The Midnight Games

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The Midnight Games Page 1

by Lee, David Neil;




  About the Book

  In the gritty steel town of Hamilton, Nate Silva has grown up with the familiar racket of football games from nearby Ivor Wynne Stadium. But now strange noises and music are coming from the stadium late at night, and the air throbs with the chanting of excited crowds. When Nate sneaks into one of these midnight games, he comes face to face with the fanatical followers of the Resurrection Church of the Ancient Gods, who are using mind control and human sacrifice in an attempt to summon the Great Old Ones who ruled the planet aeons ago. Nate tries to navigate this dangerous new world, but soon he’s pursued by members of the Resurrection Church and is targeted by the murderous Hounds of Tindalos. With the help of the Lovecraft Underground, an outspoken librarian and a being from across the boundaries Nate struggles to keep the old gods away from his city, whatever the cost.

  THE

  MIDNIGHT

  GAMES

  David Neil Lee

  To Malcolm & Simon

  The world is what

  you imagine it to be.

  Contents

  PART 1

  PROLOGUE

  CHAPTER 1: SOMETHING HAPPENS

  CHAPTER 2: SOMETHING FOLLOWING

  CHAPTER 3: SOMETHING BESTOWED

  CHAPTER 4: SOMETHING SCUTTLING

  CHAPTER 5: SOMETHING BIG

  CHAPTER 6: SOMETHING ARISES

  CHAPTER 7: SOMETHING MALIGN

  CHAPTER 8: SOMETHING DREAMED

  CHAPTER 9: SOMETHING STOLEN

  CHAPTER 10: SOMETHING ROCKY

  CHAPTER 11: SOMEONE EXILED

  CHAPTER 12: SOMETHING IN THE DARK

  PART 2

  CHAPTER 13: ENEMIES OF THE CHURCH

  CHAPTER 14: HPL

  CHAPTER 15: SNATCHED

  CHAPTER 16: INVASIVE SPECIES

  CHAPTER 17: SECRET HISTORIES

  CHAPTER 18: THE DISANGLED SANCTUARY

  CHAPTER 19: EVIE

  CHAPTER 20: THOSE WHO WOULD DESTROY US

  CHAPTER 21: TRICKADRITCH

  CHAPTER 22: THE GHOST TRAIN

  PART 3

  CHAPTER 23: DOOMED

  CHAPTER 24: THE HOUNDS

  CHAPTER 25: SORCERER

  CHAPTER 26: AFTERMATH

  CHAPTER 27: THE SURVIVORS

  CHAPTER 28: RESURRECTION

  CHAPTER 29: A MESSAGE FROM THE BORDER LANDS

  Acknowledgements

  About the Author

  PART 1

  THE STADIUM

  The world is what

  you imagine it to be.

  Then, something happens.

  PROLOGUE

  Looking back at that first night, wiser now (I guess) than I was then, I should have said to Dana, “Turn back – let’s forget about the whole thing. Because if we don’t, terrible things will happen. To you especially.”

  This is what they call the wisdom of hindsight. We can construct whole fantasy worlds around how things might have been ... if somehow we had made that decision instead of this decision. Dana would still be with us, and overall there would have been less fear, fuss and collateral damage. Although Dad and I have never had it all that easy, my life would still be going along in a more or less predictable way.

  Or everything might be changed, changed horribly, beyond recognition, and we would all be, if not dead, then thoroughly shafted, and this delicate endangered world that supports us would be doomed. So what if I had kept Dana out of the midnight games, what if I had turned him back, what if we had stayed out of Ivor Wynne Stadium that October night?

  “Let’s turn back, Dana, because if we don’t, terrible things will happen. To you especially,” I’d have said. He would have looked up at me surprised, his face pale in the distant glare of the street lights.

