The Orchard

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The Orchard Page 12

by Charles L. Grant


  His attention snapped then to the floors between the rows, but he couldn’t see anything down there but a few crushed cigarette butts, burnt matches, an empty box of popcorn, a half-filled paper cup of soda, another one on its side.

  And his own shadow darting into the gaps, darting away, disappearing.

  He could hear her breathing when he was halfway along—harsh, quick, prelude to a scream.

  “Take it easy,” he said quietly. “Take it easy, Ginny, it’s only me.”

  He moved again, watching her head rock faster and faster while her legs began to palsy, one heel thumping hollow against the baseboard. Softly, then loudly, and softly again. Her gaze shifting into puzzled focus on his face, her lips quivering for a moment before closing. He smiled at her and checked the rows above and below him, seeing nothing at all until he saw her feet. They were bare, and he realized she had stopped drumming on the wall.

  “Okay, Ginny,” he said. And stopped.

  She had relaxed, and somehow the ribbon from her ponytail had come undone and was draped now over one shoulder, almost lost in the spray of her dark blonde hair. The shirt was open three buttons down, exposing pale breasts against a tanned chest and a small white rose in the center of her bra.

  He heard a soft click, looked down, and saw a button bounce on the floor and roll out of sight.

  “Ginny, what’s—”

  The shirt was completely open, and she hadn’t moved her hands. The snap of her jeans was undone, the plane of her stomach gold in the candlelight, pushing slowly out, sighing slowly in.

  “Ginny,” he said harshly, damning his shadow now growing on the wall, covering her, shading her bronze. “Ginny, where is Scotty? Can you tell me where Scotty is? Is he hurt?”

  She smiled at him, innocence and seduction. Her jeans were crumpled at her feet, and the shirt slipped over her shoulder while he watched, hissing when it caught at her waist, hissing again when it slid to the floor. He turned away as if looking for someone to witness what was happening here, turned back to see her reach her arms out toward him. Reluctantly, he stepped closer, shaking his head at her, trying by his expression to tell her she didn’t know what she was doing.

  Wax poured onto his hand, and he cursed, dropped the candle, and the flame died on the wick.

  “Goddamn,” he muttered, raising an angry fist toward the girl, lowering it slowly when he realized he could still see her. The candle was out. The light hadn’t gone. It still lay his hovering shadow over her face, still coated her with colors the flame never had.

  Hallelujah, he thought; someone’s finally fixed the electricity.

  “Okay, kiddo,” he said sternly. “Let’s stop the nonsense, all right? They’ll be coming up to see how you are, and I don’t want them to find you like this. So look, do us both a big favor and pick up—”

  He had turned to hurry back along the row to the center aisle, and said no more when he saw the exit signs over the fire doors still unlit, the bulbs recessed in the ceiling still dark. A hand grabbed for a seat back. The balcony was black except where he stood.

  “‘Ellery,” Ginny whispered, not the voice of a girl.

  He ordered himself not to look.

  “Ellery.”

  He didn’t understand the light, but he knew full well what the girl wanted, what she was trying to do. Her mind had snapped, no question about it, probably from something she had stumbled on up here, something he hadn’t yet seen himself. And if he looked now, he would only encourage her; if he turned, he wouldn’t know how to get her dressed again without using force, and he knew what that would look like should anyone come up to see what was taking him so long in his search.

  “Ellery.”

  “Ginny, for Christ’s sake, would you knock it off and—”

  Her hand gripped his shoulder and twisted viciously, until he either had to turn or sprawl over the chairs. His jacket tore at the seam as if it were paper, his shirt tore as well, and there was a fire along his skin that made him hiss and yank free, stumbling back until he grabbed an armrest and steadied.

  “Ellery.”

  Her eyes were dull orange, her teeth lengthened to fangs, her hair was a nest of spitting black serpents.

  He screamed and his left arm lashed out, catching her on the temple and tumbling her into the next row, where she regained her feet before he could turn and run, snakes gone, eyes normal, teeth covered by lips that were shining with the blood streaming from her nose.

