Come Little Children

Home > Other > Come Little Children > Page 1
Come Little Children Page 1

by Melhoff, D.




  D. Melhoff

  Copyright © D. Melhoff 2013

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means without the prior written permission of the publisher.

  This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, resold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.

  All characters and incidents in this book are fictitious and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

  First published by

  Bellwoods Publishing

  www.dmelhoff.com

  ISBN-13: 9780992133108

  ISBN-10: 0992133106

  Cover artwork by Carl Graves

  Back cover and book design by Bryce Kirk

  Permissions

  Garden Of Magic

  from HOCUS POCUS*

  Text based on the poem “Come Little Children” by Edgar Allan Poe

  Additional text by Brock Walsh

  Music by James Horner

  (c) 1993 Walt Disney Music Company

  All Rights Reserved Used by Permission

  *Adapted lyrics not used in film

  Reprinted by Permission of Hal Leonard Corporation

  For my family

  Blood is thicker than ink

  Come little children

  I’ll take thee away, into a land

  of Enchantment.

  Come little children

  the time’s come to play

  here in my garden

  of Shadows.

  Follow sweet children

  I’ll show thee the way

  through all the pain and

  the Sorrows.

  Weep not poor children

  for life is this way

  murdering beauty and

  Passions.

  Hush now dear children

  it must be this way

  to weary of life and

  Deceptions.

  Rest now my children

  for soon we’ll away

  into the calm and

  the Quiet.

  Come little children

  I’ll take thee away, into a land

  of Enchantment.

  Come little children

  the time’s come to play

  here in my garden

  of Shadows.

  —Brock Walsh et al. (“Garden of Magic”)

  On my experience, Adam, freely taste,

  And fear of Death deliver to the Windes.

  – Eve (John Milton, Paradise Lost)

  Man,

  Plac’d in a Paradise, by our exile

  Made happy: him by fraud I have seduc’d

  From his Creator, and the more to increase

  Your wonder, with an apple.

  – Satan (John Milton, Paradise Lost)

  Table of Contents

  PART I: Town of the Midnight Sun

  Prologue

  Chapter 1: The Men and the Mortician

  Chapter 2: Nolan

  Chapter 3: The Vincents

  Chapter 4: Midnight

  Chapter 5: Stag Crescent

  Chapter 6: Autopsy

  Chapter 7: The Directors

  Chapter 8: Top of the World

  Chapter 9: The Hospice

  Chapter 10: The Wedding

  Chapter 11: The Midnight Sun

  Chapter 12: The Photographer

  Chapter 13: On the Edge of the Pond

  Chapter 14: Burning Up

  Chapter 15: St. Teresa’s

  Chapter 16: Jasper’s Parable

  Chapter 17: A Chase in the Night

  PART II: Abigail

  Chapter 18: Seven Candles

  Chapter 19: Officer Logan

  Chapter 20: 1989

  Chapter 21: Premonition

  Chapter 22: Marlee and Todd

  Chapter 23: The Bloodhounds

  Chapter 24: Night on the Water

  Chapter 25: Closed Caskets

  PART III: The Family Crypt

  Chapter 26: Entombed

  Chapter 27: Among the Dead

  Chapter 28: Quarantine

  Chapter 29: St. Luther’s

  Chapter 30: Abigail’s Gift

  Chapter 31: Divided

  Chapter 32: Hide and Seek

  Chapter 33: The Pond Floor

  Chapter 34: Battle of the Yukon

  Chapter 35: Requiem

  PART I

  TOWN OF THE MIDNIGHT SUN

  Prologue

  The old hands worked carefully with the added confidence of having done this hundreds of times. Their maneuvers were quick and precise. Fluid. Surgical.

  A scalpel touched a point between the nipples on the cadaver’s chest and drifted north, unzipping the skin exactly seven inches along the sternum. Shadows played out the rest on the concrete walls: the worker selected a heavier device and hovered over the outline of the body, flicking a switch and activating a high, screeching vibration that trailed through the air and disappeared into the silhouette’s chest.

