In a Dark, Dark Wood

In a Dark, Dark Wood by Ruth Ware

 

 

 

 

 

For Kate; for the other three fifths. With Love.

 

 

 

 

 

In a dark, dark wood there was a dark, dark house;

 

And in the dark, dark house there was a dark, dark room;

 

And in the dark, dark room there was a dark, dark cupboard;

 

And in the dark, dark cupboard there was … a skeleton.

 

 

 

Traditional

 

 

 

 

 

I AM RUNNING.

 

I am running through moonlit woods, with branches tearing at my clothes and my feet catching in the snow-bowed bracken.

 

Brambles slash at my hands. My breath tears in my throat. It hurts. Everything hurts.

 

But this is what I do. I run. I can do this.

 

Always when I run there’s a mantra inside my head. The time I want to get, or the frustrations I’m pounding away against the tarmac.

 

But this time one word, one thought, pounds inside me.

 

James. James. James.

 

I must get there. I must get to the road before— And then there it is, a black snake of tarmac in the moonlight, and I can hear the roar of an engine coming, and the white lines shine so bright they hurt my eyes, the black tree trunks like slashes against the light.

 

Am I too late?

 

I force myself down the last thirty metres, tripping over fallen logs, my heart like a drum in my breast.

 

James.

 

And I’m too late – the car is too close, I can’t stop it.

 

I fling myself onto the tarmac, my arms outstretched.

 

‘Stop!’

 

 

 

 

 

1

 

 

 

 

IT HURTS. Everything hurts. The light in my eyes, the pain in my head. There’s a stench of blood in my nostrils, my hands are sticky with it.

 

‘Leonora?’

 

The voice comes dim through a fog of pain. I try to shake my head, my lips won’t form the word.

 

‘Leonora, you’re safe, you’re at the hospital. We’re taking you to have a scan.’

 

It’s a woman, speaking clearly and loudly. Her voice hurts.

 

‘Is there anyone we should be calling?’

 

I try again to shake my head.

 

‘Don’t move your head,’ she says. ‘You’ve had a head injury.’

 

‘Nora,’ I whisper.

 

‘You want us to call Nora? Who’s Nora?’

 

‘Me … my name.’

 

‘All right, Nora. Just try to relax. This won’t hurt.’

 

But it does. Everything hurts.

 

What has happened?

 

What have I done?

 

 

 

I knew, as soon as I woke up, that it was a day for a park run, for the longest route I do, nearly nine miles all in all. The autumn sunlight streamed through the rattan blind, gilding the bedsheets, and I could smell the rain that had fallen in the night, and see the leaves on the plane tree in the street below, just turning to golden-brown at the tips. I closed my eyes and stretched, listening to the tick and groan of the heating, and the muted roar of the traffic, feeling every muscle, revelling in the day to come.

 

I always start my morning the same way. Maybe it’s something about living alone – you’re able to get set in your ways, there’s no outside disruptions, no flatmates to hoover up the last of the milk, no cat coughing up a hairball on the rug. You know that what you left in the cupboard the night before will be in the cupboard when you wake up. You’re in control.

 

Or maybe it’s something about working from home. Outside of a nine to five job, it’s very easy for the days to get shapeless, meld together. You can find you’re still in your dressing gown at 5pm, and the only person you’ve seen all day is the milkman. There are days when I don’t hear a single human voice, apart from the radio, and you know what? I quite like that. It’s a good existence for a writer, in many ways – alone with the voices in your head, the characters you’ve created. In the silence they become very real. But it’s not necessarily the healthiest way to live. So having a routine is important. It gives you something to hang on to, something to differentiate the weekdays from the weekends.

 

My day starts like this.

 

At 6.30 exactly the heating goes on, and the roar as the boiler starts always wakes me up. I look at my phone – just to check the world hasn’t ended in the night – and then lie there, listening to the pop and creak of the radiator.

 

At 7am I turn on my radio – already tuned to Radio 4’s Today Programme – and I reach out and flick the switch of the coffee machine, pre-loaded with coffee and water the night before – Carte Noire filter grind, with the filter paper folded just so. There are some advantages to the size of my flat. One of them is the fact that I can reach both the fridge and the coffee machine without getting out of bed.

 

The coffee is usually through by the time they’ve finished the headlines, and then I lever myself out of my warm duvet and drink it, with just a splash of milk, and a piece of toast with Bonne Maman raspberry jam (no butter – it’s not a diet thing, I just don’t like the two together).