  She smiled. “Ellery.”

  And she was naked.

  “Ellery.”

  She climbed agilely over the seat after him, grinning as he backed away while holding his aching shoulder, giggling when he held out a palm to stop her as if he were staving off a vampire with a large silver cross. Then she shuddered, straightened, and ran her hands up her sides until they were cupping her breasts, kneading them, flattening them, slipping one hand down over her stomach, up again, slowly, smearing her blood in pale patterns across her amber skin. Holding out a hand, stretching out a finger, reaching for him, to touch him, before he spun around and tried to run, tripped into the aisle and fell. His head struck a riser, and he grunted in pain; he blinked rapidly to clear his eyes and rolled onto his back.

  She was standing over him.

  Straddling him.

  Bending down in the nonlight until he saw the flesh peeling patches from her cheeks, her forehead, the sides of her nose.

  He screamed when she reached for him, her hands nothing but bone that cracked at the joints; screamed again when she took hold of his belt and lifted his hips effortlessly off the floor.

  Screamed a third time when she smiled, and the light snapped out.

  He assumed he had fainted, blacked out for a second, maybe two, when the thing that was Ginny Amerton hauled his groin toward her teeth. And when consciousness returned, he flailed hysterically at the air, twisting onto a hip, kicking out, grunting, feeling tears in his eyes until, at last, he calmed and lay cheek-down on the steps, gulping for a breath and telling himself over and over and over again that he was all right, he was all right, he was alone up here and he was all right. Something had somehow triggered an hallucination, but he was all right now, and he could stand if he tried.

  “All right,” he said to hear the sound of his voice. “You’re all right, pal. No sweat. Get up and get moving before they think you’re dead.”

  His legs weren’t listening. They refused to hold him, the muscles jumping in spasms until he had to grab for an armrest and hauled himself to his knees. Lowered his head. Panted again for air. Ignoring the dark while he listened for footsteps, for the rub of fleshless hand over cloth, over wood, for someone other than himself in the balcony’s night.

  What he heard was thunder; what he felt was the floor vibrating until the thunder was gone.

  He stood at last, not knowing how long it had taken for him to do it without falling down again; he used the seats to pull himself painfully up the aisle, not knowing how he managed to find the strength even to hold on; he used the wall to keep from falling and eventually made it to the top of the staircase, checking behind him twice every step of the way while he talked himself into believing he had imagined the whole thing. And talked again, commanded, when his hands began to shake, so badly his wrists and knuckles began to ache. And a third time when he knew that unless someone talked to him, and talked to him soon, he was going to cry.

  If only, he thought, it wasn’t so damned dark!

  Five minutes while he leaned against the wall and felt the blood on his shoulder and the sweat on his face; and five again while he stared at the faint light on the landing below him. He didn’t bother to wonder why he couldn’t hear the others, only drinking in the sight like heady gulps of fresh spring air. Calming. Real. No threat or nightmare there.

  God, he thought; Jesus God.

  He swallowed dryly and coughed, then gripped the banister white-knuckled until he reached the turn. There was silence below, but he forced himself to wa
it, to claw fingers through his hair, to pull off the jacket and brush a palm over his shirt. Then he stepped around the corner, smiling grimly, eyes narrowed.

  The lobby was empty.

  Katherine and Paula weren’t on the couch, and when he staggered down to the carpet, he couldn’t find Gary.

  No, he thought; no. They couldn’t have gotten out and forgot me. They couldn’t!

  “Hey, Katherine!” he called as he hurried to the exit. “Mrs. Richards?”

  The doors still wouldn’t open, the remains of the battered chair still scattered by the ticket booth.

  “Katherine?”

  The rain washing the glass, the wind bringing in the cold.

  “Paula? Gary?”

  The office door was open, and he started toward it in a rush, slowed, and moved cautiously though he wasn’t sure why. And every step he took, he expected Ginny to leap out at him, shrieking with laughter, the flesh still falling from her skeleton and the blood still running from her nose.

