Ultimate Supernatural Horror Box Set

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Ultimate Supernatural Horror Box Set Page 70

by F. Paul Wilson


  The claw hammer was sort of working, but not efficiently, and George was scraping carefully to avoid accidentally cutting the wire in half. “I’m really kind of busy right now,” said George.

  “Busy? Busy? Are you seriously trying to tell me that you’re too busy to talk to me?”

  “Will you please get to the point?”

  “I need you to punch this address into your GPS. Are you ready?”

  “We don’t have the GPS.”

  “Why the fuck don’t you have the GPS?”

  George saw no reason to confess everything that had gone wrong. “It broke.”

  “Well then somehow you need to find 7151 Pegg Avenue. Two G’s. It’s just a parking lot. The Werewolf Hunters Incorporated are on their way over there, and they need all of the information you’ve got. Everything you can tell them about his powers so that they don’t get screwed like you did.”

  “All right.” The hammer slipped and George cursed.

  “They’ll move the cage to their own van, and you can ride along while they recapture him.”

  “Ah.”

  “What?”

  “We lost the cage.”

  “Explain.”

  “He stole the van.”

  “Please tell me I didn’t hear you right. Because otherwise I’m going to have a nervous breakdown.”

  “The werewolf stole the van, okay? What do you want me to say?”

  “I want you to say any goddamn thing but ‘The werewolf stole the van!’ Are you in league with him? Is that what’s going on? Have you formed some kind of werewolf alliance?”

  “No, we just lost control of the situation.”

  “You owe me one punch, George. When you come back here, I get to punch you in the stomach, as hard as I can, and you can’t hit back. Same thing with Lou. One punch for each of you.”

  “Fine.” George had finally stripped the first wire, and started on the second.

  “Somebody’s coming,” Lou whispered.

  George immediately dropped the hammer, got in the car, and shut the door, trying to behave in a casual and completely non-suspicious manner.

  “I just can’t believe this,” said Ricky. “I thought I was going to deliver good news, and we’d laugh, and there’d be some homoerotic banter, and I’d get to go home. You realize that you’re basically unemployable at this point, right? Who’s going to hire thugs who messed up like this? You’d better get a real social security number, because you’re going to be flipping burgers for the rest of your life.”

  “I understand that.” George discretely looked over his shoulder. A well-dressed couple stood by their car, talking.

  “And I don’t mean that you’re going to be flipping burgers at a classy place. You’re going to be flipping shit burgers at a rat-infested restaurant where everybody in there is a fat redneck and you have to wear some kind of dumbfuck uniform and a zit-faced teenager barks orders at you all day. That’s your future, George!”

  “Can we do this later?”

  “And you’ll probably get food poisoning just from the fumes of the crap you have to cook! You’ll have your stomach pumped, and the doctor will say ‘Oh, shit, it’s cancerous!’ But it won’t be the good kind of cancer that you can get rid of with chemotherapy, George, it’ll be the kind where your whole body decays inside, where your guts turn into this big goopy blob of rot!”

  “I think I should hang up now.”

  “Yeah? Well, I think you should not. Are you on your way to 7151 Pegg Avenue yet, you jerk-off?”

  “I’m hotwiring a car.”

  “Oh. Need me to talk you through it?”

  “No.”

  “Did I tell you about when I hotwired this guy’s car and drove it into a lake?”

  George hung up on him. The couple finally got into their car, started the engine, and backed out of their parking space. As they did so, their car scraped against the one next to it. They stopped.

  “You have got to be kidding me,” George muttered.

  The man got out of the car to inspect the damage. He ran his finger along the spot where the two vehicles had scraped against each other, looked nervously at George and Lou, did a double-take at their grotesque appearance, then hurriedly got back in his car, backed the rest of the way out of the space, and sped away from the restaurant.

  George opened the door, returned to his previous position, and began to strip the second red wire. His phone kept ringing, but he ignored it.

  “Are they going to exterminate us?” Lou asked.

