by Jesse Karp
"Come on," Remak said, his voice harsher without rising at all, his hand out to Laura. She jerked into motion, as though having been held back by an invisible barrier. He grabbed her hand, threw the door open, and ran out with her in tow.
Laura screamed. There were men appearing at the back end of the hall, and even from this distance, she saw the haunting emptiness in their eyes, the void that had been in her parents' eyes the last time she saw them. The first of the men, solidly built, wearing jeans and a plaid hunting shirt, was leveling a shotgun at them.
Remak let go of her hand and grabbed the door he had flung open. Just as the hall boomed with the discharge of the shotgun, he swung the door between them and the men. The sound of metal shot thunking into the wood and striking the metal it was reinforced with carried through the door, and immediately Remak pushed it open again and snapped off a single hissing shot from the hip.
The hunter thrashed, his gun tumbling from his hands, and was flung back as though a rope attached to his back had suddenly pulled taut. He knocked over the man immediately behind him, and the approaching faces retreated behind the door.
Immediately, Laura went into a sprint back down the hall, toward Mal.
"Come on," she said.
"Go, Laura. I'll hold them here," Remak said, pulling the door back for protection.
She skidded to a stop. Leave him here? They needed to—
"Go."
She did, hurling herself toward the door they'd first come through and, as it clicked open before her, throwing herself through it. She was on the balcony, looking down into the foyer.
Bodies were strewn around the front door, either still or writhing on the floor, favoring an injured part. Mal was surrounded by four men, one holding tightly to his arm, the others firing attack after attack at him. Mal slipped, parried, took a blow to his chest. One of the men had a short metal pipe and swung it, only to have Mal's fist come down like a hammer and deflect the pipe into his thigh instead, where it landed with a meaty thwack that made Laura wince and Mal grunt hard.
She started down the stairs and saw, from beneath the steps, Mike come running out, snatch up a wooden stick on the floor, and lay awkwardly but fiercely into the head of the man with the pipe. The man turned just in time to catch another blow across the face that cracked the stick in two and sent him to the floor, inert.
Mike staggered back, his eyes wide, thunderstruck at the loss of his weapon. Mal had taken advantage of the opportunity to grab the neck of the man holding his left arm and swing his head hard into the face of one of the two others. The skulls met with a shocking sound that made Laura want to vomit, and Mal finished by plunging his fist into the face of the man he held by the throat. Both men went down, the second only after Mal released him.
She saw something in Mal that she had thought absent, despite his history, a steady, controlled fire lighting his features. Now she realized it had always been present, only contained. There was a whirlwind in Mal, and it had burst out of him.
Even if she had not seen it in the emptiness in the last man's eyes, it was obvious to Laura that he was being controlled by something. What sort of a fool would throw a punch at an enemy who had just taken out so many opponents?
But the man did. He threw a slow fist before him, and Mal avoided it with a minimal tick of his head, bringing the man down with a merciless fist that seemed to dislocate his jaw.
And instantly, Mal's body faltered. He held his feet, but the injuries to his leg, torso, and head were immediately clear from the way he turned and moved.
"Where's Remak?" Mike shouted at her from just a few feet away.
"Coming." She glanced back up at the balcony. "He's coming."
Some of the bodies around them were beginning to rise, their injuries obvious but not stopping them. Three who still stood but had retreated to corners took tentative steps forward.
"We have to go," Mal said in a rough, hoarse voice.
"Who has the keycard?" Mike demanded, already knowing it was Remak. "Shit!"
Laura's frantic eyes saw a chain of actual old-fashioned keys hanging from the back pocket of a man at Mal's feet. She stooped down and tore it off.
"Go," she said to Mike, grabbing Mal's arm. Supporting him would have been a trick, but he carried himself, limping badly on one leg as they careened out the door and down the stairway.
There were five keys on the ring, but only one of them fit a car, and it worked on the third one she tried, a dented blue Chevy adorned with ancient streaks of rust. When the door was opened, she flung the keys to Mike and began helping Mal into the back.
