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

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A Haunting of Horrors: A Twenty-Novel eBook Bundle of Horror and the Occult Page 395

by Chet Williamson


  "It hurts, Alex," she whimpered suddenly. "I didn't expect it to hurt this much."

  "Oh, sweetheart." Before she could protest, he was kneeling at her side. "I'm so sorry."

  "It's a success, right?" Every attempt to speak was a gurgling, fluid-filled moan. "You guys'll be all right now?"

  "Yes." He put his arms around her shoulders and pulled her onto his lap, his heart kicking when her skin shifted sickeningly under his hand. Everything about her was wet and bloated; what had they done to his beautiful onetime lover?

  "I didn't want you to come. I wanted you to remember … you know."

  He surrendered to the tears filling his eyes. "I do," he assured her. His throat was trying to lock up on him. “And I always will." It was true; his mind's eye showed him a reelful of shots: Deb when he'd first met her, holding him at gunpoint with her face frightened and determined; Deb sitting across from him at Marshall Field's, laughing as she ate pickled eggs; Deb yet again, her expression glowing with passion as their bodies entwined in the moonlight. "I love you," he said hoarsely.

  "I love you too," she said gently. She gazed up at him and he felt his heart crack as the reddish lights in her eyes visibly dimmed. All traces of the hungry thing that had tried so hard to claim her had fled. Her mouth was a darker slash against the blotched gray shadows of her face.

  "Bury me in the sun, Alex," she said clearly. And she was gone.

  Alex hung his head and sobbed.

  8

  REVELATION 13:15

  And cause that as many as would

  not worship the beast should be killed …

  "Oh, no," Vic said brokenly.

  The smell of death had brought him in. The hope he'd experienced when he'd found Howard's body in the hallway faded as he realized that the fat man’s corpse was too fresh to give out the scent of decay he was picking up. Since Hugh only entered the building when someone else was inside, last night Vic had barely glanced at the lobby before taking his search outside. Had his father, skull and torso crushed beyond repair, been stuffed so carelessly between these display cases even then? He raised his head wearily and his gaze found Anyelet, lounging on a couch a dozen yards away, her expression smug.

  He crossed the distance and stood over her. "He was just an old man," he said furiously. "He was my father."

  "He was your punishment," Anyelet pointed out. "The next time, you will be loyal to me before you indulge in foolish sympathies." She rose, her eyes flashing. "You belong to me, Vic. I made you."

  "What is that?" he spat. "Some kind of big deal? I belong to myself. You're nothing but a cold, vicious bitch who kills for the fun of it!"

  She threw back her head and laughed loudly. "I never claimed otherwise! You're the one harboring grand delusions of humanity! You're a vampire—start acting like one!"

  Vic turned his back. "I should kill you," he said quietly.

  "What!" Her mouth fell open and she jerked him around to face her. "How dare you—"

  He punched her, watching as though he were someone else as the knuckles of his fist met her jaw with all of his strength. Anyelet hurtled through the air, brightly colored clothes making her look absurdly like a tossed beach ball. She crashed against the far wall at shoulder height, then slid down and sat there, stunned and stuttering.

  "She-bitch."

  He turned and walked out, his stride growing to a full run by the end of the hall. When her howl of rage clamored through the building, he was on the tenth floor and still climbing, headed for a secret storage room in which to hide and lick his wounds.

  "I want him killed," Anyelet said fiercely.

  She glared at the vampires shuffling their feet nervously. How pathetic! Even insane, Rita was a more effective hunter than these soft fools, though now she tended to forget things from one moment to the next. Perhaps there was hope for Gabriel and Werner, but Ron and Jasper were just standing there like automated mannequins waiting for someone to throw the ON switch. Two weeks ago only Rita, Gabriel, and Gregory would have been enough to complete this task.

  Werner dug his fingers deep into the filthy hair that hung to his collarbone. "I dunno," he began, "Vic's awfully big—"

  "I don't CARE!" she screamed. "You just do what I tell you!" She snatched the nearest vampire by the collar, and the middle-aged woman with teased blond curls made a mewling noise as Anyelet shook hen "What is going on here?" she bellowed. "Do I have to kill one of you to prove that I MEAN WHAT I SAY?" She pitched the woman aside.

