by Clive Barker
“Fuck you,” he said and beat another stake under the stone. His back felt as though it was about to break. On his right hand a blister had bust. A cleg sat on his arm and feasted itself, unswatted.
“Do it. Do it. Do it.” He beat the last stake in without knowing he was doing it.
And then, the stone began to roll.
He wasn’t even touching it. The stone was being pushed out of its seating from beneath. He reached for his spade, which was still wedged beneath the stone. He suddenly felt possessive of it; it was his, a part of him, and he didn’t want it near the hole. Not now; not with the stone rocking like it had a geyser under it about to blow. Not with the air yellow, and his brain swelling up like a marrow in August.
He pulled hard on his spade: it wouldn’t come.
He cursed it, and took two hands to the job, keeping at arm’s length from the hole as he hauled, the increasing motion of the stone slinging up showers of soil, lice, and pebbles.
He heaved at the spade again, but it wouldn’t give. He didn’t stop to analyze the situation. The work had sickened him, all he wanted was to get his spade, his spade, out of the hole and get the hell out of there.
The stone bucked, but still he wouldn’t let go of the spade, it had become fixed in his head that he had to have it before he could leave. Only when it was back in his hands, safe and sound, would he obey his bowels, and run.
Beneath his feet the ground began to erupt. The stone rolled away from the tomb as if feather light, a second cloud of gas, more obnoxious than the first, seemed to blow it on its way. At the same time the spade came out of the hole, and Thomas saw what had hold of it.
Suddenly there was no sense in heaven or earth.
There was a hand, a living hand, clutching the spade, a hand so wide it could grasp the blade with ease.
Thomas knew the moment well. The splitting earth: the hand: the stench. He knew it from some nightmare he’d heard at his father’s knee.
Now he wanted to let go of the spade, but he no longer had the will. All he could do was obey some imperative from underground, to haul until his ligaments tore and his sinews bled.
Beneath the thin crust of earth, Rawhead smelt the sky. It was pure ether to his dulled senses, making him sick with pleasure. Kingdoms for the taking, just a few inches away. After so many years, after the endless suffocation, there was light on his eyes again, and the taste of human terror on his tongue.
His head was breaking surface now, his black hair wreathed with worms, his scalp seething with tiny red spiders. They’d irritated him a hundred years, those spiders burrowing into his marrow, and he longed to crush them out. Pull, pull, he willed the human, and Thomas Garrow pulled until his pitiful body had no strength left, and inch by inch Rawhead was hoisted out of his grave in a shroud of prayers.
The stone that had pressed on him for so long had been removed, and he was dragging himself up easily now, sloughing off the grave earth like a snake its skin. His torso was free. Shoulders twice as broad as a man’s; lean, scarred arms stronger than any human. His limbs were pumping with blood like a butterfly’s wings, juicing with resurrection. His long, lethal fingers rhythmically clawed the ground as they gained strength.
Thomas Garrow just stood and watched. There was nothing in him but awe. Fear was for those who still had a chance of life: he had none.
Rawhead was out of his grave completely. He began to stand upright for the first in centuries. Clods of damp soil fell from his torso as he stretched to his full height, a yard above Garrow’s six feet.
Thomas Garrow stood in Rawhead’s shadow with his eyes still fixed on the gaping hole the King had risen from. In his right hand he still clutched his spade. Rawhead picked him up by the hair. His scalp tore under the weight of his body, so Rawhead seized Garrow round the neck, his vast hand easily enclosing it.
Blood ran down Garrow’s face from his scalp, and the sensation stirred him. Death was imminent, and he knew it. He looked down at his legs, thrashing uselessly below him, then he looked up and stared directly into Rawhead’s pitiless face.
It was huge, like the harvest moon, huge and amber. But this moon had eyes that burned in its pallid, pitted face. They were for all the world like wounds, those eyes, as though somebody had gouged them in the flesh of Rawhead’s face then set two candles to flicker in the holes.
