But it was not Neil who lay on his stomach as the lifeguard tried to force breath back into the body. Neil had been doing cannonballs off the high dive when Tom’s wife had shouted for help. The pool had been crowded with people, but no one had seen Tom Dunnigan slip under; he had not cried out, had not even left a ripple in the water. Glenn got close enough through the onlookers to see Tom’s body as the lifeguard worked on him. Tom’s eyes were open, and water was running between the pale blue lips. But Glenn had found himself staring at a small, circular purple bruise at the back of Tom’s neck, almost at the base of the brain; the bruise was pinpricked with scarlet, as if tiny veins in the skin had been ruptured. He’d wondered what could have caused a bruise like that, but it was so small it certainly wasn’t important. Then the ambulance attendants wheeled Tom away, covered with a sheet, and the pool closed down for a week.
It was later—much later—that Glenn realized the bruise could’ve been a bite mark.
He’d been feeding a chameleon in the pet store when the lizard, which had turned the exact shade of green as the grass at the bottom of his tank, had decided to give him a bite on his finger. A chameleon has no teeth, but the pressure of the lizard’s mouth had left a tiny circular mark that faded almost at once. Still the little mark bothered Glenn until he’d realized what it reminded him of.
He’d never really paid much attention to the chameleon before that, but suddenly he was intrigued by how it changed colors so quickly, from grass-green to the tan shade of the sand heaped up in the tank’s corner. Glenn put a large gray rock in there as well, and soon the chameleon would climb up on it and bloom gray; in that state, he would be invisible but for the tiny, unblinking black circles of his eyes.
“I know what you are,” Glenn whispered. “Oh, yeah. I sure do.”
The light was fading. Glenn looked in the rear seat to check his gear: a snorkel, underwater mask, and fins. On the floorboard was an underwater light—a large flashlight sealed in a clear plastic enclosure with an upraised red off-on switch. Glenn had driven to the K-Mart in Birmingham to buy the equipment in the sporting goods department. No one knew him there. And wrapped up in a yellow towel in the back seat was his major purchase. He reached over for it, carefully picked it up, and put it across his lap. Then he began to unfold the towel, and there it was—clean, bright, and deadly.
“Looks wicked, doesn’t it?” the K-Mart clerk had asked.
Glenn had agreed that it did. But then, it suited his needs.
“You couldn’t get me underwater,” the clerk had said. “Nossir! I like my feet on solid ground! What do you catch with that thing?”
“Big game,” Glenn had told him. “So big you wouldn’t believe it.”
He ran his hands over the cool metal of the spear gun in his lap. He’d read all the warnings and instructions, and the weapon’s barbed spear was ready to fire. All he had to do was move a little lever with his thumb to unhook the safety, and then squeezing the trigger was the same as any other gun. He’d practiced on a pillow in the basement, late at night when Linda was asleep. She’d really think he was crazy if she found what was left of that tattered old thing.
But she thought he was out of his mind anyway, so what did it matter? Ever since he’d told her what he knew was true, she’d looked at him differently. It was in her eyes. She thought he’d slipped right off the deep end.
“We’ll see about that.” There was cold sweat on his face now, because the time was near. He started to get out of the station wagon, then froze. His heart was pounding. A police car had turned into the parking lot, and was heading toward him.
Oh, Jesus! he thought. No! He visualized Linda on the phone to the police: “Officer, my husband’s gone crazy! I don’t know what he’ll do next. He’s stopped going to work, he has nightmares all the time and can’t sleep, and he thinks there’s a monster in the Parnell Park swimming pool! He thinks a monster killed our son, and he won’t see a doctor or talk to anybody else about—”
The police car was getting closer. Glenn hastily wrapped the towel around the spear gun, put it down between the seat and the door. He laid the chain cutter on the floorboard and then the police car was pulling up right beside him and all he could do was sit rigidly and smile.
“Having trouble, sir?” the policeman on the passenger side asked through his rolled-down window.
“No. No trouble. Just sitting here.” Glenn heard his voice tremble. His smile felt so tight his face was about to rip.
