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Mr. Shivers

Page 7

by Robert Jackson Bennett


  “If you say so,” said Connelly, and began down the ravine.

  He walked along the remains of the gully a ways before spotting them up ahead. They were squatting along the edge of the ditch where the side had fallen in, brown figures among the dry clay rubble. There were five of them, four men and a woman. He saw one man’s bright bald head gleaming with his considerable backside turned to him. The three other men scrabbled with tinder in the ditch. Two seemed to be twins, with blond-red beards and moth-eaten porkpie hats, and the last was a scraggly, ratty thing who seemed more beard than man. Far to the outskirts sat the woman. She was thin and wore a leather jacket with jeans and boots and she had a handkerchief wrapped around her head, pulling her light brown hair back into a bun. She drew lines in the sand and watched the men with a face torn between irritation and exasperation.

  As Connelly came up the large man turned to look, saw him, and said without surprise, “You wouldn’t happen to have any matches, would you, mister? We’ve been trying to figure this out by hand and the only thing we’ve gotten is splinters and swears.”

  “Got a few,” said Connelly. He took out a box of matches, shook it, and handed it to him.

  “God bless,” said the scraggly one, and took it from the large one. He began striking them in clumsy blows, snapping each one.

  “Damn, Roonie,” said the woman, “you didn’t ruin your fingers trying this, did you?”

  “Sorry, Lottie,” said the man softly. “Didn’t mean to waste your matches, mister.”

  “It’s all right,” he said.

  The woman took the matches, then knelt and deftly struck one and held the flame down to the kindling. Soon the wood was crawling with flames. She sheltered it and blew at the base and soon the fire had grown through the wood like bright yellow vines filling a trellis. She took the matches, shook them again, and threw them to Connelly. He caught the box with one hand, and he and the woman looked at each other for a moment before the large man said, “Thanks a bunch. We been sitting here for hours trying to get this started.”

  “Never seen a man manage it by hand.”

  “I suppose you heard us fighting from off the road.”

  “I did. You folks robbers?” asked Connelly.

  They looked at each other, confused. “No,” said the fat man.

  “Cops?”

  “No. Why?”

  Connelly leaned back and yelled, “It’s all right. Just folks.”

  “What?” said the woman, but then saw Pike and the others come sheepishly crawling out of the roadside. “Oh,” she said. “You boys really thought we was going to jump you?”

  “These are strange times, ma’am,” explained Pike.

  “Then let’s not make them any stranger,” said the fat man, laughing. “Come down and sit with us a bit. Where you all headed?”

  Hammond pointed down the road.

  “Where we’re heading, too,” said the woman.

  “They said there was a storm coming,” said the scraggly one.

  “We heard the same,” Roosevelt said.

  “Where in the hell are our manners,” said the fat man. “My name is Monk, that there is Lottie—say hello, Lottie—and these boys are Jake and Ernie and the fella rubbing his knuckles is Roonie.”

  “Hello,” said Roosevelt, and tipped his hat. They introduced themselves. Connelly noticed the woman watching him, sizing him up.

  “We don’t have much,” said Roonie. “Just some rolls is all. We’d be happy to share them in thanks for the matches. We’d be starved without them.”

  “And we’d be happy to share what we have with you, Mr. Roonie,” said Pike, rummaging in his sack.

  “How long have y’all been walking?” asked Lottie.

  “A ways,” said Hammond. “We took a truck down here, walked about six miles since. I’m hungry as hell and don’t mind saying so.”

  They heated old rolls and tinned meat and some of them smoked cigarettes, the new friends eager as they had not had open flame in some time.

  “Any idea what’s down the road?” asked Hammond.

  “Farmland, or what used to be farmland,” said Lottie. “After that there’s a meager little town that’s not much more than a wide spot in the road.”

  “You wouldn’t to have happened to been passed up by anyone, have you?” asked Pike.

  They looked at one another, mouths full. “No,” they said.

  “No one?”

