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They Came From Outer Space

Page 19

by Jim Wynorski (editor)


  She bent over to pick up garments from the floor and dizziness came, forcing her to the edge of the bed. After a while it passed and she got her legs into one of the garments and pulled it on.

  Taking cosmetics from her bag, she went again to the washstand and tried the taps. Still no water. She combed her hair, jerking the comb through the mats and gnarls with a satisfying viciousness. When the hair fell into its natural, blond curls, she applied powder and lipstick. She went back to the bed, picked up her brassiere and began putting it on as she walked to the cracked, full-length mirror in the closet door. With the brassiere in place, she stood looking at her slim image. She assayed herself with complete impersonality.

  She shouldn’t look as good as she did—not after the beating she’d taken.

  Not after the long nights and the days and the years, even though the years did not add up to very many.

  I could be someone’s wife, she thought, with wry humor. I could be sending kids to school and going out to argue with the grocer about the tomatoes being too soft. I don’t look bad at all.

  She raised her eyes until they were staring into their own images in the glass and she spoke aloud in a low, wondering voice. She said, “Who the hell am I, anyway? Who am I? A body named Nora—that’s who I am. No—that’s what I am. A body’s not a who—it’s a what. One hundred and fourteen pounds of well-built blond body called Nora—model 1931--no fender dents—nice paint job. Come in and drive me away.

  Price tag—“ She bit into the lower lip she’d just finished reddening and turned quickly to walk to the bed and wriggle into her dress—a gray and green cotton—the only one she had. She picked up her bag and went to the door.

  There she stopped to turn and thumb her nose at the three sleeping pills in the bottle before she went out and closed the door after herself.

  The desk clerk was away from the cubbyhole from which he presided over the lobby, and there were no loungers to undress her as she walked toward the door.

  Nor was there anyone out in the street. The girl looked north and south.

  No cars in sight either. No buses waddling up to the curb to spew out passengers.

  The girl went five doors north and tried to enter a place called Tim’s Hamburger House. As the lock held and the door refused to open, she saw that there were no lights on inside—no one behind the counter.

  The place was closed.

  She walked on down the street followed only by the lonesome sound of her own clicking heels. All the stores were closed. All the lights were out.

  All the people were gone.

  He was a huge man, and the place of concealment of the Chicago Avenue police station was very small—merely an indentation low in the cement wall behind two steam pipes. The big man had lain in this niche for forty-eight hours. He had slugged a man over the turn of a card in a poolroom pinochle game, had been arrested in due course, and was awaiting the disposal of his case.

  He was sorry he had slugged the man. He had not had any deep hatred for him, but rather a rage of the moment that demanded violence as its outlet.

  Although he did not consider it a matter of any great importance, he did not look forward to the six months’ jail sentence he would doubtless be given.

  His opportunity to hide in the niche had come as accidentally and as suddenly as his opportunity to slug his card partner. It had come after the prisoners had been advised of the crisis and were being herded into vans for transportation elsewhere. He had snatched the opportunity without giving any consideration whatever to the crisis.

  Probably because he did not have enough imagination to fear anything—however terrible—which might occur in the future. And because he treasured his freedom above all else.

  Freedom for today, tomorrow could take care of itself.

  Now, after forty-eight hours, he writhed and twisted his huge body out of the niche and onto the floor of the furnace room. His legs were numb and he found that he could not stand. He managed to sit up and was able to bend his back enough so his great hands could reach his legs and begin to massage life back into them.

  So elementally brutal was this man that he pounded his legs until they were black and blue, before feeling returned to them. In a few minutes he was walking out of the furnace room through a jail house which should now be utterly deserted. But was it? He went slowly, gliding along close to the walls to reach the front door unchallenged.

  He walked out into the street. It was daylight and the street was completely deserted. The man took a deep breath and grinned. “I’ll be damned,” he muttered. “I’ll be double and triple damned. They’re all gone.

  Every damn one of them run off like rats and I’m the only one left.

  I’ll be damned!”

  A tremendous sense of exultation seized him. He clenched his fists and laughed loud, his laugh echoing up the street. He was happier than he had ever been in his quick, violent life. And his joy was that of a child locked in a pantry with a huge chocolate cake.

  He rubbed a hand across his mouth, looked up the street, began walking.

  “I wonder if they took all the whisky with them,” he said. Then he grinned; he was sure they had not.

  He began walking in long strides toward Clark Street. In toward the still heart of the empty city.

  He was a slim, pale-skinned little man, and very dangerous. He was also very clever. Eventually they would have found out, but he had been clever enough to deceive them and now they would never now. There was great wealth in his family, and with the rest of them occupied with leaving the city and taking what valuables they could on such short notice, he had been put in the charge of one of the chauffeurs.

  The chauffeur had been given the responsibility of getting the pale-skinned young man out of the city. But the young man had caused several delays until all the rest were gone. Then, meekly enough, he had accompanied the chauffeur to the garage. The chauffeur got behind the wheel of the last remaining car—a Cadillac sedan—and the young man had gotten into the rear seat.

