The Spirit Box
From Stephen Gallagher's stunning new novel of terror:
I said, "Let me get straight to it. You've got a twenty-two year old girl hidden in a cabin about seven miles out of town. She was kidnapped out of the emergency room at the Presbyterian Hospital in Charlotte at about six o'clock last night. She's got five packets of unknown substances in her gut that she swallowed and she can't expel. The boy who took her mistakenly thinks they have a value. He's preparing to cut her open to get to them."
Now, here's the thing about talking to policemen. You can't shock or surprise them. If you did, it would probably kill them to show it.
The cop said, "And how do you know this?"
"I've been tracking the drugs for the company they were stolen from," I said.
"They're all experimental. I can't tell you what will happen if any of the packages bursts or leaks. Chances are it won't be good."
"Do these kids have names?"
"Rachel Young. Cyrus Behan."
"Cyrus?" he said, and I felt my heart sink a little.
"Gallagher's hard-boiled style is pitch perfect for the tale's grim events, but he leavens it with dislocating moments of powerful emotion that draw the reader irresistibly to the characters. The novel packs a wallop that should make an impact on fans of both suspense and horror fiction." – Publishers Weekly
Stephen Gallagher
Stephen Gallagher (born 1954) is an English writer.
He has written several novels and television scripts, including for the BBC television series Doctor Who – for which he wrote two serials, Warriors' Gate (1981) and Terminus (1983) – as well as for the series Rosemary & Thyme and Bugs, for two seasons of which he was script consultant along with Brian Clemens. He adapted his own novel Chimera for ITV and directed the adaptation of Oktober as well as writing the feature-length episode The Kingdom of Bones for the BBC series Murder Rooms.