without them telling me, I mean.’

‘Willow thinks you should leave,’ says Jaime, nervously. ‘Because the other day at the church, with Paddy…’ She trails off, biting her nails.

Jesse glances at Willow with a shrug. ‘You’re right. I can’t be near him. The prey drive, it’s too strong.’

‘Guys, we’re getting off track,’ says Ralph. ‘What’re we gonna do about Mayfield?’

‘We can’t kill a person!’ Jaime cries. ‘We can’t kill a policeman!’

‘What about if he was in animal form?’ says Willow. ‘It would just be like when the dogs killed Iris.’

Ralph nods. ‘Exactly.’

‘But that was different,’ argues Jaime, tears of frustration shining in her eyes. ‘That was an accident. They were just dogs chasing a hare. They didn’t know it was Iris and neither did Jesse’s brothers. Even if we could find a way to kill whatever the hell Mayfield turns into, we’d be doing it on purpose! That’s murder, guys!’

‘He’s not a human,’ Jesse assures her. ‘Maybe once he was, but not now.’

Her eyes are wide and scared. ‘How would we even do it?’

No one answers. It hangs between them – silent, heavy and grim. Jaime wipes her eyes and gets hurriedly to her feet.

Above them thunder is rolling again and the wind has picked up and turned colder. Jaime clings to her woollen hat with both hands and shouts over the wind to be heard. ‘I’ve got to get back! Mum needs me! This…’ She stares around at them helplessly, barely able to meet their eyes. ‘This is crazy.’

Jesse gets up and steps closer to her. He takes her hands in his. ‘But if it comes to it,’ he says. ‘If we have to, if we have no choice, would you help us?’

She stares back at him, her lower lip trembling, her eyes miserable as she looks to the others, before giving the tiniest of nods. She pulls free and stalks quickly away.

Willow breathes out slowly and uses the wall to help her stand. The rain is powering down making her feel like the town is against them, like the very environment around them is trying to thwart their plans – stop them being together.

‘How?’ she asks Jesse.

He shoves his hands in his pockets and glares at the ground. ‘I don’t know. But I can find out.’

‘Anything in the stuff we got from the books?’ asks Ralph.

Willow shakes her head sadly. ‘Nothing. I’ve gone over and over it and so has Jaime. I think Iris did it on purpose, to lure Paddy in, or trick us, I don’t know. But she was certainly one of them, don’t you think so, Jesse?’

‘Yeah, I do and I think she liked to cause trouble.’

‘How do you mean?’

‘I mean, the amount of times Mayfield has said it should have been me, not Paddy. Right from the start, and he’s not the only one. I think it was meant to be me who disappeared but Iris, for some reason, gave Paddy the book.’ Jesse looks at Willow sadly and she nods.

‘She put a target on him. You think we can trust Bob Rowan?’ Willow turns to Ralph. ‘Out of all of them?’

‘I don’t know,’ he sighs. ‘I really hope so. I could go back and see him again? See if he knows how to do it?’

Willow and Jesse swap a look then both nod at Ralph. Willow expects his lip to tremble and his shoulders to drop but she is wrong. Ralph nods back firmly, proudly even, she thinks and then he too, is gone.

‘I still think you should get out of there,’ Willow says quickly to Jesse. ‘Go to the treehouse.’

‘I can’t,’ he snaps, his eyes suddenly dark. ‘Didn’t you hear what I said about Paddy? I can’t be near him.’

‘But if you left now,’ she tries arguing. ‘Before she gets her claws into you any deeper, before…’

He turns away. ‘I can’t. Not yet. We need her to trust me and I have to stay there for that to happen. I’ll find out what I can, all right? About Mayfield and how to kill him. About everything.’

‘You’re in danger!’ Willow cries after him but he leaves quickly, and the wind takes her words and scatter them across the hills. She is not sure if he ever heard them.

7

Jesse knows what he has to do, who he has to see and he feels in his heavy bones that he does not have much time. Whatever Margaret gave him in that drink is still affecting him – he knows that much – it’s in his system now, running through his veins. He knows he cannot ever be near Paddy again and his heart is breaking. But he can do something. He can make sure Paddy is safe from Mayfield. Ralph is right and Jesse knows it more than anyone.

He heads home – to what used to be home – and he trails his way sluggishly up the stairs to the flat. If anything it smells even stronger, or maybe his sense of smell has sharpened. Stale sweat and strong beer mixed with ingrained dirt, grease and decay. Not just his flat, but the whole building.

He still has his key so he lets himself inside and walks straight into Billy. Relief floods him; relief he’s home, relief it’s not his father or empty-eyed Wyatt who’s never liked him; relief so strong it makes his knees buckle. He reaches for Billy and grabs him by the arms.

