Authors: Edward Lee
The woods were a tangled maze, as terrifying as they were mysterious in their heaped detritus, skeletal branches, and dense hanging vines. Then he’d stumbled upon the little Creeker girl, her big red eyes staring at him through ribbons of black hair. Phil was afraid at first—he could see her deformities: the misshapen head, the uneven joints, and the wrong number of fingers and toes. Plus, he’d never forget what Eagle had told him—that the Creekers had teeth like Kevin Furman’s bulldog, and sometimes they’d bite you if you got too close…
But that was stupid. Phil could tell right off that this girl, though he hadn’t seen her teeth, wasn’t going to bite him. His fears dwindled away in seconds. She was like him; she seemed fascinated. In chopped speech, with her fallen hair puffing in front of her mouth as she spoke, she told him her name was Dawnie.
Then the voice cracked out of the woods, calling her home, and she quickly ran away.
But Phil didn’t want her to leave. So—
He followed her.
And was lost again in minutes. The dank woods seemed to swallow him whole. The sun beat down through the trees like a hot hammer; sweat drenched his Green Hornet T-shirt till it stuck to him. As his Keds crunched on through the brush, bugs buzzed around his face and shoulders, biting him as he vainly swatted at them with frantic hands.
And just as he feared he’d never get out, the forest opened up
into a clearing where high sun-baked brown grass rustled in a dead, hot breeze.
And that’s when he saw the House.
Holy poop!
The big rickety three-story farmhouse sitting up on hill. Veins of gray wood showed through cracked white-wash, and the missing shingles on the steeped roof reminded him of Mrs. Nixerman’s missing teeth. The high black windows looked back at him like eyes…
It’s haunted,
he felt sure.
It’s a haunted house.
It had to be. It was the creepiest house he’d ever seen in his life, and if ever a house had ghosts, this was it.
This must’ve been what Uncle Frank meant. This house had to be one of the “things” ten-year-olds weren’t supposed to see.
So Phil did what any ten-year-old would do.
He went up to see.
The steps creaked under his Keds when he hiked up to the front porch. He could barely see anything through the screen door, just clunky shapes and murky darkness.
Then he tiptoed to the first window and looked in…
The sun baked down on his back as he leaned over further to squint. At first he couldn’t make out a thing, just more clunky shapes. But then his eyes began to pick things out: a big old couch, a cane chair, paneled walls and framed pictures hanging.
But—
No ghosts.
Aw, poop,
Phil thought in the ultimate childhood disappointment.
There ain’t no ghosts in there. It’s just an old house. Nothin’at all to be scared of—
Phil shrieked high and mighty when seven little fingers tapped on his back. He probably jumped a foot in the air, turned, then landed bug-eyed on his feet.
Dawnie was laughing; Phil felt like a wimp.
“You—you live here?”
“Yuh-uh-yeah,” she said.
And when she’d been laughing, Phil noted with more disappointment that she didn’t have teeth like Kevin Furman’s bulldog. She had just plain old regular teeth like everyone. Eagle was full of poop.
“They-uh-now goan,” she said.
“Huh?”
“Goan.”
Goan,
Phil thought. Gone. She must mean that her parents were gone now.
“Come-up-on,” she said.
“Huh?”
She gestured him away from the window with her finger. “Come on. In-ah-side. Grot, er, got’s sunipin’ ta’s show-ur ya.”
Phil translated. She wanted him to come in the house. She had something to show him.
But what?
Part of him didn’t want to go—this was a Creeker’s house. She might have big ugly Creeker parents who’d want to whup him, thinking he was fixing to do something bad to Dawnie, like maybe even raking her like that girl Eagle told him about.
Yeah, Dawnie’s parents might whup him bad, or worse…
After all, they were Creekers.
Nobody knew Phil was out here, even Phil himself didn’t know where he was. All he could see were the girl’s big ugly Creeker parents chasing him around the house with big sharp teeth like Kevin Furman’s dog. But then he thought,
Don’t be a little wuss. She just got done saying her parents are gone. And, anyway, she’s kinda neat…
“They goan. Come on.”
Phil followed her into the house. He stopped a moment and noticed the brass knocker on the opened front door. It was the strangest thing. The knocker was a face, only the face didn’t have any nose or mouth. Just two big blank eyes staring back at him.
“Commer-on, now. Don’t be scairt. I’se-uh tole ya, they’se uh-goan.”
They’se-uh goan,
Phil mimicked in thought.
Can’t hurt to just go in and look around.
He could tell Eagle he’d been to the haunted Creeker whorehouse, that he’d gone
inside.
Then Eagle and his other friends would think he was cool.
The front room wasn’t that much different from his aunt’s. Regular furniture, chairs, a big wooden highboy in the corner, and a grandfather clock. It was just a little older, that’s all. He followed Dawnie up the stairs to the left. The stairwell was dark, and the hall upstairs was even darker. But this made sense ’cos he’d heard Creekers, like most hillfolk, didn’t have electricity. “Where we going, Dawnie?” he asked on the landing. “We going to your room?”
“Naw,” she said, facing him. Again, he noticed her bubs; they were little but sticking out real nice through the old sundress she wore, and actually she’d be kinda pretty if it weren’t for the messed up hands and feet.
“Foller uh-me.”
Then she took him by the hand and led him up another, even darker, flight of stairs.
Jeez, it’s hot,
he thought. Twice as hot as outside, and a lot more muggy. Once they got on the third-floor landing, Phil was so hot he felt like he was cooking. Up here was a smaller hall; more old framed pictures hung on the walls, but they were too dark to see. The only light came from a small, high little window at one end, and then he noticed a line of lights—tiny white dots shooting from each door in the hall.
Keyholes,
Phil realized.
Dawnie seemed winded with some weird kind of excitement. Phil could see the grin behind the black ribbons of hair.
She squeezed his hand.
“Wanner, uh, wanner-see-um?”
“See who, Dawnie?”
“Er-um, my-um sisters?”
Her sisters?
Phil didn’t know about this. He didn’t know if he wanted to meet Dawnie’s sisters. What if they were real messed up and ugly? What if they didn’t like him?
And what would Dawnie’s sisters be doing up here in all this darkness and heat?
Her hand was hot and moist. She squeezed his own hand harder.
“Wanner, uh, wanner-see-um doin’ it?”
Doing what?
All of a sudden, Phil didn’t like this. He could get in trouble. He wasn’t even supposed to be here, and he didn’t even really know where he was.
He wanted to leave.
But Dawnie pulled excitedly at his hand. Phil wanted to pull away, but for some reason he couldn’t.
She took him to the first door.
“Git-er on down,” Dawnie said and put her hands on his shoulders.
Phil knew what she meant. She wanted him to get down on his knees.
She wants me to look in the keyhole.
Phil knelt as her excited hands on his shoulders pushed harder. The bright light from the keyhole blazed on his face.
Dawnie’s hand nudged his head.
“Look-it. Looker-on in-nair.”
Phil felt woozy, kinda sick. He hadn’t felt good for the past coupla days, and right now he felt real bad. His stomach quivered, and even though it was so hot, he suddenly shivered against a chill. He knew he was coming down with the flu or something, or maybe some stomach bug he got from eating his aunt’s awful stuffed peppers.
Plus, he was scared.
“Hey, Dawnie, I’m not feeling too good. I better get on home now.”
But Dawnie wouldn’t hear of it. Her fingers tightened on his shoulders, and she nudged him again.
“Go-on. Look-it.”
The keyhole blazed.
Chills coursed up his back.
Then ten-year-old Phil Straker took a deep breath, put his eye to the keyhole—
Jesus Jesus Jesus!
—and looked in.