  Instantly the hum dropped an octave—ggvvrrrrr, ck-ck, ggvvrrrrr—choking and sputtering as it coughed up particles of bone dust.

  Ggvvrrrrr! CK-CK! Ggvvrrrr!

  The mist made a macabre Tyndall effect in the lamplight. Beyond these specks, the worker turned off the electric saw and brought up a wooden box the size of a tea chest, then withdrew something from inside.

  Something small.

  Something odd.

  It was too dark to see what the object was, but the worker handled it nimbly and lowered it into the body’s rib cage. Finally came the wires. Long strands went to string the ribs together again, and then finer thread began suturing the seven-inch cut. The worker—the puppeteer—pulled up and down on every angle and direction, tugging at the limbs like they belonged to a limp marionette.

  When the wiring and stitching were complete, the worker reached up and pulled away her surgical mask to reveal a stern woman with a weathered complexion. Her hollow cheeks and pursed lips formed a mean countenance, and a tight nest of charcoal hair pegged her somewhere in her late fifties. She examined her work on the table and nodded, satisfied, then scooped the body of the dead six-year-old boy into her arms and walked briskly out of the room.

  Outside was calm. The courtyard glowed on nights like this: beautiful fountains bubbled in the moonlight—stone maidens carrying marble vases, Grecian warriors with playful cherubs gliding above their heads—while wisps of fireflies pulsed on and off in the sweet-smelling ground cover. At one end of the yard, a sprawling tree dipped its roots in the water of a deep pond, and at the opposite end the estate stood proud, protecting it all. Guarding it.

  The back door swept open and out walked the woman with the boy in her arms. She hummed a soft tune to herself as she strolled to the edge of the pond, and when she reached the water, she slipped out of her heels and waded two, three steps farther. Finally she let the boy go, and then turning around without so much as a slight pause to watch the body sink through the ripples, she pulled on her heels again and walked back toward the house, still humming her mellifluous tune.

  A minute passed.

  The waves in the pond settled.

  The work was done.

  1

  The Men and the Mortician

  Camilla Carleton cleared her throat. You can stop staring now, please. She glanced beside her, and the old man sitting at the back of the airplane looked away. He tugged the brim of his Stetson hat over his face and adjus
ted the crotch of his jeans, folding his arms and tilting his head down like one of those sleepy cowboy cut-outs that ranchers prop against their fences to make themselves seem mellow and rustic.

  Camilla was out of place, there was no doubt about that. Twenty-six years old, pale skin, long burgundy hair. She fluffed her white ruffled blouse and smoothed out the black pinafore on top, which was draped over a pair of leggings that stretched all the way down to a pair of wedges made from Louisianan alligator scales.

  “Sweet Jesus,” the old-timer had commented to the airline’s ticket-taker when they’d boarded the plane. “Some civvies. Got ourselves one of those tropical birds that flew too far south and came around the top again. Heh, heh, heh.”

  Apparently the outfit attracted more attention up north than it had back home—or maybe everyone back home was just used to it by now. Either way, Camilla couldn’t care less what an old man from Whitehorse had to say about fashion. Frankly, she had bigger things to worry about.

  Tap, tap, tap went the alligator wedges.

  Tap.

  Tap, tap.

  Tap, tap, tap.

  The other passengers were, by Klondike standards, run-of-the-gold-mill folk. An overweight trucker in jeans and suspenders was snoring in row three, and right behind him—slouched in 4D—an oil rigger was scratching the stubble underneath his chin, yawning as he watched the Yukon gorges dip past his little window. The other seats were empty until the very back. On the right side of row twenty was the retired old-timer, splayed out like a genuine Yukon prospector: salt-and-pepper moustache, tan jacket, authentic deer-hide work boots. He was a caricature modeled after his grandfather’s box of gold-panning photographs, down to the same Stetson hat.

