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The Devil in Gray

Page 10

by Graham Masterton


  Hesitantly, he reached out with his thickly bandaged right hand for the panic button that lay on top of his blanket. He didn’t want to look like a fool, calling the nurse because he suspected there was somebody else in the room, when there obviously wasn’t. But if this was a side effect of some of his medication, he thought that the nurse ought to know. He had never taken LSD or any other hallucinogenic, but he could imagine that this was what a trip was like. You could see, like, invisible people.

  Just as he was about to press the button, the rustling noise abruptly changed into a sharp rush of air. Jerry felt something hit his wrist, something as hard as an iron bar. He said, “Jesus!” and jerked up his arm and he was sprayed in the face with blood. He stared at his wrist in disbelief. His hand had been cut off, and it was lying on the green cotton blanket with its fingers curled tightly in convulsion.

  He said, “Jesus” again, and then “Jesus.” His wrist didn’t even hurt, but blood was jetting all over the bed and spattering his pajamas. He thought: This hasn’t happened. This can’t be real. He could still feel his right hand, even though it was separated from his wrist, and he tried to make it reach for the panic button.

  It was then that somebody grabbed his lapels and heaved him bodily out of bed. He lost his balance and rolled across the floor, knocking over his IV drip. Panting with fear, he tried to scramble toward the door on his knees and his remaining hand, leaving a zigzag trail of blood on the vinyl, but he was pulled onto his feet with such force that he heard his spine crackle.

  “Help me!” he screamed. “Help me!”

  Somebody crooked an arm around his neck, so that he could scarcely breathe. Somebody very tall, and very powerful. Somebody dressed in coarse woolen clothing. Somebody who breathed against the back of his neck in harsh, staccato bursts, hah! hah! hah! like the breath of a hungry wolf.

  “Help me!” he choked. “For God’s sake, help me!” But he could only manage the hoarsest of desperate whispers.

  His pajama top was ripped open at the front, scattering buttons. Then—without hesitation—a knife blade was plunged into his stomach, an inch below his navel. The shock was intense, like being punched, and there was a high-pitched whistle of body gases. Jerry tried to struggle free, but his invisible attacker was so strong that he couldn’t even buckle his knees and drop in submission onto the floor.

  There was a moment’s hesitation, and then his stomach was slit open, upward, with one measured stroke, as if his attacker were relishing every moment of terror that he was inflicting. Jerry stared down at himself in utter dread. He could see no knife, and nobody holding it. Yet his skin parted in front of his eyes, revealing glistening red muscle and thick white fat, and then the first bulge of stomach, with a tracery of scarlet veins.

  At first he felt completely numb. But as he was opened up wider, he was suddenly gripped by an agony that made him cry out, “Mama!” like a terrified child.

  Decker opened the Mercury’s rear door and grabbed Sandra’s hand. “Come on!” he urged her. “We have to be quick!”

  Eunice said, “What about me? Do you want me to come, too?”

  “Please, yes. Hicks—can you take care of Ms. Plummer?”

  He ran up the hospital steps, tugging Sandra behind him.

  “What if he sees me?” Sandra asked.

  “You don’t have to worry about that. I’ll take care of him. All you have to do is tell me where he is.”

  They pushed their way through the revolving doors. A security guard approached them with his hand raised and said, “Hey, slow down! You have to report to reception first!”

  Decker showed him his badge. “We’re kind of pushed for time, okay?”

  “Who’s the little lady?”

  “Acting Officer Sandra Plummer. Now—if you don’t mind.”

  They hurried to the elevator bank. Hicks and Eunice were close behind, but Decker said, “Take the next one!” and hit the button for the fifth floor.

  On the way up, Sandra gave him a nervous smile. “This is exciting. I’d like to join the police.”

  “You already have,” Decker assured her.

  The bell chimed and the elevator doors opened. Decker took hold of Sandra’s hand again and said, “We’re going to go see Gerald Maitland first. He’s the guy who lives in the house where you first saw the So-Scary Man, okay?”

  “Why are we going to see him?”

