The Box Set of Hauntings and Horrors

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The Box Set of Hauntings and Horrors Page 14

by Jeff DeGordick


  A flash of headlights shone down the lonely road behind Tommy, and he threw a glance at it. He looked at the magical cord and saw that it was looped over the tongue of his shoe and around the back of it.

  Summoning a burst of courage, Tommy quickly untied his shoelace to loosen it, then he shimmied his foot out of it. The witch's lasso snapped shut and was pulled back into her wand like a roll of measuring tape.

  Tommy got up and ran up to the road, yelling and waving his arms.

  The horn blared and the car swerved to a stop next to him.

  He ran up to the passenger doors, banging on the windows and screaming for the driver to let him in.

  The passenger window rolled down and a man leaned past a girl sitting in the seat next to him and said, "Get in, little dude."

  Tommy pulled open the door in the back and climbed in, yelling for the driver to get them out of there.

  "Tommy?" a familiar voice said.

  He looked over and saw Brett sitting next to him, then he realized that it was Stacy sitting in the passenger seat with her boyfriend Vince driving.

  Vince didn't seem to take his warning seriously, and he slowly put the car back in drive and eased onto the accelerator. But the car cruised down the dark road, and Tommy pressed his face to the window, not seeing the witch chasing them. The radio was off, and no one talked after Tommy had calmed down, creating an eerie silence.

  "What happened to you?" Brett said.

  "The witch came after me!" Tommy replied. "In the corn maze!"

  Brett's eyes widened. "We saw her too. She came after me and the other guys, and we got split up after some bats attacked us. Man, things are going crazy around here."

  "Don't talk about witches!" Stacy said sharply from the front seat. "That's ridiculous."

  Brett rolled his eyes and looked at Tommy. "She doesn't believe me," he whispered. "But I see what's going on. I see all the kids being taken..."

  "I know where she's taking them!" Tommy said.

  "Where?"

  "To the church!"

  Vince looked in the rearview mirror. "To the church it is, little buddy," he said in a robotic voice. He sank his foot on the gas pedal and the car picked up speed.

  Stacy shoved him in the shoulder. "What the hell, Vince? We're not going to the church! I need to get Brett back home."

  But Vince wouldn't listen. A turn came up on the left, and Vince took it, heading for the church at the edge of town.

  Tommy gulped. He wasn't equipped to go there right now. He just wanted to get out of here and find his sister; Vince didn't know what he was getting them into.

  "I'm serious, Vince!" Stacy cried. "Turn around!"

  He ignored her.

  "If you won't turn around, then stop this car right now! Me and Brett are getting out and walking!"

  Vince pulled the car to an abrupt stop, and Tommy and Brett were thrown into the seats in front of them. Stacy pushed open the passenger door. "Come on, Brett," she said, stepping out into the cold night.

  As soon as she was out of the car, Vince stepped on the accelerator again and the vehicle shot forward without her. Tommy and Brett spun around in their seats and watched Stacy scream and flail her arms in the middle of the road behind them, yelling for Vince to stop.

  Vince reached over and adjusted the rearview mirror, staring at the two of them with cold eyes. "All the kids like going to the church," he said. "They all love the church, yes they do." The way he delivered his sentences was monotonous and very inhuman. It sent a chill down the kids' spines, and as Tommy watched him, he saw the exact mannerisms that his father had exhibited lately.

  Carmen came out of the woods toward the road. "Tommy!" she screamed, looking around. Then she saw something a few paces from her. She ran over and picked it up, and her heart plunged to her toes.

  It was Tommy's shoe.

  Tears flowed down her face, and she knew that he'd been taken by the witch to the church. She wasn't ready to go there yet, but she didn't have any more time. It was now or never if she ever wanted to see her brother alive again.

  Into the Witch's Snare

  Vince's Pontiac crawled up the hill and its headlights flashed across the parking lot. It slowly rolled to the other end and stopped in front of the church. The headlights washed against the welcome sign sitting at the start of the path leading up to the church doors.

