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A Haunting of Horrors: A Twenty-Novel eBook Bundle of Horror and the Occult

Page 368

by Chet Williamson


  A heavy smell of dampness and decay saturated the air. Beneath the stench Perlman's senses detected something worse as he descended the stairs and tried to breathe through his nose. The hall's watery light carried only a few steps before he reached for the flashlight; its glow was little comfort in the deepening blackness. Nerves screaming, his leg jarred when the steps ended unexpectedly and he swung the flashlight in a jittery arc around the room to make sure he wasn't standing on top of something he wasn't yet prepared to meet. He was taking an incredible chance. He knew almost nothing about what vampires could or couldn't do, when they could do it—nothing. Perlman's survival these past months had been based on two principles: stay well hidden at night and stay out of dark places. For all he knew, the cursed things could rise during the day as long as the room was dark. Well, he'd soon find out.

  He played the light around more slowly; the basement was smaller than he expected and the beam picked up everything from cardboard boxes and newspapers to a bicycle slowly corroding in the dank air. From his position it was easy to see across the room, where a set of weights had been scattered at the foot of a beat-up antique wardrobe whose wood was even blacker than the mildewy wall behind it, and Perlman's heart skipped. He'd been half-hoping not to find anything; then he could run safely back to the hospital and its white-walled security and firmly pledge to try again another day. He'd never been a procrastinator, but fear was doing odd things in his head and he looked longingly at the staircase with its faraway dribble of daylight before forcing himself to cross the floor, clearing a path from the stairs to the wardrobe.

  The sounds he made as he pushed aside a bundle of magazines seemed as loud as a symphony and he wondered if they could hear in their sleep. By the time he was standing within a few feet of the cabinet, he was shaking so badly he almost couldn't breathe; each step made the air in the basement thicker and so filled with evil that he didn't want it in his lungs anyway. The hair at the back of his neck, stubby from his awkward homemade haircuts, was standing so high he could have been moving through a field of static electricity. His hands, pale, slender, and defenseless—a surgeon's hands—shone in the back glow of the flashlight. Could he actually go through with this?

  Clutching the tape and rope, he watched in absent-minded horror as his other hand pulled open the wardrobe's door.

  Thick, vile air spilled out. His heart pounded fiercely in his chest and at first he thought his blood pressure had escalated so dangerously that he'd lost his eyesight, because even with the flashlight he couldn't see anything inside the cabinet. Then he realized he was gazing at a filthy blanket nearly as black as the wardrobe's interior. Before his courage could flee, he yanked the blanket aside.

  "Oh!" he whispered as he stared face-to-face with a child of about four years old. The boy's naked, dirty skin was a deep, emaciated gray, and twined on his sunken chest were sticklike fingers from which sharp, blackened nails curled. Unwittingly, Perlman's gaze met the vampires; beneath bloodless, translucent lids, unholy brown eyes sparkled up at him.

  Daddy? The sweet voice in his mind was that of an innocent preschooler. Please hold me. I'm so cooold… . Behind Perlman's eyes formed a vision of this child as he had once been, and for an instant he imagined he'd found the boy alive, skin pink with health but shivering, brown eyes gazing at him trustingly. Daddy … please help me, it said, and Perlman's heart nearly broke.

  His body moved on its own and he began to bend, intending to pull the poor, tiny body into his warm arms. Beneath the pitiful cries swirling in his mind, Perlman sensed a building eagerness that caused his pounding pulse to stutter.

  He stepped forward and reached—

  Another step—

  His right foot cracked into a twenty-pound weight lying just under the front of the wardrobe and he cried out as sanity-bringing pain rocketed up his foot and ankle. His face—which had been only a half foot from the boy's jerked up and away as his fingers fumbled with the tape and slapped it over the creature's face. The agony climbing up his leg was an immense thing competing with the voice that still rang in his head—a voice that had gone from childish cajoling to fading screams of rage as he leaned back against the wall and panted for breath. When he realized that he'd almost become a human pacifier for this miscreation's daytime nap, the sardines and crackers he'd eaten earlier exploded from his throat in a smelly, wet mess across the weights at his feet.