  Then there was Camilla. The odd girl out, 20A, misplaced in the tough northern territory with her pretty black pinafore and funeral-chic leggings. But her outfit wasn’t the only thing that pegged her as different. It was the way she sat—arms and legs tucked together, shoulders slouched—and the way she took in her surroundings with a curious, wide-eyed look that hinted her thoughts were as busy as her East Coast couture. Maybe as sharp too.

  The Hawker-Siddeley 748 continued cutting its way from Whitehorse to Dawson City. It drew a long vapor trail over Miles Canyon and the Yukon River, following the milky waters from where they churned and surged through the winding chutes of volcanic rock to quieter streams that branched off and became clear as gin. As Camilla stared out of her window with pupils as wide as camera apertures, she thought: These valleys are spectacular. Absolutely spectacular.

  It was so untouched—so raw, the Yukon wilderness—and even more breathtaking than she had predicted. A quote from the first chapter of a book she’d been trying to finish before she left popped into her head: “An ocean can make the largest man in the world feel small, while the Yukon makes the strongest men feel weak.” The quotation resonated from thirty thousand feet. Every river and crater below appeared to be carved out by a giant’s hand, and the hillsides, steep and cragged, were like the land’s underbite coming to swallow up anyone who wasn’t worthy of scaling its soil. Unlike neat patches of land in other parts of the country, this was wild terrain that jutted and swerved and sprawled wherever it felt like. There was only one word that could sum it up—indeed, it’s what the poets usually settled on—and that was “untamed.”

  The plane dipped into a bank of clouds and the spell of the Yukon was temporarily broken. Camilla’s quick, camera-like focus returned to the cabin in search of a distraction. Why didn’t you bring a carry-on, genius? She frowned. Or at least Meyers and Thiessen. You knew you’d want to go over the Thanatos problems again. Her upper teeth raked her lower lip, and she fidgeted with the nervous twitch of an A+ student who knows she’s failed a final exam before she’s even sat down to write it.

  She checked her watch: ten minutes to landing.

  The plane hit a pocket of turbulence and rattled the coffeepots at the front of the cabin. She started scratching off the black nail polish on her left thumbnail—the right was stripped bare—and wiped a bead of sweat that was bubbling below her nose. It wasn’t the flight that was making her worried. No, she was much more nervous about what would happen after the plane landed. Everything had to go perfectly. It had to. She peeked outside her tiny porthole again and watched the Klondike River reappear in the glistening sun.

  “No need ta’ worry, miss.”

  Camilla turned to see the old-timer stretching his arms in front of him. His restlessness had apparently boiled into conversation. “Never had to use the life vests yet,” he added with a wry smile, nodding at the window.

  She considered the comment for a second. “I wonder…”

  “Hmm?”

  Her eyes narrowed.

  “Wonder what?”

  “How often they replace them. I read a story once, from Nassau, where a plane went down and the jacket seams were brittle. Everyone drowned.”

  The old timer’s smile went running away faster than bartender John’s from Billy Joel’s “Piano Man.” He adjusted himself uncomfortably in his seat.

  “And what about defects?” she continued. “Who gets the one jacket out of a thousand—or ten thousand, or a hundred thousand—that slipped by? Of course, that assumes we have life jackets. They say they’re under our seats, but has anyone ever checked?”

  Camilla laughed hesitantly and waited to see if the old-timer would laugh too. He didn’t.

  She turned back to her window and stared out again. There was a flash of genuine curiosity on her face as she imagined the plane going down and crashing into the sapphire river below. Our airplane is down, the life preservers are missing. What’s next? Her eyes flitted faster, intrigued, as she thought about the potential—though unlikely—emergency scenario and ignored her real-life problems momentarily. There’s nothing but water and bodies. Four men, including the pilot. Maybe I can use the cadavers to float to shore? Like a bolt of lightning in a clear blue sky, a funny image popped into her imagination: a raft constructed entirely of corpses. Arms as masts, feet as rudders, real heads as figureheads. She giggled to herself again as the old timer cinched his seatbelt tighter around his waist.