  Tommy and Brett sat nervously in the back of the car, and they waited in silence for Vince to say something, but he just sat there.

  "Can we go?" Tommy asked.

  "Yes," Vince said, "into the church." He stared at the two of them in his rearview mirror.

  "I meant go home," Tommy said quietly.

  But Vince just sat there, his steely eyes staring at them through the rearview mirror.

  "Come on Vince, this isn't funny," Brett said. "I don't want to be here."

  "Go in the church," Vince said emotionlessly.

  "No way," Brett said, holding his arms across his chest.

  Vince put the car into park, then he opened his door and stepped out. Brett watched in fear as he walked to the back and opened his door. When Vince reached in and grabbed him by the collar, Brett put his hands up defensively.

  "Okay, okay!" he said. He got out of the car and backed away from Vince, and Tommy did the same, not wanting to be near the man alone.

  Without another word, Vince got back in the driver's seat and turned the car around, speeding out of view down the hill.

  The two boys found themselves in the empty parking lot of the church that was about as far on the outskirts of town as they could get. The church itself was Irish Catholic, and it sat at the edge of a cliff overlooking a river flowing down below. It was normally a picturesque place to visit, but as the two boys turned around and saw the building standing against the dimness of the moonlight, their skin crawled.

  "This is where the witch has been taking them?" Brett asked.

  "Yeah," Tommy replied. "Me and my sister found some clues that led here." He looked around and saw the little marsh in the distance near the start of the long and winding road leading up to the church's parking lot where the timothy-grass grew. Then he turned and looked at the gardens on the west side of the building and saw the same flowers that had been in the box, and one or two of the weeds.

  "So are they... inside?" Brett asked. There didn't appear to be any activity outside, nor inside for that matter, as all the lights in the church were off. Beautiful stained-glass windows adorned the east and west sides of the building, but any visible glow coming through them was absent.

  Brett turned and looked down the road, thinking about Vince. "I really hate him, you know," he said suddenly.

  Tommy turned to him. "He seems the same as my dad," he said. "I think he's being controlled."

  Brett dismissed him. "He was like that before all this started. He reminds me a lot of my dad before he left." Brett had always kept up a tough shell, keeping anyone from getting too close to him, and Tommy could finally see where he got it from.

  "Does he always hit you?" Tommy asked.

  Brett stared out at the edge of the cliff past the church. "You know, let's just go, okay?" There was irritation in his voice, and Tommy knew it must have been a tender subject. "It can't take that long to walk home from here, could it?" Brett asked.

  "But what about all the kids that disappeared?" Tommy asked, turning back to the church.

  "I really don't want to go in there," Brett said, and his apprehension was surprising to Tommy; normally Brett would be the first one to sneak into a place at night.

  "Well I'm going in," Tommy said. He was terrified of what he would find, but all the clues seemed to lead to here, and if he could help save someone, he would; it's what his mother always taught him was right when she was still around, and his father even taught him the same lesson back when he spent more time parenting and less time working.

  Tommy walked along the pathway and came up to the tall and wide doors at the front of the
church. Brett was left in the lurch behind him, but he could only take standing in the darkness by himself for so long before he grunted and joined him.

  They pulled on the doors, expecting them to be locked, but they swung open easily, as if someone was expecting them. They found themselves in a small coat room, and there was a doorway beyond that led to a lobby. All of the lights were out, and it didn't look like anyone was inside.

  "Are you sure you got the right spot?" Brett asked.

  Tommy's eyes scrunched up. "I think so," he said. He moved forward carefully and spotted a light switch on the wall as the door to the church he'd opened slowly swung closed behind them. He flicked it on and to his delight the lobby lit up with white fluorescents. They crossed into the sanctuary, which they could barely see from the off-glow of the lights in the lobby, but it seemed empty, too.

  Their footsteps echoed in the large room as they plodded across the carpet. Brett found the light switch and turned it on, and half of the lights in the sanctuary illuminated over their heads. The boys searched the large room, but there was no one there; no children; no witches.