  Dana had led me to a shadowy corner at the stadium’s south end – away from the excited crowd, which I knew from experience was not your standard football crowd, pouring through the front gates: the screaming children and ponytailed women, the men wearing RESURRECTION CHURCH OF THE ANCIENT GODS T-shirts, or baseball caps with the now-familiar logo:

  According to Dana, we could break into the stadium by somehow, without hacksaws or bolt cutters, severing the steel anchors of its chain-link fence. Here in the shadow of the bleachers, he bent to this task, but if I could do it all over I would say, “Get out of here, man. Out of this neighbourhood, this city. As far away as possible from Hamilton, especially from here in the east end, where dark things and pissheads and evil powers are gathering and scheming to strike at me and tonight, even more so, to strike at you. We’re both in great danger ...”

  And so on. Then, respecting my new powers of prophecy, Dana would shrug: “Hey man, if you say so.” He would fold up his pocket knife and head back to wherever he spent his nights. So even though I will never see him again, even though it means I feel myself missing Dana – who, although technically homeless, had become a part of this beat-up old neighbourhood; I guess I would even call him a friend – for his sake, I’m glad he’s gone.

  But who am I kidding? It would never happen that way.

  Okay – if through some miracle, I’d had this flash of foresight, I would still have needed a lot more in the way of evidence. Otherwise, Dana would have looked up, he might have paused for a second, but he would have just snickered.

  “Come off it, Nate. Terrible stuff has happened to me already. Why do you think I got no fixed address?” He would have returned to his work, his thin blade miraculously slicing through the wire anchors. “Terrible stuff still happens to me,” he’d say over his shoulder, “on a daily basis. No fixed address for eight freakin’ years.”

  But hindsight is useless, as my dad has always been fond of pointing out. “If I had known then what I know now...” is one of his favourite precursors to an extended reminiscence that is sure to include his constant striving, occasional triumphs, even months and years of being “on a roll,” but an admission that if you stood back and looked at the big picture, what you’d see was, basically, failure. He’d prop it up with a conclusion that up to now, I’d always found depressing. “What the heck, you never know.” Dad would shrug. “You just hafta keep on keeping on.”

  I guess at some point or another, terrible things happen to everybody, though some stuff is more terrible than others. Even normal everyday life is often a frightening and dangerous proposition – I’d never thought of it this way before until it was pointed out to me, in person, by the man who claimed to be none other than H. P. Lovecraft himself.

  “Nate my boy,” he said sombrely. “As I’ve written, the oldest and strongest emotion of mankind is fear, and the oldest and strongest kind of fear ...”

  But I’m getting ahead of myself. Let me tell you how all this started.

  CHAPTER 1

  SOMETHING HAPPENS

  Here in the east end, it’s nothing new to see a rundown European church – Polish, Ukrainian, Italian – suddenly turn Asian, its faded signs freshly painted over in Korean or Vietnamese. Along Barton Street, everything from Satan to cannabis has its house of worship. In this neighbourhood, churches loudly promise everything from cancer cures to “glorious rapture” (better, I guess, than the regular rapture). They are just a few of the many enterprises that explode into life, like aliens from a more cheerful planet, cleaning and painting the empty storefronts, putting up a brave face for months or years, waiting for their offerings to catch on, their sparkly display windows gradually turning dull and dusty, before eventually turning off the lights for good, covering the windows with a fresh set of newspapers and heading home.

  The first I saw of the Resurrection Church was graffiti: a few words hovering around a logo that looked different every time I saw it drawn with magic marker or brush or spray can. Someti
mes it looked like a math problem, sometimes like some weird musical notation, sometimes like a single staring eye.

  THEY RETURN!

  Just this past summer, on a hot day down by the railway tracks, I had been searching for praying mantises with my friend Sam Shirazi. We had gone down to the end of Markle Avenue, just off the rarely used train line that curved through our neighbourhood into the north end; a no man’s land of belching chimneys (mostly gone cold) and vast catwalked factories and crumbling parking lots. Markle led to an abandoned chain factory in the corner of an empty parking lot ringed by dusty underbrush. Behind it, rusted metal smokestacks from an old incinerator still stood – barely stood, it looked to me, getting rustier every year. But that day, the old brick building was showing some action. There were cars parked there, and a sign over the logo proclaimed this as the Resurrection Church of the Ancient Gods.

  “Funny place for a church,” I said.