Startled, confused, Billy allows a brief and clumsy hug before pushing him back again.

‘Jesus,’ he says, his voice no more than a whisper. He glances over his shoulder; Jesse can hear snoring and spluttering from within the flat.

Jesse pulls the door shut. ‘I need to talk to you,’ he hisses. ‘It’s urgent.’

Billy looks him up and down. ‘What’s wrong? You don’t look too good.’

‘I’m not good.’ He steps closer, leaning towards Billy’s ear. ‘I need a gun.’

Billy recoils. ‘Whoa, what?’

‘Can you get me one? Soon. Soon as you can.’

Billy stares at him for a long moment, frowning before narrowing his eyes in understanding. ‘Mayfield.’

Jesse nods. Billy’s eyes flit over his face, as if he’s trying to take in every detail. Then he opens the door, pushing him back out.

‘Don’t let Dad see you. He’s been awful. I’ll get you one. Meet me in the car park behind The Hare tomorrow?’

‘Thanks,’ Jesse breathes, wanting to hug him. ‘What time?’

Billy thinks for a moment, wrinkling his nose. ‘Seven.’

Jesse nods. ‘Thanks, Billy. I mean it.’

Billy does not reply. He close the door, looking at Jesse one last time with a long and sorrowful expression.

Jesse feels lighter as he heads back down the stairs. He knew he could rely on Billy, if only for this one thing. He knows his brother will fetch him a shotgun from one of his poaching buddies and he knows he’ll hand it over with very little fuss. He breathes out slowly. One step closer.

Then he sees the police car.

Like so many goddamn times before…

His heart seems to shudder its way up into his throat and a spiky coldness floods his veins. Mayfield – the car parked in Taylor Drive – leaning out the open window while the rain lashes down. He beckons Jesse.

‘Let me drop you back to Margaret?’ he calls out. ‘You’ll catch your death out here.’

Jesse gulps and stares briefly at the darkening skies. The wind and rain are howling around him and he wonders what the town is trying to tell him. He moves reluctantly and stiffly towards the car.

Jesse climbs in the passenger side as he has done on so many occasions, when this man has demanded it. How many years now, he thinks, how many years has he been haunting my life?

Mayfield grins and starts the engine. ‘Family reunion?’

Jesse keeps his gaze fixed ahead. ‘Just warning them not to poach on Margaret’s land again.’

‘Oh?’ Mayfield chuckles. ‘Well then, maybe she is right about you.’

‘What do you mean?’

‘Oh, you know, that you’re somehow worthy or special, or some such bullshit. Of course, Bishop and I don’t agree for a start and we’ve seen a lot more of you over the years, haven’t we?’

Jesse does not answer. He returns to staring ahead.

‘Well anyway, what Margaret wants, she usually gets,’ sighs Mayfield. ‘So, don’t go shitting your pants, Archer. I’ll take you back and deliver you safe and sound. Her new toy. Her new pet. It’s too late to escape her clutches, you know that, don’t you?’ He laughs.

Jesse grits his teeth and stares ahead.

‘What’s inside you already,’ Mayfield goes on in a playful wondering tone. ‘It’s taken hold and you can feel it. She’ll urge you to drink more and you’ll have to so she can trust you – because if she doesn’t trust you, well, where does that leave you?’ Mayfield laughs and when Jesse glances his way, he sees his tongue flick from one corner of his mouth to the other. ‘That leaves you to me,’ he says with certainty. ‘So, you don’t want to let her down or piss her off and you know it. You’ve worked it all out already, eh? See, that’s why I’m happy whatever happens, Archer, because you’re screwed either way. You’re trapped.’


Thanks for reading!

Please feel free to leave a comment letting me know what you thought of this latest chapter.

NOTE: Please remember this is NOT the finished version of Black Hare Valley Book 1. This book has not been to my editor yet or even my beta readers. There will be typos, grammatical mistakes, and sentences that need rewriting.

COMING NEXT THURSDAY: Chapter Twenty-Nine “The Hunt”

Black Hare Valley: Chapter Twenty-Seven “Ralph and The Raven”

image is mine

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1

Jesse wakes up in confusion. He is lying on his back in the bed at Hill Fort farm. But he has no idea how he got back there. Groggy, he props himself up on one elbow and examines himself. He’s wearing the same clothes he had on when he got to the old church but he has no memory of returning. He presses a hand to his forehead where a nasty headache is brewing and a slideshow of images fills his mind.

Running. So much running. Suddenly, he can hear his heart beating in his ears again. He squints and groans. Running faster. Grass and hills. The church. What made him go there? Why were the others there? What were they doing?

