THE UNINVITED II: THE VISITATION David was still scanning the sky for the glowing object, thinking it would appear again at any second. It didn't. He exhaled, relaxing his grip on the steering wheel. A smile even touched his lips. 'Well, everybody, it looks like our excitement is over for the night,' he said. 'We should be home soon.' He smiled to himself, trying to dismiss what had just hap- pened as nothing more than 'a little adventure'. He shook his head. How empty and unconvincing those words sounded. Who was he trying to fool? He had been fright- ened as, he imagined, anyone in a similar position would have been. The sight of the unidentified . . . He allowed the thought to trail off. 'Dad.' 'Yes, Dean,' he said. 'That light we saw.' 'What about the light?' he said. 'It's behind us.' THE UNINVITED II: THE VISITATION Frank Taylor A STAR BOOK Published by the Paperback Division of W.H. ALLEN & Co. PLC A Star Book Published in 1984 by the Paperback Division of W.H. Allen & Co. PLC 44 Hill Street, London W1X 8LB Copyright © 1984 by Frank Taylor Typeset by Phoenix Photosetting, Chatham Printed in Great Britain by Hunt Barnard Printing Ltd., Aylesbury, Bucks. ISBN 0 352 31539 3 This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out or otherwise circulated without the publisher's prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed upon the subsequent purchaser. To Ray Mudie When they ask you to blow in their bag, it's not because their chips are hot. Cheers. 'Fifty billion planets, there's got to be some life. Don't tell me I'm the only one standing in the night . . .' Saxon Prologue Every single incident described in this book is true. It actually happened. It happened to ordinary people who found themselves involved with something terrifying. Something unwanted, unexplained. Uninvited. This book is not a work of fiction, although there are those who will try to dismiss it as such. But for every sceptic there will be a believer and it does not, in the final analysis, matter if this story is believed or not. For what you will read did happen. That is fact and nothing can be done to change it. Set down on the following pages is a series of occurrences for which there is no easy scientific explanation. Science, for once, is inadequate for finding answers to questions we scarcely dare ask. Nevertheless, the proof is here to be read. The story which follows is not an isolated one. In 1977, the Coombs family in Wales were the subject of a similar, though less malevolent, visitation. Their story was told in The Uninvited, a book which was labelled by some as the product of an over-active imagination. It may well be that this book will be similarly criticised. That is unimportant. The facts speak for themselves and it is for you, as readers, to decide whether to believe or not. Whichever you decide, just be thankful that what you are about to read did not happen to you. Although it would be naïve to suggest that the events set down in this book will be the last of their kind. There is too much in life which we don't understand. Too many questions to which we will never know the answers. Perhaps, in cases such as that which follows, it is best not to know. 1 One July 22nd It was too bright to be a star. David Ellis glanced out of his side window and studied the distant object for a second longer. It was too big to be a star. He focused his attention back on the road ahead, guiding the Volvo along at a steady forty miles an hour. David had first noticed the object about ten minutes earlier, shortly after they had left the outskirts of Chesterfield behind. As he drove, surprised at how little traffic there was on the A632, he had spotted the glowing yellow light quite by chance. An aeroplane, he'd thought at first, but then he had decided that the object could well be a meteor or comet. But a star? He glanced at it again. The bloody thing was getting bigger, he was certain of it. David squeezed his eyes shut tightly for a second. He was tired, that was the answer, his eyes were playing tricks on him. The object wasn't getting bigger and, when he looked back again, if he bothered to, it would probably be gone. He decided to concentrate on his driving. Beside him, his wife Caroline dozed. Her head lolled back against the head-rest. Her fingers were moving in an erratic rhythm, attempting to keep time with the tune which floated from the car radio. In the back seat their children, Michelle, who was eleven, and Dean, yet to reach his tenth birthday, slept. Caroline's sister, Julie, yawned and rubbed her eyes. She had lived with the family for the past three months, since 3 the break-up of her marriage. At thirty-one, she was three years younger than Caroline. Five years David's junior. The two women were very much alike both physically and emotionally. 'David, what is that?' The voice came from behind him and he turned slightly as Julie leant forward, pointing out of the side window. She was indicating the yellow object. 'It's probably a star,' he said, trying to justify his own theory. 