
Enter Black
Author
D.P. Mendes-Kelly
Reads
225K
Chapters
36
The End
āSheās in there, boss!ā I shouted.
I was already runningātorch in one hand, boots thudding across rain-slick concreteābefore Ken could reply. He lagged behind, panting.
The house loomed at the end of the terrace like a last rotten tooth, half-swallowed by fog. The demolition crew had already cleared the others. This one was the only thing left standing, boarded and bowed, clinging on like it hadnāt heard the order to go.
I reached the door and tried the handle. Locked. Rotten wood, though.
āBack entrance?ā Ken called, catching up, his breath clouding in the cold.
āNo time.ā I stepped back, raised my boot, and kicked. The frame shuddered but held. Againāsplinters this time. Third time lucky.
The door slammed open with a crack like a gunshot, revealing a pitch-black hallway that smelled of mold, piss, and something worse.
āThe caller was very specific,ā Ken said.
I nodded once, sweeping my torch across the damp plastered walls. āWe canāt be too late. I promised her mum.ā
We moved fastāfootsteps soft on spongy carpet, torchlight carving through the dark. Bits of ceiling dangled like cobwebs. Wallpaper peeled in strips. A childās shoe sat abandoned halfway up the stairs.
A cold shiver ran through me. Not fearāsomething older. Instinct. The kind that creeps up the spine and warns you to stop before you open the wrong door.
From above came a single, heavy thud.
Another thud. Then silence.
āDid you hear that?ā I asked.
āHear what?ā
āSheās up there,ā I said. āRoom at the back.ā
The stairs groaned under us. I led, stepping over a collapsed banister. Rain tapped the glass on a cracked skylight. My breath hung like smoke.
Four doors off the landing. Three ajar. One closed tight. The smell was stronger hereācoppery, like meat left out too long.
I tested the handle. Locked.
Ken raised an eyebrow. āI suppose itās my turn to kick the door down, but at my age, the legs arenāt quiteā¦ā
I slammed my foot into the door before he started listing symptoms. It didnāt budge.
I stepped back and drove my shoulder into the panel. It cracked. Again. A jagged tear opened near the latch. The third hit did itāwood splintered inward, the whole door swinging wide on broken hinges.
The room beyond was almost empty. Torn curtains. Bare boards. Dust like snowfall. But the far wall caught my eyeātoo clean, too flat, too white. The paint hadnāt even finished drying. It gleamed faintly in the torch beam.
Ken stepped in beside me. āWho builds a new wall in a condemned house?ā
I didnāt answer. Iād already crossed the room.
I crouched. The air was cold hereāmuch colder than the hallway. I pressed my palm to the plaster. It was ice. The kind of cold you feel in your bones.
Then I heard it.
Faint. So faint I thought it might be in my head.
A voice. A girlās voice.
āHelp me.ā
I jerked back.
Ken saw my face and didnāt ask.
āIāll go and fetch the crowbar,ā he said.
Alone, I stared at the wall. The fresh paint. The deep chill. The scratch marks gouged into the floor.
My torch flickered.
There was a knock.
One soft knock.
From the inside.
Ken returned with the crowbar and a look that said heād rather be anywhere else.
āSheās in there,ā I said, in a low voice.
He didnāt answer. Just handed me the bar and stepped back.
I wedged it into a seam in the plaster, near the gouges in the floor. The wall gave with a faint crunchācheap work. Someone hadnāt even bothered to screw in proper joists. I tore into it, section by section, plasterboard splitting like dry cake.
A wind kicked up. Not from outside. From within. Cold air spilled into the room like water from a broken pipe, carrying with it an overpowering stench.
Behind the wall, darkness.
ThenāI saw her.
At first, it didnāt register. My brain refused. She was sitting upright, knees tucked under her chin, arms wrapped around herself like sheād curled up to sleep.
But her eyes didnāt move. Her lips were blue.
Iād seen her last on a missing person flyer. Sophie Langton, fifteen.
And her skin⦠gray. Mottled.
I dropped the crowbar. The clang felt distant.
Ken swore behind me.
We stared.
āI heard her, though.ā
Ken gave me a concerned look.
I took a cautious step forward and reached out. Her body was wedged into the cavity like a final insult, half-hidden between plaster and brick.
Laid across her lap was a flower. A dark thing. Withered, like it had been dried in salt and ash. A black tulip, maybe. Iād never seen one before.
