No.
That was Memphis, this was Elkwood. This was the new and improved Julia Stone, the one who was on the path to healing. Imaginary Creeps no longer stalked the alleys of her mind. Thanks to Dr. Forrest.
She glanced behind her at the woods, which seemed to have crept closer to the house since yesterday. The Appalachian Mountain shadows reached out like fingers, and she searched there for movement, any sign that people were watching. That he was watching.
Julia let the door swing open and squinted into the dark throat of the house. Nobody home. Nothing to fear, just the bland patterns of her furniture to welcome her. Just another day in her new normal life.
Nonetheless, her hand went into her purse and touched the cool canister of mace. She went inside, not letting herself look back. When you were cured, you didn’t care what was behind you. Forward was all that mattered. Coat rack, recliner, sofa, television. Forward, another step, even though something was wrong with the coffee table.
At first she thought they were small boxes of food, maybe delicate chocolates or caviar, arranged in a line across the table. Something Mitchell would buy her to make up for a slight. But how did the packages get inside?
Her legs carried her closer, her fist clenched around the mace. The row of squares weren’t boxes. She touched them in the dimness, let her fingers track over the raised surfaces. A child’s wooden blocks.
She picked up the nearest one, her breath catching. Tilted toward the window, the embossed letter caught enough light to show its cruel hook, its sharp teeth.
J.
She placed the block back on the table, casting a look down the shadowed hall. Nothing there but dark and darker.
Her hand trembled as she picked up the next block in line. She lifted it six inches before she dropped it, and the wood clacked against the table’s surface and tumbled under the couch like an oversized dice.
She didn’t need to read the letter to know what it said. Because the next block was the same, and so was the next.
O.
She slapped the blocks off the table and knelt on the carpet, her heart playing her ribs like a mad xylophonist, the melody broken, the rhythm spastic, the blows landing much too hard.
A noise behind her, louder than her heartbeat. Nothing, she knew. She would be strong, because this was Elkwood, North Carolina, and bad things couldn’t follow her here. She wouldn’t look, because cured people didn’t jump at every imagined sound.
Kurr-chack chack.
Nothing but the wind pushing branches against the house.
Chack.
Only in her head. She couldn’t help it. She turned.
The Creep stood on the porch, six-foot-two.
Metal glinted in his fist.
The fish-eye lens of panic both distorted and magnified her vision. Julia tried to scream but had no breath, she rose, glanced frantically for the canister of mace she had dropped, knowing it was too late, it had always been too late, they’d had her since she was four.
The Creep’s hulk blocked the doorway, a belt loaded with weapons circling his waist. His eyes were hot and steely, his mouth open in passionate rage.
He had long, long fingers.
The blade flashed, quivered.
Her heart had been set afire and shot from a catapult.
The past had reached her, despite all her running and hiding and pretending. It was here, now, come to towering, fire-breathing life. She would never make it to the bedroom door in time. If she fled, his pleasure would only intensify, and her legs were like stacks of wooden blocks shot through with string.
Why fight any longer?
The Creep was silhouetted against a backdrop of sun and light blue sky, the wild colors of autumn wreathing his head like a halo.
Julia lifted her forearms out of instinct, shut her eyes, and waited for the swift delivery of his decades’-old promise. But first would come the benediction, the words that would cut deeper than any blade.
His voice came, not in the thunder of a murderer, but in a soft, shocked exhalation. “Jesus, lady.”
She peeked from behind her arms. The stranger’s eyebrows furrowed in concern. His eyes were light green, the color of a murky pond under sunlight. Light green, not red like The Creep’s. His arm lowered to his side, and she saw that it was a screwdriver he held loosely in his fist, not a knife.
The man took two steps backward, almost losing his balance at the edge of the porch. “I was sent here to check the windows.”
“Windows?” She managed to squeeze the word through her constricted throat.
“With winter coming on and all. The landlord sent me.” He paused, squinted, and continued, his vowels stretched by his native Southern Appalachian accent. “This is 102 Buckeye Creek Road, isn’t it?”
She forced her head to nod twice. She saw now that the weapons at his waist were only tools, a hammer, tape measure, a couple of screwdrivers, all tucked into his leather belt that had pouches on each hip.
“I was just going to knock when you popped around the corner,” he said hurriedly, as embarrassed as she was. He patted his chest with exaggerated force. “Whew. About made my heart jump like an electrified frog.”
She nearly grinned in relief, but the muscles of her face were frozen. This was no Creep, after all.
Or was it? Sometimes they were clever, took their enjoyment more from the playing of the game than from the final victory. They’d played their games for years.
But she had asked the landlord two days ago if all the windows could be checked, both the sash locks and the weather stripping. Unless this Creep had tapped the phone line and knew—
No, Dr. Forrest wouldn’t like that line of thinking. I’m new and improved, remember?
Looking past the handyman, she saw an old green Jeep parked off the far edge of the road. It was parked under the trees where she wouldn’t have seen it while driving up.
A Creep in a Jeep? Sounded too much like Dr. Seuss to be dangerous. Silly. A coy boy with a toy, bark in the dark, a metal muddle mental puddle. Still, the adrenaline jolt tingled her nerves at a hundred amps and caused her fingers to twitch.