"Uh," Mike said, holding the keys before him, "I can't drive."
"What?"
"Look," he said, incensed by the question regardless of the situation, "not everybody in the whole goddamned world knows how, okay? I failed my test and didn't bother going back—I live in New York City, for Christ's sake. Is that okay with you?"
She snatched the keys back and helped Mal lower himself into the front passenger seat, then raced around and got in.
The car closed and locked, they sat and stared at the open doorway of the house. They could see bodies moving up the stairs. Two faces appeared in the doorway, scanning them with lifeless gazes.
"Start the engine," Mike said from the back, his hand gripping the front seat hard.
"What about Jon?"
Remak fired a shot down the hall into the wall, causing the man reaching for the shotgun to retreat once again. There was a single bullet left.
"There are more men coming up the front stairs as well," the Librarian's voice echoed just behind him in the metal room. "They're injured, but there's a substantial number."
Remak turned toward the door at the front of the hall, awaiting the rush.
"There's a room across the hall from you," the voice said. "There's equipment in it you might be able to use, and another way out. Go fast—there isn't much time left."
Remak didn't hesitate.
"God help you," the Librarian's voice echoed as Remak left it behind him.
Three men were coming out of the house, one armed with a pipe, another with a bat. They favored their injured parts, but they were being driven by a force beyond them.
"We can't wait," Mike said. "Who knows what else is coming this way? Remak has the keys. If he makes it out, he c an—"
"I'll go back in for him," Mal said, smearing his headrest with blood.
A rush of flame burst through the windows of the top floor, followed immediately by a low whumpf. Almost instantly, another burst shattered the second-floor windows, the charred curtains flapping outward on the wave of heat. Men were tumbling out of the building now, some staggering, others being carried. Finally, flame rushed out after them from the ground floor as well.
"Okay, go ahead," Mike said from the back.
"Oh, God," Laura said. "Jon."
The three approaching men had not even turned to see the flame engulfing the house. A mere ten feet away, one of them raised his pipe.
"Go! Would you go, for the love of God?" Mike yelled.
The pipe flew from the man's hand and rang off the windshield, leaving a spider web of cracks in front of Laura's face. She stamped down on the gas and swung the wheel so that the car slewed to the side. The man with the bat ran up and swung it down, creating another chaos of fissures along the side window, even as the car thumped into him and sent him careening backwards.
The last man chased the car futilely as it gathered speed down the lawn and onto the gravel road. They raced away, and the sight of the weird, empty men gathering before the burning house disappeared around a bend of forest.
THE ROAD
LAURA WAS CRUISING as fast as she could along bumpy side roads, avoiding the highway but trying to run parallel to it. They were speeding toward the nearest town with a train station, according to a tattered map that had been in the car. Luck had been with them for a change. The car they'd stolen—yes, Laura realized with a shock: she was a ca
r thief now—was old enough that it had no GPS to track them by, but did have a veritable atlas of old road maps crammed into the glove compartment. Once they got there, they could ditch this thing and go ... somewhere. Laura squinted to see through the cracks in the windshield. The black night rushed by them, skeletal trees and jagged rocks lit up at the edges of their path.
Silence hung heavy in here. Laura had described the conversation with the Librarian, and without Remak here to usher them through the full understanding of it, each wrestled with it in his or her own mind.
"It isn't over for us, you know," Laura said, and received a snorting bark of laughter from Mike in back. "It's not. It hasn't won, yet. We're still here, aren't we?"
"Some of us," Mike said. "Or did you forget about Remak already? It has won. We just keep running away from the consequences."
"No," Laura said absently, her mind moving toward something else. "It hasn't, because it's not inside us." She looked at Mal. "Why isn't it inside us?"
Mal looked back, short on answers, but holding her eyes as long as he could.