Garrow was entranced by the vastness of this moon. He looked from eye to eye, and then to the wet slits that were its nose, and finally, in a childish terror, down to the mouth. God, that mouth. It was so wide, so cavernous it seemed to split the head in two as it opened. That was Thomas Garrow’s last thought. That the moon was splitting in two, and falling out of the sky on top of him.
Then the King inverted the body, as had always been his way with his dead enemies, and drove Thomas head first into the hole, winding him down into the very grave his forefathers had intended to bury Rawhead in forever.
By the time the thunderstorm proper broke over Zeal, the King was a mile away from the Three Acre Field, sheltering in the Nicholson barn. In the village everyone went about their business, rain or no rain. Ignorance was bliss. There was no Cassandra amongst them, nor had “Your Future in the Stars” in that week’s “Gazette” even hinted at the sudden deaths to come to a Gemini, three Leos, a Sagittarian and a minor star system of others in the next few days.
The rain had come with the thunder, fat cool spots of it, which rapidly turned into a downpour of monsoonal ferocity. Only when the gutters became torrents did people begin to take shelter.
On the building site the earth mover that had been roughly landscaping Ronnie Milton’s back garden sat idling in the rain, receiving a second washdown in two days. The driver had taken the downpour as a signal to retire into the hut to talk race horses and women.
In the doorway of the Post Office three of the villagers watched the drains backing up, and tutted that this always happened when it rained, and in half an hour there’d be a pool of water in the dip at the bottom of the High Street so deep you could sail a boat on it.
And down in the dip itself, in the vestry of St. Peter’s, Declan Ewan, the Verger, watched the rain pelting down the hill in eager rivulets, and gathering into a little sea outside the vestry gate. Soon be deep enough to drown in, he thought, and then, puzzled by why he imagined drowning, he turned away from the window and went back to the business of folding vestments. A strange excitement was in him today: and he couldn’t, wouldn’t, didn’t want to suppress it. It was nothing to do with the thunderstorm, though he’d always loved them since he was a child. No: there was something else stirring him up, and he was damned if he knew what. It was like being a child again. As if it was Christmas, and any minute Santa, the first Lord he’d ever believed in, would be at the door. The very idea made him want to laugh out loud, but the vestry was too sober a place for laughter, and he stopped himself, letting the smile curl inside him, a secret hope.
While everyone else took refuge from the rain, Gwen Nicholson was getting thoroughly drenched. She was still in the yard behind the house, coaxing Amelia’s pony towards the barn. The thunder had made the stupid beast jittery, and it didn’t want to budge. Now Gwen was soaked and angry.
“Will you come on, you brute?” she yelled at it over the noise of the storm. The rain lashed the yard, and pummelled the top of her head. Her hair was flattened. “Come on! Come on!”
The pony refused to budge. Its eyes showed crescents of white in its fear. And the more the thunder rolled and crackled around the yard the less it wanted to move. Angrily, Gwen slapped it across the backside, harder than she strictly needed to. It took a couple of steps in response to the blow, dropping steaming turds as it went, and Gwen took the advantage. Once she had it moving she could drag it the rest of the way.
“Warm barn,” she promised it; “Come on, it’s wet out here, you don’t want to stay out here.”
The barn door was slightly ajar. Surely it must look like an inviting prospect, she thought, eve
n to a pea-brained pony. She dragged it to within spitting distance of the barn, and one more slap got it through the door.
As she’d promised the damn thing, the interior of the barn was sweet and dry, though the air smelt metallic with the storm. Gwen tied the pony to the crossbar in its stall and roughly threw a blanket over its glistening hide. She was damned if she was going to swab the creature down, that was Amelia’s job. That was the bargain she’d made with her daughter when they’d agreed to buy the pony: that all the grooming and clearing out would be Amelia’s responsibility, and to be fair to her, she’d done what she promised, more or less.
The pony was still panicking. It stamped and rolled its eyes like a bad tragedian. There were flecks of foam on its lips. A little apologetically Gwen patted its flank. She’d lost her temper. Time of the month. Now she regretted it. She only hoped Amelia hadn’t been at her bedroom window watching.
