Both guns bark together.
Christine closes her eyes. She hears the gunshots as they come, hears the giddy murmur of the dead all around her. But no pain comes. When her eyes open, she already knows what’s happened but still turns her head to see for herself:
On the steps behind her, Margie’s kneecaps have exploded. The waitress pitches sideways off the steps, hitting the ground headfirst.
She doesn’t scream; the only sound she utters is a breathy groan.
Sleepwalkers surround her in an instant, like a pack of dogs. Christine looks on in horror, expecting them to tear Margie apart, but instead they pick her up gently and bear her up over their heads.
More come and pick up Ron the same way. One holds the rope, always keeping the pressure on Ron’s throat.
The director just looks at Christine and smiles.
“It’s not your time to choke yet,” he says. “But it’s coming.”
One by one, each of the army of pale, sleeping teenagers and children falls in step and disappears into the woods.
The witch stands looking on, utterly expressionless. Christine wrenches the knife from her mother’s grip but remains there, standing on steps, her chest heaving big, furious breaths, with no idea in the world what to do.
“No! Take me!” she shouts.
The director cocks his head.
“Patience,” he says.
At the foot of the steps, the sleepers release Caleb and simply walk away. Caleb rises and goes for his knife.
The director gives him a bemused look.
“Stabbing me now?
Et tu,
Billy? If only it were that easy.” He turns away. “I’ll see you both soon,” he calls over his shoulder.
“You’re not getting away with this!” Christine screams, and she charges the director with her knife.
The director wheels, another lasso already swinging in his grip.
He flicks his wrist and the rope almost seems to have a mind of its own as it flits through the air and jerks the knife out of Christine’s hand. He whips the rope around over his head, then swings it back at Christine. The knife, caught in the loop of the lasso, whips toward her with incredible speed. It makes a tiny “tick” sound as it passes her face, and that’s all. She falls to her knees.
Caleb takes a step forward to go to her but is cut off by three lingering sleepers, who hiss at him fearsomely.
When the director flicks his wrist again, the knife jerks into his left hand and the lasso winds itself into a neat loop in his right.
“Not now, my sweet Christine. Soon. We’ll all be together again soon—you, me, and Billy. I promise.” He blows her a kiss, and flanked by sleepwalkers, turns and disappears into the woods.
In an instant, Caleb is kneeling in front of Christine.
His heart is throbbing. He doesn’t know what he’s going to see when he looks at her face, what hideous disfigurement or fatal wound he will find there, but he’s trembling just thinking of the possibilities.
“Are you okay?” he asks as he arrives at her side, breathless.
“No,” she says, through tears.
And he looks at her frantically. First at her eyes—both there, both dark and beautiful and intact—then her throat; it’s unblemished by blood.
He squints in the dark. “What’s wrong?”
“Can’t you see?” she says. “It’s horrible.”
He keeps looking, seeing nothing.
“What?” he asks desperately. “What?”
“He cut off a bunch of my hair,” she says, clearly in shock from the sight she just witnessed.
Caleb looks closer. A chunk of her long, dark hair has indeed been chopped off—and her only other injury is a tiny scratch just in front of her ear, which oozes one huge tear of blood.
Caleb laughs and pulls her to him and hugs her tight.
“Do I look horrible?” she asks, sounding numb.
Laughing with relief, he says, “You look gorgeous.”
She pulls away from him.
“We have to get Margie and Ron back,” she says.
He takes her hands in his and squeezes them. “We will. I swear.”
On the porch, the witch is on her hands and knees, scrubbing Margie’s blood and tiny, shattered bits of kneecap off the steps, and humming.
K
NEELING IN A FIELD OF STARS
, this might be the night the world was made. Crickets chirp, the night breeze rustles leaves overhead, and all else holds its breath. In the dark, two childhood friends embrace. This might be Adam and Eve in the Garden. This might be the beginning of the world instead of the end of it.
“We’ll fix all this,” says Caleb, only half believing his own words. Then: “What is it?”
Christine stares hard at nothing. Finally, she says: “The voices—I can’t hear them anymore.”
“They’re gone?” he asks.
“No. Still here, but . . . quiet. Like they’re waiting for something. For the end.”
“Then let’s finish it.”
They help each other off the dew-soaked ground. The Spanish moss hanging from ancient, dying oak trees, the strangling kudzu, the serpentine tendrils of mist creeping from the forest all around them: everything is a shroud. Hiding the truth. Hiding the future. Hiding any chance they might have had at a pleasant life full of denial and the appearance of happiness, a normal life. Now, even if they perform a miracle and somehow make it out of this ghost town alive, they’ll be forever haunted. Maybe figuratively, maybe literally.
They listen to the squeal of bats overhead. They enter the circle of light cast from the windows of the squat little trailer, mount the steps—still splattered here and there with blood and bits of bone. They open the screen door. And Caleb freezes, listening.
There is a moaning sound, so soft it could be the creak of a tree trunk in the wind. Except it’s not.
He grabs Christine’s arm. “Do you hear it?”
She’s still for a moment.
“I think we should go inside,” she says. “It’s not safe out here.”
But Caleb is already ignoring her, already heading down the steps, around the corner, to the dark side of the trailer where the moonlight won’t even go.
And he stops in front of the cellar door.
“It’s coming from in here,” he says.