  They shook their heads.

  “Why?” asked Monk, suddenly suspicious. “Who you looking for?”

  “Nothing. You would have remembered him.”

  “Would I?”

  “I would expect so, yes.”

  “And why would I remember this strange person?”

  “He’d be a scarred man. Scarred along the cheeks like—”

  He stopped as the other five jumped to their feet and yelled. The woman and the twins tensed and moved away and Monk stared from face to face, bewildered. Everyone was on their feet except Connelly, who stayed seated at the edge of the ditch before the fire. He was unable to say why but he felt no threat, or not yet at least.

  “What’s going on?” said Roosevelt.

  The other five looked at each other and Monk said, “You all are looking for the shiver-man?”

  Everyone was silent for a great while.

  “Yeah,” said Connelly.

  Lottie said, “So are we.”

  No one moved. Then Connelly reached forward and poked at the edge of the fire with his foot. “Well. That’s something.”

  “Why you looking for him?” said Roonie. “What do you want with him?”

  “Why? What about you?” Hammond said.

  “We’re no friends of his, if that’s what you’re asking,” said Pike quickly. “I doubt if such a man has friends of any kind, Mr. Monk.”

  Monk mopped sweat from his brow with a soiled piece of fabric and thought. “Good God almighty,” he said, “if this isn’t crazy as all hell.”

  They looked at each other for a few minutes longer, sometimes making to whisper to one another before becoming embarrassed and giving up.

  “Rolls are done,” said Connelly, and reached forward and lifted the food off the flame. “You all going to eat or what?”

  “What do you want from him?” Lottie asked them.

  “Nothing good,” said Connelly.

  “Would nothing good be killing?”

  He looked at her a long, long while. “It would,” he said.

  The other group considered this, then sat and began eating. Pike and the others followed, still watchful.

  “I think it’s sort of funny,” said Connelly.

  “What is?” said Lottie.

  “How surprised we are. I mean, we met our own already. The folks we traveled with before this. So there’s no reason to be upset if we meet more, is there. Makes sense that there’s got to be more who’s after him, and for the same reason.”

  “I don’t think that’s very funny,” said Lottie. “That’s not very funny at all.”

  “No,” said Connelly. “I guess it isn’t, is it.”

  The two groups looked at each other. Then they sat and began eating and did not speak for some time.

  Once they were done eating they shared their stories. The other party spoke of lost kin, of dead friends, of loved ones slain. Lottie would not tell hers, merely shaking her head. All the stories were familiar, all the tellers quiet and broken-eyed. How far had they all tracked him? Were they to put their separate paths end to end Connelly would have guessed it would stretch across the country. A line of crimson footprints, twisting through the desert flats…

  Connelly shook himself.

  “And what’s the most recent thing you heard of him?” said Pike softly.

  The other party exchanged looks. “You haven’t heard?” asked Lottie.

  “No. Heard what?”

  Monk leaned in. “You know that town up ahead? Wide spot in the road?”

  They nod
ded.

  “We hear there’s an odd fella set up there for the night. Face all messed up. Heard it not more than four hours ago, from a man off the road.”

  A deafening silence fell over all of them. Hammond got to his feet and stood staring down at Monk.

  “You mean it?” said Roosevelt.

  “I surely do.”

  “Good God…” whispered Hammond. “He’s here. He’s here. He’s right over that fucking field over there, is that what you’re telling me?”

  Roonie nodded. “Would be. We’re going to wait ’til nightfall. Going to sneak up on him. Get him that way.”

  “What? You’re waiting?” said Hammond.

  “We are,” said Monk.

  “No! No, the hell with that!” he shouted. “Come on! He’s right over there! We got one shot at this and we’re going to sit around a damn fire eating fucking tinned meat, is that? Jesus!”

  “Waiting’s smart,” said Roonie, but he looked ashamed.

  “You’re cowards,” Hammond said. “Cowards is what you are. You’ve come all this way and now you’re afraid.”