  No, Camilla reconsidered, impossible. Cadavers don’t float until their rigor dissipates. Proteasomes, I think? Yes, proteasomes oxidizing. Best case scenario, an average body won’t produce enough gas to float in forty degree water for at least ten days postmortem. Unless…

  The plane started its descent, but Camilla was too caught up in her morbid daydream to notice. She looked around the cabin and began taking inventory of the other passengers: Thin elderly man, 150 pounds. Another man, muscular, 200 pounds. Hmm. Her eyes locked on the large man snoring in the third row. Obese male, 280 pounds, mostly fat. Good. Fat’s less dense than muscle and floats easily, especially in saltwater.

  A grin stretched across her face.

  Mystery solved. Hang on to Mr. Mars Bars.

  Without warning, the airplane’s tires touched down on the runway and snapped Camilla back to reality both physically and mentally. Her fingers dug into the armrests and her teeth clamped together like Vise-Grips while the plane rattled and shook and gravity regained its control over all of them.

  The men and the mortician had arrived in Dawson City.

  The passengers stood on the tarmac as they waited for the pilot to bring them their bags from the airplane’s cargo hatch. It was hot—at least eighty degrees—which was a sultry surprise, especially to Camilla. She reached up and hid both of her ears behind her hair, then folded her arms to protect as many ghost-white pores as possible from burning.

  “Never been to Dawson?”

  It was the old-timer again. He looked less pallid after arriving on solid ground.

  “What gave it away?” Camilla asked, dragging the tip of an alligator wedge sarcastically across the gravel.

  “Huh. All you goths this funny?”

  “I wouldn’t know.” She shrugged. “I think goths emphasize mystic and romantic
motifs more than I do. I just like clothes. And shoes.”

  “Oh.” He half nodded. “OK then.”

  The pilot came by with an armful of duffel bags and two bloated suitcases. He handed a bag to each of the men and then, with some difficulty, nudged the bigger luggage in front of Camilla. She took a seat on one of her suitcases and began scratching her nail polish again.

  The old-timer tipped his Stetson to the pilot and started off down the tarmac. After a dozen paces, he stopped—frowning—and turned around.

  “You waitin’ for a ride?” he called back. “Town’s not for another fifteen clicks, y’know.”

  “I know. I’m fine.”

  A warm breeze swished over the landing strip and tossed Camilla’s hair about her face. In the distance, she could see specks of moose and caribou meandering a tall rump of dirt that towered over a trickling creek, and above them the Red Crossbills and Bay-breasted Warblers flapped lazily on the wind.

  “You have a place to stay?” the old-timer pressed. He softened the question with his northerner’s smile. “Big tourist season. Eldorado and Aurora might be booked up.”

  “That’s OK. I’m going to Nolan.”

  “Nolan?” The man’s smile vanished as quickly as it came. “What’s a cute girl like you got goin’ on up in Nolan?”

  She opened her mouth to reply but was quickly cut off by a series of thunk, thunk, thunks followed by a loud thud. The two of them looked over to see the pilot wheeling a cardboard box marked “Human Remains” down the steps of the airplane’s cargo hatch.

  The old-timer straightened up—now on edge—and appraised Camilla again, watching her eyes light up at the sight of the casket. A grim gaze clouded his features.

  “Don’t worry,” she said, catching the old-timer’s worried expression. “Most commercial flights have a body or two on board. Usually it’s just…Umm, well, it’s not well advertised.”

  “Wonder why.”

  Camilla shrugged. “I guess it’s a bad marketing hook.” Her hands swept the air, revealing an imaginary billboard: “‘We fly dead people.’”

  The old-timer parted his lips, but the sound of something else cut him off. It was a distant crunch coming toward them.

 

‹ Prev