“Don’t open it, Caleb. I’m serious. I have a really bad feeling. The dead are screaming not to open it.” Pain is in her voice, and she has her hands clamped to her ears—but Caleb is deaf to her, his eyes transfixed by the door. From its latch, a big, rusting padlock hangs.
He turns, looking for something, anything that might help him break the lock, then sees it. A hatchet waits, stuck in a log on the far side of the lawn, framed in moonlight, and Caleb brushes past Christine. Now he’s running to the hatchet, yanking it free, now shrugging off Christine’s restraining hand.
And chopping at the lock on the door.
“Billy, no!” Christine says. “It has to stay locked.”
Why should I trust her?
he thinks suddenly. She, who just tried to kill Ron. This could be a trick, a ploy. His father could be locked up in there.
“Everyone calls me Caleb now,” Billy says.
And he chops.
“The voices say the devil is in there! They say you’ll set him free!”
Caleb growls, eyes narrowed: “The voices make people disappear, Christine. You think we can trust them?”
“They also saved our lives,” she says.
Caleb is chopping.
He says: “And can you tell the difference between the ones that want to help and the ones that hurt? What if they’re lying to you? You ever think of that?”
“They said you’d say that,” she says, backing away from him one step. “They predicted all of this. They said you’d betray us!”
Caleb stays his hand for a moment, looks at her.
“Who’s down in this basement? Do you know?”
She just stares at him.
“Why are you trying to stop me? Your mother locked somebody in here. Who?”
“I don’t know.”
“Then we have to find out. It could be anybody. Could be a kid, for Christ’s sake!”
“That’s not what the voices say.”
“It could be my dad!”
Caleb starts hacking at the lock again.
“Billy,” Christine says, “they all say you’ll help him bring about the end. They say you’re the one who’ll make it happen.”
“I would never do that, Christine.”
“Maybe you already are.”
Silence settles between them, one more black shroud.
Sparks fall, and the hammering blows of the hatchet fill the forest. The moon passes behind a cloud, the lock falls, and Christine walks away.
Caleb doesn’t notice her leave. He’s pulling on the rusted handle, pulling back the peeling wood cellar door, smelling the rot and must behind it.
Inside, an abyss.
He’s terrified to look into the blackness, terrified to look away. He has no light. But something makes him take the first step down into the dank cellar. Something makes him take the second. And he wonders suddenly if he’s being drawn down by his own will, or the will of a thousand malevolent demons. The urge to run fills him suddenly with the urgency of vomit rising in the throat.
But he will not run.
It’s too late, anyway. He’s in the dark now.
The wet, sickly smell of decay surrounds him, making him shiver. He reaches the bottom of the stairs and steps into liquid up to his ankles.
Something is brushing his face. He keeps swatting it away, but it keeps coming back; cobwebs, or something worse. He’s suddenly about to cry; he just wants to leave, just wants to wake up from this nightmare that somewhere took a wrong turn and became real. And . . .
And he isn’t alone.
Amongst the rustle of chains comes a dry, sharp whisper.
“If you’ve come to kill me, you’re wasting your time,” it says. “I’m already dead.”
There’s no way of telling where the voice comes from. It echoes from all around him.
Caleb opens his mouth, but terror has robbed him of his breath.
“Are you the devil?” he asks finally.
The laugh comes like the crackle of dry leaves.
“Well, I’m sure not God.”
Caleb doesn’t know what to say.
“You think you’re a very brave boy, don’t you?” says the devil.
Outside, a storm is blowing in. Rain begins pattering and builds until even from underground. Caleb can hear the drops pounding relentlessly.
“You wanted to save the world . . .”
“Who are you?” says Caleb, “If you’re my father, then say so. And if you’re really the devil . . . ” He wants to finish, but doesn’t know how. “You can’t have me,” he says finally.
The laughter cracks. “Certainty is like a straitjacket, kid, and you need both hands. Now stop asking questions and listen; our time is short.”
Caleb shivers. Glancing over his shoulder, he sees nothing. All around him the darkness is total. He might be in outer space or the Mariana Trench. He might not be at all. He can’t see the cellar door. He can’t see anything.
“Listen, if you would undo what’s been done here, I’m going to tell you the story of Jonathan Morle. This is the first and the last time anyone will tell it, so pay close attention.”
Caleb does.
“Morle grew up in Boston. He was a sad kid, tried killing himself several times before he was even fifteen. Maybe that’s what happens to the son of a Harvard professor and a whore.
“After his mother died of syphilis, he broke into his father’s house. He found him in his study asleep and strangled him, then hung him from a rafter. Next, he found the old professor’s wife and two grandchildren, killed them with a fire poker and hung them up as well. Most of the police thought it was a murder-suicide, that the professor did it, that it was the work of a brilliant but slightly insane intellectual. But not all of the cops were convinced. And one of the detectives came after Jonathan.
“With no money and no means to flee, Morle joined the merchant marines, boarded a freight ship, and departed immediately for the farthest ports this world offered. He went around the globe, from
Amsterdam to Cape Town, Bangkok to Sydney.
“His shipmates described him as a quiet man with a beautiful singing voice. He didn’t drink alcohol, didn’t care much for prostitutes, stayed away from fights. But at every port he landed, a family was found dead, hung from the rafters of their house. Nobody on his ship knew about that. It didn’t even hit the local papers until they had weighed anchor and left port. The only strange thing about Jonathan Morle, his shipmates said, was that he seemed to collect a clock at every stop.