The black hare…

Jesse springs upright, lowering his hand and gazing around in a panic. He saw it, the black hare. He chased it. He wanted it. The smell, the scent, the blood. Hunger. Running, running, running. Teeth. Escape. He shakes his head – after that, he has nothing.

A knock on the door alarms him. Margaret never knocks. Jesse moves to the end of the bed and lowers his feet to the floor. His throat is tight and dry and his stomach is rolling over in hunger.

‘Who is it?’ he asks, his voice a thin croak.

The door handle turns slowly and time seems to slow down as the door swings open, revealing Hilda in her wheelchair, Horatio at her side.

‘Horatio is not much of a dog,’ she states flatly, her eyes shooting around his room. She has a tray on her lap and what looks like a sandwich in the middle of it. Jesse swallows, licking his lips.

‘What?’

Hilda rolls herself slowly in. She ignores his question and gazes around the room. Seemingly satisfied, she holds out the tray and Jesse takes it nervously. His hands shake as he rests it on his knees. The sandwich looks divine. Thick white bread, corned beef, lettuce and tomato. He stares at it longingly.

‘Thanks.’

‘She said you’d be hungry.’ Hilda is turning her chair around. ‘She’s gone to town.’

‘What time is it?’

‘Lunchtime,’ says Hilda, glancing over her shoulder. ‘Saturday,’

Jesse’s jaw drops. Saturday? He leans forward. ‘Wait. Did you say Saturday? It’s Thursday.’

‘It was Thursday,’ yawns Hilda. ‘Then it was Friday. Now, it is Saturday. Come on, Horatio.’

‘No, wait! Please!’ Jesse places the tray behind him and gets up. He feels sick for a dizzying moment, light-headed as the room swims around him. He holds his head. ‘I’ve been asleep since Thursday? No way.’

Yes way,’ is Hilda’s terse reply. She still won’t look at him, he notices. But he looks at her. He sees a small woman in a child’s body – her clothes young, her face old. She’s supposed to be a decade younger than Margaret but as Jesse looks at her now, he thinks she looks older. Her wrinkles are deeper, the skin on her neck saggier. It’s almost impossible to tell what goes on behind those eyes but Jesse can’t help feeling that she’s been trying to tell him something.

‘How did I get here then?’ he demands. ‘Last I remember, I was in the old church with my friends.’

‘Yeah, they brought you,’ Hilda replies, her eyes on the dog. ‘They helped you back here.’

‘Why don’t I remember? What the hell was in that drink they gave me? It did something, didn’t it?’

Hilda releases a dramatic sigh. ‘Not supposed to ask questions.’

‘And you’re not supposed to tell me things, but you did. Didn’t you, Hilda?’ He steps closer and she glances up nervously. Is she afraid of him? He stops where he is and holds out his hands. ‘You told me that Horatio isn’t a dog and Margaret isn’t your sister. What the hell does that mean?’

Hilda arches her lip, her eyes now fixed on her lap. She rolls herself a little closer to the door. ‘You know about the boy. The hare,’ she says after a beat. Jesse nods. ‘Then you know about Horatio,’ she sighs, her gaze shifting to the Labrador’s dozy face. He’s sniffing around her lap trying to snuffle up sandwich crumbs.

Jesse steps closer again. ‘He’s not a dog. Shit.’ He presses both hands to his head. ‘Shit. Shit. Like Paddy. When? When did it happen?’

‘I don’t know,’ she grumbles, with another eye roll. ‘Don’t ask me.’

‘But I need to know. You have to tell me, Hilda. Horatio was a missing kid too? Is that what you’re saying?’ His mind is spinning when an awful thought occurs to him. ‘Jesus, he’s not my mum, is he? Or my aunt? They both went missing!’

A shrill and childish laugh escapes Hilda. ‘He’s a boy, stupid!’

‘Whose boy? Whose? Where did he come from?’ Jesse closes the distance between them and puts his hands on the arms of her chair, trapping her. ‘You have to tell me. You can’t just drop that and not expect me to ask more!’

‘It’s not important who he is,’ she mutters, eyes burning into the floor.

‘Yes, it is! If he was someone’s kid!’

‘He was never a puppy…’ she hisses. ‘He was… grown-up.’

‘Why can’t he change back? Like the committee? Like Mayfield? Hilda, please!’

‘I don’t know.’ She crosses her arms tightly and glances at the window, panicked by the sound of wheels on gravel. ‘She’s back. She’s never gone for long.’

‘Please tell me,’ he begs. ‘Please.’

‘I don’t know. They don’t tell me anything.’

‘Then how do you know about him?’

‘I listen. I wait. I pick stuff up.’ She unfolds her arms and grips the wheels. Jesse lets go and she rolls forward. They hear the front door open and he knows he has to let her go. She wheels away silently, head bowed, Horatio at her side.

