Downpipe Blocked |work| -
Her first thought was vandalism . Her second was evidence . Her third, as she wrestled the pipe apart with a wrench, was a rising tide of irrational dread.
“Right,” she muttered, channeling her aunt’s can-do spirit. “Easy.” downpipe blocked
She tugged on her wellingtons, the rubber stiff from disuse, and marched outside. The downpipe, a slender, white PVC column running from the gutter to a cracked concrete splash block, looked innocent enough. But when she peered up at the gutter, she saw it: a dark, wet dam of decomposing leaves, moss, and a single, inexplicably shiny tennis ball. Her first thought was vandalism
Eleanor closed the book. Her kitchen was silent. The kettle was off. The fridge wasn’t humming. Then she heard it—a single, soft drip from the sink. She hadn't turned on the tap. She walked over. The faucet was dry. The drip came again. And then, from the plughole, a tiny, perfectly formed leaf, copper-brown and sodden, unfurled itself like a tongue and lay glistening on the stainless steel. But when she peered up at the gutter,
She looked out the window at the downpipe. It was no longer silent. It was humming a low, gurgling song. And she understood, with a cold, certain horror, that she hadn't unblocked the pipe. She had opened a door.
Her smile vanished. She read on. The journal wasn’t a diary. It was a logbook of obsession. A previous owner of the house, a man named Tobias Crane, had become convinced that the water in the drains was not just water. He called it “the grey.” It was a sentient, malevolent seepage, a slow intelligence that moved through the pipes of the town, pooling under floorboards and weeping from faucets. He wrote of hearing whispers in the toilet cistern, of finding fish bones in the shower drain, of a low, rhythmic knocking that travelled through the waste pipes, like a heart beating in the walls.