Daughters of Arkham

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Daughters of Arkham Page 35

by Justin Robinson


  Sindy eased the door closed and latched it. They heard Abby’s bedroom door open. Abby noted with grim amusement that they hadn’t knocked.

  Another bolt flashed through her, and once again, for a moment, the world was gray and wispy. When she came out of it, she realized she was gnawing at her lip to keep quiet. Abby nodded to the door that lead to the hall. Sindy crept to the door and peeked out. Then she glanced back and nodded.

  Abby heard the men searching her bedroom. They never said a word. Seemed like all pretense was gone. Abby and Sindy were now enemies of the Daughters. She wondered how far they would go. Even now, she couldn’t imagine that her mother and grandmother would allow anyone to hurt her.

  Nate and Bryce, on the other hand, were in a great deal of danger.

  They slipped into the empty hall. Sindy started for the front hall, but Abby pulled her back the other way. The back stairs that lead to the kitchen were down this hall and around the corner. She moved as quickly and as quietly as she could, Sindy just behind her. She kept waiting for her bedroom door to fly open and see Crows come boiling out.

  The latch clicked.

  One step away.

  The door opened.

  They rounded the corner. She paused, hearing the footsteps in the hallway. She remained motionless and tried not to breathe. A bolt went through her, and she sucked in air. The hall shifted once, from black to white. Her breathing was deafening in the quiet. She heard a step toward her, and wondered which of the Crows it would be. She pictured him coming closer, stalking his prey while his shadow jittered behind him.

  “Half of you to the front,” she heard Bertram say. “The rest search the rooms up here.”

  The footsteps were loud, but they were all heading away from them. Abby and Sindy had a small window of opportunity. Abby seized it, hurrying down the stairs. She had to cling to the rail to avoid tipping over. They hit the bottom, slipped out the door, and headed toward the kitchen. If they could reach the passageway, they could get to the church and free the boys before the Daughters even knew there was something wrong.

  As she reached for the doorknob to the pantry, it began to open. Sindy squeaked and yanked Abby into the nearby alcove. They heard stilettos clicking along the ceramic tile of the kitchen floor. Sindy and Abby slinked further into the alcove, clinging to each other as the Daughters of Arkham made their way into the house. They couldn’t use the tunnel. They needed another way out.

  They were a room away from the solarium, an easy way to get into the backyard. It wasn’t ideal, but it would have to do.

  The pantry door was shut. Abby managed to wait a solid five Mississippis before she waddled out of the alcove. She slid the patio door open and then they bolted outside into the crisp air, making for the break in the wall.

  “Where are we going?” Sindy hissed.

  “Through the forest.”

  “The forest! Look at me. Look at you. We are not equipped for a hike.”

  “We’d better be.”

  They made it to the wall, and through the break in the side. Thorns raked at them as they found the path. They started down to the dry creek-bed. Abby took careful steps across the jagged stone. As cautious as she was, she felt the teeth of the rocks in her ankles, shredding her tights and then her skin.

  “Do you have a plan?” Sindy asked.

  “We need to find Mr. Harris.”

  “You said he’s a monster!”

  “A different kind of monster.”

  Abby wanted to get more details, but there wasn’t time. They were moving into light undergrowth. The pain in her belly was not as bad, though she did periodically grimace at what felt like a hot needle jabbing through her. Whenever it happened, the forest turned craggy and dead all around her for the space of an eye-blink. She pressed on, forcing out one painful step after the other.

  By the time they made it back onto the street, Abby was hobbling. She was winded and there was a hot lash of pain throbbing in her lower back. They were halfway down the street, at the midpoint between Abby’s home and the turnoff to Arkham Academy. Abby wasn’t certain she could make it all the way to the school and then out to the church. She also didn’t think she had a choice.

  Sindy glanced at her. “Do we need to get you a wagon?”

  “Shut up. You try doing this nine months pregnant.”

  “No thanks. I’m not having kids ‘til I’m fifty, and then I’ll hire someone to have them for me.”