  The chandelier trembled; the crystals rang like tiny bells that had never been tuned.

  “Look, guys,” he said as he stepped over the threshold.

  The office was empty, except for the injured man still sleeping on the couch. The candle burning on the desk was much lower, and he could see the bruise on the man’s temple darkening, spreading, as if there was hemorrhaging. He hurried over and shook his shoulder, shook it harder when there was nothing but a waggling of the man’s head. Holy shit, he thought, and knelt beside him, put a finger to his neck, to his wrist, to find evidence of a heartbeat. It was there, but it was weak, and he licked at his lips as he returned to the lobby.

  “I don’t get it,” he said aloud, hands on his hips. “Hey, Katherine! Mrs. Richards? Paula?” He pushed the auditorium door in and braced it open with one foot. “Gary! Hey, Richards, where the hell are you guys, huh?”

  Nothing in there but the dark; even the huge screen had stopped its glowing.

  It’s all right, he told himself. It’s cool, it’s all right, they’ll be back.

  He backed into the lobby and watched the door swing silently shut. A nightmare, he decided; Ginny, the rain—it’s a goddamned nightmare, that’s all.

  Ellery

  He whirled to stare at the staircase he’d taken, whirled again to peer at the one on his right. No one was there; no shadows, no nightmare.

  But he noticed the men’s room door and rushed in, propped it open with a trash can to give him feeble light, and called again for Richards, shutting up instantly when the name echoed flatly off the dull white tiles. The three stall doors were open; water dripped from one of the faucets; a shred of brown paper towel dangled from its dispenser and waved at him in a draught. The stench of stale disinfectant gagged him; the smell of his own sweat was sour and strong.

  Without thinking, not daring to think, he crossed to the sink and turned the faucet off with an angry twist, yanked away the strip of toweling and used it to dry his hands, tore off another length and soaked it in warm water. He rinsed his face, dried it, dried his hands twice, all the while avoiding a look at his reflection in the mirror above the basin. He was not a brave man, and was not ashamed to admit it; and he knew that as soon as he saw the look on his face, the look in his eyes, something inside was going to shatter.

  He sighed explosively, and moved on his toes to the door so not to have to hear his footsteps.

  A look at his watch; it was well past midnight.

  A look to the outside; it was still raining hard.

  It wasn’t until he found himself staring at the candles on the table that he realized he would have to do something soon or they were all going to go out at about the same time; and when they did, he would be alone. In the dark.

  Quickly, he pinched out the flames of all but one, sagged into a chair, and stared blindly at the front doors. A single candle wasn’t much, but four of them would last a hell of a lot longer one at a time. By then, if he were lucky, it would be daylight and he’d be able to signal someone out on the street to get help, to let him out.

  But Davidson had left, and so had Seth and Toni, and in all the time they’d been gone, not one had returned.

  Ellery He ignored it. It was only his nerves playing stupid games.

  “I will wake up now,” he said loudly, pleased his voice didn’t crack or waver. “I will wake up now, and I will go home.”

  It had been a boring film.

  “Now! I am waking up right now!”

  He couldn’t even remember the title, and he had fallen asleep somewhere in the middle, drained because of the problems at the store, weary because he couldn’t seem to get his personal life in line, disgusted because he had no one to blame but himself. Every morning without exception, he woke up determined to take charge; and most evenings he returned home, thinking that perhaps his brother during their last meeting two years ago had been right, that he was a loser. Not because he wasn’t smart, but because he allowed too many people to have too great a say in what should be his destiny, his own fate.

  “I will wake up,” he said to the empty lobby.

  “Then can I wake up too?” Katherine asked him, leaning against the frame of the ladies’ room door, her makeup smeared, her eyes red from weeping.

  When he spoke her name, his breath was white. When he took off his jacket to place around her shoulders, a fresh flow of blood stained the sleeve of his white shirt.

  When she asked him what happened, he only looked at the stairs.