Jesse closes the door and paces back to the bed. He sits down and devours the sandwich in seconds. It’s only when the plate is clear that he sees the folded note poking out from under it. Quickly, listening out for Margaret, he reads the note:

Jesse – you passed out. Sick! You made us take you to Margaret’s. You said you were close but we’re worried. You were not like you! We need to see you ASAP. Find a way, They are trying to change you – Willow, Ralph and Jaime.

2

Jaime watches Mark passing the first crate to the delivery driver, then creeps back up the stairs and closes her bedroom door behind her. She goes to the window and waves at Ralph who is lingering outside the shop opposite. He gives a wave to show that he has seen the signal. Then he starts to move. She watches breathlessly as Ralph crosses the road, walks past the pub and turns left into Lupin Lane. He is out of sight and Jaime has no knowing if his part of the plan worked or not.

3

Ralph arrives at Lupin Lane just in time to see the first crate being loaded into the waiting van. He ducks back and waits. Shaking and unable to believe he is actually doing this, Ralph watches until he is satisfied the van is loaded with enough crates for him to hide behind.

As the driver returns to the pub for more, Ralph hares down the road and flings himself into the back of the stationary van. He scuttles quickly behind the stacked crates. He’s clutching his bicycle helmet tightly in both hands and he curls himself over it, closing his eyes and holding his breath as footsteps approach.

The van dips as another heavy crate is loaded and then the doors slam shut and Ralph is in darkness. He opens his eyes and sits up, huddled against the back of the van. He’s breathing fast now, hands shaking slightly as he holds onto the helmet, his only protection.

Shit, he thinks, picturing Jaime’s face; I’m gonna need more.

The engine starts and music blares, making Ralph jump. It’s that Spaceman song he keeps hearing everywhere, one that gets in your head and won’t get out. He closes his eyes again, a small yelp escaping as the van starts to move. Ralph cannot believe he is doing this. Alone. Willow had offered to come but he’d refused. She needed to put her own plan into action.

Ralph folds his arms around his knees and tries to prepare himself.

4

‘You ought to take a break now,’ Willow’s mother says to her from the till where she is sipping a fresh cup of tea. ‘Before it gets busy again. It always gets busy after lunch.’

Willow turns the jewellery stand around another rotation, her eyes fixing firmly on the one she wants. A silver dagger on a black cord. She slips it from the hook then conceals it up the sleeve of her shirt.

‘Okay, I’ll go for a walk then,’ she tells her mother, slipping behind the till to retrieve her cloak. She nods at the pile of neatly wrapped gifts in a box beside the till. ‘Are these orders?’

‘Yes, waiting to be picked up.’

‘Could I deliver any? On my walk?’

Her mother eyes her curiously but nods. ‘Sure. Go for it. Take as many as you like, They’re all addressed.’

‘I will.’ Willow selects four gifts and drops them into a large gift bag. ‘I won’t be long.’

‘Thanks, love.’

Willow pauses at the door. ‘Mum?’

‘Yes, love?’ Her mother lowers her mug of tea.

‘I gave those photos to Jesse to show his dad, is that okay?’

Her mother looks uncertain; her lips parting then closing again as a troubled frown wrinkles her brow. Then she recovers with a nervous smile and pushes her hair behind her ears. ‘Yes, of course, that’s fine.’

‘And you still don’t remember hanging out with Nick Archer? Or Frankie Maxwell?’ Willow asks softly. ‘It’s okay if you don’t, Mum. Sometimes I think this town sort of sings people to sleep, you know.’ She laughs at herself, lowering her gaze. ‘I don’t know.’

‘I do know,’ her mother replies and when Willow looks up she is sure she can see tears in her eyes. ‘I think you might be right. It’s like I don’t want to remember, but I don’t even know why I don’t want to, or why I can’t. Does that make sense?’

Willow nods. It breaks her heart but she gets it.

‘I just know that it’s better that I don’t,’ her mother adds softly, looking down.

Willow nods before slipping out the back way. She starts to skirt swiftly around the outskirts of town. She delivers the packages one by one to four surprised and grateful customers. Willow saves the dagger necklace for Hill Fort Farm.

5

Jaime checks the library first. It’s empty except for two elderly ladies perusing the romance section in a wobbly manner. Eugenie Spires peers over the rim of her spectacles and raises her eyebrows.

‘Can I help you, dear?’

‘Just looking for my friend.’ Jaime fakes a smile and backs out again just as quickly.

Her heart racing, Jaime doesn’t really know what she is doing. This is not a plan; nothing they agreed upon anyway. But she couldn’t sit still and do nothing; not while Willow is on her way to Jesse and Ralph is risking life and limb trespassing on Bob Rowan’s land.