  Tommy's fear was starting to settle down, and he became confused. Could he have been wrong about this place? If the witch wasn't keeping all the children here, then where?

  "Doesn't this place have a basement?" Brett asked suddenly, remembering a time many years ago when his aunt had forced him to come here with the family.

  Suddenly Tommy remembered this too. His father and mother had taken him and his sister to church four years ago, not long before she died. They never came much before, but his mom wanted to leave a lasting impression of tradition and family on his young, impressionable mind. Sadly, that lesson had certainly fallen through the cracks. But when they took him and his sister here, they would sometimes run downstairs in the basement and play.

  Tommy and Brett walked to opposite ends of the sanctuary and searched around the pews at the front. Tommy opened a door to a small room next to the stage and pulled dusty white cloths off of old furniture.

  When he returned, Brett stood on the far side of the large room, facing one of the stained-glass windows. His head was pointed down to the carpet and it looked like he was shaking. When Tommy called his name, Brett quickly wiped an arm across his face, then he turned around, but kept his face pointed away from Tommy.

  "What do you want?" Brett asked.

  Tommy walked up to him. "Are you okay?"

  "I'm fine," he said. "Get away from me!" Brett shoved him and Tommy stumbled to a pew, falling hard on the wooden seat.

  Brett marched up onto the stage as if nothing happened, and he noticed a display sitting at the back. He walked up to it and peered down at the glass case. "Cool!" he said.

  Tommy was confused at what he saw from Brett, and his sudden change in demeanor, but he got up cautiously and joined him on the stage. "What is it?"

  "It's a knife or something. Maybe a dagger."

  "A ceremonial knife, maybe?" Tommy suggested, admiring the way the curved blade attached to the hilt, and the decorations etched into it.

  "Get it for me," Brett said.

  "What?"

  "Break the glass and take it," Brett said. "I want it."

  Tommy shook his head. "No."

  Brett shoved him again. "What's your problem? Don't you want to hang out with me? I didn't know you were such a dumb ass."

  "I don't want to steal it," Tommy said. "That's wrong."

  Before Tommy could give another excuse, Brett tipped over the display's stand and it crashed open on the floor, shattering to pieces. Brett bent down and picked up the dagger, eyeing it proudly and feeling the weight of it in his hand.

  "What are you doing, Brett?" Tommy asked.

  "I'm taking this, what's it look like?"

  "No, I mean why are you acting like this? Bullying me? It isn't right. I saw Vince bully you, and you didn't look like you liked it very much. So why are you doing it to me?" Tommy's nature was inquisitive and honest, and it was like Brett's kryptonite when confronted with it.

  Brett's face faltered. His mouth fell open and he tried to say something, but when he couldn't find the words to directly face his problems, anger rose in him instead. He gripped the handle of the knife tighter as his face went red. "I... You..."

  Tommy saw the knife in his hand and backed up slowly. "We don't have to fight," he said quickly. "I thought we were friends?"

  A tear dropped out of Brett's eye, and his face twisted into horror when he felt it stream down his cheek. He dropped the knife and took off running, wiping his face with his sleeve.

  "Wait!" Tommy cried and chased after him.

  Brett took a left out of the sanctuary and headed for the staircase going down to the basement. Tommy followed him to the stairs and watched as he fled down into the darkness. He stopped suddenly, not wanting to run headlong into the unknown. "Brett!" he called. But he didn't answer.

  Tommy didn't want to go down there, but he couldn't just leave Brett alone like that, especially if there was something down there that neither one of them wanted to see. Tommy held the railing tightly and slowly made his way down. He called out Brett's name a few times, listening as the silence answered him.

  His feet touched the basement floor, and he felt the coldness wash over the area. Tommy fumbled around in the dark for a light switch, and as his finger touched it, his heart seized, afraid of what horrors waited for him when he shone a light upon them.