  A beige Honda turned onto Abby’s street. She almost threw herself back into the screen of brush that separated road from woods, but stopped when she saw a familiar inhuman face behind the wheel.

  “Well, that’s just weird,” Sindy said.

  Mr. Harris pulled over next to them. “Abby? Are you all right? You’re bleeding.”

  She got in the passenger side while Sindy climbed in the back.

  “What are you doing here, Mr. Harris?”

  “I’m looking for you.”

  Another bolt of pain rammed through her. This time it lingered, and the dead place bloomed all around her. She could not see the center of the rot, but she could see the edges, the way the shadows writhed and twisted, as solid as anything else. She groaned, gritting her teeth. Soon the wave passed.

  She smelled the ghost of a peaty stench. The presence was close.

  “Abby?” Mr. Harris asked.

  “We need your help. And I need you to drive.”

  He pulled a U-turn and headed away from Harwich Hall. “What is it?”

  “The Daughters of Arkham have Bryce and Nate out in that church in the woods. They’re going to be sacrificed, and you told me what that means.”

  “What does that mean?” Sindy demanded, her voice high and reedy with panic.

  “Abby, we can’t be talking in front of your friend.”

  “She knows everything, Mr. Harris, and I didn’t tell her. She knows because she’s a Daughter of Arkham.”

  Harris nodded. “What then?”

  “We’re going to rescue them.”

  “In your condition?”

  “There’s no one else.”

  Harris looked over at Abby and gripped the wheel tightly. “That isn’t entirely true. That’s why I came to find you, Abby. There are others like me. They are willing to help you in this fight against the Daughters. They will help save your friends.”

  Sindy was leaning forward between the seats. “I don’t know you that well, and even I can hear the giant ‘but’ you’re about to drop.”

  “We take a great risk in exposing ourselves as apostates to the Daughters and their thralls. I would like to say the others will help for no other reason than it’s the right thing to do, but that is not the reality we live in, Abigail. I need your assurance that if the time ever comes when you can help our cause… you will do so.” He extended a hand to Abby.

  Sindy looked worried. “Abby, I don’t know about—”

  Sindy wasn’t fast enough. Not when Bryce and Nate’s lives were at stake. Abby put her small, pale hand in Mr. Harris’s rubbery, webbed one and gripped it tight.

  “You have my word.”

  An electric current of finality surged through their hands, sending tingles up and down Abby’s spine. The deal was done.

  For better or for worse.

  82

  Captured

  ‘bryce awoke to a continuous throbbing in his temples that echoed into the very fillings of his teeth. This was worse than his hangover after the carnival. He tried to lift his hands to cradle the insistent pounding, maybe push it back in, but his hands were bound. He winced as he moved. Tiny, burning flecks of pain flashed across his chest, back and arms. It was like he had paper cuts all over his body. The scent of fresh blood wafted into his nostrils.

  He looked around with pain-bleary eyes and saw the top of Nate’s slumped, brown head behind him. They were chained together in the center of a colonial church; probably the one Abby and Nate had told him about. The church had been partially reclaimed by the s
urrounding forest, the most striking evidence of which was a massive oak tree growing through one wall. Beams of sunlight stirred dust motes in the air.

  He heard a soft groan from behind him, Nate was coming around. They were sitting back-to-back on an altar. They had been stripped to their underpants, and symbols had been drawn on them in blood, their own blood. The rest of the church was empty, though every now and again, he swore he could hear a few footsteps scraping over stone.

  “Whu… wh… what’s going on?”

  “You okay, Baxter?”

  “I think so. But my head… everything hurts.”

  “That’s good. I mean, they knock me out, it’s like whatever. No damage done. But you’ve actually got some brains in there. They hit you hard enough and you’ll have to take up football to get to college.”

  “What?” Nate was baffled.

  “I figure these old biddies never got a chance to see a couple young studs like us. I’m thinking there are going to be some nudie shots of us online tomorrow.”