  Roonie got to his feet. “You say that again. You say that again to me.”

  “If you had an inch of spine,” said Hammond softly, “you’d have done it already.”

  “What about you, boy?” asked Monk. “You killed a man? Are you a killer?”

  Hammond faltered and made to turn away. He quivered and lashed out and kicked a nearby log, sending it flying.

  “Hammond!” Pike said loudly. “Sit down! These folk talk sense.”

  “What’s sense is going over there right now and putting a bullet in whatever brain he’s got,” said Hammond.

  “That’s not sense, that’s idiocy. What we do is right, but no lawman knows that. You shoot that man in broad daylight and you’re liable to get shot yourself.”

  “That doesn’t matter and you know it,” Hammond said, his voice smooth and quiet and deadly.

  There was a moment of quiet.

  “You don’t think we want the same?” said Monk. “You don’t think we said the very words you’re saying now? Yes, we do have one shot. And I don’t aim to mess it up.” But Connelly noticed how he turned bright red as he spoke, and how he mopped sweat from his brow.

  Hammond shook his head and did not respond.

  “Come on,” said Roosevelt. “Sit down, Hammond. Don’t lose your head now. If you do you’ll do it wrong and he’ll just wind up laughing at you again. And you don’t want that, do you?”

  “No. No, I don’t want that.”

  “Then sit.”

  He did. He wiped at his face, hiding his tears and smearing dust over his cheeks and eyes. In the fading light he looked like some child of war, face painted and awaiting battle.

  “Make no mistake,” said Monk. “We mean to kill him, yes. We need to see this thing dead. And we will. We’ll come in at night. Find him. We’ll all get him, make sure he can’t escape. Then we move. And… and we take all the time we need.” Again the chubby hand rubbed sweat away from his eyes.

  “And we need a great deal of time,” Hammond said.

  “Yeah,” said Lottie, her voice trembling. “Yeah, we do.”

  Connelly looked at her, then at the others. They did not look much like killers. They spoke the words but he saw desperation in them rather than resolve. These were not monsters or machines but anguished people clinging at a chance to put things right. But here at the penultimate moment a trickle of doubt worked into them, one by one. All except perhaps Pike… And then Connelly wondered about himself.

  We’ll figure it out, he reasoned. We got to.

  Monk said to them, “We have just met, yet we know each other.”

  Pike said, “Are you inviting us to join you? For the moment?”

  “Don’t see why not. We get more folk we got a better chance of getting him.”

  “That’s so,” said Pike. And he spat in the fire and watched it sizzle and gripped his heavy walking stick and began to wait.

  As evening fell their purpose weighed more heavily upon them. Their eyes grew flat and in that instance all of them were one person, one grieving heart and one vengeful hand. Yet each also felt they were alone in their suffering, for they had endured a loss that made the world a gray and silent place, barren and unpopulated.

  “When should we go?” said Roonie softly. “When should we go?”

  Monk looked at the sky overhead. “Don’t know much about killing. It’s almost night. I suppose now is as good a time as any.”

  “I would suppose,” said Pike.

  They did not move at first. They sat still until the sky was dark, like a dome had fallen across the country, trapping them and blocking out all light. Then they dumped dirt on the fire and stood without speaking and walked west, like ghosts passing through the empty fields, simply obeying the red song inside of them without thought.

  CHAPTER EIGHT

  It was less than two miles. Within minutes they saw a clutch of buildings silhouetted against the bleak light of the dying sunset. There was something wrong with the light in the distance, like it was shining through greased glass, but they paid it no mind.

  “Where’ll he be?” asked Hammond.

  “Inn,” said Monk. “I hope.”

  They spread out and approached the town in a tight half-circle. They saw no people, no animals, no sign of life save for a few lit windows among the buildings. At the outskirts they moved among the structures like hunters in a forest, seeking cover and shadow and lines of sight. Still nothing stirred.

  “Whole damn place is dead,” said Roosevelt.