  “Well … if my feeling about this is correct, I think the reason the So-Scary Man came here to the hospital was to look for him.”

  They ran along the corridor until they reached Gerald Maitland’s room. There was no police guard outside, only an empty chair, an untidy newspaper, and two empty coffee cups. Decker tried to open Gerald Maitland’s door, but it was jammed. It felt as if a chair had been wedged underneath the handle, but he couldn’t tell for sure because the blind was pulled down.

  “Jerry!” Decker shouted. “Jerry, are you okay?”

  He banged on the door with the flat of his hand. “Can you hear me, Jerry? Are you all right in there? Can you get out of bed and let me in?”

  Sandra looked up at Decker worriedly, biting her lip. “Do you think something’s happened to him? You don’t think he’s hurt him, do you, the So-Scary Man?”

  “Let’s hope not,” Decker said. He grasped the door frame with both hands and gave the door a kick, and then another. “Jerry! Can you hear me, Jerry? Open up, Jerry, come on!”

  Sandra pressed her index fingers against her forehead, as if she were concentrating very hard. “It’s that wrong feeling again,” she said. “It’s that wrong feeling!”

  Decker kicked the door again and again, but it still wouldn’t budge. At that moment Hicks and Eunice came running along the corridor—and, from the opposite direction, the cop who was supposed to be guarding Jerry Maitland’s door.

  “Where the hell have you been?” Decker shouted at him.

  By way of explanation the cop lifted up a bag of donuts and said, “I’m sorry, sir, I was only a couple of minutes. What’s wrong?”

  “Help me get this goddamn door open. It’s jammed, and Maitland’s not answering.”

  Hicks and the cop both put their shoulders to the door, while Decker kicked it.

  Eunice protectively put her arm around Sandra’s shoulders, while Sandra herself stood with her eyes wide and her hands over her mouth, making a thin mewling sound under her breath.

  Inside the room, Jerry was still being held upright, although his head had fallen back onto his invisible attacker’s shoulder so that he was staring blindly at the ceiling. He was suffering such waves of pain that he could hardly think, and there was a high-pitched singing in his ears. He was still trying to keep his intestines inside his sliced-open stomach, his left hand desperately gripping the slippery sides of his wound like a man in a storm trying to hold a thick rubber raincoat together.

  “Now who’s the martyr?” whispered a thick voice, close to his ear.

  He didn’t answer, couldn’t. He just wanted it to be over with. Anything to stop the pain. Anything to end the horror of what was happening to him.

  “Now who’s making the ultimate sacrifice?” the voice demanded. “Now who’s giving everything for honor and glory?”

  He let out a gargle. He wanted to beg for mercy, but his attacker’s arm was pressing too hard against his larynx. He thought he could hear knocking and somebody calling his name, but it seemed to be coming from very far away.

  The room began to darken, as if a cloud had passed over the sun. As it did so, he felt a dreadful tugging sensation in his abdomen. His head dropped forward and he saw that an unseen hand was pulling his small intestine out of his stomach cavity. It rose up in front of him in spasmodic jerks, like a huge white worm.

  It rose higher and higher, and then it started to slide around the bedrail, around and around, and coil itself into a knot. “No,” choked Jerry. He couldn’t bear any more agony.

  There was a moment’s pause, and then he was lifted cle
ar of the floor, and heaved up onto a shoulder that he couldn’t see. He screamed, and coughed up blood, and the knocking grew more and more frantic.

  “Jerry! What’s happening? Open the door, Jerry, for Christ’s sake!”

  But Jerry was helpless. He feebly tried to struggle but he was carried across the room, toward the window, and as he did so his intestines were dragged out of his body, yard by bloody yard, even though he scrabbled wildly to keep them in.

  He reached the window. He was lifted even higher into the air, with his arms and legs flailing, and then he was flung through the glass. There was an explosive smash, and he felt himself tumbling through the air, colliding with the side of the building as he did so. But then there was a hideous, agonizing jolt, and he spun around and found himself hanging in midair, suspended by his own guts.