  Sam responded, “There’s a guy in there looking at us.”

  “We’re not on their property. We’ve got every right to be here.”

  “Now he’s talking to that other guy. Let’s get out of here.”

  “Who cares?” I said. “They look like redneck losers.”

  “Nate. Yeah,” Sam replied.

  Sam knows more than I do about run-ins with rednecks. I conceded and we headed back down the tracks. My dad’s family is Portuguese and my mom, as I recall her, was some kind of blonde, so I look more or less white-bread Canadian. But sometimes Sam gets a hard time from the guys at school who run in gangs and sneer and bully and, when they figure they can get away with it, punch out anyone outside the gang. At first I’d thought it might be both funny and instructive to point out their feeble knowledge of geography, since they call Sam “Paki” even though he and his family are from Iran. In reality, these miniseminars were never appreciated. Now I simply try to avoid such confrontations, though when they happen, I stand by Sam. Of course, Sam’s full first name is Osama, which doesn’t help.

  Anyway, I’d thought no more of the Resurrection Church of the Ancient Gods. Until tonight.

  “HOLD THIS...” Dana handed me the flashlight. In its uncertain beam I saw him pull out his pocket knife. It wasn’t much of a knife, with a rubber handle and a blade about five centimetres long, but this little blade, amazingly, sliced through the solid metal bands that anchored the fence to the fencepost, in this shadowy corner of the chain-link barrier that separated Ivor Wynne Stadium from the city around it.

  “Buddy set this up here so he could sneak into Ticats games, he’s a big fan. Then a couple weeks ago he asked me – same as you did, Nate – if I knew anything about these midnight games. I didn’t know what he was talking about. He said he’d go to one of them and tell me what goes down. But I never saw him again.”

  “He went into a midnight game, and he didn’t come out?”

  “Before the game I’d see him every morning buying his smokes at the Big Bee. Every day, seven a.m. like clockwork. Next thing you know, he’s gone.”

  Then Dana showed me his secret. Looking around, he pulled two plastic zip ties out of his jacket. He slipped the bands he had just cut – which weren’t metal at all, just zip ties – into a pocket.

  “I spray paint ’em silver,” he said proudly.

  At that moment a roar blossomed from the crowd and the announcer’s excited voice – “ON THE WAY, THE GREAT ONE HIMSELF” – blasted from the stadium’s sound system. “Go go go quick quick quick,” Dana urged me, pushing the fence’s lower corner inward and following after I scuttled through. From the shelter of a dumpster we could just see the football field’s illuminated east end. Dana gestured at the nearest refreshment booth. “Nate, buy a beer,” he whispered. “So we won’t look like total moochers. Get an extra cup.”

  “I can’t buy a beer. I’m underage.”

  “The way I hear it, tonight anything goes. This is a midnight game. I’ll meet you back here.”

  “But ...” I was going to say “... they know me here.” Dana had already faded back into the shadows. I worked the stadium concessions during football games in the summer and fall. I have made a lot of hot dogs and been hissed at by a lot of drunks, but I’d picked up a few cooking skills, and probably social skills too.

  As it happened, I didn’t know the bartender, who wasn’t much older than me and looked unsurprised when I materialized out of the shadows in the black pants and hoodie that Dana had recommended and which I usually wear anyway. When I held up one finger he poured a Steely Dan into a plastic cup without asking for ID. I pushed the money toward him. I was only sixteen and didn’t look a day older, but Dana had said that at midnight games, anything goes. Well, we would see.

  “Could I get an extra cup?” I asked. “My buddy’s has got a crack in it.” He pulled a cup from a stack.

  “Good crowd tonight,” I observed.

  “More all the time, and we got something real good this week,” the bartender said. “Yog-Sauces will be smackin’ his lips when he lands here.” He turned as a new group of customers approached, laughing and slapping and jostling each other excitedly.

  I retreated to find Dana had closed up the gap in the fence, and was waving to me from just inside the nearest entrance, looking out at the lights on the field. He pulled a Steely Dan of his own from his pocket and emptied the can into my offered cup.

