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Less Than Human

Page 28

by Raisor, Gary


  The A came next.

  "A pretty girl, Amy," Steven said. "She looks a lot like her mother."

  John said nothing as he punched the ball out of sight. His hands did their job, independent of thought, of emotion.

  Nothing else in his life had ever worked, except his ability to shoot pool. It had never let him down. It didn't let him down now.

  He dropped every ball in the rack.

  So did Steven.

  They went through another rack. Then they did it again.

  And again.

  And again.

  They did nine racks without stopping.

  Steven fished the balls out of the belly of the pool table, dumped them into the rack. "I have to say I'm impressed, John. You're quite a shooter, the best I've seen in a while. Most don't make it past the second or third rack."

  John said nothing. He slid a hand beneath his jacket, touched the wet slipperiness spread across his stomach and saw that his fingers came back red. When he looked down, he saw a patch of darkness that ran all the way down his leg.

  More blood.

  Laying his stick on the table, Steven walked over and tore John's shirt open. He lifted the bandage, stared at the oozing wounds. "Looks like you've sprung a leak. That's a shame; the game can't be called on account of pain." Steven prodded the wound with a stiff finger, watching the lean hustler double over in agony. "What happened, Johnny boy, you look like someone stuck a knife in you?"

  "A buffalo gored me—in a dream." The room was tilting, and John had to lean against the table when Steven released him. "Most people would say that's crazy, but I guess you know what I'm talking about."

  "Don't try to play games with me. You won't like the way they turn out."

  "I need to sit down." John's hands had gone numb, and his stick clattered to the floor.

  Steven picked it up, handed it back to him. John was barely able to close his hands around the cue.

  The blond vampire watched calmly, his eyes taking in the blood dripping onto John's boots. "You're bleeding to death. If you don't get to a doctor very, very soon, my friend, you're going to be very, very dead. Tell you what I'm going to do. You pick one of those balls, say with somebody you barely know, and you give it to me." Steven took John's stick from him and laid it on the table. "And I'll see you get to a doctor myself."

  John made his tongue work. "It's your shot."

  They did six more racks before the cue slipped from John's hand, causing him to finally miss. It was Timmy Cates who didn't go down.

  John slowly slid to his knees in front of the table, his face bathed in sweat. His jeans were now completely soaked with blood. There was a pool of it at his feet.

  "Looks like your leak has turned into a gusher, Mr. Warrick." Pulling the hustler up from the bloodstained floor, Steven half dragged, half carried him over to where the knife waited. "What's it to be, do we stop here, do I take my prize and go home? Or do we keep playing?"

  John's head felt like it was too heavy to lift, but he managed to meet the icy blue eyes. "We keep playing."

  "Then you've got to ante up."

  John laid his hand on the table.'

  The vampire worked the knife out of the wood. "Are you sure? A finger is a precious thing to a man who makes his living with his hands."

  "Do it."

  "All right, you're the boss." Steven pulled out a cigarette lighter and began heating the blade, running the flame back and forth along its length. A tongue that licked a red glow in its wake. "We don't want you losing any more blood. Which finger?"

  "The little one."

  "Good choice. That's the one they all give up first." Steven tested the knife. It wasn't hot enough to suit him so he continued holding the flame to the blade. "One time I played this guy in Reno—ten grand against one of his fingers. I think he owed a lot of money to some loan sharks." Steven tested the knife again and still he wasn't satisfied that it was hot enough. "The guy just wouldn't quit, he kept thinking he was going to get back in the game. You know, I walked out of there with every one of his fingers, every last one. Can you believe that?"

  John spread his fingers.

  "I'd suggest you give me Louise. She's got cancer, and I don't think she'll live more than another year."

  "You're a liar. Louise has never been sick a day in her life."

  "She's got lung cancer. You might as well give her to me."

  "Take the finger."

  The blade was glowing cherry red now, and Steven put the lighter away. "It's your fault she's got cancer. She smokes too much and thinks about when the baby was still alive. She knows you blame her."