"Teenagers," Mike said acidly, sick of the bond that had formed between the two of them. "Teenagers are what ruined my life."
"You're a teacher," Laura said, turning her eyes back on the rushing road ahead. "And that's your attitude?"
"What the hell do you know about it?" Mike demanded. "What the hell do you know about teaching and what the hell do you know about kids?"
"I teach sometimes," Mal said. "Coach little kids, I mean."
"You're a damned kid yourself. You teach them what, exactly? How to beat the shit out of people?" Mike would not give an inch.
"No." Mal stiffened in his seat. "Discipline, confidence. I treat them with respect and I teach them to show respect."
"Well," Mike said, his shadowed face deepening into a scowl, "I want to personally thank you on behalf of every teacher, every real teacher, who was ever ignored or cursed at or attacked with a knife in a hallway. Thanks for getting those really, really important messages through to our kids."
Laura's instinct was to intervene, to defuse this the way she defused her mother's depression, her father's ire, once upon a time. But was there a point here? Would either of them ever give up?
No. Laura flinched at the realization. Neither of them would ever give up.
"This thing that's after us, " she said, "it lives in people's heads. It makes them think and do things they wouldn't normally think or do. That's why our friends, our families don't remember us. This thing is in their heads, and it took those memories away."
"It's made out of our fear, or our desperation," Mike interrupted her, a disembodied voice from the darkness in back. "I see it every day when I look at a classroom of kids who gave up. I see it in other teachers. I see it in the mirror every goddamned morning. It looks exactly like those people at the Librarian's house did, exactly like Brath did before he shot Isabel. It looks like everybody you walk by on every street in the world."
"No," Laura said. "That's not true."
"It is true!" Mike shouted from the back. "You know it's true! It's in us right now, and that's why we're all fucked!"
"No." Laura's voice was consumed with a preternatural calm. "It's not true. It's not in all of us. That's why it's chasing us instead of just making us want to crash into a tree. It can't control some of us."
"Our dreams," Mal said quietly.
"Yes," Laura said. "Our dreams. That was the meme, hopelessness, whatever you want to call it, trying to take us over and not being able to. You, Me, Mike, Jon. And Isabel."
"Why?" Mike said, his voice smaller now. "What makes us so special?"
"Mal," she said with serene self-assurance, "how did you do that, back in the house? I saw a fight once, between my high school football team and another team. One punch was enough to put someone out of it. What's your trick?"
"There is no trick." The green and blue light off the dashboard instrumentation made the yellow and purple bruises on Mal's face glow weirdly, turning them into a partial mask.
"You just take it," Laura said, completing Mal's unspoken answer.
Laura had seen the picture of Tommy and Annie; Mal had showed it to her on the bus ride back from East Woodman. Tommy looked like a thinner, shorter Mal. Where the younger brother's face was somber but unyielding, the older brother's was impatient, lines of anger etched permanently around his eyes. But Tommy looked happy, in the picture at least, standing in the sun with his arm around a girl he loved. Annie was softer, her happiness fresher and without a history. Yet there was a sense in her of something else. Laura knew she must certainly be projecting this onto the picture, but it looked as if there was an undeniable melancholy to Annie's happiness, that she knew even then what was coming.
That image was Mal's goal, the brother he believed he had a debt to. But it was not the reason he was going on. Mal was going on because it was all he knew how to do. He fought with his life every day. Laura had never faced a future without certainty, without family, without a clear path before her, until now. But that was the future Mal stared down every day. What had he said? You make your own future. And Mal kept moving toward it because he simply refused to go down.
"You just take it," she said again. Mal looked at her, confused at the import she put into the words. He might not have understood it about himself, but she could tell Mike had caught on from his silence.
"Jon," she said, "believes he has a duty to solve this. He's, like, a scientist and a soldier. He said it himself when he was talking about his dream. He has a duty to figure this out."
"He was a scientist and a soldier," Mike said. "Now he's just dead."
"We don't know that," Mal said.