  “Bryce, what are you talking about? We’ve been kidnapped and they are going to eat us. You think I’m worried about showing my junk on Twitter?”

  That’s right, Nate, Bryce thought. Get that adrenaline moving. Get that big brain working. Bryce needed him present if they were going to survive this. “Well, pardon me, Baxter. I didn’t know you swung that deep. But good on you, man.”

  Bryce heard and felt the steady rattling of chains. “How freaking hard did they hit you?” Nate snapped. “We have to get out of here.”

  “Save your strength. These chains are serious. All you’re going to do is cut your wrists up.”

  Nate growled with frustration and slammed his chains against the ground. “Stupid! We are so damn stupid. They control the press, the cops, the banks, and a private army of weird sea creatures. How the hell did we think we could stop all of that with some old newspapers and fireworks?”

  “Don’t ask me. I’m the pretty one.”

  Nate laughed. It was coarse and tinged with bitterness, but it was something. “That you are, Coffin. That you are.”

  Nate sighed, and leaned against him. Bryce could feel the top of Nate’s head brushing the back of his neck. Just as he was thinking about how very small Nate actually was, he felt the quiet shuddering and shaking of suppressed sobs. He might be able to cripple an upperclassman with his bare hands, but he was still just a little kid. Hell, they both were. Just because he had a driver’s license didn’t mean he was ready to face this kind of horror.

  “I hated you for that, you know,” Nate whispered. “I hated you so much for that.”

  “For what? Being pretty?”

  “For making me invisible.” Nate drew a long, quivering breath. “It didn’t matter what I did for her or how much I wanted it to be different. When you were around… Abby didn’t see anyone else.”

  Bryce gritted his teeth. “Really? You want to do this now?” He tried to turn his head but the chains held him fast. “I’m sorry she didn’t pick you, okay? But I didn’t steal her. Being her BFF and knowing her your whole life doesn’t give you any eminent domain. She’s not your property.”

  “Bryce.” Nate’s voice was still on the shaky side.

  “And you probably never even told her! She didn’t choose me, I’m just the only one who ever bothered asking her!”

  “Bryce!”

  “What?!”

  “You’re right.”

  “What?” Bryce’s sudden rage was subsumed by utter confusion.

  “You’re right. I haven’t been fair to myself, Abby or you. I thought...I thought she wanted you for the same reason every other girl does. Because of how you look. I was wrong.”

  Nate leaned back into Bryce. He sniffed.

  “Now, pay attention because I’m only saying this once and because we’re going to die soon. But you’re not just the pretty one. You’re more than your money and your looks. You’re the real thing. And when it comes to boyfriends… I guess Abby could do a lot worse.”

  Bryce felt a sudden lump in his throat. “Yeah… well, full disclosure. When it comes to best friends, there’s no way Abby could do better.”

  Bryce leaned back into Nate with squared shoulders. They both drew strength and comfort from the shared contact as they drew deep breaths. Bryce closed his eyes. He pictured Abby and smiled as he thought how pleased she would be to know how he and Nate were getting along.

  The front doors of the church boomed open. A column of women came walking in, each of them with a manservant at their backs. When they looked at the two boys in chains, it was only with the mild interest of a well-fed snake regarding its next meal. He saw Charity Duckworth; Ophelia Thomas and her doughy mother; and Corrine Marks. Hester Thorndike was at the front of the group. Her pinched face fluttered with an embryonic grin.

  “Oh God,” Nate whispered in terror.

  “Good morning, ladies. I hope you forgive us for not standing; I’m not especially familiar with ritualistic murder etiquette. Are you guys gonna bone us, like, one at a time… or all at once? Because if we have a say in the batting order, I’d like to put in my requests now.”

  “What in the freaking hell are you trying to do?” Nate hissed.

  “If you could try and move the fatties and hags to the back of the line, I would super-appreciate it. I’m sure you know where you can stick yourself, Mrs. Thorndike.”