āSheās been here a while,ā Ken murmured. āDays at least, maybe longer.ā
I was shaking. I hadnāt noticed. My hands refused to steady.
Ken backed away. āIāll call it in.ā
I stayed.
There were marks on the brick behind herāscratched into the wall in a frantic, looping pattern. A spiral, over and over again. Something about it made my stomach turn. At the center of the spiral were three slashes, like claw marks or tally strokes.
And then I saw her hand.
It was resting awkwardly against the brick, the fingertips bent. Under her nails, dried blood. Her last act had been trying to scratch her way out.
I knelt. Looked closer.
All my training, all my rational, logical outlook seemed to drain away. I reached out to touch her hand.
The moment my gloved fingers brushed her skin, I felt it.
Heat.
Only for a secondābut unmistakable. A bloom of warmth, like flesh coming back to life.
Her eyelids fluttered.
I gasped and stumbled back.
Ken came running. āWhat? What is it?ā
I looked at the girl. Still. Cold. No sign of life. Her eyes shut. Lips parted in the same silent cry.
āNothing,ā I said. āJust slipped.ā
He frowned but didnāt push.
We both stood there, breath shallow, listening to the groan of the broken house.
Far below us, a door slammedāthough we were sure no one else had entered.
I felt something change then. Not in the room. In me.
Something that had been solid now cracked. And something elseāsomething older, harderāfilled the space it left behind.
āIāll wait for Forensics,ā Ken said softly. āYou get some fresh air.ā
I was already walking out of the room. Down the stairs. One step at a time.
Outside, the rain hadnāt stopped. But I didnāt feel it.
The girlās face was still with me. The scratch marks. The black flower. The heat.
And that knockāfrom the inside.
***
It took six hours for the paperwork to start.
Theyād sealed the house by ten. Forensics swept ināboiler suits, clipped voices, no eye contact. Sophie was bagged and tagged like evidence rather than someoneās little girl, wheeled out past us on a stretcher. Her eyes had been taped shut. I knew that trick. Didnāt help.
John Bell arrived around noon, as if summoned by the scent of blood.
āWell,ā he said, looking at the ruined doorway. āI told them youād get sentimental. This work needs someone with a stronger stomach.ā
I tried to ignore him.
Ken looked like he wanted to say something, but thought better of it. Heād seen that look on my face before. The one I got when Bell was around.
āSheās the Langton girl,ā I said flatly. āThe one reported missing last spring.ā
Bell squinted. āCanāt be. Langton was seen in Sheffield three weeks ago. A lad claims she nicked his Walkman.ā
āSheās been in that wall for months.ā
āCould be someone else, then.ā
āItās her.ā
He turned away, giving me that dismissive little wave he reserved for female colleagues. āPathology will confirm. Donāt make this another one of your crusades.ā
And that was it. That was the moment.
Something inside me broke. Months of searching for Sophie. The promise I had made to her mum. āIāll find her.ā
Years of Bellās, āMake us a brew, love, while we solve this crime.ā
Now here he was, a girl dead, and him seeing nothing but an opportunity to get one over on me.
Reader, I punched him.
If I had thought about it for a second, I would have stopped myself, but in that moment, I saw red.
He looked at me askance, and then suddenly a smile spread across his face.
āIāll have your badge for this.ā
I didnāt answer. Just walked past him, down the steps and into the rain. By the time I reached the car, I was shaking.
Inside, it was silent. I sat for a moment, hands on the wheel, not starting the engine. My fingers felt numb.
I took a breath. It tasted like plaster dust and copper.
The windscreen was fogged up.
I frowned, leaned forward, wiped it with my sleeve.
And froze.
There was a handprint on the inside of the glass.
Small. Child-sized. Perfectly formed.
I turned in my seat, heart thudding.
The car was empty. Doors locked. Windows up.
I reached out slowly and touched the print. It was warm.
Then the car radio crackled to life. Just static. No signal. The volume knob spun on its ownāclick, click, clickārising steadily.
I shut it off with a jolt. Silence returned like a held breath.
Thenā
A knock.
Soft.
From inside the boot.
I didnāt move. I just sat there, listening.
And for the first time in years, I was afraid.




