  "We'll find him, Mistress. Don't worry." Jasper shot the sprawled woman a glance and everyone mumbled their agreement.

  "Good," Anyelet snapped. "Now move it. And don't stop looking until you find him or the sun comes up."

  They scurried from the room and in a moment she was alone again, still boiling inside from Vic's blow. She closed her eyes, then opened them again. Rebuilding was impossible, and she'd finally come to accept that. Not only were the humans depleted nearly to extinction, her so-called children had become so numerous that they had lost that fine sense of obedience that was so critical. Unlike them, she had lived on the blood of rats and wild animals successfully for centuries, and could easily do so again—and not end up like those bedamned nuisances in the subways. Hiding from the sun and from mankind was a simple thing when she could slip deep into the earth and lower her metabolism for literally centuries at a time. There were things to attend to first, though: Rita and the others could not be left to destroy what was left of mankind, if only to ensure a land of plenty when she reemerged.

  And, of course, there was Vic. She rubbed her jaw absently, feeling along the line of bone to where the ridges were almost healed. Her eyes darkened; had his aim been six inches higher, she might be lying dead next to Hugh. A few feet away amid the lobby's ruined furniture and cracked plaster, the old man's body rotted silently on the floor.

  Her eyes narrowed to slits as she headed for the subbasements to join the search. It was time to start cleaning house.

  VII

  March 29

  Liberation

  1

  REVELATION 19:19

  [They] gathered together to make war against her

  that sat on the horse, and her army.

  "Why was Calie acting so strange?" C.J. asked. He and Louise were posted at the door to the Hanley-Dawson body shop; he could hear Alex and the others talking inside. LaSalle Street gleamed with moisture, but the warm sun was already spreading dry patches on the pavement.

  "I don't think she likes me," Louise commented. "She's acted funny ever since we met."

  "Calie acts funny anyway."

  C.J. poked his head inside.

  "What's the holdup?" he yelled. "We should be halfway there!"

  Perlman came out of a darkened doorway grasping a flashlight. "We can't find another tank of oxygen," he complained as he wiped a grimy hand across his nose. "Alex says the one on the cart is nearly empty and it might not be enough."

  "How do you know there is another one?" Louise asked.

  Perlman shrugged. "Mex says there should be. He—"

  "I found it!" came a muffled voice from downstairs. Perlman hurried back down and in a few more minutes the men lugged a heavy cart and tanks onto the main floor.

  "I never heard of such a thing," Alex grumbled. His eyes were swollen and ringed with purple shadows. "Why the hell would they put the extra setup in the basement? It should've been in the body shop."

  Ira hustled into the room with Kyle, a redheaded man in his late forties. "I can't find any spare parts," he told Alex. "They're probably locked up in someone's toolbox."

  "I thought you just needed the oxygen tank," C.J. said. "That's the big one, isn’t it?"

  "Yeah, but the acetylene tank on this one is in better shape," Alex pointed out. "We're better off using the newer equipment." He looked peeved. "It wouldn't hurt to have a spare piece or two, though. I could take the extra one apart… ." He shook his head. "Never mind. We don’t have the time."

&n
bsp; Elliot pushed experimentally on one of the cart's wheels. "This thing's a wreck. We'll be lucky if it doesn’t fall apart."

  "The other one's worse," McDole said. "Stuff's been beat to hell and it's rusted besides."

  "We'll make do." Alex shoved the Winchester awkwardly into his belt and grabbed the cart's handles. "Let's just go. We're an hour behind already."

  "I don't understand why you had to come." C.J. pushed his hand into the pocket of his jeans. "We could've handled this."

  "I never said you couldn't," Louise said. "But Dr. Perlman agreed that having a woman there is going to help calm these people if they start to freak out. You guys are just too … I don’t know. Efficient, maybe. All business and no softness."

  He snorted. "There'll be time for that tomorrow." There was a sharp metallic clatter behind them and someone cussed. The teenagers halted and turned back. "What's wrong?" C.J. asked.