  “Seems to be,” said Pike.

  “What the hell’s going on?”

  “I can’t say.”

  There was a crash from a general store and a man came running out from the back with arms full of food and bottles of alcohol. He wore overalls and a straw hat barely kept together and he had no shoes. He stopped when he saw them watching, then turned to run before one of the twins stepped out and stopped him, grabbing his arm.

  “Let me go!” he cried. “Let me go!”

  “What’s this nonsense?” said Pike as he strode up.

  “Let me go! You bastards let me go!”

  As they struggled one of the bottles fell from the man’s arms and shattered on the ground. He shrieked like a child and kneeled over it, crying, “You broked it! You done broked it! Why’d you have to do that?”

  “Be quiet,” said Pike.

  “You done broked it! I had to go to all that trouble and everything and you all just ruined everything! Why, you—”

  Pike slapped him hard, once, then twice. A trickle of blood began to form at the corner of the man’s mouth and he whimpered.

  “Will you be quiet?” asked Pike.

  He nodded.

  “What’s happening here? Where’re all the people?”

  “They left,” he said, and sobbed and rubbed at his mouth.

  “Why? Where?”

  “Don’t know where. They left ’cause there was no reason to stay. Farms all dried up, got bought out, got dug up. There’s only a few here now.”

  “And where are they?”

  “Most left just now. A storm’s coming. You can take what you want. The place is deserted. You can just go in and take whatever you want,” he said, and smiled like this tip could fix everything.

  “Get out of here,” said Pike, and threw him aside. The man hurried to grab what he had dropped and ran down the street without looking back. Pike turned to the others. “This doesn’t change anything.”

  “No,” said Connelly.

  They found the inn, a long, low-slung building that could have been built with the same primitive tools and designs of fifty years ago, even a hundred years ago. An oil lamp fluttered and swung in the window as the wind picked up. Connelly, Pike, and Monk entered while the others kept watch outside. The inn seemed abandoned as well until a short, fat man with a droopy mustache poked his head out of the back.
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br />   “What the hell?” he said. “Are you folks crazy or something?”

  “No,” said Pike.

  “There’s a goddamn storm coming in, don’t you know to get cover?”

  “We know. We’re looking for someone.”

  “Oh?”

  “Yes. Someone who may be staying here.”

  “Only got one man who’s staying here.”

  “Does he have a scarred face, by any chance?”

  The innkeeper looked at them, suspicious. “He might. What do you want with him?”

  “Where is he?” asked Monk.

  “I don’t like this,” said the innkeeper.

  “Where?” repeated Pike.

  “You boys get out of here. I don’t want you here. Get out.”

  Pike walked around the countertop and the innkeeper opened his mouth to shout when Pike’s fist slammed into the wall above the man’s head. The innkeeper cowered before Pike, shielding his face with his arms. Connelly started forward but Monk put his arm in front of him, though he was trembling. Pike grabbed the innkeeper and thrust him back on the counter and clapped his hand over the man’s mouth before he could yell.

  “You stay quiet,” said Pike to the innkeeper. “You scream and I will make sure you never walk or write again, do you hear me? I have walked miles and miles to find this man and I will have no issue walking over you, sir. Now where is he? Is he here?”

  The innkeeper shook his head, terrified.

  “Then where is he?” said Pike, and took his hand away.

  “He left,” whispered the innkeeper.

  “Left? Where’d he go?”

  “He said he was going for a walk. He does it every night but he said he was doing it again this time. I said he was crazy, just like you all are, you bastards. He said he was going for a walk and I said the sky was about to come down on him but he paid it no mind.”

  “Which way did he go?”

  “Up the street,” said the innkeeper, and pointed. “That a-way.”

  Pike left him where he was and they walked out. The others crept out of the shadows and joined them in the road.

  “Well?” said Roosevelt.

  “He isn’t here, Mr. Roosevelt,” said Pike. “He went for a walk. The man said he does it every night.”

 

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