  The bulb flickered on over his head, casting the area in a pale glow. The main section of the basement was empty, and there were a few rooms connected to it. Some were for storage, one was a play area for the kids, and one was a library. Distant memories came back to him as Tommy crept around in the dark, poking his head in each room.

  "Brett?" he said.

  Sobbing came from behind him.

  Tommy turned around slowly, staring back across the basement. There was one last storage room that he hadn't checked yet. He made his way over to it. His fingers slid along the dark wall inside, then he turned on the light. Stacks of boxes sat in the middle of the room with furniture pushed around the edges. The soft sobs came from the other side of the boxes.

  Tommy's heart beat rapidly. "Brett?" He walked around to the other side and saw Brett's miserable shape curled up on the floor with his knees hiked to his chest. His head snapped up at him and he saw a mess of red and wet eyes. Brett held an arm over his face to shield the shame.

  "Go away!" Brett said.

  Tommy was dumbfounded; he had never seen Brett this... this vulnerable.

  "I can't do it anymore!" Brett sobbed. "It's all my fault!"

  "What's your fault?" Tommy asked.

  "Everything!" he said. "All of this! If it wasn't for me, no one would be hurt or missing. Nobody would be acting weird!"

  "What are you talking about?"

  "I did it! Okay?" he cried, offering his hands up in appeasement. "I burned down Halloween House with the witch inside!"

  "You what?" Tommy asked, shocked.

  "I didn't mean to! Everyone was standing around her house, throwing rocks and stuff. I thought it looked fun, so when no one was looking, I snuck around to the back and lit a fire. It was just supposed to be a joke! I thought someone would put it out! I didn't mean to do all that!" He sank his head in his hands and started bawling, his chest heaving up and down with miserable sobs.

  Tommy walked up to him and cautiously placed his hand on Brett's back.

  "Get off me!" Brett shouted, knocking his hand away.

  Tommy took a step back. "It's okay, it's not your fault. You didn't know."

  Brett looked up and considered him for a moment, then he turned his head away again and stared at the floor.

  Tommy turned around, feeling cold from the startling revelation. Then he thought again about everything that had happened since, including the witch supposedly kidnapping the children and bringing them to the church. But they had been upstairs in the church and now he had seen every room in t
he basement, but the entire place was empty; there were no kids anywhere. Had he been wrong about this place?

  "Now things will never be the same again," Brett muttered, starting to calm down. "I just wanna—" Brett paused in midsentence, reaching behind him and plucking something off the back of his neck. He held the strange item in front of him and looked at it. "What the hell, Tommy? Why did you throw this at me?" He held it out to him, and Tommy saw that it was a flower from the garden outside the church.

  "I didn't," Tommy said.

  Brett reached behind his neck again and pulled out something else stuck to his coat. He looked at the timothy-grass and then threw it on the ground, smacking the back of his neck repeatedly with his hands to get it all off. He turned to Tommy to ask how it all got there, and then he noticed something on the floor. "What the...?"

  Tommy turned to the doorway.

  Weeds and flowers—all the clues that had led Tommy here in the first place—lined the floor in a trail leading out the door of the room.

  Brett stood up and the two of them silently drifted out of the room into the main section of the basement. The trail led up the stairs the way they'd come, and they both stared at it, questions filling their minds. They rounded the corner and came up onto the ground floor, and then they both gasped.

  Lining the lobby were hundreds of lengths of rope, with a loop tied on the end like a lasso. Well over two hundred of them were strewn all across the floor like hungry snakes, and many dozens were hanging from the ceiling like nooses.

  Tommy suddenly realized it was a mistake to want to come here in the first place. And as the lights flickered and the witch appeared in the room in front of them, he realized that the church was never a place where the witch kept the children; it was only a trap.

  Carmen ran across the parking lot to the front doors of the church, her lungs burning. She heard screams inside, and she opened one of the doors just in time to see Tommy cowering in the far corner of the lobby as the witch slowly glided to him. Brett was knocked out, lying face-first on the floor. She looked up momentarily, mesmerized by all of the ropes, terrified at what was going on.

 

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