  His leg almost buckled as he took a step and Perlman wondered what damage he'd done to his foot. Moisture trickled into his eyes and he swiped at it with the back of his hand as he pulled out two of the garbage bags and tucked one inside the other; grimacing, he leaned back into the wardrobe and tugged the bags over the vampire's head and skeleton-like torso. As he worked the plastic around the frigid body, the voice tried to squirm into his mind again and he purposely ground his foot into the floor, hissing through his teeth as the pain cleared his thoughts. Even with a busted foot it didn’t take much to lift the boy from the wardrobe and draw the other bags around it from the feet up.

  The child weighed little and normally Perlman could have simply tossed him over a shoulder and gone on his way. As he tied the plastic tightly around the boy he was grateful that he'd brought the two-by-fours, though he'd done so because he'd assumed his captive would be an adult and considerably heavier. Now he placed a wood piece at each side of the creature and ran the thick duct tape around and around, twisting and circling until he was certain the body wouldn't slide down and scrape against the ground as he dragged it. With the extra length of wood at one end, he could pull it down the street like a travois.

  He was never so relieved to see daylight as when he finally hauled his burden down the porch steps of the three-flat. Each time the wood bumped from one riser to the next Perlman felt the vibration run up his arms and travel to his injured foot. His head ached, his stomach churned, and his foot throbbed, and to make matters worse, when he crossed the street and came out from beneath the tree shadows into the sun, the thing in the garbage bags began to try and wriggle free. With the amount of tape and rope wrapped around it, Perlman thought the boy could have undulated for a week and not gotten loose, but it was a spooky thing to witness and he tried to hobble faster and get the vampire back to the hospital as quickly as possible. The way it was writhing it seemed the sun's rays were going through the dark green plastic as though it were mesh. It had felt like hours inside but the sun, springtime bright and strong, had just reached its axis and Perlman relaxed, knowing he could still count on hours of daylight.

  But he wondered what tonight would bring.

  5

  REVELATION 6:12

  … and the moon became as blood.

  Deborah Nole's teeth ached from being ground together for the last three hours, yet every time she tried to relax, her teeth started chattering; in the empty auditorium the sound was machine-gun loud.

  Dammit! Why was she awake? Exhaustion usually made her sleep through the night, oblivious to her usual fear of the dark and the creatures that now owned it. Tonight her eyes were open uselessly in the blackness, lids stretched wide as if they could re-form into extra ears with which to search the cavernous room for sounds. She could detect nothing, and she was pretty good at it. More than pretty good—she'd managed to stay alive when countless others hadn't. But the heavy drapes that hung between her cot and the back wall could be a double-edged benefit: while her own sounds were muffled from the hundreds of empty seats surrounding the stage, the stealthy steps of an intruder would likewise be easy to hide. What time was it? Frozen in the same position for so long her arms had gone numb, Deb was afraid to even finger the light on her wristwatch and she could no longer feel the reassuring pressure of the twelve-gauge next to her. For all she knew the shotgun was balanced on the edge of the cot and would clatter to the floor if she reached for it.

  How long? This was driving her insane; she had to know what time—wait! Her breath hitched at an imagined sound and the muscles of her arm unlocked automati
cally as her hand slid down and closed around the stock of the Winchester. Her stomach tightened, then acknowledged the fullness of her bladder, a sure sign that she'd made it to another dawn.

  Her lungs emptied in relief and she grasped the gun and sat up, still shaking as she groped for the matches and oil lamp; a few seconds and a warm, welcome glow lit the backstage alcove. She took the lamp and climbed the carpeted steps around the banisters, caution returning at the first entrance as she pushed the bar down and felt the lock release. As she eased out of the Arthur Rubloff Auditorium, weak daylight filtered down the stairs from the dining room on the second floor. The building's noises had still terrified her a year ago, but eventually Deb had learned to recognize the daily creaks and groans as the sun brought the temperature up and caused the old mortar and stone to expand. But Deb listened for other noises, such as the stealthy steps of someone who'd managed a way inside. Although she daydreamed about it often, she really didn't know what she'd do if that ever happened, and it had been six months ago in October since she'd last seen a living person outside. His name, he'd said, was John, and he was as ragged and thin as they came. She'd greeted him eagerly and together they'd gathered another cot and blankets, more food and fresh clothes. After months of cowering alone, this man was a godsend of potential security.