The policeman suddenly started to get out of the car, and Glenn knew he would see the gear on the back seat. “I’m fine!” Glenn protested. “Really!” But the police car’s door was opening and the man was about to walk over and see—
“Hey, is that you, Mr. Calder?” the policeman sitting behind the wheel asked. The other one hesitated.
“Yes. I’m Glenn Calder.”
“I’m Mike Ward. I bought a cocker spaniel puppy from you at the first of the summer. Gave it to my little girl for her birthday. Remember?”
“Uh . . . yes! Sure.” Glenn recalled him now. “Yes! How’s the puppy?”
“Fine. We named him Bozo because of those big floppy feet. I’ll tell you, I never knew a puppy so small could eat so much!”
Glenn strained to laugh. He feared his eyes must be bulging with inner pressure. Mike Ward was silent for a few seconds, and then he said something to the other man that Glenn couldn’t make out. The second policeman got back into the car and closed the door, and Glenn released the breath he’d been holding.
“Everything okay, Mr. Calder?” Mike asked; “I mean . . . I know about your son, and—”
“I’m fine!” Glenn said. “Just sitting here. Just thinking.” His head was about to pound open.
“We were here the day it happened,” Mike told him. “I’m really sorry.”
“Thank you.” The whole, hideous scene unfolded again in Glenn’s mind: he remembered looking up from his Sports Illustrated magazine and seeing Neil going down the aluminum ladder on the left side of the pool, down at the deep end. “I hope he’s careful,” Linda had fretted and then she’d called to him. “Be careful!” Neil had waved and gone on down the ladder into the sparkling blue water.
There had been a lot of people there that afternoon. It had been one of the hottest days of the summer.
And then Glenn remembered that Linda suddenly set aside her needlepoint, her face shaded by the brim of her straw hat, and said the words he could never forget: “Glenn? I don’t see Neil anymore.”
Something about the world had changed in that moment. Time had been distorted and the world had cracked open, and Glenn had seen the horror that lies so close to the surface.
They brought Neil’s body up and tried mouth-to-mouth resuscitation, but he was dead. Glenn could tell that right off. He was dead. And when they turned his body over to try to pound the life back into him, Glenn had seen the small purple bruise at the back of his son’s neck, almost at the base of the brain.
Oh God, Glen had thought. Something stole the life right out of him.
And from that moment on, maybe he had gone crazy. Because he’d looked across the surface of the pool, and he had realized something very odd.
There was no aluminum ladder on the left side of the pool down at the deep end. On the pool’s right side there was a ladder—but not on the left.
“He was a good boy,” Glenn told the two policemen. There was still a fixed smile on his face, and he could not make it let go. “His mother and I loved him very, very much.”
“Yes sir. Well . . . I guess we’ll go on, then. You sure you’re all right? You . . . uh . . . haven’t been drinking, have you?”
“Nope. Clean as a whistle. Don’t you worry about me, I’ll go home soon. Wouldn’t want to get Linda upset, would I?”
“No sir. Take care, now.” Then the police car backed up, turned around in the parking lot and drove away along the wooded road.
Glenn had a splitting headache. He chewed a third
Excedrin, took a deep breath, and reached down for the chain cutter. Then he got out of the car, walked to the admissions gate and cleaved the chain that locked it. The chain rattled to the concrete, and the gate swung open.
And now there was nothing between him and the monster in the swimming pool. He returned to the car and threw the clippers inside, shucked off his shoes, socks and trousers. He let them fall in a heap beside the station wagon, but he kept his blue-striped shirt on. It had been a present from Neil. Then he carried his mask, fins and snorkel into the pool area, walked the length of the pool and laid the gear on a bleacher. Rain pocked the dark surface, and on the pool’s bottom were the black lines of swimming lanes, sometimes used for area swim-meets Ceramic tiles on the bottom made a pattern of dark blue, aqua and pale green.