Her mother had complained of a headache so Jaime had offered to pop out and pick up her prescription. She hadn’t thought twice; it was just an opportunity to get out of the pub and away from Mark’s accusing gaze.

A quick trip around town, she’d thought, get away from Mark and help out Mum and get time to think, because it’s been increasingly hard to think inside the pub. Jaime is relieved the investigation is no longer stashed there. The pressure had been keeping her awake at night and she certainly doesn’t need any more reasons for Mark to distrust her. But even with it gone, the atmosphere there makes clear thought almost impossible. The pub, she has realised, is a focal point for the town. There is another, of course, the ill-reputed Old Fort, a place frequented by the likes of Jesse Archer’s father. But almost everyone else goes to the Hare and Hound at some point every week. Mark is proud of this. The heart of the community, he often says, while the church is the soul.

Jaime isn’t sure about any of that but she does know the pub is constantly rammed with people, morning to night. Everyone knows Mark and Mark knows everyone. It’s like that in small towns, he likes to remind her.

But out here, in the fresh air, where everything still smells like the earth after rain, Jaime can finally think clearly. She checks the library for Nathan Cotton who she knows frequents it as much as her but then outside, remembers the other place he can usually be found and quickly diverts to the chemist.

Of course; why didn’t she think of it sooner? Because thinking rationally is so hard in that damn pub. It’s a circus, day and night. But maybe somewhere at the back of her mind she had known.

She pushes open the door and there he is. Reading a magazine behind the counter; a magazine he quickly stuffs under the counter when she walks in, his cheeks reddening.

‘Hi!’ He looks pleased to see her, so she smiles back warmly.

‘Hi, Nathan, how are you?’

‘Pretty good thanks. How can I help you?’

‘I just need my mum’s prescription.’ Jaime rests her arms on the counter in a casual manner that she hopes indicates there is no need to rush. ‘It might not be ready though, she said.’

‘I’ll check for you. Catherine Aster, right?’

‘Yep, thanks.’

Nathan trots around the back and she can see the top of his head bent over a few shelves whilst murmuring to Mr Martin, the pharmacist. Nathan returns, shrugging apologetically.

‘You’re right, it’s not ready but Mr Martin is making it up for you now. Can you hang on a few minutes? It shouldn’t take long.’

‘No problem.’ Jaime flashes her sweetest grin. ‘I can wait.’

‘Cool.’ Nathan returns to his stool but does not retrieve his magazine from under the counter. He smiles guiltily instead.

‘So how are you?’ Jaime asks. ‘You and your family?’

He sighs and examines his hands. ‘Oh, you know. Okay, I suppose. Thank you for asking.’

‘There’s been no news, I suppose?’

‘Great-Grandma? No.’ He shakes his head. ‘Nothing. Mum says not to expect any. She says it was a long time coming.’

‘Really? That’s so sad.’

‘Yeah, but she was super, super old.’

Jaime nods in sympathy. ‘It must be hard not knowing for sure.’

‘She was always vanishing,’ says Nathan. ‘Mum says even when she was a kid. There one minute, gone the next. Never knew how long she’d be gone for.’

‘Where do you think she went?’

Nathan shrugs. ‘No clue. If she went off, you could never find her. Just had to wait for her to come back on her own.’

‘Wow. So, you never knew where she went or what she did?’

‘Nah. Just figured she went off into the woods, the hills, you know. She really liked it out there. Just needed to be alone, I guess.’

‘And what was the longest she’d be gone for?’ Jaime asks, then, seeing a slight frown on his face, she adds hastily, ‘I’m sorry. I’m so nosy. I should shut up. I want to be a journalist one day and once I get asking…’ She laughs at herself. ‘I’m sorry, Nathan.’

‘No, no, not at all.’ He reassures her with a smile, ‘The answer is, I don’t know. A few weeks maybe? Here and there.’

Jaime nods and decides she might as well brave one more question. She can see Mr Martin sealing the paper bag with her mother’s prescription in. ‘What was she like, Nathan? What sort of person was Iris?’

‘Hard to say.’ Nathan glances at the ceiling and rubs his chin as if thinking. ‘Eccentric mostly, I guess. Old-fashioned. In her own world, really. I’d have liked to get to know her better but my mum always said not to expect to.’

‘Really? Why not?’

‘Said she didn’t like children.’ He shrugs again.

Jaime lets a nervous laugh escape. ‘But she had a family, she had you..?’

‘Yeah I know. But I can vouch for it. She wasn’t mean or anything, but Mum was right. She really didn’t care for children.’

‘Was it your mum’s mum or dad…?’

‘Her dad,’ nods Nathan. ‘He didn’t stick around when my nan was expecting Mum though.’

‘Oh? He left town? Iris’s only child left Black Hare Valley?’