  "One of the wheels snapped off." Elliot grimaced as he inspected the left side. "Damn, I knew this would happen. Can we carry it?"

  "We'll have to." Alex was already sweating from dragging the heavy cart along the bumpy street. He gave Elliot a meaningful look as the blond man started to grab a tank. "Don't try it; we don't need a drip trail from one of those bites. C.J., take the other end of this oxygen tank; Buddy, you and Ed take the acetylene. And look out—these suckers are heavy."

  C.J. handed the bow to Louise, then grunted as he hefted the end of the oxygen tank. "Oh, man," he groaned as they began a slow trek toward Wells Street. After a block, he had to ask. "How much farther do we have to go?"

  "Too far," Ed, a thinner man in his forties, panted.

  "It'd be easier if these things had handles. There's nothing to hold on to. Let's rest," McDole gasped. He and Ed lowered the acetylene tank to the ground and McDole sighed. "Sorry, guys."

  "Doesn't matter," Alex said. "We needed a break anyway. These tanks are bastards—all that concentrated weight."

  Despite his complaints, C.J. didn't even look winded as he squinted at his watch. “Are we going to be able to pull this off?"

  "It's still early," Louise protested.

  “At this speed we won’t get there before noon," C.J. pointed out.

  "That's still enough time," Alex said as he let out a slow breath. "Cutting the chains should go quick. It's getting back to Water Tower that worries me."

  “As long as they can walk, we'll be all right," Perlman interrupted. "To be safe, I'd say we need at least two hours to get them from building to building."

  Alex scowled. "You're really trimming down my time. If there's more than ten or fifteen, or if something goes wrong …”

  Perlman spread his hands. "I'm just trying to make a safe estimate, that’s all. Better to say we need more and have time left over than to run out."

  “All right." McDole squinted and grasped his end of the tank, looking relieved when Perlman took a position in the middle. "Let's go, folks."

  "Jesus," C.J. hissed as he and Alex edged through the doors and peered into the dimness of the Mart's main hallway. "What's that smell?"

  "Rotting meat," Perlman answered softly from behind him. "Someone dead."

  Alex inched along the wall for a few feet, then waved them in. "Clear so far—oh, God." He looked pained as the others filed in. "Here's the smell."

  "Wasn't this the guard?" C.J. asked, wrinkling his nose. "You think no one's watching them now?"

  McDole studied the remains of the man on the floor. "Yeah, this is him," he said in a low tone. "But I wouldn't count on there being no one else up there." He glanced at them. "Don't get reckless."

  "Let's go," Alex said. "Which way?"

  "Third floor in the back," said Frank, a black man nearly McDole's age. He nodded toward the dead man. "That's where I've been seeing this guy move past the windows." His dark eyes were hooded and angry. "Seen him do a lot of other things, too." He cleared his throat gently, then spit a glob of saliva onto the corpse as quietly as possible. The others stared at him and he lifted his chin in defiance. "I didn't do that for you, Dr. Perlman. I did it for those poor people upstairs."

  "Let's go," Alex said again. "We're wasting time down here. Kyle, you know where you're going?" Kyle nodded.

  "Then lead the way."

  2

  REVELATION 22:5

  For the Lord God giveth them light… .

  "I'm sorry," Stephen said again. The woman just stared at him, her face dirty and blank. "You have to understand," he pleaded. "There aren't any keys. She throws them away."

  "Then kill us and get it over with, damn you!" a man yelled from the next room. He banged on the wall furiously.

  Stephen clapped his hands over his ears, squeezing his skull. God, how he wanted to free them! He'd thought he could help them stay warmer and feed them better, let the women start healing now that Howard was gone. But he had been so terribly wrong. They talked to him like they'd never talked to Howard, and asked things of him that he just couldn't do. He would free them in an instant if he could. Other than that …

  He was not a murderer.

  "Please," he offered the pale woman a cup of hot chicken soup made from supplies he'd found stacked in an empty cubicle. "It'll make you feel better." But she just sat, staring at the skirt and jacket he'd given her instead of putting them on. He was afraid to try and dress her, afraid she would think he was Howard all over again. "You should put those on," he prompted, "so you can be warm." Still, she just … sat.