  “It doesn’t sound like it.”

  “Well, that’s good.”

  “Yeah. They want us to tell the reinforcements everything we know about Ivan.”

  “Should we do it?”

  “Tell them about him?”

  “No, meet up with them.”

  “I don’t know. Ricky was having a meltdown yelling at me, so I doubt that he was trying to be sneaky about anything. I think we’ll get our asses chewed out--and for what it’s worth, I’ll make sure I take the heat on that--but I don’t think there’s any reason for them to kill us.”

  “What about pure anger?”

  “What I mean is, we won’t give them a reason to kill us. We’ll just make sure we don’t give up all of our information right away. Keep ourselves needed.”

  “Are you sure that’ll work?”

  “Do you want to spend the rest of our lives as fugitives from the law and from other criminals?”

  “I guess not.”

  George finished stripping the second wire. He wrapped the two stripped wires together. “I’m going to let you make the final decision on this one. My choices today haven’t worked out so well.”

  “I don’t know. We should at least return the case of money, so they’ll stop looking for us eventually.”

  The phone had gone to voice mail three times, but Ricky kept calling. George pressed “talk.” “Give it a rest, will you, Ricky?”

  “What happened to the girl?”

  “What girl?”

  “Don’t be coy with me. The girl you had with you. Did you create a Wikipedia page for our whole operation and drop her off at the CNN studio?”

  “The werewolf killed her.” George assumed that the lie would be exposed before too long, but for now he just wanted Ricky off his back.

  “Well, that’s one good thing to come out of this. Didn’t I tell you not to hang up on me?”

  George stripped a brown wire. Now that he’d gotten some practice with the claw hammer, the process was going more smoothly. “We got disconnected.”

  “The hell we did. Did you finish the car yet?”

  George touched the brown wire to the red wires. The engine roared to life. “Just got it.”

  “I could’ve done it in half that time.”

  “Can I hang up now?”

  “Are you going to 7151 Pegg Avenue?”

  “Yes.”

  “Are you going to create any more disasters on your way there?”

  “No.”

  “Then you can hang up. Jerk.”

  CHAPTER TWENTY

  An Unpleasant Conversation

  And, just like that, Michele was screwed again.

  Honestly, it wasn’t all that surprising that Ivan had snatched her, but she would have expected it to be when she was being stupid and hanging around the tavern, not when she was being smart and going to the hospital.

  They’d been driving for a few minutes. Ivan hadn’t said anything, though she caught him glancing at her in the rear-view mirror several times, and she made no effort to start a conversation. Thus far she’d successfully forced herself not to cry. He could carve the entire Bible into her skin before she’d give him the satisfaction of watching her cry.

  She wouldn’t beg, either.

  There was nothing she could do about the trembling, though.

  God, she was scared. She didn’t want to die. She considered lying and telling him that she was pregnant, to see if she could appeal to some
tiny shred of goodness, but she didn’t think he had any. He’d probably love it if he thought she was pregnant. She could just hear him: “Oooooh, then I’d better save your belly for last!”

  She adjusted her position. Her only solace was that he’d have to open the cage to kill her, at least if he wanted to do it with his teeth and claws, and she’d have an opportunity to escape.

  “How are you holding up?” he finally asked.

  “I’ll be honest with you: not so well.”

  “Oh, I don’t know about that. You can still talk, can’t you? A lot of my prey gets so scared they can’t even do that.”

  “Then I’m honored.”

  “You should be. Mute people just aren’t much fun.”

  “Are you going to kill me?”

  “Do you think I should?”

  “No.”

  “Why not? Appeal to my sense of reason.”

  “I never did anything to you. I tried to help you.”

  “I don’t recall that.”

  “I guess I was being too subtle, then. We were both victims.”

  “Correction. I was no victim. I had George and Lou exactly where I wanted them the entire time. There’s evidence of this back at the tavern we just left. How many people do you think I killed? Guess.”

  “Six.”

