Authors: Gord Rollo
Tags: #Suspense, #Horror, #Fiction, #Occult & Supernatural, #Thrillers, #Organ donors
ing for him to move close so he could hit m e , I might be
able to spin around, deflect his gun away, and drive my
knife home.
It wasn't aperfect plan, and it probably wouldn't work
but I had to admit it wasn't a bad plan either; the best I
was going to get, anyway.
Do it then. Don't wait.
Adrenaline pumped through my veins, making me
primed and ready to make my stand, but I'd always
been a bit of a coward and fear made me hold off. I wasn't
ready to die yet. Maybe a better chance would present
itself around the next corner.
Dammit Mike! Do it now before it's—
"That's for enough, scumbag," Jackson said.
"What?" I stupidly asked. I looked around for signs
of a graveyard but there was n o t h i n g in sight. The path
looked the same as it always had, maybe even a bit nar¬
rower than a lot of the trail. "But what about the grave¬
yard? Drake said there was a—"
"Forget the graveyard, Mike. This is far enough. I'm
tired of walking and I'll be damned if I'm gonna freeze
my ass off out here digging a hole for a freak like you."
I turned to face Jackson, scared and frustrated I'd
wasted my best chance to win this fight, but there was
also a part of me getting pissed off. W h o did these
people think they were?
"So, you're going to plug me and then what, j u s t
leave me here to r o t ? "
Jackson smiled, raised his gun to point it at the cen¬
ter of my chest, and said, "Yeah, that sounds about
right. Any famous last words?"
This was really going to happen. Jackson was going
to shoot me dead, his finger already tightening on the
trigger. The time for delaying was over. One in a mil¬
lion chance or not, I had to act, and I had to act now, go
for the knife and to hell with the consequences. I was a
dead man whether I moved or not.
"No last words, Jackson " I said. "I'd like to show you
something cool, though "
Even while I was saying it, I knew it was a pretty
lame plan, but I reached for the knife anyway. Jackson
was standing at least ten feet from me so how was I
supposed to close the gap without getting shot? Maybe
I could throw the knife? Maybe I could—
Holy shit!
I saw her before Jackson did, and it shocked the hell
out of me. If n o t h i n g else, my bumbling plan to draw
out my switchblade had distracted Jackson enough that
he was looking down at my hand to see what I was pull¬
ing from my pocket. He never registered the presence
of a third person in the forest until it was too late.
Junie!
W h e r e she came from or how she snuck up on both
of us so quietly I'll never know, but when she attacked
she attacked hard. I thought she was carrying a baseball
bat but it was only a broken tree branch. By the time
Jackson realized what was going on, Junie was already
swinging. She was a small woman, but she walloped
Jackson so hard across the chest and neck he flew eight
feet backward, smashing against the trunk of a nearby
tree and slumping to the ground with a groan. Junie
moved in for another swing and I shook off my disbe¬
lief she was here rescuing me long enough to pull.out
my knife, trigger the spring that released the shiny
steel blade out to its full-length, and go help her.
Jackson was down and probably broken up inside, but
he was far from out. Junie raised the branch above her
head to strike again, but Jackson shot her point blank in
the belly, a red exit wound the size of a silver dollar
spraying out above her right kidney. The sound of the
shot was deafening, a thunderclap close enough to nearly
knock me off my feet. I didn't fall, though, didn't panic;
I kept running, closing the gap.
Junie fell off to Jackson's right; screaming only once
before hitting the ground. Jackson was watching her
fall, enjoying the moment from the look on his face,
but that look changed in a hurry when he saw me launch
into the air, diving on top of him. He tried to swing his
gun up to shoot m e , too, but I was faster than him, my
reflexes acting in survival mode now. I landed on him
full force, using my entire weight to drive home the
blade to the left of Jackson's sternum. He screamed but
the force of my body had driven the air from his lungs
and what came out sounded more like a car tire going
flat than a cry of pain. There was surprisingly little
blood but I knew I'd done some big-time damage. I was
no fool, though. I'd seen enough cheesy horror movies
to know that once you get someone down, you never
give them the chance to get back up. So I drove the
blade back into Jackson's chest a second time, and a
third, and a tenth. I don't know for sure how many
times I stabbed the guard or at what point he was dead,
but by the time I rolled off him his chest was destroyed
and there was no worry of a B movie sneak attack once
my back was turned.
Junie!
I had to help her.
Please let her be all right,
I prayed, but in my heart I
knew that wasn't going to be the case. She hadn't moved
from where I'd seen her fall. I dropped to the ground,
scooping Junie into my arms and used my hand to help
turn her face toward me. Her eyes were unfocused and
distant, but with a heroic effort she managed to gather
herself and look up at me. .
"Why, Junie?" I asked, tears in my eyes, overcome by
the magnitude of her sacrifice. "Why take a bullet for
me? We barely knew each other."
She was fading fast, blood bubbling from the corners
of her mouth, as well as from the grievous wound in her
abdomen. "Because they've hurt you enough," Junie
whispered. "I couldn't live knowing—"
That was it; the lights suddenly went out in her eyes
and Junie went limp, dead in my arms without the
strength to finish her sentence. She'd said all she needed
t o , though, and I pulled her closer to me and held her
tight as I wept for her, her crippled son, and her sense¬
less death. If I could have traded places with her on the
bed of forest leaves I would have gladly.
In a heartbeat.
I closed my eyes and prayed for the world to go
away.