  He sighed and went on to the next, and the next, and the one after that. The response was the same: people so numbed to abuse and the cold that they were unable to respond to what little help he so desperately tried to give. One young man grabbed him and shook him, then released him in disgust; another threw the hot soup in his face and told him he was no better than Siebold.

  When the brown-haired man and the kid with the bow stepped out of the stairwell, Stephen had slipped into a confused, mumbling prayer.

  And he truly believed God had finally heard him.

  3

  REVELATION 16:1

  Go your ways, and pour out the vials of the wrath of God

  upon the earth.

  "This guy's brain is oatmeal," C.J. said. "Look at him." The man still sat on the floor and muttered about God and the hellbeasts that ruled the earth.

  "Forget him," Alex said shortly. "Look at this." He was standing at the door to the first of a long row of tiny offices; inside, a teenage girl gawked at him and struggled frantically to wrap herself in a robe that still bore manufacturer's tags.

  "It’s all right, miss," McDole said in a soothing voice. "We've come to get you out of here." His words simply didn't register. "I said, we've come to get you out of here!" he repeated loudly.

  The hallway erupted with sound. The startled group of rescuers rushed from room to room, trying to calm the frenzied people as cries of "Please!" and "Help!" mingled with sobs and other entreaties, and as they finally quieted, the group realized just how poorly the prisoners had been treated. Most suffered from ongoing exposure and shivered constantly; no doubt more than a few were n the early stages of pneumonia, and almost all of them lad muscle and tissue damage from the chains tightly encircling their ankles. They were malnourished and weak, and Perlman was infuriated when he discovered how badly some of the women had been beaten. When he reached a cubicle containing an obviously pregnant roman, he whirled and strode back to the man on the floor. "Why is that pregnant woman tied?" he demanded. When he received no answer, he raised the man's eyelid with his thumb, released it, then slapped the man sharply. "Snap out of it! We need answers now!"

  Surprisingly, the fellow did try. "She—" He frowned, as though it was difficult to concentrate. "She doesn't want the baby," he finished at last.

  Perlman glowered at him. "Why not?"

  The man blinked and realized they were all staring at him. "Because of Howard," he explained. "It's his.”

  “Who's Howard?" Alex asked.

  "It must
be the dead man downstairs," Frank said. "He made it a daily habit to … have relations with the women."

  "He raped them?" Perlman was so enraged his face was turning crimson.

  "He called it breeding," the white-faced man told them. He struggled to his feet and gazed blearily down the hall. "They aren't doing so good."

  McDole put his hand on the man's arm. "What's your name, son?"

  "Stephen. I'm a …" His words faded away.

  "What?" Elliot prompted.

  Stephen's eyes fogged. "I … don't know. I can't remember."

  Alex clapped his hands briskly and everyone turned their attention to him. His face was determined. "Let's get these people the hell out!"

  "You have to go faster!"

  Alex pushed Stephen away. "Stop it! I don't have time to listen to you!" he snapped.

  "Stephen," Perlman said from behind the emaciated young man, "can you help over here?" Stephen hurried to Perlman's side and began helping with a woman whose expression was dazed as they pulled a heavy sweater over her head, then pushed her feet into a pair of sneakers. Stephen had been foraging haphazardly in the wholesale outlets on the higher floors, running up and down with armloads of mixed-up clothes and shoes. A good thing—none of the rescuers had even considered there wouldn't be clothing available for these people to wear. At the far end of the hallway, Louise was sitting with the pregnant woman and rambling on in a calm voice, talking about how nice it would be for them all to walk around free in the sun again. Stephen hadn't been lying; when the doctor had tried to untie her, she'd gone into a rage and started screaming at him to perform an abortion immediately. He finally had to sedate her and leave her bound; it was a good bit of foresight that he'd thought to bring several Tel-E-Ject syringes of diazepam along with the syringes of V-BAC. Injecting everyone, including Stephen, had been quick and silent; most just sat there and accepted the shot. It was unnerving.

 

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