"Please."
"Even if he is," Laura said, "all it could do was kill him. It can never really have him the way it did those people." Or my parents, Laura thought, and her heart fluttered.
"Killing him isn't bad enough?" Mike muttered. "You talk about fighting, about going on no matter what, like you know it from the movies or something. It's not all cool and dramatic. It sucks ass. It's what happens when everything you care about is gone, when you have to face the worst things about yourself and you still keep going. It doesn't feel impressive and powerful when you're doing it; it just fucking hurts. Do you know that?"
"Yes," Laura said, and her calm had broken, her jaw trembling. "I know that. And I know that you do, too."
She heard Mike shift, set up an angry response.
"Mike," she said, hoping to cut it off. "Why are you a teacher? You seem to despise it and the students. Why are you doing it?"
She looked into the shadowy depths of the back seat, and Mike's eyes glistened back out at her.
"When I was a kid," he said in an even voice, "my mother had a scolding chair. That's where you sat when you were in trouble, so Mom could give it to you real good. Over Mom's shoulder, if you were sitting in the chair, there were all these faces staring back like judges. That was the family wall: all the great Boothes throughout history." He let out a choked, ridiculous laugh at that. "Really, most of the pictures were of my grandfather, as a young man, as a teenager, in the army, his framed medal, family gathered around his grave. Granddad was the great wonder of the Boothe line, the one great success that made the rest of us fuck-ups look that much worse. See, while he was stationed in Texas, waiting for his assignment, a fire broke out in his barracks. Granddad—well, back then he was only a father to two children he saw about two days a year—Granddad rushed in and pulled out three GIs with his own hands. He went back in for a fourth and never came out. We weren't even at war. It was an accident, a fire. So, do you see what the great success of the Boothe lineage was?"
Sacrifice, Laura thought with admiration.
"Giving up our own, worthless lives." Mike laughed a high-pitched shrill that threatened to go on and topple him into madness. But suddenly he recovered and pulled himself up just inches from Laura's ear.
"So why do I teach these kids
? That was your question? I do it because somebody has to do it," he said. "Anyone can teach smart, ass-kissing suburban kids like you, Laura. Somebody has to suffer and teach the kids who can't be taught. And since my life is a towering pile of crap anyway, why not me?"
Laura saw it: the kids he was talking about hadn't stolen his life; he had given it to them. He had sacrificed his life to them, thinking that only in that sacrifice could he give his life value. The realization caught in Laura's throat. She was flummoxed, not out of pity, but out of awe.
The car was quiet and bumpy for a long stretch of the black expanse outside the cracked windows.
"What about you?" Mal said to her. "Why aren't you giving up?"
"I feel like"—she fumbled for the right words—"I don't know. It's hard to say. My parents have given me ... I feel like I owe something to the world, to make it better. To make it a place where the fear and desperation that Mike talked about can't be used as a weapon. I guess the reason I'm not giving up is for the future."
Mal looked like he wanted to reach out and touch her, and she wanted him to. But her hands were locked white-knuckled on the jittering steering wheel. And there was another thought that came unbidden into her head.
"What I can't figure out is how it got my parents," she said. "They made me this way, didn't they? They always pushed and pushed to give me a good life. To give me the future I'm talking about. Why couldn't they find strength in that, too?"
"Because they're those kind of parents," Mike said. "The kind that make your life into theirs, that hover over every decision like the world is hanging on it."
"You make that sound like a bad thing," Mal said, his question coming from some deep place inside his own head.
"No," Mike said in a voice steadier and more resolute than he had ever used in Mal and Laura's experience; as if for just a moment, he was talking about something he actually believed. "Whatever strength they had before they were parents, it's all concentrated now. Because everything changes when you become that kind of a parent, and it only takes one thing to upset your precariously balanced strength. Whatever this is, a meme"—he said the word as if it tasted bad—"it climbed into them and took away the one thing they couldn't go on without: you, Laura."