  He didn’t scream. He was too shocked and winded to scream. But he gripped his large intestine with his left hand and tried to pull himself upward. The peritoneal coating was far too greasy, and he had no more strength, but he kept thinking, I’m alive, I’m still alive, and as long as I’m still alive I can survive. He saw horrified faces staring at him and he thought he could hear people shouting. He thought: They’ve seen me, that’s good, they’ll send somebody to help. He twisted his intestine around his hand to give himself some more purchase, but he was much too weak to pull himself any higher.

  “Alison?” he said. Then darkness flooded into his head and he died, dangling, slowly spinning around and around in front of the third-story windows, on the end of twenty-eight feet of bloody, stretched entrails.

  As the window smashed, Decker gave the door another kick and it flew open as if it had never been jammed. He yanked out his revolver and stepped into the room. The first thing he saw was the grisly scarlet rope that was tied to the end of the bed, although he didn’t understand what he was looking at.

  “What the fuck?” the uniformed cop said.

  “Looks like Maitland’s escaped,” Hicks said. “Tied some sheets together and broken the window.”

  Decker looked across at the blood-spattered bed, and then down to the zigzag pattern of blood on the vinyl floor. “Cut himself real bad, by the look of it.”

  He cautiously approached the window. As he did so, he became aware of an odd distortion in the air. The buildings opposite the hospital appeared to ripple and melt, as if he were looking at them through the rising heat from a corrugated iron roof. Even the window frame wavered, which gave him an unexpected sense of vertigo.

  He took one more step forward, and then he was violently pushed in the chest. He was thrown sideways against the end of the bed, hitting his shoulder. Hicks, bewildered, said, “Lieutenant?” but then he was pushed, too, and promptly sat down in the armchair in the corner. The uniformed cop was turning around to help Decker when he, in turn, was slammed against the doorjamb. “Holy shit,” he said, as blood burst out of his nose.

  Decker shouted, “The door! Shut the door!” but it was already too late. From the corridor outside, Sandra shrieked, “It’s him! It’s him!”

  Decker pushed his way past the uniformed cop, his revolver raised in both hands. Sandra was clinging on to her mother and pointing along the corridor. “There he goes! Look! Can’t you see him? There he goes! He’s there!”

  All that Decker could see was a fluid, transparent wobble at the very end of the corridor. He was about to shoot at it when a side door opened and two nurses stepped into his line of fire, laughing. “Get back!” Decker yelled at them. “Get out of the way!” but before they could react one of them was thrown to the floor and the other was pushed on top of her.

  Decker ran down the corridor and kicked open the door that led to the elevator bank. An elevator opened, and he lifted his revolver and shouted, “Freeze!” but it was only an orderly pushing an elderly woman in a wheelchair. There were three other elevators, but two were at lobby level and the third was on seven. Not only that, the stairs were right at the other end of the hospital.

  He said, “Shit,” under his breath and holstered his revolver. There was no point in putting out an APB on somebody who couldn’t be seen. He walked back toward Jerry Maitland’s room, stopping to help up one of the nurses.

  “I felt like somebody really shoved me,” she said, straightening her cap. “Somebody shoved me but there was nobody there.”

  “I know,” Decker said. “The same thing happened to all of us.”

  “But what was it?”

  “We don’t know yet. It’s some kind of trick. Don’t worry, we’re on top of it. I’ll need to talk to you later, if you could give me your names.”

  “Lieutenant!” Hicks called out, and Decker could hear the distress in his voice. “Lieutenant, you’d better come take a look at this!”

  At that moment, the door to the elevator bank was flung open and two of the hospital security guards came running toward them, followed by three male paramedics and a nurse.

  CHAPTER FIFTEEN

  Cab said, “This is getting very unfunny.”

  Decker took off his glasses and polished them with his garish red and yellow necktie. “At least we have a clear idea of what we’re up against.”

  “Oh, you think so? We’re up against some kind of invisible guy who can only be seen by a young girl with Down’s syndrome? What’s clear about that? I can’t even give any details to the press.”