A gust of wind caught the barn door and it swung closed. The sound of rain on the yard outside was abruptly muted. It was suddenly dark.
The pony stopped stamping. Gwen stopped stroking its side. Everything stopped: her heart too, it seemed.
Behind her a figure that was almost twice her size rose from beyond the bales of hay. Gwen didn’t see the giant, but her innards churned. Damn periods, she thought, rubbing her lower belly in a slow circle. She was normally as regular as clockwork, but this month she’d come on a day early. She should go back to the house, get changed, get clean.
Rawhead stood and looked at the nape of Gwen Nicholson’s neck, where a single nip would easily kill. But there was no way he could bring himself to touch this woman; not today. She had the blood cycle on her, he could taste its tang, and it sickened him. It was taboo, that blood, and he had never taken a woman poisoned by its presence.
Feeling the damp between her legs, Gwen hurried out of the barn without looking behind her, and ran through the downpour back to the house, leaving the fretting pony in the darkness of the barn.
Rawhead heard the woman’s feet recede, heard the house-door slam.
He waited, to be sure she wouldn’t come back, then he padded across to the animal, reached down and took hold of it. The pony kicked and complained, but Rawhead had in his time taken animals far bigger and far better armed than this.
He opened his mouth. The gums were suffused with blood as the teeth emerged from them, like claws unsheathed from a cat’s paw. There were two rows on each jaw, two dozen needle-sharp points. They gleamed as they closed around the meat of the pony’s neck. Thick, fresh blood poured down Rawhead’s throat; he gulped it greedily. The hot taste of the world. It made him feel strong and wise. This was only the first of many meals he would take, he’d gorge on anything that took his fancy and nobody would stop him, not this time. And when he was ready he’d throw those pretenders off his throne, he’d cremate them in their houses, he’d slaughter their children and wear their infants’ bowels as necklaces. This place was his. Just because they’d tamed the wilderness for a while didn’t mean they owned the earth. It was his, and nobody would take it from him, not even the holiness. He was wise to that too. They’d never subdue him again.
He sat cross-legged on the floor of the barn, the grey-pink intestines of the pony coiled around him, planning his tactics as best he could. He’d never been a great thinker. Too much appetite: it overwhelmed his reason. He lived in the eternal present of his hunger and his strength, feeling only the crude territorial instinct that would sooner or later blossom into carnage.
The rain didn’t let up for over an hour.
Ron Milton was becoming impatient: a flaw in his nature that had given him an ulcer and a top flight job in Design Consultancy. What Milton could get done for you, couldn’t be done quicker. He was the best: and he hated sloth in other people as much as in himself. Take this damn house, for instance. They’d promised it would be finished by mid-July, garden landscaped, driveway laid, everything, and here he was, two months after that date, looking at a house that was still far from habitable. Half the windows without glass, the front door missing, the garden an assault course, the driveway a mire.
This was to be his castle: his retreat from a world that made him dyspeptic and rich. A haven away from the hassles of the city, where Maggie could grow roses, and the children could breathe clean air. Except that it wasn’t ready. Damn it, at this rate he wouldn’t be in until next spring. Another winter in London: the thought made his heart sink.
Maggie joined him, sheltering him under her red umbrella.
“Where are the kids?” he asked.
She grimaced. “Back at the hotel, driving Mrs. Blatter crazy.”
Enid Blatter had borne their cavortings for half a dozen weekends through the summer. She’d had kids of her own, and she handled Debbie and Ian with aplomb. But there was a limit, even to her fund of mirth and merriment.
“We’d better get back to town.”
“No. Please let’s stay another day or two. We can go back on Sunday evening. I want us all to go to the Harvest Festival Service on Sunday.”
Now it was Ron’s turn to grimace.
“Oh hell.”
“It’s all part of village life, Ronnie. If we’re going to live here, we have to become part of the community.”
He whined like a little boy when he was in this kind of mood. She knew him so well she could hear his next words before he said them.