  "Our son fell off the back of the truck while Louise was trying to take his picture. It was an accident. I don't blame her." But John knew that was a lie, he did blame her. The words sounded hollow to his own ears.

  "Last chance to save the finger."

  John looked away.

  The heat from the knife reached John and it almost felt good because he was so cold. A shiver passed through him as his hand was grasped, held. The knife touched his finger and he heard the crunch of his bones when the blade passed through them. He heard a slight sizzle, smelled the sickly sweet odor of his own burning flesh.

  Then it was all over.

  Just like that.

  His finger lay there on the table like some kind of undersized Vienna sausage.

  But it wasn't all over.

  The pain caught up with him. Coming in waves. Drowning him.

  He curled into the fetal position on the floor, holding his injured hand under his armpit, making mewling noises as he crawled across the pine board. There were no words to describe how much his hand hurt.

  Steven knelt beside him. "It's the heat from the knife you feel, not the loss of your finger. Don't worry, the worst of the pain only lasts for a few minutes."

  John's consciousness began going grainy at the edges, slipping away. Just before he blacked out, the sudden image of a cabin in a clearing strobed on the inside of his eyelids, and he saw a dead man and woman lying on the ground. Then the scene was gone before he could get a good look.

  The sawdust on the floor filled John's open mouth, choking him. He threw up and he felt the wounds in his stomach tear some more.

  Something wet and cold struck him in the face, brought him back. He saw Steven Adler standing over him with an empty beer bottle. The vampire pulled him up until they were face-to-face. "The clock is ticking and we don't have time for rest breaks." He handed John a cold beer to wrap his injured hand around. "The game is waiting. We play until I miss, or until you run out of fingers."

  They did three more shots, and John missed.

  Kevin this time.

  The little finger from his right hand joined his left.

  Steven placed them side by side. "Two down, eight to go. I'll make a necklace out of them."

  John tried to pull away from the knife waving in front of his face, but he couldn't find the strength. The blade caught the light, fading in and out, and John realized he was no longer seeing the present. He was watching something that had happened a long time ago.

  The knife was reflecting off a kerosene lamp.

  Shadows danced on the wall.

  John realized something about the knife had jump-started him, had taken him to this distant place in time.

  He felt his legs go limp and his eyes rolled up, but there was no escape from what was in his head. He was hot-wired into this.

  Going along for the ride.

  He was standing in a clearing looking into the door of a dirt-floor cabin. There were two boys sprawled in the corner and he could tell from the odd angle of their heads they were dead with broken necks. Steven Adler was crouched on the floor in front of a little girl.

  His knife kept catching the light as he worked.

  The whole thing only lasted an instant but John was sure of what he had seen—Steven Adler crouched over a little girl with a wet knife in his hand. Her high-pitched screams were carried on
the night air.

  Another strobe.

  He saw a young Earl Jacobs ride up to the cabin, walk in. The screaming started again. There was a pistol shot and the screaming stopped.

  Another strobe.

  John was back in the present. Despite the blade hovering inches from his eyes, he spat in the vampire's pale, grinning face. "You skinned her alive, you son of a bitch, you skinned her alive. She was just a little girl."

  "What little girl?"

  "The one in the cabin. The one Earl found."

  "Oh, that little girl." He held the cue stick under John's nose. "Her skin made the leather on the handle of my cue stick, her red hair made the snake. Little boys and girls around five are the best. Their skin is very supple at that age. I always wanted to see if I could skin one who was still alive." Steven wiped the spit from his cheek and hauled John over to the table, deposited him face down there. "You've got a lot of spunk, John, and I admire that. I really do, but you'd better save it for the game." He handed John a cue stick. "It's your shot."

  But the cue slipped from John's hands, fell to the floor with a clatter. He crawled across the green felt, leaving dark stains in his wake, until he finally collapsed. His hands no longer hurt. Nor his stomach. In fact, right now, he couldn't feel anything.

  "Come on, John, I'm waiting."