‘Never to be seen again,’ Nathan smiles and shrugs. ‘My nan brought my mum up on her own until she died of cancer when my mum was, I dunno, I think about eighteen? She didn’t have a lot to do with Iris, I don’t think.’

‘Oh, I see. I’m sorry, Nathan. Not exactly happy families then, hey?’

‘No, I guess not.’

‘Catherine Aster?’ Mr Martin shuffles into sight, squinting behind his thick glasses and holding out the paper bag.

Jaime wishes she had more time with Nathan but she knows it would be risky to keep questioning him. She takes the bag, thanks them both and leaves.

6

Ralph has been bumped about long enough to know they are now on Rowan land and he has the bruises to prove it. The van has finally come to a stop. Ralph freezes, listening. The music stops and a van door slams. He curls into a ball and holds his breath. He thinks to himself, what is the worst that can happen? The driver finds him, shouts a bit and then sends him on his way? But what if the driver is one of them? What if he is caught and handed over? Changed in some way? What if they hand him over to the police? What if he ends up alone with Mayfield?

Ralph’s mouth is paper dry and his pulse is roaring in his head when the doors are slid open and sunlight fills the van. He feels footsteps walking away, crunching on loose gravel. Ralph knows he has to move now. He can’t risk missing his chance or getting shut in the van again. Breathless, almost sick with nerves, he forces himself to move. He slides over to the doors and lowers his feet to the ground, before climbing slowly and cautiously out of the van.

When nothing happens he peers around the door and sees the Rowan farmhouse looming ahead at the end of a scruffy gravel drive, overgrown with weeds. It is surrounded by long grass, stinging nettles and unkempt hedges. Huge oak trees circle it and beyond them, nothing but deep dark woods.

Ralph shivers and looks around. Seeing no one, he starts to move, heading left to where a rusty red tractor is stationed. He slips behind it, hidden in cold shadows to wait.


7

Willow approaches the farm under a dark and turbulent sky. It looks like bruises spreading out across the horizon, slowly but surely creeping closer to Black Hare Valley. The clouds are blooming, she thinks, swollen and pregnant with the promise of yet more rain. Summer in Black Hare Valley is not a given, she thinks. Weather can, and will, go either way.

Willow wonders; how close will Margaret allow her to get? A cold wind whips viciously across the fields and Willow’s cloak drifts out to either side, briefly illuminating her slim dark frame, before she tugs it together and hurries on, eyes fixed ahead on Hill Fort House.

A large bird arrives, circling above her as she approaches the drive. Margaret’s car is there and Willow can see the light from the open front door. She curries on, casting a watchful eye on the hovering bird, then she sees that it is Hilda at the door. She wheels herself backwards to allow Willow an entrance, almost running over a drowsy Horatio as she does.

Willow stands there, blinking in silence for what feels like forever. She suddenly has no words, and barely any thoughts. A roll of thunder shatters the silence and Hilda wheels forward to swing the door shut with a bang,

‘Are you here to see stupid?’ she asks, wheeling around to face Willow, who nods instantly, mouth hanging open. ‘I gave him your note. He’s out the back.’ Hilda points to the conservatory attached to the library. ‘On the patio.’

‘I’ve got a delivery for him.’ Willow finally remembers her voice but Hilda is not interested. She looks away and wheels herself towards the kitchen with the dog in tow. Willow turns slowly, mystified, before marching stiffly into the library. There are no lights on and its dim and shadowy as she makes her way across to the French doors. One is ajar so she slips through and follows the small orange glow in the rose garden.

Willow clears her throat and walks quickly over to join Jesse. The clouds have thickened and the quality of light is poor. Jesse is perched on the edge of the patio, smoking a cigarette. He looks up as Willow joins him and she sees pure confusion in his eyes. He is pale and clammy, his fingers trembling as they tap ash from the cigarette onto the grass.

‘She lets you smoke?’ Willow can’t help smiling. His gaze shifts to the cigarette and his shoulders lift and drop in a small tight shrug. ‘I can’t believe she let me in. Hilda, I mean. Where’s Margaret?’

Jesse looks up. The large bird, a buzzard, Willow thinks, is still circling above them, slowly and lazily as if it has nowhere else to go.

‘You gave Hilda that note? Bit risky.’

Willow swallows and looks back at Jesse. She digs into her cloak and retrieves her last package. ‘I know. I hope she didn’t show anyone else. This was my cover,’ she tells him, pushing it onto his lap. ‘I was going to say you’d ordered it from the shop. You might as well have it.’

Jesse pulls on the cigarette one last time then flicks the butt away. He unwraps the package carefully, his eyes clearing suddenly, his face losing the tension. He lifts the necklace out by the cord and allows the silver dagger to dangle in front of his face. A small smile brightens his features.

