Granâs face, looking as numb as Joan felt. âWe canât leave Gran here.â
Joan didnât want to either. The thought of leaving Gran with people who hated monsters was unbearable. But Gran had always been practical. âRuth, sheâd want us to go.â With each thump of the door, a larger slice of light was showing. Joan grabbed Ruthâs hand and dragged her up. âWe have to go.â
She half shoved, half pulled Ruth over to the window. She pushed the curtain aside and recoiled. There was a body outside, lying in the colonnade: a woman with long black hair. She was wearing a blue dress with silver beading.
âI know,â Ruth said shakily. âItâs Marie Oliver.â
Joan wiped her face with the back of her hand. The gap in the window wasnât nearly big enough. She gave the glass a shove. It barely moved. Had anyone even opened it in the last hundred years?
âI think we can squeeze through,â Ruth said. âDonât you think?â
Joan stared at her. The gap wasnât big enough for a child. She pictured Ruth stuck in the window while Nickâs people stabbed her like theyâd stabbed Gran. Her stomach rolled. If anyone was going to get stuck, she wasnât going to let it be Ruth.
She climbed up onto the sill. The wooden flat of it bit into her stomach as she forced herself into the gap. As soon as she started pushing, she knew she wasnât going to fit. Her side dragged against something sharp, making her grunt. The seeping warmth that followed told her that the wound in her side had torn wider. And then she couldnât go any farther. She was stuck just like sheâd pictured. A fish on a hook for anyone passing. She struggled desperately.
âShit.â Ruth shoved at Joanâs side, making Joan pant in pain. âOh God. I canât move you.â Joan struggled harder. âOh my God,â Ruth whispered, panicked. âOh my God.â She shoved Joan again. She shoved her again. She shoved her hard. And then something tore in Joanâs dress, and Joan fell to the ground in an inelegant flop.
Joan lay there for a moment, trying to breathe through the pain. On the ground beside her, the dead woman lay, eyes wide open, looking up at nothing. Joan felt a sob rise in her throat like bile. She squeezed her eyes shut for a second and then forced herself to her feet.
âGive me your hands,â she said to Ruth shakily. âIâll need to pull you hard.â
âHere.â Ruth passed something through the gap. It was the heavy bronze candlestick that Joan had taken from the mantelpiece.
Joan tucked it under one arm. âGive me your hands. Hurry. â Whoever had killed Marie Oliver might be just around the corner. âAnd be careful. Thereâs a nail sticking up.â
âFuck, this is narrow,â Ruth said. âI donât think Iâll fit.â
âYouâll fit,â Joan promised. âIâll pull you through.â
A loud crash sounded. The room lit up. âRuth!â Joan tried to catch Ruthâs hands, but Ruth had already scrabbled back, turning to face the intruders. â Ruth! â Joan screamed. She didnât even care if anyone heard her. âRuth, get on the sill! Iâll pull you out!â
âJoan, run,â Ruth ordered. Her voice sounded weird. Fierce and stern. Almost like Granâs voice.
âNo!â Joan shouted. People in black were swarming into the room. âRuth!â One of the figures caught Ruthâs arms. A knife flashed. â No! â Joan screamed.
Ruth struggled, flailing an arm free. One of the figures slumped to the floor, and then the knife plunged into Ruthâs gut. She made a horrible, agonized sound. Her shocked eyes met Joanâs through the window.
â No! â Joan heard herself cry.
And then there was just empty space where Ruth had been. She was gone.
A face appeared in the window.
J. S. Cooper, Helen Cooper