  Instead of fixing him with a rage-filled glower, Hester just smiled and moved to the side, revealing the woman behind her.

  Bryce’s voice trailed off.

  Marianne Coffin didn’t look at him. Her eyes were glassier than usual, and she swayed badly as she walked.

  Hester began to chuckle.

  83

  To the Church

  ‘mr. Harris drove up to the house. Harwich Hall looked empty, but that was no guarantee of anything. For all Abby knew, Hester and Constance were waiting just inside the lounge, waiting for her to return.

  She felt a sharp pain in her abdomen and suddenly the house was green-black, covered in the same mold that was taking over the dollhouse. It lasted a few moments before returning to normal. With another twinge, she was back to seeing with her eyes.

  “Let’s go.”

  “What about your grandmother?” Sindy said with a fearful look at the house.

  “She’s already gone.” Abby tried to sound confident. She turned to Mr. Harris. “Be quick, all right?”

  “As fast as I can,” he said.

  She gave him a brave smile. Her teacher, a monster, and an ally amidst all the strangeness. Abby got out of the car, doing her best to conceal just how difficult that was. She felt like she had an armchair strapped to her belly. Her feet complained. Her ankles burned.

  As Sindy joined Abby on the street, she took her hand and gave it a comforting squeeze. They went through the gate and approached the house cautiously, ready for the door to burst open at any second. They made their way around the side and Abby immediately felt better.

  She opened the door that led into a hallway and listened. No sounds came from the house. On the one hand, the house being empty meant they were safe for the moment. On the other hand, it meant the Daughters had already left for the church. They were running out of time.

  They went into the kitchen and down into the cellar. The secret door was open. Whether this was through forgetfulness, intent, or invitation, Abby did not know. She took Sindy’s hand again and they plunged into the tunnel together. She knew that she could not allow her friends to languish one second longer than necessary.

  They made no effort to move silently and their feet scuffed along the stones, pulling whispering echoes from the wall. The passageway slithered outward, and on the last slight wave, Abby came to a stop. Sindy ran right into her back but knew enough to keep quiet. Ahead, haloed in the dark circle at the mouth of the passage, were two figures. Abby saw them as they were. Croatan. They faced outward.

  “What now?” Sindy whispered.


  Abby only shrugged. She probably should have expected guards, but they’d come into this blind. Maybe they could backtrack to the house and get some kind of weapon? Knock these two out? It was as ridiculous and desperate as the rest of their not-plan.

  “I can hear your eyes blink. Whispering will do you no good,” said one of the voices.

  “Oh no,” Sindy hissed.

  The two Crows turned and peered into the passage. Their silvery eyes reflected blind light from the moon.

  “Eleazar?” Sindy said.

  “Hello, Sindy. Thanks for bringing Abby. Why don’t you just grab her arm and we’ll all head up to the church?”

  Abby looked at her friend in horror. Sindy’s eyes were wide and her mouth was slack. Her arm came up, hypnotized, ready to grab Abby’s arm.

  “Sindy!” Abby said in shock.

  Sindy jumped. “What?” She looked at her own hand and yanked it back as if it belonged to a stranger. Eleazar began moving toward them, his mouth pulled up in a terrible snarl. Sindy looked back and forth between him and Abby, then put her hand up in his direction.

  “Stay away from us!”

  The Crow halted in his tracks. He didn’t even try to move. A bolt ripped through Abby’s belly. She groaned, clutching at it. The tunnel turned black, glistening with oily slime. It was alive, somehow, and the mouth was the only way out. Fleshy protuberances had enclosed Eleazar’s ankles. He was ensnared by the floor and Sindy’s command.

  The world shimmered back to normal, freeing Abby’s perception. She was about to call to Sindy, but her friend was already on it.

  “Eleazar, stop your friend.”

  Eleazar tore his legs free and whirled on his friend and savaged him with two swift swipes. He stood over the fallen Crow before straightening up to address Sindy. “Anything else, Mistress?”

 

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