  Back then she'd been sleeping in the Morton Lecture Hall, yet in spite of her loneliness she was no fool; her 9mm pistol had stayed hidden in the deep pockets of her jacket, and John hadn't known about the sawed-off shotgun until she'd blown half his chest away when she caught him undoing the locks on the basement hall's entrance after he'd thought her asleep. Only the worst type of human could walk the night hours and she knew he would have returned in a few hours—if that long—and even her miniature arsenal wouldn't have stopped the creatures he would've brought with him. She'd spent the remainder of that night sitting in the dark and listening to the blood drip from John's cooling body. How long had he known about her? Long enough to alert others to her refuge before she'd met him? Maybe blood creatures already crawled through the rooms above. Combined with her terror was the guilt of having taken the life of another human; as wretched as John had been, killing him seemed almost unforgivable when so few real people still walked this earth.

  Almost.

  In the morning she had wrapped the body in a sheet and dragged it out, intending to throw it in the lake. Despite her sturdy build, the distance had proved too much and she'd settled for hoisting it over the concrete barrier on Monroe and dropping it to the railroad tracks forty feet below. Guilty conscience or not, the corpse made a satisfying thud as it hit; if there were others like him, she hoped they'd see the justice in his death. She'd cleaned up the mess and locked the hall permanently from the inside; perhaps the mars ghost would be trapped there, too.

  A quick examination now showed her the entrances were unscathed, and she finally felt safe enough to return to the auditorium and use the Port-o-Potty. As she changed from one heavy cotton jumpsuit to another, an ache spread through her stomach and she flinched. She'd have to go to the library soon and read up on ulcers; the mirror showed the same clear blue eyes and curly black hair spilling down her shoulders, but the growing pain in her gut mocked her healthy appearance.

  Deb pocketed her keys and let herself out the Michigan Avenue doors, testing them to make sure the latches caught. A year ago she would've never guessed locks would be such an important part of her life. Standing on steps leading down to an empty world in the morning was nearly as frightening as the coming of each dusk. She had worked in the Art Institute since graduating from college and had seen it overrun with employees and visitors—maybe that was why she had chosen to live here; good memories, the images of a thousand people and times captured on canvas, in photographs, bronze, and marble. Outside, nothing moved for as far as she could see: no people, no cars—not even a single squirrel, once so common along the boulevard and in Grant Park. Only the birds remained; safe in their ability to fly, God alone knew where they roosted. She wondered longingly if the animals in the rural areas had fared better.

  If she closed her eyes and concentrated, she could still remember mornings at her parents' house not so long ago, still hear her little sister Janet calling her to Get out of bed, Mama's got breakfast on the table! Dad's laughter booming out of the kitchen at some wisecrack made by seventeen-year-old Mark. And Mom …

  The familiar loneliness settled heavily around her, amplified in silence broken only by the occasional twittering of an unseen sparrow. She hoped the sparrows and pigeons would become more plentiful as spring progressed, but for now most probably still huddled high atop the skyscrapers. A few more weeks and maybe the silence wouldn't be so damned …

  loud.

  6

  REVELATION 3:2

  Be watchful, and strengthen the things which remain.

  "What's he doing?"

  The man, his white hair the only testimony of age, shrugged as they looked to the sidewalk from a window high in Water Tower Place. He could think of no logical response as the teenager pressed one cheek against the window in an effort to see better.