C H A P T E R T H I R T Y - F O U R
Surprise, surprise, my prayers went unanswered. W h e n
next I opened my eyes the world was still there, cold
and rotten as ever, and I had two dead bodies lying at
my feet to prove it.
I took a deep breath to steady my frayed nerves, then
climbed shakily to my feet. I spent a couple of minutes
covering Junie up with leaves and saying good-bye. She
deserved a better grave and burial than that, but time
was of the essence and the shroud of foliage was the best
I could do with no shovel or tools. Jackson, I left to rot
where he lay, j u s t as he'd planned on doing with me. Let
the birds pick out his eyes and the rest of the forest ani¬
mals and bugs have their way with him for all I cared. I
had to get moving. I wanted to put as much distance
between me and this spot as I could before anyone fig¬
ured out Jackson wasn't coming back.
I made it about a hundred feet farther down the for¬
est path, j u s t around the next bend, when I finally found
Drake's cemetery.
My God!
The path didn't widen out a lot, maybe twenty feet at
its widest, but there were grave markers everywhere,
little white wooden crosses stuck all over the path and
covering the forest floor to my left and right. I didn't
bother to count, but there had to be sixty or seventy of
them, easy—maybe as many as a hundred.
I hadn't expected to see anything like this. Why
would Drake mark the graves? D u m p i n g bodies was
one thing, the animals and the elements clean up the
mess in no t i m e , but to mark the graves seemed like a
silly idea to me. W h a t if the police ever found this
place? Drake would be sunk, Dr. Marshall too. I couldn't
believe he'd allowed this. Unless, of course, they were
both arrogant and brazenly stupid enough to think
they were so far above the law they could do whatever
they wanted and consequences be damned. That was
it—had to be. There was no other answer for this evil
place. And that's what it was—evil—a shrine to N a t h a n
Marshall's God complex, a mockery of the poor souls
unceremoniously buried here to appease Drake's de¬
ranged superego.
These were the men and women from before the
basement incinerator, Drake had said. How many more
had died since, their collective ashes dumped in the
woods for the wind to scatter. Probably more than
this—a lot more.
My God.. .all those people/
The full scope of Dr. Marshall's madness hit me
then. I'd known he was completely off his rocker, and
Drake was no better, but I'd never known j u s t how nasty
and cruel they truly were. This cemetery made me sick
to my stomach. It also royally pissed me off.
Somebody had to stop these bastards.
Somebody with n o t h i n g to lose, a person who be¬
lieved that retribution was for more important than
their own personal safety.
Somebody like me.
That sounded good. It was j u s t the thing the hero in
every big-budget action movie would say. Trouble was,
this was my life, not a movie, and I sure as hell wasn't
anybody's hero. Far from it. But then again, it
was
true
that I had nothing to lose. And somebody
did
have to put
a stop to Dr. Marshall and his crazy boyfriend, Drake.
Ah, man, how did it ever come to this?
Deep down I knew I'd already made up my mind. I
was j u s t trying to avoid it for another few seconds.
Freedom was finally within my grasp, but I couldn't j u s t
walk away. I knew I couldn't. My conscience, having
always been a right stubborn bugger, wouldn't allow it.
Too many people had suffered here. Too many people
called to me from their nameless graves, tormented
souls who whispered the word
revenge
in my ear. They
deserved retribution—all of them, but especially Junie.
H o w could I walk away from her?
Fuck it. Marshall and Drake are going down!
I had no idea what I was possibly going to do, or if I
had it in me to pull something like this off, but as I
turned and started walking back toward the castle, I felt
good about my decision. I was scared, hell, who wouldn't
be, but in a good way that made me feel alive for the
first time in years. Today I had a chance to be more
than j u s t an expendable bum or a patched-together
sideshow freak. Today I could be the great equalizer,
the h a m m e r of justice—a hero for the dead and down¬
trodden everywhere. That was taking it
way
too far,
crazy talk, but I needed to believe in myself again—really
believe—something I hadn't done since before the car
accident that destroyed my family.
Back where Junie and Jackson had died, I stopped to
see if the security guard had anything on him that
might be useful. I grabbed his gun, of course, happy to
see it still had nearly a full clip of bullets. I also found a
small black penlight and a Bic disposable lighter, but
the thing that shocked me and made me shake with an
equal mix of fury and fear was a white, wooden cross
tucked into his jacket pocket.
Another grave marker.
Mine!
I put the flashlight and lighter into my pocket along
with Junie's switchblade, but the cross had a ten-inch
vertical shaft and it was too big to fit. I considered j u s t
throwing it away but it had a point on one end that
could maybe be used as a weapon. I stuffed it inside my
jacket and decided to take the damn thing with me.
The gun I kept in my hand and at the ready. Believe it
or not, I already had the beginnings of a plan forming
in the back of my mind. I didn't force it, j u s t letting it
simmer for a few minutes as I kicked some leaves over
Jackson's body. People would be coming to search for
him soon and covering him up might give me a few
extra minutes before my best weapon—the element of
surprise—was gone forever. In the m e a n t i m e , I had to
get my ass moving.
I took off at a run back down the forest trail. Well, it
was more of a fast limp but it was the best I could do. I
had to make it back to the outer edge of the forest be¬
fore Drake sent the reinforcements to look for me. He
would t o o ; I had no illusions about that. Surely he'd
have heard the shot that had killed Junie. My ears were
still ringing from the gun blast. Drake would presume
that shot had been Jackson shooting me, but if the guard
didn't show up at the castle to give Drake the gruesome
details, he'd know I'd somehow turned the tables on
Jackson and immediately send out the guards.