'I noticed it about five minutes ago,' Julie said. David didn't speak but, instead, looked out of his side window again, squinting at the object. It was easy to see, not only because of its glowing phosphorescence but because the night sky was so clear. The clock on the dashboard showed 10.36 p.m. and there wasn't a cloud to be seen in the dark blue canopy above them. Silvery pinpricks of stars hung in the heavens like sequins on velvet and, amongst them all, the yellow object shone out clearly. David frowned, realizing that its size had something to do with how low it was in the sky. He could have sworn that it had not been as low as that when he'd first seen it. He sighed. It must be an aeroplane. And yet the lights which he saw had no break in them, the object seemed to be composed entirely of one single luminous entity. The object, which he could see was now beginning to take on some discernible shape, passed over Walton Wood on their left, now, apparently, keeping pace with the car. He smiled to himself. He felt so stupid. At first he had thought it was his eyes that were playing tricks on him, now he thought it was his mind. Perhaps the fact that he had seen that blasted film Close Encounters of the Third Kind so recently was helping to fuel his interest in this mysterious object. A spacecraft. He almost laughed aloud. From her vantage point in the rear, Julie was watching even more intently. The object, from being a blur of yellow light, had now taken on a recognisable shape. It reminded her of a large egg. 4 David looked up again. He swallowed hard. The object was getting lower in the sky, it was drawing closer. They drove past Harper Hill, about six miles from the point where the main road was joined by the B5057, but David knew that he must keep to the main road and, for some unaccountable reason, that knowledge made him feel more secure. He glanced at the object once more. It was glowing much more brightly now, so much so that he had to narrow his eyes to look at it. He gripped the steering wheel tighter and drove on, guessing that it would take them perhaps another forty or fifty minutes to reach Matlock and home. As he glanced at the yellow shape again he blinked hard, his eyes feeling as if they were full of grit. He cursed under his breath and pushed his foot down slightly on the accelerator. The light, burning ever brighter, dropped lower, picking up speed. It was directly in line with the car now. Was this, David wondered, some kind of optical illusion? It was easy to imagine that something was following you. That the stars were moving. Perhaps this was the same sort of thing. He couldn't be sure how far away the glowing object was, how high in the sky. All he knew was that it seemed too close for comfort. There was a deafening blast of static from the radio and Caroline sat bolt upright in her seat. 'What was that?' she said, touching her temple with one hand. No one spoke. Then she, too, saw the object. 'David . . .' She was pointing at it. He cut her short. 'I know, I've seen it,' he said, tersely. She turned in her seat to see that Julie was gazing at the yellow egg and also that the children had been awoken by the deafening burst from the radio. There was more static and then silence. David twisted the frequency knob but there was no sound to be heard. He pulled his hand away sharply. The radio felt hot. Indeed, the entire dashboard was 5 beginning to give off a faint blanket of heat. The petrol gauge needle began to rise and fall slowly. Outside, the glowing object was still tracking the car, now drawing closer until David guessed it was little more than a mile away from them, cutting through the sky like a missile. It left no vapour trail as an aircraft would but then, he reasoned, no aircraft would be flying so low. The Derbyshire countryside with its countless hills and valleys was no place for a pilot to practise low altitude flying. And this craft, whatever the hell it was, seemed to be less than seven hundred feet up by now. 'What is it, David?' asked Caroline. 'I don't know,' he said, quietly, his voice taut. He tried to look away from the yellow thing, to concentrate his mind on the road and countryside ahead, perhaps in the hope that if he ignored it, the yellow beacon would disappear. He glanced at his petrol gauge again. The needle was still moving up and down, though more rapidly now. He looked at the clock on the dashboard, the hands frozen at 10.49. He tapped it with his index finger then glanced at his own watch. David felt a shiver run down his spine. He held the watch to his ear but could hear no ticking. It had stopped at 10.49. Coincidence? He wondered if the object, whatever the hell it was, might be giving off some kind of magnetic impulse. Perhaps that was what had caused the radio to blow out too. The object disappeared behind a range of hills. David cast anxious glances to the spot in the sky where it had been but could not see it. 'It's gone,' said Julie. David didn't answer. He slowed down slightly, scanning the heavens for the yellow shape, almost relieved when he didn't see it. 'If it was a plane, perhaps it landed somewhere,' Caroline offered. 'Perhaps,' David replied. 'Though I don't know where. 6