  But before the chauffeur could start the motor, the young man hit him on the head with a tire bar he had taken from a shelf as they had entered the garage.

  The bar went deep into the chauffeur’s skull with a solid sound, and thus the chauffeur found the death he was in the very act of fleeing.

  The young man pulled the dead chauffeur from the car and laid him on the cement floor. He laid him down very carefully, so that he was in the exact center of a large square of outlined cement with his feet pointing straight north and his outstretched arms pointing south.

  The young man placed the chauffeur’s cap very carefully upon his chest, because neatness pleased him. Then he got into the car, started it, and headed east toward Lake Michigan and the downtown section.

  After traveling three or four miles, he turned the car off the road and drove it into a telephone post. Then he walked until he came to some high weeds. He lay down in the weeds and waited.

  He knew there would probably be a last vanguard of militia hunting for stragglers. If they saw a moving car they would investigate.

  They would take him into custody and force him to leave the city.

  This, he felt, they had no right to do. All his life he had been ordered about—told to do this and that and the other thing. Stupid orders from stupid people. Idiots who went so far as to claim the whole city would be destroyed, just to make people do as they said.

  God! The ends to which stupid people would go in order to assert their wills over brilliant people.

  The young man lay in the weeds and dozed off, his mind occupied with the pleasant memory of the tire iron settling into the skull of the chauffeur.

  After a while he awoke and heard the cars of the last vanguard passing down the road. They stopped, inspected the Cadillac and found it serviceable. They took it with them, but they did not search the weeds along the road.

  When they had disappeared toward the west, the young man came back to the road and began walking
east, in toward the city.

  Complete destruction in two days?

  Preposterous.

  The young man smiled.

  The girl was afraid. For hours she had walked the streets of the empty city and the fear, strengthened by weariness, was now mounting toward terror. “One face,” she whispered. “Just one person coming out of a house or walking across the street. That’s all I ask. Somebody to tell me what this is all about. If I can find one person, I won’t be afraid any more.”

  And the irony of it struck her. A few hours previously she had attempted suicide. Sick of herself and of all people, she had tried to end her own life. Therefore, by acknowledging death as the answer, she should now have no fear whatever of anything. Reconciled to crossing the bridge into death, no facet of life should have held terror for her.

  But the empty city did hold terror. One face—one moving form was all she asked for.

  Then, a second irony. When she saw the man at the corner of Washington and Wells, her terror increased. They saw each other at almost the same moment.

  Both stopped and stared. Fingers of panic ran up the girl’s spine.

  The man raised a hand and the spell was broken. The girl turned and ran, and there was more terror in her than there had been before.

  She knew how absurd this was, but still she ran blindly. What had she to fear? She knew all about men; all the things men could do they had already done to her. Murder was the ultimate, but she was fresh from a suicide attempt. Death should hold no terrors for her.

  She thought of these things as the man’s footsteps sounded behind her and she turned into a narrow alley seeking a hiding place. She found none and the man turned in after her.

  She found a passageway, entered with the same blindness which had brought her into the alley. There was a steel door at the end and a brick lying by the sill. The door was locked. She picked up the brick and turned. The man skidded on the filthy alley surface as he turned into the areaway.

  The girl raised the brick over her head. “Keep away! Stay away from me!”

  “Wait a minute! Take it easy. I’m not going to hurt you!”

  “Get away!”

  Her arm moved downward. The man rushed in and caught her wrist. The brick went over his shoulder and the nails of her other hand raked his face. He seized her without regard for niceties and they went to the ground. She fought with everything she had and he methodically neutralized all her weapons—her hands, her legs, her teeth—until she could not move.

  “Leave me alone. Please!”

  “What’s wrong with you? I’m not going to hurt you. But I’m not going to let you h;t me with a brick, either!”

  “What do you want? Why did you chase me?”

  “Look—I’m a peaceful guy, but I’m not going to let you get away. I spent all afternoon looking for somebody. I found you and you ran away. I came after you.”

  “I haven’t done anything to you.”

  “That’s silly talk. Come on—grow up! I said I’m not going to hurt you.”

  “Let me up.”

  “So you can run away again? Not for a while. I want to talk to you.

  “ “l—I won’t run. I was scared. I don’t know why. You’re hurting

  He got up—gingerly—and lifted her to her feet. He smiled, still holding both her hands. “I’m sorry. I guess it’s natural for you to be scared. My name’s Frank Brooks. I just want to find out what the hell happened to this town.”

  He let her withdraw her hands, but he still blocked her escape. She moved a pace backward and straightened her clothing. “I don’t know what happened.

  I was looking for someone too.”

  He smiled again. “And then you ran.”

  “I don’t know why. I guess—“ “What’s your name.”

  “Nora—Nora Spade.”

  “You slept through it too?”

  “Yes . . . yes. I slept through it and came out and they were all gone.”

  “Let’s get out of this alley.” He preceded her out, but he waited for her when there was room for them to walk side by side, and she did not try to run away. That phase was evidently over.