“I don’t want to.”
“Well we’ve no choice.”
“We can go back tonight.”
“Ronnie—”
“There’s nothing we can do here. The kids are bored, you’re miserable ...”
Maggie had set her features in concrete; she wasn’t going to budge an inch. He knew that face as well as she knew his whining.
He studied the puddles that were forming in what might one day be their front garden, unable to imagine grass there, roses there. It all suddenly seemed impossible.
“You go back to town if you like, Ronnie. Take the kids. I’ll stay here. Train it home on Sunday night.”
Clever, he thought, to give him a get out that’s more unattractive than staying put. Two days in town looking after the kids alone? No thank you.
“O.K. You win. We’ll go to the Harvest-bloody-Festival.”
“Martyr.”
“As long as I don’t have to pray.”
Amelia Nicholson ran into the kitchen, her round face white, and collapsed in front of her mother. There was greasy vomit on her green plastic mackintosh, and blood on her green plastic Wellingtons.
Gwen yelled for Denny. Their little girl was shivering in her faint, her mouth chewing at a word, or words, that wouldn’t come.
“What is it?”
Denny was thundering down the stairs.
“For Christ’s sake—”
Amelia was vomiting again. Her face was practically blue.
“What’s wrong with her?”
“She just came in. You’d better ring for an ambulance.”
Denny put his hand on her cheek.
“She’s in shock.”
“Ambulance, Denny ...” Gwen was taking off the green mackintosh, and loosening the child’s blouse. Slowly, Denny stood up. Through the rain-laced window he could see into the yard: the barn door flapped open and closed in the wind. Somebody was inside; he glimpsed movement.
“For Christ’s sake—ambulance!” Gwen said again.
Denny wasn’t listening. There was somebody in his barn, on his property, and he had a strict ritual for trespassers.
The barn door opened again, teasing. Yes! Retreating into the dark. Interloper.
He picked up the rifle beside the door, keeping his eyes on the yard as much as he could. Behind him, Gwen had left Amelia on the kitchen floor and was dialing for help. The girl was moaning now: she was going to be O.K. Just some filthy trespasser scaring her, that’s all. On his land.
He opened the door and stepped into the yard. He was in his shirtsleeves and the wind was b
itingly cold, but the rain had stopped. Underfoot the ground glistened, and drips fell from every eave and portico, a fidgety percussion that accompanied him across the yard.
The barn door swung listlessly ajar again, and this time stayed open. He could see nothing inside. Half wondered if a trick of the light had—
But no. He’d seen someone moving in here. The barn wasn’t empty. Something (not the pony) was watching him even now. They’d see the rifle in his hands, and they’d sweat. Let them. Come into his place like that. Let them think he was going to blow their balls off.
He covered the distance in a half a dozen confident strides and stepped into the barn.
The pony’s stomach was beneath his shoe, one of its legs to his right, the upper shank gnawed to the bone. Pools of thickening blood reflected the holes in the roof. The mutilation made him want to heave.
“All right,” he challenged the shadows. “Come out.” He raised his rifle. “You hear me you bastard? Out I said, or I’ll blow you to Kingdom Come.”
He meant it too.
At the far end of the barn something stirred amongst the bales.
Now I’ve got the son of a bitch, thought Denny. The trespasser got up, all nine feet of him, and stared at Denny.
“Jee-sus.”
And without warning it was coming at him, coming like a locomotive smooth and efficient. He fired into it, and the bullet struck its upper chest, but the wound hardly slowed it.
Nicholson turned and ran. The stones of the yard were slippery beneath his shoes, and he had no turn of speed to outrun it. It was at his back in two beats, and on him in another.
Gwen dropped the phone when she heard the shot. She raced to the window in time to see her sweet Denny eclipsed by a gargantuan form. It howled as it took him, and threw him up into the air like a sack of feathers. She watched helplessly as his body twisted at the apex of its journey before plummeting back down to earth again. It hit the yard with a thud she felt in her every bone, and the giant was at his body like a shot, treading his loving face to muck.