Land of the Living

Land of the Living by Nicci French Page A

Book: Land of the Living by Nicci French Read Free Book Online
Authors: Nicci French
Tags: Fiction, thriller
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pain became sharper and more localized. My neck. A scraping on a cheek. One leg felt as if it had been bent backwards. My face, my breasts, my stomach were so hard on the ground it felt for a moment as if I’d pulled the wall down with me and it was lying on top of me, weighing me down.
    And I wasn’t dead. I was alive.
    Then a thought came into my mind like a jab of steel right through me. I wasn’t tied down. He wasn’t here. How long had he been gone? Think. Think. This time I hadn’t counted. Quite a long time. My wrists were still tied behind my back. I tugged at them. Useless. I almost sobbed. Had I done this just to lie helpless on the floor? I swore to myself that if I could do nothing else I would kill myself by smashing my head on the stone. If I had no other power, I could at least deny him that pleasure.
    My body felt sore and starved into weakness. And there was a new fear. I had virtually abandoned myself to death and there had been peace in that. It had been a form of anaesthetic. But now I had a chance. That knowledge brought feelings back into my limbs. I was able to be very, very frightened again.
    I swung my body around. Now my back was resting on my tethered arms. If I could push them over my feet so they were in front of me. It was a gymnast’s trick and I’m so far from being a gymnast. I raised my feet off the ground and stretched them back as if I were going to touch the ground behind my head. Now the pressure was off my wrists. I made an exploratory attempt to pull my hands round. They wouldn’t go round. I pushed and pushed. No. I groaned. Then I spoke to myself. Silently. It went like this: Some time soon, in one minute or three hours or maybe five, he will come back and he will kill you. There will absolutely definitely never be another chance after this one. You know this can be done. You have seen children doing it as a game. You prob ably did it when you were a girl. You would cut your hands off, if that would get you out of these knots. You don’t have to do that. You just have to get your hands in front of you. If it means you need the strength to dislocate your shoulders, then do it. Strain yourself. Get ready. Five, four, three, two, one.
    And I pushed with all the force in my body. I thought my arms would come away from my shoulders and I pushed harder and my hands were behind my thighs. If my ankles hadn’t been tied together it would have been easier. Now I was trussed up like a pig ready to have a bolt shot into its head. I made myself think of that as I pulled my knees down on to my chest, back as far as I could, and worked my hands round my feet. The muscles in my back, my neck, my arms and shoulders were screaming but suddenly my arms were in front of me and I was gasping and felt the sweat running off me.
    I sat up and pulled the hood off my head with my tied hands, thinking as I did so that he would be there looking at me when I did it. I pulled the gag out of my mouth and drank air as if it were cold water. It was dark. No, not entirely dark. Very dim light. I looked at my wrists. They were secured by some sort of wire. It wasn’t knotted. The ends were twisted around each other. With my teeth it was really quite easy to undo. It just took time. Ten horrible seconds for each twist and my lips were bleeding now. And then, with the last twist, it came away and my hands were free. I freed my ankles within a couple of minutes. I stood up and then fell immediately, shouting in pain. My feet felt as if they were being pumped up and were going to burst. I rubbed and scratched at my ankles until I could stand again.
    I looked around. In the near darkness I could see brick walls, the dirty cement floor. There were some rough shelves, broken pallets on the floor. I could see the ledge where I had spent the past days. Then I remembered. I lifted the wire noose over my head. One end was attached to a bolt that my fall had pulled out of the wall. How lucky had I been? I felt my neck

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