  John tried to move. Couldn't.

  Steven picked the stick up, broke it across his knee as though it were a matchstick and tossed the pieces on the table. "Looks like we're all through here. Game's over." He grasped John by the hair and lifted his head, exposing the throat. The stained knife was still in his hand. "I guess the time for us to part company has come. Any last words before you join your dead friends or do you just want to whisper them to me later?"

  "You didn't beat me." John tasted his own blood in his mouth. He choked on it, swallowed. "You're not the best. I am."

  "We'll have eternity to debate that." Steven placed the knife under John's outstretched throat, hesitated, and then the blond vampire smiled a sad smile. "You showed a lot of guts tonight, and I'd like to let you live, John, I really would. But some day you might work up enough courage to come after me. With what you know, you might do what so many have tried and failed."

  A bullet poked through the window, tugged at Steven's shirt and shattered the jukebox across the room. An instant later, the sound of a shot followed.

  "Looks like your friends are trying to save you. Too bad they're too late." He pulled the knife across John's throat with a swift economical motion, and let the hustler's head drop back to the table. A pool of blood formed, began running toward one of the pockets.

  Steven knelt beside John, whispered in his ear. "Since you played so well tonight, tell you what I'm going to do. I'm going to let you stay dead. We'll call it professional respect." The vampire placed the knife back in his belt and eased out into the night, looking for signs of the would-be sharpshooter. Dawn was almost here and he had to hurry. He reached the Caddy, unscrewed the cue stick, tossed it in the seat.

  The bullet punched through Steven's back and splattered in the dust beyond the car. He stared at it wonderingly before turning, before looking at the man in the door holding the .44, his .44; the one Matt Thomas had given him so many years ago. "Earl, what are you.—"

  The second bullet caught Steven in the leg and he had to grab hold of the door to keep from falling. "I had to kill him. He had my cue stick. I can't live without it, you know that."

  "We don't have time for any more lies. I found Timmy Cates at the graveyard and he told me what he saw before I gave him back. Amy and Jesse told me you were here, so I decided to ease over and see what was going on. I heard everything you told John." Earl's face was filled with determination. "Maybe I could have lived with most of what you do, maybe even pretended I don't know what you are, but I couldn't lie to myself about the little girl. Not the little girl."

  Steven made an effort to move toward Earl.

  The pistol belched flame and Steven's other leg crumpled, the kneecap blown away. He slid to a sitting position in the dust, his back propped against the car, his leg cocked at an impossible angle. Almost faster than the eye could follow, he produced John's .32 from his boot and pointed it at Earl. He pulled the hammer back. His finger tightened on the trigger, but his hand trembled and, after a long moment, he lowered the gun. "Well, how about that? I can't pull the trigger. I guess John was right, I'm a little more human that I thought."

  Earl walked over, took the gun from Steven's hand.

  The wounded vampire didn't resist.

  Bobby Roberts' Cadillac pulled into the parking lot with Louise behind the wheel, Jesse and Amy beside her. They went into Jake's and came out with John between them.

  "He's lost a lot of blood, but he's still alive," Louise said. "Don't ask me how. We're going to try and get him to the doctor in Holbrook. I don't know if he can hold on that long."

  Earl watched as they laid the injured man in the backseat and drove away. "He's pretty tough. I bet he hangs on." Earl turned to Steven. "You did a piss-poor job of cutting his throat."

  "Did I? I guess my heart wasn't in it."

  Earl sat down beside Steven.

  "What do we do now?" Steven asked.

  "We wait."

  Across the rapidly graying night, a stage coach approached the bar. Boyce was doing the driving. Kevin, Nash, Ernesto, Manny, and Jesus were on board. They pulled into the lot, threw on the hand brake, and piled out. "Is John all right?" Nash asked. The horses were hot from running and steam rose off their bodies in the chill air.

  "Don't know," Earl answered. "He was still alive when Louise took him to Holbrook."

  "Is this what you wanted, Earl?" Boyce asked. "It's as close as we could get to a wagon on such short notice."