‘This is cool.’

‘Yeah, it is. Jesse?’ Willow looks down at her hands clasped between her knees. She feels a drop of rain splatter onto her head. ‘Do you remember what happened that night at the church?’

He drops his hands between his legs and releases a juddering sigh. ‘No.’

Willow feels a surge of relief. Before she can stop herself she turns to him and takes one of his hands into her own.

‘It’s okay, Jesse,’ she tells him softly, leaning closer. ‘She wants you and she’s trying to change you. I think we need to get you out of here.’

He doesn’t nod or shake his head. He stares into her eyes, then licks his lips and says, ‘It was a drink they gave me.’ There is a slow shock building behind his eyes and Willow waits, giving a tiny nod to encourage him on. ‘It did something to me. But I should stay here… The more she trusts me, the more I can learn.’

‘It doesn’t matter.’ Willow squeezes his hands. ‘We can’t undo what they’ve done. We spoke to Paddy, to the hare, at the church before you ran in. He’s been saving us again and again but he’s not safe from them and he can’t ever be Paddy again.’

Willow waits while he tries to absorb this news. There is nothing but pain and confusion in his face. She glances up as the bird of prey cries out suddenly – a shrill, haunting call. She shudders and squeezes his hand again.

‘I had to see you.’

Jesse nods but does not answer. His eyes are fixed on the small silver dagger pendant.

‘We’ve got some plans,’ Willow hisses at him. ‘But I think we really need to get you out. You could go back to the treehouse. You’d be safe there.’ When he does not reply, Willow leans closer, until their heads are pressed together. ‘Jesse, if you can do it, please go to the treehouse. If you get the chance, okay? Paddy is there. You’ll both be safe while we figure it all out. Because there has to be an answer, Jesse, there just has to be.’

Jesse finally meets her eye, draws in his breath and gives a firm nod. Willow breathes out in relief and lets go of his hand. She tugs her cloak closer as the rain falls harder.

‘I better go. We’ll see you soon, okay?’

He nods. Willow forces herself to move when all she really wants to do is grab his hand and drag him with her. But the bird is circling and the lights are on in the house that looms behind them.

She walks quickly away against all her instincts, and does not look back.

8

Ralph doesn’t know how long he’s been hiding behind the tractor but it feels like forever. It’s raining steadily and the plumy low clouds have darkened considerably. Bob Rowan is there by the van with the delivery driver, a short burly man with a grey baseball cap on. They’re chatting – perhaps Bob Rowan is relaying his next order, or perhaps a dissatisfaction with this one – but he keeps looking over at the tractor.

The knowledge that he has been spotted or sensed somehow, drips through Ralph like cold cement until he starts to fear he is going to heave. But Ralph reminds himself sharply that he is here to speak to Mr Rowan. This is all going to plan. Despite how close to vomiting he is.

The van door slams and Ralph jumps dramatically and bites down a scream. He peers out long enough to see the van driving away and that Bob Rowan has disappeared from sight. Ralph allows himself to breathe out slowly, steadying himself and willing the nausea away.

Then suddenly he is surrounded by black feathers fluttering madly against his face, and a terrible dark scream fills the air. Ralph staggers backwards, yelping and gasping and batting with his hands. He trips and falls on his backside, looking up long enough to see a huge black raven flapping directly above his face. Ralph screams and scrambles back until his spine presses against the trunk of one of the huge gnarly oaks.

The bird dives in, black feet and talon like claws stretching towards Ralph’s face. He lowers his head, pulls up his knees and wraps himself into a tight ball. The claws strike the helmet again and again, soft black feathers filling the air as the raven’s wings bat rapidly up and down.

Ralph shrinks in on himself – safe in the knowledge that the helmet is protecting him – then he yelps in pain when the claws rake across his knees. He had thought to wear thick jeans and chunky walking boots along with a wool-lined duffel coat. It still hurts, despite the padding.

‘Stop it!’ he barks behind his arms. ‘Stop it! I know who you are! Just stop it!’

The raven squawks at him and continues to try to gouge his flesh. He feels a sharp slicing pain in his wrist when the bird’s beak finds exposed skin.

Ralph reaches out in desperation, lifting his head long enough to stare right into the demented white eyes of the bird – whilst his hands grab and slip and grab again, finally closing around the wing feathers.

Ralph cries out with the effort to contain it but he has it and he forces the bird down onto the damp ground. It twists and flaps and squawks furiously, but he’s on his knees leaning over it and putting his weight onto it.

‘Stop it!’ he shouts angrily. ‘Just stop it Bob Rowan! I just want to talk! And I’m not leaving until we do!’