  “I got slipped a mickey in a tavern,” Frank Brooks said. “Then they slugged me and put me in a hole.”

  His eyes questioned. She felt their demand and said, “I was-asleep in my hotel room.”

  “They overlooked you?”

  “I guess so.”

  “Then you don’t know anything about it?”

  “Nothing. Something terrible must have happened.”

  “Let’s go down this way,” Frank said, and they moved toward Madison Street. He had taken her arm and she did not pull away. Rather, she walked invitingly close to him.

  She said, “It’s so spooky. So . . . empty. I guess that’s what scared me.”

  “It would scare anybody. There must have been an evacuation of some kind.”

  “Maybe the Russians are going to drop a bomb.”

  Frank shook his head. “That wouldn’t explain it. I mean, the Russians wouldn’t let us know ahead of time. Besides, the army would be here.

  Everybody wouldn’t be gone.”

  “There’s been a lot of talk about germ warfare. Do you suppose the water, maybe, has been poisoned?”

  He shook his head. “The same thing holds true. Even if they moved the people out, the army would be here.”

  “I don’t know. It just doesn’t make sense.”

  “It happened, so it has to make sense. It was something that came up all of a sudden. They didn’t have much more than twenty-four hours.”

  He stopped suddenly and looked at her. “We’ve got to get out of here!”

  Nora Spade smiled for the first time, but without humor. “How? I haven’t seen one car. The buses aren’t running.”

  His mind was elsewhere. They had started walking again. “Funny I didn’t think of that before.”

  “Think of what?”

  “That anybody left in this town is a dead pigeon. The only reason they’d clear out a city would be to get away from certain death. That would mean death is here for anybody that stays. Funny. I was so busy looking for somebody to talk to that I never thought of that.”

  “I did.”

  “Is that what you were scared of?”

  “Not particularly. I’m not afraid to die. It was something else that scared me. The aloneness, I guess.”

  “We’d better start walking west—out of the city. Maybe we’ll find a car or something.”

  “I don’t think we’ll find any cars.”

  He drew her to a halt and looked into her face. “You aren’t afraid at all, are you?”

  She thought for a moment. “No, I guess I’m not. Not of dying, that is.

  Dying is a normal thing. But I was afraid of the empty streets—nobody around. That was weird.”

  “It isn’t weird now?”

  “Not—not as much.”

  “I wonder how much time we’ve got?”

  Nora shrugged. “I don’t know, but I’m hungry.”

  “We can fix that. I broke into a restaurant a few blocks back and got myself a sandwich. I think there’s still food around. They couldn’t take it all with them.”

  They were on Madison Street and they turned east on the south side of the street. Nora said, “I wonder if there are any other people still here—like us?”

  “I think there must be. Not very many, but a few. They would have had to clean four million people out overnight. It stands to reason they must have missed a few. Did you ever try to empty a sack of sugar?

  Really empty it?

  It’s impossible. Some of the grains always stick to the sack.”

  A few minutes later the wisdom of this observation was proven when they came to a restaurant with the front window broken out and saw a man and a woman sitting at one of the tables.

  He was a huge man with a shock of black hair and a mouth slightly open showing a set of incredibly white teeth. He waved an
arm and shouted, “Come on in! Come on in for crissake and sit down! We got beer and roast beef and the beer’s still cold. Come on in and meet Minna.”

  This was different, Nora thought. Not eerie. Not weird, like seeing a man standing on a deserted street corner with no one else around. This seemed normal, natural, and even the smashed window didn’t detract too much from the naturalness.

  They went inside. There were chairs at the table and they sat down.

  The big man did not get up. He waved a hand toward his companion and said, “This is Minna. Ain’t she something? I found her sitting at an empty bar scared to death. We came to an understanding and I brought her along.” He grinned at the woman and winked. “We came to a real understanding, didn’t we, Minna?”

  Minna was a completely colorless woman of perhaps thirty-five. Her skin was smooth and pale and she wore no makeup of any kind. Her hair was drawn straight back into a bun. The hair had no predominating color. It was somewhere between light brown and blond.

  She smiled a little sadly, but the laugh did not cover her worn, tired look. It seemed more like a gesture of obedience than anything else.

  “Yes.

  We came to an understanding.”

  “I’m Jim Wilson,” the big man boomed. “I was in the Chicago Avenue jug for slugging a guy in a card game. They kind of overlooked me when they cleaned the joint out.” He winked again. “I kind of helped them overlook me. Then I found Minna.” There was tremendous relish in his words.

  Frank started introductions which Nora Spade cut in on. “Maybe you know what happened?” she asked.

  Wilson shook his head. “I was in the jug and they didn’t tell us.

  They just started cleaning out the joint. There was talk in the bullpen—invasion or something. Nobody knew for sure. Have some beer and meat.”

  Nora turned to the quiet Minna. “Did you hear anything?”

  “Naw,” Wilson said with a kind of affectionate contempt. “She don’t know anything about it. She lived in some attic dump and was down with a sore throat. She took some pills or something and when she woke up they were gone.”

 

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