  “Higher.”

  “Twelve.”

  “Lower.”

  “Ten.”

  “Lower.”

  “Nine.”

  “This is going to take all night,” said Ivan. “I killed seven people. Murdered two people earlier today, for a twenty-four hour total of nine so far. Messed Lou up in a big way. Shredded two cops. Got a lady shot. Let two people go on purpose, and believe me, that’s the only reason they’re not dead.”

  “What about George?”

  “I didn’t kill him yet.”

  “Why not?”

  “He comes later. Got to save the good stuff. Are you impressed by the seven people I killed at the tavern?”

  “Sure.”

  “I think you’re just humoring me. I’ll bet you’ve never killed nine human beings in a day. I bet you haven’t even killed two. Am I right?”

  “You’re right.”

  “You know what sucks about the number nine? It’s not a monumental number. Nobody celebrates the ninth anniversary of something. It’s all about those nice round numbers. That’s what people like. If I went around telling everybody that my body count for today was nine, they’d be amazed by my awesomeness, of course, but they’d feel that something was missing. It just wasn’t quite at the next level. You can’t really have a party for nine. Do you see what I’m saying? Can you think of any possible way for me to fix my little quandary with the whole number thing?”

  “Just lie and say you killed ten.”

  “Hmmmm. I never thought about that. I hate to be deceptive, though. There has to be a better way. Thinking...thinking...thinking...”

  “Do you really want people to know about your feat?”

  “I like that you called it a feat. I figured you’d feel a little more revulsion than that.”

  Michele ignored him and tried to steer the conversation back toward reasons he shouldn’t kill her. “I could have run away. They let me go.”

  “You did run away. I found you at the hospital.”

  “I had a chance before that. I stuck around because I want to tell this story.”

  “Is that so?”

  “Yeah.”

  “So, what, you want to write The Dastardly Deeds of Ivan the Werewolf?”

  “Something like that.”

  “Or maybe Interview With a Werewolf. Let Anne Rice sue.”

  “If you let me go, I’ll make you famous.”

  “If I wanted to be famous, I’d walk onto Oprah’s set and transform in front of her cameras. Then I’d rip out her throat. I appreciate your efforts, Michele, but there’s really not much you can offer me.”

  “I disagree.”

  Ivan smiled. “Well, I mean, there’s that. You like it wolfy style?”

  Michele felt the blood drain from her face, but tried to keep her voice steady. “Why are your aspirations so low?”

  “What do you mean?”

  “You have this incredible power, something that’s so amazing that nobody who hadn’t seen it for themselves would ever believe it could be true, and yet you just use it to kill people.”

  “Killing people is fun. It’s better than not killing people, I’ll tell you that.”

  “There’s so much more you could do.”

  “Like what? Bring canned food to homeless people? Teach our children about the wonders of volcanoes?”

  “You could be a superstar celebrity. How much earning potential do you think a werewolf in the public eye could have?”

  “A lot, until somebody put a silver bullet in his heart.”

  “There are plenty of rich celebrities who a lot of people want to assassinate and they do just fine. With that much money, you could keep yourself safe.”

  “I’ve got it! Maybe I could be a superhero!”

  “Maybe you could.”

  “I could be Werewolf Man, and I’d go around biting evildoers. I could wear a furry cape with a big W on it. Oh, man, I never even dreamed I had so much untapped potential. You’ve opened up a whole new world for me. How can I ever repay you?”

  “I’m serious, Ivan.”

  “Are you trying to become my manager or something?”

  “Maybe.”

  “I think you’re talking just to keep yourself alive. I think you’re too adorable and innocent to actually want to go into business with a big bad werewolf, who would probably ruin all of his promo ops by going on bloody rampages.”

  “That’s not true.”

  “You’re certainly an opportunist. I admire that. But, again, let’s say for the sake of argument that I was interested in your idea. Maybe I looked in the mirror one day and said ‘Golly, I’ve devoted my whole life to evil. How shameful. Woe is me for my poor decisions. I must balance out all of the death and destruction by doing good deeds.’“

  “I didn’t say they had to be good deeds.”