Ralph feels a shift under his hands. The soft silky feathers seem to contract inwards as if shrinking away from his touch. He stares dumbly but darkness fills his vision, feathers beating and rustling and fluttering in his face. Ralph backs off, raising his arms and closing his eyes for the briefest moment.

When he opens them again he is staring at Bob Rowan. The dark-haired sturdy looking man is standing over him, breathless, his eyes burning with cold malice.

Ralph gulps and uses the tree to help him to his feet. He realises then that despite everything he still can’t fathom how any of this is possible. Rewind a few weeks and Ralph had no idea such sinister and impossible things happened in his town. He presses himself back into the thick rough bark and gulps cold air.

Bob Rowan examines him – looks him up and down then licks his lips. ‘You got a death wish?’ he snaps suddenly, stepping forward. ‘Is that it?’

‘No,’ Ralph shakes his head. ‘No, I haven’t.’

Rowan steps closer, his low round head jutting viciously forward. ‘You must have!’ he snarls, spittle flying from his thick lips and splattering Ralph’s face. ‘Sneaking on my land! Did you think I wouldn’t smell you or hear you the second that van arrived? I knew that van had a visitor in it, you stupid little shit. Do you think they don’t know too? Of course they do! They know every little move you miserable lot make!’

He steps back finally, glaring at Ralph, who lifts his hands warily and drags them across his face. ‘They,’ he manages to utter. ‘The committee? They? You’re not one of them, are you?’

Rowan’s eyes drift away. His face shuts down and he turns away abruptly, lifting and dropping his broad shoulders in a dramatically sulky shrug. He starts to move away, muttering to himself, ‘Get off my land…’

Ralph leaves the tree and follows.

‘Mr Rowan? You were happy Iris was killed. You pecked at her and the mayor, she shooed you away like she hated you. That must mean something. You’re like them but you’re not one of them.’

‘Oh, aren’t you a clever clogs?’ Rowan sneers at him sideways.

‘We’re right,’ Ralph asserts. ‘And they changed Paddy. Others too. But Paddy is stuck like that, isn’t he? It’s different for him and he’s in danger. We’re all in danger, Mr Rowan.’

‘Leave well alone then.’

‘We can’t do that.’

‘Why?’

‘Why? Because Paddy is our friend. We have to save him. And Jesse too – the mayor is trying to change him, isn’t she? We want our friends back. Safe.’

Rowan chuckles darkly. ‘No chance, lad. Too late.’

‘Was it you?’ Ralph asks suddenly. He stops walking. ‘Was it you that tried to warn Paddy?’

Bob Rowan growls again and turns to face him. He looks him up and down again. ‘You need to go, sunshine, right now. You, those others, they’re no match for what’s out there. You should know that by now.’

Ralph agrees but he can’t stop now, he can’t have gone through all this for nothing. He has to take something back. He has to. He steadies himself and stands tall.

‘You’re right,’ he nods. ‘We don’t understand any of this, not really, but we’re trying and we’re not afraid, Mr Rowan. We have to save our friends.’

‘Too late I told you,’ Rowan shakes his head solemnly. Ralph wonders if he can detect regret in the old man’s eyes. ‘They’re too strong,’ he adds. ‘Too old. Ancient, they are. You’re meddling with ancient… things, boy. Things you don’t understand.’

‘Help me understand,’ Ralph begs him. ‘Even if we don’t stand a chance. Please. Tell us it’s hopeless if it is, but please tell us so we can decide for ourselves.’

Bob Rowan stares back at Ralph, into Ralph, for what feels like a very long time. His eyes, though surrounded by wrinkles, are incredibly bright and sharp. Curious, even. Then, he wrinkles his nose and looks away.

‘Mayfield is the problem,’ he says in a low voice, almost a whisper. ‘He’s the danger.’

Ralph swallows thickly. He feels cold suddenly, drenched in a creeping icy panic.

‘Mayfield is her mistake,’ Rowan goes on. ‘He’s her regret. She hates him and Mayfield – along with being a bloodthirsty sadistic killer, is a spy. A blackmailer. A spy with power over every single person in this town, even if they don’t know it yet.’

Bob Rowan steps back. His head is low on his burly shoulders. He looks weary and old, the light in his eyes dimming.

Ralph stares at him, a deep and dark realisation pouring over him, suffocating him with its gruesome obviousness – He licks his dry lips and says to Bob Rowan,

‘We’ve got to kill Mayfield.’

The old man nods. Yes.

Thanks for reading!

Please feel free to leave a comment letting me know what you thought of this latest chapter.

NOTE: Please remember this is NOT the finished version of Black Hare Valley Book 1. This book has not been to my editor yet or even my beta readers. There will be typos, grammatical mistakes, and sentences that need rewriting.

COMING NEXT THURSDAY: Chapter Twenty-Eight “The Storm”