There were thousands of places for it to hide, Glenn reasoned. It could be lying along a black line, or compressed flat and smooth like a stingray on one of the colored tiles. He looked across the pool where the false ladder had been—the monster could make itself resemble a ladder, or it could curl up and emulate the drain, or lie flat and still in a gutter waiting for a human form to come close enough. Yes. It had many shapes, many colors, many tricks. But the water had not yet gone back to the lake, and the monster that had killed Neil was still in there. Somewhere.
He walked back to the car, got the underwater light and the spear gun. It was getting dark, and he switched the light on.
He wanted to make sure the thing found him once he was in the water—and the light should draw it like a neon sign over a roadside diner.
Glenn sat on the edge of the pool and put on his fins. He had to remove his glasses to wear the facemask; everything was out of focus, but it was the best he could do. He fit the snorkel into his mouth, hefted the underwater light in his left hand, and slowly eased himself over the edge.
I’m ready, he told himself. He was shaking, couldn’t stop. The water, untended for more than two weeks, was dirty—littered with Coke cups, cigarette butts, dead waterbugs. The carcass of a bluejay floated past his face, and Glenn thought that it appeared to have been crushed.
He turned over on his stomach, put his head underwater, and kicked off against the pool’s side, making a splash that sounded jarringly loud. He began to drift out over the drain, directing the light’s yellow beam through the water. Around and beneath him was gray murk. But the light suddenly glinted off something, and Glenn arched down through the chill to see what it was—a beer can on the bottom. Still, the monster could be anywhere. Anywhere. He slid to the surface, expelling water through the snorkel like a whale. Then he continued slowly across the pool, his heartbeat pounding in his ears and the sound of his breathing like a hellish bellows through the snorkel. In another moment his head bumped the other side of the pool. He drifted in another direction, guiding himself with an occasional thrust of a fin.
Come on, damn you! Glenn thought. I know you’re here!
But nothing moved in the depths below. He shone the light around, seeking a shadow.
I’m not crazy, he told himself. I’m really not. His head was hurting again, and his mask was leaking, the water beginning to creep up under his nose. Come out and fight me, damn you! I’m in your element now, you bastard! Come on!
Linda had asked him to see a doctor in Birmingham. She said she’d go with him, and the doctor would listen. There was no monster in the swimming pool, she’d said. And if there was where had it come from?
Glenn knew. Since Neil’s death, Glenn had done a lot of thinking and reading. He’d gone back through the Courier files, searching for any information about the Parnell Park swimming pool. He’d found that, for the last five years, at least one person had died in the pool every summer. Before that you had to go back eight years to find a drowning victim—an elderly man who’d already suffered one heart attack.
But it had been in a copy of the Birmingham News, dated October tenth six years ago, that Glenn had found his answer.
The article’s headline read “Bright Light” Frightens Lake Residents.
On the night of October ninth, a sphere of blue fire had been seen by a dozen people who lived around Logan Martin lake. It had flashed across the sky, making a noise—as one resident put it—“like steam whistling out of a cracked radiator.” The blue light had gone down into the lake, and for the next two days, dead fish washed up on shore.
You found the pipes that brought you up into our swimming pool, didn’t you? Glenn thought as he explored the gray depths with his light. Maybe you came from somewhere that’s all water, and you can’t live on land. Maybe you can suck the life out of a human body just as fast and easy as some of us step on ants. Maybe that’s what you live on—but by God I’ve come to stick you, and I’ll find you if I have to search all—
Something moved.
Down in the gloom, below him. Down near the drain. A shadow . . . something. Glenn wasn’t sure what it was. He just sensed a slow, powerful uncoiling.
He pushed the spear gun’s safety off with his thumb. He couldn’t see anything, dead bugs floated through the light like a dust storm, and a sudden newspaper page drifted up from the bottom, flapped in his face and sank out of sight again. Glenn’s nerves were near snapping, and he thought with a touch of hysterical mirth that it might have been an obituaries page.
He lowered his head and descended.
Murky clouds swirled around him. He probed with the light, alert for another movement. The water felt thick, oily; a contaminated feel. He continued to slide down into the depths, and they closed over him. His fins stirred more pool silt, and the clouds refused the light. He stayed down as long as he could, until his lungs began to heave, and then he rose toward the surface like a flabby arrow.