  “I don’t see why not. Maybe there are some other people out there who have the ability to see him. You know, maybe Sandra isn’t the only one.”

  “You really think I’m going to announce that we’re looking for somebody we can’t see? You must think I’m desperate for early retirement.”

  Decker put his glasses back on and shrugged. “I still think it might help. If what this guy can do is a trick, or some kind of mass hypnosis, then there could be somebody out there who can tell us how it’s done. Then again—if he’s a genuine supernatural phenomenon, there could be somebody out there who knows how to track him down and do whatever it is you have to do to supernatural phenomena to stop them from disemboweling people.”

  “Who? Father Karras?”

  Hicks said, “No—I agree with Lieutenant Martin. I think people are pretty open-minded about weird stuff these days. Like, you know, poltergeists and demonic possession and shit.”

  Cab dragged out his handkerchief and loudly blew his nose. “I can’t do it. The chief will go nuclear. The city manager’s daughter went missing a couple of years ago and I called in a psychic detective. And then I made the mistake of mentioning it to Roger Barrett at WRVA.”

  “Kaboom!” Detective Rudisill remembered, with relish.

  “Exactly. Kaboom. Can you imagine what the chief would do if I put out a public appeal for hypnotists and mentally challenged children and exorcists? She’d have my balls for her Sunday-best earrings.”

  “Okay, Captain,” Decker conceded. “We still have a couple of orthodox lines of inquiry to follow up—like we’re looking into the Maitlands’ family histories, and Major Drewry’s, too.”

  Cab said, “All right … see how far you get with your regular inquiries. After that—if you still think we need to involve the media—come back and talk to me first. Don’t give me any nasty surprises.”

  “I wouldn’t dream of it, Captain. But—one more thing. We need to reinstate Sandra Plummer’s close protection.”

  “All right. I think I can find a way to justify that.”

  “Oh—and one more thing. Are you still planning to go to Charlottesville on Tuesday afternoon?”

  “Why are you always so interested in my movements, Martin?”

  “No particular reason. I just like to know where you are, you know—in case things get exciting.”

  Outside in the parking lot, he met Mayzie. It was early evening now, and the sky was golden.

  “Hi, Mayzie,” he said, putting his arm around her shoulders. “I’ve been meaning to call you. You’re right. We really have to talk.”

  Mayzie tw
isted herself free of him. “I’ve decided I don’t want a baby after all,” she retorted.

  “You’ve decided? Don’t you think I have any say in this?”

  “You told me you didn’t want to be a father.”

  “I know … but I don’t know. I’m kind of warming to it. I could take him fishing. I could teach him how to play five-card stud.”

  “How do you know we would have a boy?”

  “He must be a boy. Do I look like the kind of guy who’d have girls?”

  “Decker, you’re a head case. What happened in the men’s room … you were like a mad person. I don’t want to have children fathered by a mad person.”

  “I had a—thing, that’s all. Kind of, like, a hallucination. Overwork. Not enough sleep. Too much coffee.”

  “Decker, you can’t change my mind.”

  He had reached his car. He caught hold of her arm and stopped her. “Have you been to a clinic yet? Talked about it? I mean the medical implications?”

  “Why should I go to a clinic?”

  He frowned at her. “You’re not going to try and do it yourself, are you?”

  “I don’t know what you mean.”

  “The abortion. It could be really dangerous, doing it yourself.”

  “I’m not pregnant, Decker.”

  “You mean you lost it?”

  Mayzie shook her head. “I’m sorry. I was stupid. I thought it might bring us closer together, if you thought that I was going to have your baby. You don’t know what I feel about you, do you? You don’t care, either. I see you flirting and sleeping around with any girl you can get your hands on, and that hurts. That really, really hurts.”

  Decker lowered his head and ran his hand through his hair. “I’m sorry, Mayzie. The last thing I ever wanted to do was hurt you. I’ve been hurting so much myself that I—well, I guess I got into the habit of it. I totally forgot that other people have feelings. That you have feelings.”

 

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