THE HOUSEMATES
Day 1
The ferry glided ashore. A bus waited on the hill. Rain came down in silver sheets against the
velvet darkness of the endless night. It
was like the opening to a horror movie.
Damien didn’t like wearing the hood over his head and had
managed to peek out from beneath it several times in the last hour. It was uncomfortable being in the dark,
unable to see, unable to even hear properly.
Damien’s hosts had told him that the hood was necessary –
that the location of the island must be kept secret. The only information they had divulged
willingly was that his destination was somewhere off the northern coast of Scotland. The atmosphere’s cold, penetrating bite made
it easy to believe that Damien had been taken north. He rubbed at his shoulders.
Freezing my bloody knob off here.
Not wanting to push his luck, Damien pulled the hood back
down over his face and engaged his hearing. It sounded like the captain of the small
passenger ferry was about to give orders.
“Okay, everybody. I’m
afraid you will have to leave your hoods on for just a little while
longer. The house is just over a mile
inland. A bus will take you there now, and
then you can finally take the hoods off and settle in.”
There were sighs of relief from all around. Damien wasn’t sure how many other people were
on the ferry with him, but he estimated there was at least ten; definitely
enough bodies to constitute a crowd.
They were all wearing hoods the same as his.
So I have about a dozen competitors. That puts my odds of winning pretty low.
Near the ferry’s bow, a man had begun ushering everybody
ashore, barking orders at them in a clipped tone. Damien stumbled past the gruff gentleman and
was hustled along onto what felt like a wooden jetty beneath his feet. The freezing rain made him shudder as he left
the shelter of the boat.
Remind me never to
come to Scotland again if this is what it’s like.
Damien started up an incline, towards where he imagined the
bus was parked. An engine idled nearby
and the acrid odour of spent petrol mingled with the scent of wet soil. An owl hooted.
When Damien finally stepped onto the waiting bus, the warmth
was heavenly. It must have been several
hours since his journey had begun and he was starting to feel the weariness in
his bones.
They had collected Damien from a train station in Sheffield,
where he had then been driven even further north for almost three hours. That was when he had been told to put the
hood on. He transferred onto a coach,
along with several other people, and got going again on yet another leg of the
journey. The hood prevented him from
seeing who his companions were, but he heard some of them chatting to whoever
was closest to them.
Time became a blur.
Weariness and boredom had led to a dazed passing of seconds and minutes
and hours until, finally, Damien and his companions were boarded onto a ferry,
which had taken them on the short trip to where they were now.
Damien was glad to hear he was now only a mile away from his
final destination.
Thought I’d never get
there.
He groped his way along the aisle of the stationary bus and
found himself a seat on his left. He sat
down and relaxed back into the soft cushion.
Oh, yeah. That
feels better.
Just another twenty minutes and this wretched trip will
be over.
Not long now until this whole thing begins.
Nerves began to tickle at Damien’s psyche as he sat there
and waited for the bus to get moving.
The bizarre nature of the situation he was in began to sink in. It was something he never would have got
himself into usually, but…
When needs must…
The Devil drives.
Damien felt someone dump down on the seat behind him as the
bus grumbled into gear and started moving.
The rain continued falling heavy outside, thudding against the window
panels on both sides of the vehicle.
Damien closed his eyes beneath his hood and allowed himself
to rest. He had a worry that rest would
be hard to come by during the days ahead.
The bus sped up, jerking and hopping as it traversed uneven
terrain. A couple of times it felt as
though the vehicle had gone off road completely, so bad was the rocking and
tilting. There were no sounds coming
from outside: no noise from other traffic, no grinding steel of industrial
buildings. Wherever the bus was heading,
it was seemingly in the middle of nowhere.
The stranger on the seat behind Damien leant forward and
whispered to him. “Pretty exciting,
huh?”
With the hood still over his head, Damien was unsure if the
woman’s question had been directed at him.
After a few seconds he decided that it was and gave a reply. “I don’t know if ‘exciting’ is the word I
would use.”
The stranger huffed.
“Really, then how would you describe it?”
“Overdone.”
“What do you mean?”
“I mean this is all a bit dramatic. We’ve been whisked away in the dead of night
under the cover of darkness to a destination we know nothing about. Is it really necessary?”
“It’s just part of the experience. Putting on a good show.”
