Whiteout - Ken Follett [113]
The lights were on. Grandpa’s dark brown brogue-style shoes were side by side on the carpet, and the blue shirt he had been wearing yesterday lay on top of a pile of clothes in the linen basket. Craig stepped into the bedroom. The bed was unmade, as if Grandpa had just got out of it. On the bedside table was a copy of Scientific American magazine, open—and the phone.
Craig had never dialed 999 in his life. What were you supposed to say? He had seen people do it on television. You had to give your name and location, he thought. Then what? “There are men with guns in our kitchen.” It sounded melodramatic—but probably all 999 calls were dramatic.
He picked up the phone. There was no dial tone.
He put his finger on the cradle and jiggled it, then listened again. Nothing.
He replaced the handset. Why were the phones out? Was it just a fault—or had the strangers cut the wires?
Did Grandpa have a mobile? Craig pulled open the bedside drawer. Inside he saw a flashlight and a book, but no phone. Then he remembered: Grandpa had a phone in his car, but did not carry a mobile.
He heard a sound from the dressing room. Sophie poked her head out of the suit cupboard, looking frightened. “Someone’s coming!” she hissed. A moment later, Craig heard a heavy footstep on the landing.
He darted into the dressing room. Sophie ducked back into the attic. Craig fell on his knees and crawled through the suit cupboard just as he heard the bedroom door open. He had no time to close the cupboard door. He wriggled through the low door, then quickly turned and closed it softly behind him.
Sophie whispered, “The older man told the girl to search the house. He called her Daisy.”
“I heard her boots on the landing.”
“Did you get through to the police?”
He shook his head. “The phone’s dead.”
“No!”
He heard Daisy’s heavy tread in the dressing room. She would see the open cupboard door. Would she spot the low door behind the suits? Only if she looked carefully.
Craig listened. Was she staring into the open cupboard at this minute? He felt shaky. Daisy was not big—an inch or two shorter than he was, he guessed—but she looked absolutely terrifying.
The silence dragged out. He thought he heard her step into the bathroom. After a shorter pause, her boots crossed the dressing room and faded away. The bedroom door slammed.
“Oh, God, I’m so scared,” Sophie said.
“Me, too,” said Craig.
***
MIRANDA was in Olga’s bedroom with Hugo.
When she left the kitchen she had not known what to do. She could not go outside—she was in her nightdress and bare feet. She had raced up the stairs with the thought of locking herself in the bathroom, but realized almost at once that that would be useless. She stood on the landing, dithering. She was so frightened that she wanted to vomit. She had to call the police, that was the priority.
Olga had her mobile in the pocket of her negligee—but Hugo probably had his own.
Frightened though she was, Miranda had hesitated for a split second outside the door. The last thing she wanted was to be in a bedroom with Hugo. Then she heard someone step out of the kitchen into the hall. Quickly, she opened Hugo’s door, slid inside, and closed it quietly.
Hugo was standing at the window, looking out. He was naked, and had his back to the door. “Would you look at this bloody weather?” he said, obviously thinking his wife had come back.
Miranda was momentarily arrested by his casual tone. Obviously Olga and Hugo had made up their quarrel, after yelling at each other half the night. Had Olga already forgiven her husband for having sex with her sister? It seemed quick—but perhaps they had had this row before, about other women. Miranda had often wondered about Olga’s deal with her flirtatious husband, but Olga had never spoken of it. Maybe they had a script: infidelity, discovery, quarrel, reconciliation, then back to infidelity.
“It’s me,” Miranda said.
He spun around, startled, then smiled. “And in déshabillé—what a lovely surprise! Let’s get into bed, quick.”
She heard heavy footsteps