When he reached the top, something grasped his head.
It was a cold, rubbery thing, and Glenn knew it was the grip of death. He couldn’t help it; he shrieked around the snorkel’s mouthpiece, twisted violently in the water and caught sight of slick green flesh. His frantic movement dislodged the facemask, and water flooded in. He was blinded, water was pressing up his nostrils and the thing was wrapped around his shoulders. He heard his gurgling underwater scream, flailed the thing off him and thrashed desperately away.
Glenn kicked to the edge of the pool, raising geysers. The aluminum ladder was in front of him, and he reached up to haul himself out.
No! he thought, wrenching his hand back before it touched the metal—or what was supposed to pass as metal. That’s how it had killed Neil. It had emulated the other ladder and entwined itself around Neil as he entered the water, and it had taken him under and killed him in an instant while everyone else was laughing and unaware.
He swam away from the ladder and hung to the gutter’s edge. His body convulsed, water gurgling from his nostrils. His dangling legs were vulnerable, and he drew them up against his chest, so fast he kneed himself in the chin. Then he dared to look around and aim the light at the monster.
About ten feet away, bouncing in the chop of his departure, was a child’s deflated rubber ring, the green head of a seahorse with a grinning red mouth lying in the water. Glenn laughed, and spat up more of the pool. Brave man, he thought. Real brave. Oh Jesus, if Linda had been here to see this! I was scared shitless of a kid’s toy! His laughter got louder, more strident. He laughed until it dawned on him that he was holding his facemask’s strap around his right wrist, and his right hand gripped the gutter.
In his left hand was the underwater light.
He had lost his snorkel. And the spear gun.
His laughter ceased on a broken note.
Fear shot up his spine. He squinted, saw the snorkel bobbing on the surface five or six feet away. The spear gun had gone to the bottom.
He didn’t think about getting out of the pool. His body just did it, scrabbling up over the sloshing gutter to the concrete, where he lay on his belly in the rain and shivered with terror.
Without the spear gun, he had no chance. I can use the chain
cutter, he thought. Snap the bastard’s head off! But no, no: the chain cutter needed two hands, and he had to have a hand free to hold the light. He thought of driving back to Birmingham, buying another spear gun, but it occurred to him that if he got in the car and left Parnell Park, his guts might turn to jelly on the highway and Neil’s voice would haunt him: “You know I didn’t drown, don’t you, Dad? You know I didn’t . . . ”
He might get in that car and drive away and never come back, and today was the last day of summer, and when they opened the drain in the morning, the monster would go back to the lake and await another season of victims.
He knew what he had to do. Must do. Must. He had to put the facemask back on, retrieve the snorkel, and go down after that spear gun. He lay with his cheek pressed against the concrete and stared at the black water; how many summer days had seen him in that pool, basking like a happy whale? As a kid, he couldn’t wait for the clock of seasons to turn around and point him to this pool—and now, everything had changed. Everything, and it could never be the same again.
Neil was dead, killed by the monster in the swimming pool. The creature had killed part of him, too, Glenn realized. Killed the part that saw this place as a haven of youthful dreams, an anchor-point of memories. And next summer, when the monster came back, someone else’s dreams would die as well.
He had to go down and get the spear gun. It was the only way.
It took him another minute or so to make his body respond to his mind’s command. The chill shocked his skin again as he slipped over the side; he moved slowly, afraid of noise or splashes. Then he put the mask on, swam carefully to the snorkel with his legs drawn up close to the surface; he bit down hard on the mouthpiece, thinking suddenly that if there was really a monster here it could have emulated the snorkel, and both of them would’ve gotten a very nasty surprise. But the snorkel remained a snorkel, as Glenn blew the water out of it.
If there was really a monster here. The thought caught him like a shock. If. And there it was. What if Linda was right? he asked himself. What if there’s nothing here, and I’m just treading dirty water? What if everything I’ve thought is wrong—and I’m losing my mind? No, no, I’m right. I know I am. Dear God. I have to be right.
Creatures: Thirty Years of Monsters Page 28