  “Did your brother really call you a loser?”

  They were on the couch, his arm around her shoulders, and they were staring at the rain.

  He hadn’t realized he had been speaking aloud, and he answered her truthfully, making her frown.

  “He was wrong, then, wasn’t he,” she said.

  “I guess. I don’t know. Sometimes I wonder.”

  She snuggled closer, laying her head on his shoulder as she drew up her legs, not bothering to adjust the skirt that exposed most of a thigh. He touched her hair. She sighed and told him that not long after he had gone upstairs after Ginny, Richards had decided he and his wife would do what Ellery was obviously incapable of doing—find a way out. The man, she said, had virtually dragged his wife into the auditorium, and when they hadn’t returned after fifteen minutes or so, she had gone in to check on them. They were gone. She had called to Ellery from the middle aisle, but he hadn’t answered. She could not, however, bring herself to go up the stairs, so she’d gone into the rest room instead. Hidden. And started to cry.

  “I want to know what’s going on.”

  “So do I. Believe me, so do I.”

  “But there has to be a reason!”

  “I know, I know.”

  And he told her about his earlier notion it might be some sort of hostage situation, though not the kind Richards had claimed, or a prank, or maybe someone was out there fiddling around with electronics, which might explain why the doors wouldn’t open and the telephone wouldn’t work. He knew next to nothing about such things, and could not explain, when asked, why the glass wouldn’t break. Nor could he explain what had happened to Ginny.

  “Now that has to be a trick,” she said in disgust, shivering in spite of the fact he hadn’t told her the whole story. “I mean, that kind of weird stuff just doesn’t happen.”

  “Except in dreams,” he said quietly.

  Without warning she pinched his chest hard and he yelped, almost slapped her when she pinched him again. “Not a dream,” she said. “So what the hell is it?”

  By his reckoning it wasn’t more than fifteen minutes before they roused themselves from the couch in a tacit decision to make a methodical search of the building for the others, and for a way out. They didn’t talk about the storm; they didn’t react to the lightning and thunder.

  By consent, they began in Davidson’s office, not bothering to remain quiet despite the old man’s restless sleep. Drawers were opened, emptied, and were empty of keys; they could
find no tools, no extra flashlights, nothing on any of the papers they uncovered that would tell them what had gone wrong with the theater tonight. The rug was turned up wherever they could move it, furniture was shifted, a storage closet was found that was completely empty. They tapped the walls for hidden exits, feeling like fools and doing it twice again. He climbed on a chair to tap the ceiling for a trapdoor entrance to a crawlspace or attic; and she stared at the old man for over a full minute, finally leaned down and shouted in his ear, slapped his face hard, and was about to drag him to the floor when Ellery stopped her, grabbing her in his arms and taking her gently out.

  “Who is he?”

  “I don’t know.”

  “Where did he come from?”

  “I don’t know that either. I just found him, that’s all.”

  “The sonofabitch. I hope he dies.”

  They searched the rest rooms again, propping open the doors to let some of the candlelight creep in before them.

  They each took one of the staircases to the balcony, felt their way along the upstairs wall, and met in the middle. He almost didn’t make it. He couldn’t look down the aisles, and when Katherine asked him where he had last seen the girl, he couldn’t even lift a finger to point. It was too dark up here, darker than it should have been, and it was all he could do to keep from grabbing her and screaming.

  In the lobby he hefted the ticket seller’s stool and prodded the doors with its thin metal legs, harder each time as frustration shortened his breath and turned his muscles rigid, until he was ramming furiously against the glass, in the corners, in the center, while the rain ran in white-edged sheets and the thunder mocked him and the lightning showed him nothing but his reflection in its glare. His hair darkened with perspiration, his lips were drawn back, teeth bared, tongue flicking; a leg buckled and he was thrown forward, hitting his shoulder against the jamb, and he whirled and threw the stool across the room, shouting wordlessly, fists in the air, then at his temples. Then down at his sides.

 

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