She cleared her throat. One final test. “Did George Wellman send you?”
“Webster,” he said, staring at her strangely, as if not sure what to make of someone who didn’t know the name of her own landlord. “Mister George Webster from Silver Key Properties. I do a lot of work for him. Name’s Walter.”
“Of course,” she said, gathering her nerve enough to step forward. They were both looking at the red canister of mace on the floor. His forced smile was more like an embarrassed grimace, his cheeks creasing and blushing slightly. She bent and picked up the mace, kicking aside one of the wooden blocks.
“You have kids?” he asked.
She shook her head, avoiding his eyes. How could she explain that the blocks weren’t hers without sounding like a lunatic? But the problem was she couldn’t be sure the blocks weren’t hers or whether or not she was a lunatic.
“Listen, I can come back later,” he said. “I’ll just pick up a key from Mister Webster and do it while you’re at work.”
“No, I’m fine. Really.” She wiped her hair from her eyes, and her fingers came away moist with sweat. She tried to cover her jumpiness with a lie. “I just ran through the house, I heard the phone ring, and I thought I heard somebody at the door, and—well, look at me, I’m just a babbling mess.”
He looked, a few seconds longer this time. Then he cast his gaze down to the porch. “Well, ma’am, I guess I should have hollered when I saw the door was open.”
“Don’t be silly.” Julia hated herself for her panic. “I just wish Mr. Webster had told me you were coming.”
“He said he left a message on your answering machine.”
She nodded again, feeling as wooden as the blocks that were scattered across the floor. “Why don’t you go ahead? I’ve got to go back to work in a little bit.”
“Won’t take long.” He was aroun
d thirty. His hair was brown and just long enough to curl a little at the ends. His muscular hands bore several scars, but the skin on his face was smooth under his short beard. He didn’t have the beaten expression worn by many people who worked with their hands, though the shadows of his face harbored a hint of sadness and darkness. He didn’t look like the sort who would play pranks with wooden blocks.
Then again, they never did.
“Come on in.” She stepped aside so the handyman could enter. His tool belt jangled as he passed. He went to the front windows, flipped back the locks and slid them up. A draft of forest-flavored air wended across the room.
Julia left the door open and crossed to the sofa, sat where she could see him, and pretended to thumb through Psychology Today. Her hand gripped the mace tightly. The landlord had seemed overly eager to rent this place. How many keys did Webster have for the house?
“These are fine,” the handyman said, sliding the windows closed. “Anderson windows are built good. Double panes. Ought to really help on your heating bill.”
“I’ll be burning wood,” she said, turning the magazine page to an article entitled “Precious Memories: How To Preserve Your Family’s Past.” She kept looking past the magazine to the blocks on the floor.
“Good for you. Cheaper and you get a little exercise. Where you from?” he asked without turning around, his screwdriver creaking as he tightened a curtain rod hanger.
“Memphis.”
“You’re in for a treat. We get about eight or ten snows every year. Don’t get much down there, I reckon.”
“Just once in a while. It melts before you even get to pack a dirty snowball.”
“Can’t stand to be in the city myself. Breaks me out in a sweat. People piled on top of each other like Japanese beetles on a cherry leaf.”
Julia said nothing. She wasn’t used to loquacious carpenters. In Memphis, skilled laborers did their work in silence. She was used to her own crowd, other reporters, artists, Mitchell’s lawyer friends. In the city, strangers kept to themselves. Unless they wanted flesh, blood, or soul.
“How long you been in Elkwood?” he asked, not pausing in his work.
“Four months,” she said.
“That figures,” he said. “I did some work here at the start of summer. House had been empty for a couple of years.”
“I wonder why. It’s a cozy little place.”
“Hartley used to live here.” The handyman said “Hartley” as if spitting out the name of an old enemy.
“Don’t tell me I’m living in a haunted house,” she said.
“No ghosts here. Just bad memories.”
He gathered his tools and moved into the kitchen. Julia remained where she was, slipping the mace into her pants pocket and browsing the magazine.
After several minutes of the windows sliding up and down and tools rattling, the handyman appeared at the end of the hall.
“Okay if I go in the bedroom?” he asked.
He probably found some embarrassing things in his job. He went into private places, patched things where secrets hid. But Julia had no secrets there, not much to blush about in her bedroom. No ceiling mirrors, no bedside sex toys, no leather straps or chains dangling from the bedposts.
Just a crazy clock that was stuck on 4:06.
“Go ahead,” she said. “Can I make you a cup of coffee?”
“No, thanks, ma’am. I don’t want to put you to no trouble.”
“It’s no trouble. I’m going to make some anyway. I only want a cup or two, though.”
“Well, in that case, I’d appreciate some to go. I got my thermos out in the Jeep.”
Julia busied herself in the kitchen, whistling as she filled the pot. She didn’t glance over her shoulder, even though the urge was strong. With the water running in the sink, he could sneak right up behind, reach out his long, long fingers—
She twisted the tap angrily. Tears filled her eyes. Her lip quivered.
It owned her.