  “You mean I should become a supervillain? Now that might be cool.”

  “You’re not taking me seriously.”

  “What’s a good name for a werewolf supervillain?”

  “Ivan...”

  “What about Wolf Killer? No, wait, that sounds like I’m killing wolves. Death Wolf. Blood Wolf. Ghost Wolf. I’m not really a ghost, but that sounds kind of scary, doesn’t it? Beware the evil done by the Ghost Wolf. Oh, hell yeah.”

  “I’m trying to help you.”

  “No, but thanks. You really aren’t very good at trying to negotiate yourself out of death. The only thing I might need you for is a sweet piece of ass.”

  “If you try it, I’ll rip your dick off.”

  “There’s no need to be crude. You could have just said ‘penis.’“

  “I’m serious.”

  “Are you? Do you really think that I’m afraid of you? With all the people I’ve slaughtered today, you expect me to be worried about you injuring my wee-wee?”

  “If it gets anywhere near me, you’ll lose it. I promise you that.”

  “See, now, you almost had me convinced to go along with your idea about cashing in on my werewolf fame, but then you had to go and threaten my genitalia. Rude, rude, rude. And yet, strangely arousing.”

  “Try it and see what happens.”

  Ivan laughed. “Relax, sweetheart. There’ll be no sexual violence tonight. I’m not the kind of guy who needs to take it by force, if you know what I mean and I think you do. I am going to murder you, though.”

  Michele clenched her fists. Don’t cry, don’t cry, don’t cry...

  “Nothing to say to that? Surprising. Do you want to know how it’s going to happen?”

  “Okay.”

  “I love how you tried to sound brave when you said that. Here’s the plan: I’m
going to pull this van over to someplace nice and secluded. I’m going to search through the radio stations until I find some appropriate mood music--hopefully they’ve got a jazz station around here, but if not, we might go for some classic rock. Then I’m going to walk back there, open the van doors, and then I’m going to stand there and stare at you. You know that creepy feeling you get when somebody is just staring at you, where your skin crawls and you can’t concentrate on anything else? You’ll have that, except you’ll know that as soon as I’m done staring at you, I’m going to kill you. I might stare at you for a minute, I might stare for an hour, but when it’s over, I’m going to very slowly unlock the cage.”

  “You’re making a big mistake.”

  “No, I think I’m making a wise decision. Don’t interrupt my scenario. After I open the cage, I’m going to--”

  “I don’t want to hear it.”

  “I don’t care what you want to hear, little lady. You’re going to hear what I want you to hear, and I want you to hear about your upcoming horrible death. If you want to put your hands over your ears and go ‘la la la la la’ there’s not much I can do, but it would be kind of childish.”

  “There’s no reason to kill me.”

  “I want to. That’s a pretty good reason. I mean, if you really think about it, there’s no reason to eat a great big chocolate chip cookie dunked in a glass of cold milk, but it’s something you’d want to be doing right now, isn’t it? You’re my cookie. That’s what I’ll call you from now on. How’s it going, Cookie?”

  “Fuck you.”

  “Oh, see, now you’re just resorting to expletives. Not cool, Cookie. I guess that means you’re done trying to have an intelligent conversation, which in turn means that it’s time for you to die. Oh well.”

  They drove in silence for a few more minutes. At one point Michele had to choke down some vomit, but she still didn’t cry. She refused to cry.

  Ivan stopped the van and shut off the engine. “Here we are. Looks like you’ll be dying in...actually, I don’t know the name of this place. It’ll be in the obituary, though. Your family will know.”

  “You don’t have to do this.”

  “That’s already been well established. You’re not bringing anything new to the table. Offer me something better than the lame observation that I have a choice in the matter. Come on, offer something now. You’ve got ten seconds. Nine...eight...seven...”

 

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