  "Should I go down?" C.J.'s eyes, usually so hard and suspicious in his unlined face, brightened with the prospect of contact with someone new. Although he smiled to himself, Buddy McDole's expression remained outwardly bland as he watched the thin man below struggle with a small stretcher on which he had obviously tied a vampire. Even from here McDole could see the plastic-like covering ripple as the sleeping creature instinctively tried to escape the sunlight. But the man had done his task well; the vampire wasn't going anywhere—at least not until tonight.

  The guy was limping badly and McDole's first impulse was to send someone down to help. They'd certainly seen him enough—many times before the sentries had alerted McDole to the knocking at the main doors this morning. It had been a point in his favor that the stranger hadn't broken in, and if it weren't for one nagging question, McDole might have indeed sent C.J. to greet him—probably scaring the shit out of him in the process.

  But …

  What the hell was he doing with a vampire?

  7

  REVELATION 3:10

  I will keep thee from the hour

  of them that dwell upon the earth.

  "Up and at 'em, Beau," Louise told the little dog. "Time to move out." Beauregard's ears perked, though the cataract-filmed eyes never wavered. She scratched the tiny graying head, wondering how much he really heard.

  This morning's hotel was the top apartment of a four-story walk-up in East Rogers Park in the fancier section along Sheridan Road just north of the park, not far from where she'd been a student at Senn High School. New sunlight blazed across its front room through the triple picture windows; the chilly air was warming and old Beau crawled from her lap and stretched unsteadily, working the stiffness from his pencil-thin legs. Copying him, Louise crossed her arms and massaged the night tension from her shoulders, then stared out the windows at the Lake Michigan shoreline and the calm, deep waters. Two miles south there would still be ice chunks bobbing in the colder waters of Montrose and Belmont Harbors, but if the weather stayed warm, the ice would disappear in another two days … she smiled. Warm weather at last! More important than that: shorter nights, longer days. More hours in which to … what? Louise shook her head and wandered back to the bedroom to gather her sleeping gear from the dusty bed. It would take another twenty minutes to pack up and haul the furniture away from the front door so they could leave.

  Breakfast was a can of peaches for her and a packet of burger-like dog food for Beau. It wasn't until she automatically carried their trash to the kitchen that she realized they'd shared the night's hideaway with a corpse.

  The peaches tried to come up but Louise locked her throat until the urge passed, then opened her clenched fist and dropped the garbage in the wastebasket. The dried-out body, curled in a fetal position, was crammed into the space between the refrigerator and stove by the back wall. Either
the eyeballs and lids had rotted away or cockroaches—those indestructible insects—had feasted before moving on to a fresher kill. It was impossible to tell what had killed the person or whether it had been a man or woman—something Louise didn't care to know anyway. What counted was that they'd been lucky: the corpse had stayed a corpse.

  Her scalp tightened at the enormity of her carelessness—in her haste to find shelter, she'd barricaded herself and Beau in an apartment she hadn't checked thoroughly, only glancing hurriedly through the rooms before dusk. Her luck had held—this time. Being trapped with a bloodsucker was unthinkable. How could she have done this?

  Her legs carried her back to the bright front room before they began shaking. When she sank onto a once-plush leather sofa, Beau tilted his grizzled face toward her, then padded across the carpeting until he bumped her ankle, where he curled up with a contented snuffle. But even the comforting sunlight couldn't overthrow the knowledge of the cadaver one room away. The kitchen, she now realized, had no windows. She had stupidly not seen the body to begin with; it was even more unlikely she would have noticed it had it been intentionally covered by something to block out the sunlight, and she was alive this morning only by the wildest of odds—Jesus! She and Beau had developed a pattern this last year: wake, eat, and wander, always looking for better things to eat and better places to sleep. They stayed put only during the heavy snows when footprints made travel impossible. In the small buildings they frequented, it could be easy for the vampires to pinpoint the prolonged presence of warm flesh, so they moved on. And on. Easing into a comfortable routine with the coming of spring's longer hours and the thinning vampire population, Louise had pushed the travel time to the limit the last couple of weeks, stretching each day as far as she could.

 

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