  "Yeah, that'll do fine, boys. Much obliged for all your help."

  Steven Adler shifted beside the car, made an effort to stand. "Did you sell out to the humans, Earl; did they promise that you could live among them like a normal man?"

  "No, they didn't make me any promises, but I made them one."

  "And what was that?"

  "That I'd stop you."

  The men gathered around Steven Adler, staring at him with equal parts of curiosity and hatred on their faces.

  "Well, it looks like you caught yourselves the bogeyman." Steven regarded them calmly. "What are you going to do now that you have him? Have you come to extract your vengeance, to punish me for the death of your loved ones?"

  "No, we've come to lay the dead to rest," Nash said. The people you grieve for suffered in life. I gave them peace."

  "It's not up to you to decide who should live, who should die," Kevin said.

  "And who are you to decide I should die? I've walked the earth longer than the race of man; I have fed on your kind since the beginning. I am the eater of souls." He grinned at Kevin. "I may have yours before the night is over, my young friend." He made a lunge at Kevin, who jumped back.

  The .44 in Earl's hand centered on Steven again.

  The vampire's cold blue eyes tracked the gun. "Matt Thomas gave me that for my twenty-first birthday. How did you happen to come across it?"

  "I found it. I talked to Timmy, Amos, Elliot, and everything kept coming back to the Navajo graveyard. Time and again, too many times for it to be a coincidence. There had to be a reason, and I finally figured it out. Your home is close by the graveyard."

  Moving incredibly quick, Steven crawled snakelike on his stomach toward Earl and made a grab for the .44.

  But Earl was ready. The pistol jumped in his hand and a hole the size of a dime appeared in Steven's forehead. The long blond hair fluttered once, as if a gust of wind had caught it. Flecks of gray matter splashed the Caddy door, ran down. "Well, I'll be damned," Earl said wonderingly, staring at the stain on the car. "I finally seen a bat. After all these years I finally seen a bat." There was no joy in his voice.

  The vampire began writhing on the gravel like a snake with a b
roken back.

  Walking over, Earl pulled Steven's knife from his belt. He grabbed blond hair, held the blade in front of Steven's face. "I don't know if you can hear me or not, but you try to come out of your body and I'm going to stick you with this." Then he nicked Steven in case the vampire couldn't see the knife. Smoke boiled up from the wound and the vampire screamed in agony.

  Earl picked Steven up, threw the vampire over his shoulder, and dumped him on the top of the stagecoach. He then pulled out a set of handcuffs that Louise had given him and fastened Steven's hands to the rail.

  "You're taking a little trip, in case you want to know," Earl told him. "You're going home."

  They all drove to the graveyard in the coach.

  Earl slung Steven over his shoulder and walked toward a hole in the cliff wall. "There's a pyramid in there, right inside the mountain," Earl said, "or at least the tip of one. The rest goes down in the ground. Don't ask me how far, 'cause I don't know."

  "Where did the hole come from?" Boyce asked.

  "It's the entrance to Steven's home and it's protected by a stone slab that must weigh better than a hundred tons. Looks natural as hell. It slides up and down. The whole thing is controlled by counterweights." Earl pointed at the cliffs above them. "You have to climb that rock face over there to get to the lever. No human could ever make the climb."

  "How did you find it?" Jesus asked.

  "I used to be a pretty good tracker once upon a time. I seen where some footprints went up to the cliffs and then just stopped. That didn't seem right, so I did a little climbing myself."

  They walked inside.

  Boyce's flashlight found a hole leading down. There were steps carved in the stone.

  "This is it," Earl announced. "Home." He laid Steven at the edge of the hole and paused. "I figured out what was really in that cue stick of yours."

  The vampire tried to mouth the word "What?" but he had no voice.

  "It was your salvation; it could have saved you from your evil side. You told me you had to have a taste of it to stay alive. But that wasn't true, was it? You had to have a taste to keep from killing."

  Steven closed his eyes, unable to face Earl.

 

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