Maybe it—the fear, the darkness, The Creep—wouldn’t take her this morning, but she knew it was out there.
No, not out there. In here.
In her head.
The worst place of all. This was an inside job all the way. The monster rummaged in the rooms of her mind, hid in cramped closets, staked out the shadowed corners of her psyche. What scared her most was the knowledge that she had built that monster herself, bit by bit, sewn it from scraps of memory and the threads of what-if, imagined it to life. The cellar of her head-house was a Frankenstein laboratory for bringing strange creatures to life.
No monster had spread those blocks on her coffee table, had spelled out that name. Because everybody knew that monsters weren’t real. Especially Dr. Forrest.
She started the coffee maker. Her therapist in Memphis told her to lay off the caffeine. Dr. Lance Danner. Lance. Freud could have had a field day with that name. Sometimes a cigar was just a cigar and a lance was just a lance.
Dr. Danner also told her that, although they had been progressing in the therapy, a move was probably a good thing for her. He’d encouraged her to take the job in Elkwood, depressurize, embrace a rural lifestyle. Dr. Danner even made a referral to a doctor here that Julia felt comfortable with, touting it as “a continuum of care.” Mitchell had been against her leaving, but his possessiveness had only made Julia more determined. If she was ever going to show him she was a big girl, now was the time.
Big girls don’t cry, though.
Julia wiped away her tears with the back of her hand. She was glad she didn’t wear make-up, because the streaks would show. Not that she cared much what the handyman thought of her. She definitely wasn’t out to appear attractive to anyone, especially a potential Creep in a Jeep.
She took her cup of coffee to the living room, picked up the magazine, put it down again. She stared out the window at the red, purple, and yellow of the changing leaves. The mountains were comforting despite their mystery. The ancient ridges of the Appalachians rolled out like soft ocean waves, in a rhythm that promised protection and peace.
The buildings of Memphis had been suffocating, the giant walls looming, dense traffic like a herd of sulfur-spewing demons. The hot jaws of the city nipped at her heels with every step, hounded her, gnashed steel-and-concrete teeth at her. A million Creeps lurked in the alleys, two million eyes followed her every move. Memphis would have chewed her, ground her bones to powder, swallowed her.
The move here had not been a mistake. For the first time in his exalted reign, Mitchell had been wrong, though Mitchell would never admit it.
“All done, ma’am,” said the handyman, coming back into the living room. “The locks are all sound, and you shouldn’t get any bad drafts come winter.”
“Great.” She reached for her purse on the floor beside her. Her foot kicked one of the blocks and it rolled to Walter’s feet.
“You a schoolteacher?” he asked.
“No, I write for the Courier-Times. How much do I owe you?”
“Nothing,” he said. “Mister Webster pays me. Repairs are the landlord’s responsibility.”
She thought about tipping, decided against it. These mountain folks were proud about such things. Far different from the grabby people in the city. Instead, she said, “Let me get that coffee for you. Soy creamer’s all I got. Me and dairy disagree.”
“That would be fine, ma’am. I’ll go get my thermos. I have to check a couple more things outside first.”
He went out the open front door. When he reappeared several minutes later, he was without his tool belt. He gave her the thermos and waited by the door.
“Say, did you know your clock was messed up?” he asked when she returned with the filled thermos.
“My clock?”
“Yeah, in the bedroom. It was stuck on 4:06 the whole time I was in there.”
She had unplugged the clock. Hadn’t she?
She smiled to disguise the icy rush that shot through her veins. “Thanks for telling me. It’
s been acting up lately. Guess I’ll have to get another one.”
“Yeah. Never heard of a digital clock doing that. Usually they just blink or go dark.”
“Stuck in time.” Just like me. The smile felt painted on her face, like a dime-store mannequin’s.
“Keeps you young,” he said. “Growing old is for people who give up too soon.”
“I’ll keep that in mind. Thanks for the work.”
“Sure. You need anything else, ask for me. Walter.” He smiled again as he reminded her of his name. It wasn’t a come-on smile. It was a friendly smile, with slightly crooked teeth, the kind you could trust.
No, that’s not true. You can’t trust ANY smile. Because every smile has teeth behind it.
She almost gave him her name then decided against it. “Okay, Walter.”
“You found a church yet?”
“Pardon me?”
“Church. It can be hard to settle in to a new place.” He looked at her with inquisitor’s eyes, as if he had a personal stake in her soul. She resented the notion that he saw her as a chance to bank some goodwill and capital in some heavenly coffer.
“I’m set.” She smiled, the conditioned reflex of people being mindlessly civil to acquaintances. He’d been kind to her and was probably just extending a small-town politeness. She owed him better than a bland brush-off, and her thoughts were already drifting into the dark cracks of the past.
“Have a good day, Miss Stone.” Walter waved and headed for the Jeep, humming a country-tinged tune. Julia closed the door.
Now she was alone.
No, not alone. Inside with the Creep.
The Creep was always in the house, no matter where she lived.
CHAPTER TWO
The phone bleated in a slaughter of electric sheep.
She had two phones, one in the living room, one by the bed. Perhaps overkill for a three-room house, but she liked to have one within reach if she couldn’t find the cell. In case of emergencies.
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