  “No way I’m buyin’ it here,” he said. “It’s five bucks a beer, isn’t it?”

  “Six.” That six bucks had hurt and I was hoping Dana would at least split it. Actually, I had been hoping this evening would be free of charge. At least now we looked like legitimate paying customers. We started up the stairs to the nearest bleacher, the beer sloshing in its plastic cups.

  FOR ALL the noise the midnight games made, with their thunderous announcements and heavy metal music pounding through the neighbourhood, tonight there were no more than a few thousand people here, filling the lower rows of the bleachers, watching the bright lights and the figures running and scattering and feverishly prepping the field below. Dana and I had agreed that, to stay inconspicuous, we would head for the empty upper tiers where we could look down on the crowd and scope out whatever was going on.

  My father and I live two blocks away from the stadium, on the other side of my old school, the boarded-up Prince of Wales Elementary that we preferred to call PoW. This was the house I grew up in, an old three-storey brick house that my mom and dad had bought to raise a family, though they’d only managed to produce me before my mother died ten years ago, when I was six.

  Since the summer’s end, once every week or ten days, the games had been keeping our neighbourhood awake. Everyone on our street was used to Ticat nights, when the blasts of music, the amplified chanting, the flyovers by jet fighters and antique bombers, the blasts of cheering were all tolerable because they were part of our way of life, and because they finished by ten p.m.

  I had inherited my father’s lack of interest in football, but since I’d turned fifteen, and began to work in the concessions, I’d welcomed the games and even enjoyed the noise and the drunkenness, the anticipation, the bursts of excitement. Like a lot of kids in the neighbourhood it was my first real job where I made real money. Not only did I make some money, but for a few hours a new world opened up, a world different enough from mine to make me happy to clean up the spilled drinks and grease spatters, fill up on leftover fries and hot dogs, and leave the custodians to dim the lights as I left the stadium and went back to everyday life.

  But I didn’t know anyone who had ever been called to work the midnight games. I could have used the money, but when I called the concession they had nothing for me. “Those are private contracts.”

  I didn’t mind too much; there was something weird about these games, not advertised online or on the radio, unreported on TV or in the sports pages. They started up at midnight, when the streets filled with families and couples and crowds, hollow eyed and obsessed, bickering and swearing and trading li
nes from songs I’d never heard, as they came from all over the city to converge on the latest Midnight Game.

  “The guy at the bar mentioned something called Yog-Sauce,” I said, “or Yog-Sauces.” I fought for balance as I skidded on a wet spot.

  This was another reason to keep going up, and up; the occupied seats were awash in Steely Dan. It turned out I had been alone in my pathetic purchase of a single beer with extra cup. The customers who were arriving as I left had taken trays to handle all the beer they needed, and among the crowd plastic cups slopped Steely Dan across plastic seats. People were noisy and excited: “Get this show on the road,” someone yelled.

  We passed a baby in its stroller, shrieking and ignored while its mother, a ponytailed woman spilling out of her shirt, screeched at the man in the baseball cap next to her. “I wanna be a cougar. Why? Because cougars are awesome. Because I wanna find a loser like you and chew his leg off!”

  “I haddit with you!” he shouted. The baby kept crying. Dana and I, keeping our heads down, trudged up the steps to the upper tiers, our shadowed feet crunching through discarded empties and splashing through puddles. Halfway up the section we started to find empty rows; and finally we sat down on benches above the crowd. I sipped my beer. The benches were damp with dew, or what I hoped was dew, drawn out of the air as the autumn night cooled.

  “This beer tastes funny,” I observed. Dana was squinting out at the field.

  “They done something with the team colours.”

  “Not that I’m an expert. My dad says that Steely Dan is made from diet ginger ale and rubbing alcohol.”

  Dana wasn’t listening. As music boomed from the speakers I looked down into the glare on the field. Sure enough whoever was playing wasn’t wearing the Ticat black and gold. At the west end of the field the team was dressed all in black and at the opposite end, the team was in white. White, I wondered, how do they do it? The grass stains must be hell to get out. I pulled out my phone and clicked a few photos.

 

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