Damien sighed. “It’s
stupid.” He pulled the hood off his head
and blinked his eyes. He’d had enough of
being in the dark. The whole thing was ridiculous. He understood the need for privacy, to a
certain degree, but he was done feeling like a prisoner of war.
“Sir, please put your hood back on!”
Damien looked over at the front of the bus to see that the
driver was twisting around to study him.
The man was skeletal with cheekbones that leapt out at right-angles. Beside him stood a colleague: a burly man in
a set of black overalls and work boots.
“Sir,” said the burly man beside the driver. His dark eyes had narrowed and were targeted at
Damien. “Put your hood back on or you
will be disqualified. You must obey the
rules at all times. That is what you
agreed when you signed up for the show.”
Damien stared out of the rain-soaked window. A flash of lightning lit up the sky and the
landscape came briefly into view. The
entire area was marked by grassy hills and craggy outcroppings, and not a great
deal else.
“Sir, I am going to give you three seconds…”
Damien rolled his eyes and sighed. “Fine!
But this is getting stupid.” He
tugged the hood back over his head and cursed beneath it.
Why the hell did I agree to this? I feel like a right dickhead.
The bus continued its journey for another five minutes
before slowing down and eventually stopping.
Everybody sat in silence while they waited to be summoned.
“Can everybody please shuffle to the front of the bus,” said
a voice that Damien recognised as belonging to the burly man in the black
overalls.
Damien got to his feet and felt his way down the aisle. He immediately bumped into someone in front
of him and had to wait for them to get moving.
Once they did, he followed after them.
At the front of the bus, someone placed a hand on Damien’s
shoulder and manoeuvred him down the steps.
His feet planted down on wet, crunching
gravel. Someone bumped into him from
behind and sent him stumbling forward. It
wasn’t long before he was standing shoulder to shoulder with the rest of his
unknown companions as they were corralled into a group.
“Okay, everybody. You
can now take off your hoods.”
Damien ripped his off and let it fall to the floor. He couldn’t help himself from stomping it
into the mud. Everybody else in the
crowd seemed equally relieved and there was a collective sigh among them.
The man in the black overalls stood in front of the assembled
crowd and had been joined by several other men. They all wore jeans and dark sweaters. The sweaters had a logo of a great staring
eye on the left shoulder. It looked the
type of symbol the Mason’s would use, or maybe a little like hieroglyphics.
Several yards ahead lay a vast complex which resembled a
factory unit in many ways. Barbed wire
lined the edges of a ten-foot steel fence which ran around the sides and back
of the complex. Giant floodlights lit up
the entire area. It reminded Damien of a
concentration camp.
“Now,” said the man in black overalls. “You are about to enter our specially
designed facility. You will spend up to
ten days inside; some of you, not so long.
In order to remain inside, you must obey all rules at all times. Failure to follow rules will result in
expulsion from the house. Failure to
follow commands will result in expulsion from the house. Failure to participate will result in
expulsion from the house. Do all of you
understand?”
The crowd mumbled affirmably.
The man continued.
“Each day inside the house will include a group task followed by a vote
to eliminate one member of the household.
The winner or winners of the group task will be immune from receiving
votes. Each evening will feature an
elimination task between the two members of the group who received the most
votes. The loser of the elimination task
will be expelled from the house. Is that
clear?”
The crowd mumbled agreement once more.
“After all contestants, bar two, are eliminated, the prize
money will have been won. Two million
pounds split between the final two housemates.
Those housemates will then have a choice – they can leave with a million
each, or wage it against one another in a final elimination task. The winner of the task will then leave the
house with two million pounds in their bank account, while the loser will
receive nothing.”
The group got excited and began looking around at one
another as if to weigh up their competition.
They look like a bunch
of rabid hyenas, Damien thought. Am I the same as them?
The man in the black overalls clapped his hands together,
regaining everybody’s attention. “Okay,
my friends,” he said. “Welcome to the
house and let the games begin.”
6 comments :
This is really interesting so far.
Sounds really interesting, when is the book finished? I can't wait :0D
shared all over.... cant wait for the novel!!!
I can't wait, I love every book I've read by you, I love the way you write :) x
opheliaevernote.blogspot.com
It should be out end of August. I should finish the story next week and then just need a few weeks to edit it.
Love it so far, can't wait to continue. I've been singing your praises since I first read The Final Winter!
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