By the time Jack climbed the steps and pushed through the glass doors, into the lobby, Rebecca was already there. Flashing her badge and photo ID at the startled doorman, she said, “Police.”
He was a stout man, about fifty, with hair as white as the snow outside. He was sitting at a Sheraton desk near the pair of elevators, drinking coffee and taking shelter from the storm. He must have been a day-shift man, filling in for the regular night-shift man (or perhaps new) because Jack had never seen him on the evenings when he'd come here to pick up the kids.
“What is it?” the doorman asked. “What's wrong?”
This wasn't the kind of building where people were accustomed to anything being wrong; it was first-class all the way, and the mere prospect of trouble was sufficient to cause the doorman's face to turn nearly as pale as his hair.
Jack punched the elevator call button and said, “We're going up to the Jamisons' apartment. Eleventh floor.”
“I know which floor they're on,” the doorman said, flustered, getting up so quickly that he bumped the desk and almost knocked over his coffee cup. “But why—”
One set of elevator doors opened.
Jack and Rebecca stepped into the cab.
Jack shouted back to the doorman: “Bring a passkey!
I hope to God we don't need it.”
Because if we need it, he thought, that'll mean no one's left alive in the apartment to let us in.
The lift doors shut. The cab started up.
Jack reached inside his overcoat, drew his revolver.
Rebecca pulled her gun, too.
Above the doors, the panel of lighted numbers indicated that they had reached the third floor.
“Guns didn't help Dominick Carramazza,” Jack said shakily, staring at the Smith & Wesson in his hand.
Fourth floor.
“We won't need guns anyway,” Rebecca said. “We've gotten here ahead of Lavelle. I know we have.”
But the conviction had gone out of her voice.
Jack knew why. The journey from her apartment had taken forever. It seemed less and less likely that they were going to be in time.
Sixth floor.
“Why're the elevators so goddamned slow in this building?” Jack demanded.
Seventh floor.
Eighth.
Ninth.
“Move, damnit!” he commanded the lift machinery, as if he thought it would actually speed up if he ordered it to do so.
Tenth floor.
Eleventh.
At last the doors slid open, and Jack stepped through them.
Rebecca followed close behind.
The eleventh floor was so quiet and looked so ordinary that Jack was tempted to hope.
Please, God, please.
There were seven apartments on this floor. The Jamisons had one of the two front units.
Jack went to their door and stood to one side of it. His right arm was bent and tucked close against his side, and the revolver was in his right hand, held close to his face, the muzzle pointed straight up at the ceiling for the moment, but ready to be brought into play in an instant.
Rebecca stood on the other side, directly opposite him, in a similar posture.
Let them be alive. Please. Please.
His eyes met Rebecca's. She nodded. Ready.
Jack pounded on the door.
VII
In the shadow-crowded room, on the bed, Lavelle breathed deeply and rapidly. In fact, he was panting like an animal.
His hands were curled at his sides, fingers hooked and rigid, as if they were talons. For the most part, his hands were still, but now and then they erupted in sudden violent movement, striking at the empty air or clawing frantically at the sheets.
He shivered almost continuously. Once in a while, he jerked and twitched as if an electric current had snapped through him; on these occasions, his entire body heaved up, off the bed, and slammed back down, making the mattress springs squeal in protest.
Deep in a trance, he was unaware of these spasms.
He stared straight up, eyes wide, seldom blinking, but he wasn't seeing the ceiling or anything else in the room. He was viewing other places, in another part of the city, where his vision was held captive by the eager pack of small assassins with which he had established psychic contact.
He hissed.
Groaned.
Gnashed his teeth.
He jerked, flopped, twisted.
Then lay silent, still.
Then clawed the sheets.
He hissed so forcefully that he sprayed spittle into the dark air around him.
His legs suddenly became possessed. He drummed his heels furiously upon the mattress.
He growled in the back of his throat.
He lay silent for a while.
Then he began to pant. He sniffed. Hissed again.
He smelled the girl. Penny Dawson. She had a wonderful scent. Sweet. Young. Fresh. Tender.
He wanted her.
VIII
Faye opened the door, saw Jack's revolver, gave him a startled look, and said, “My God, what's that for? What're you doing? You know how I hate guns. Put that thing away.”
From Faye's demeanor as she stepped back to let them in, Jack knew the kids were all right, and he sagged a little with relief. But he said, “Where's Penny? Where's Davey? Are they okay?”
Faye glanced at Rebecca and started to smile, then realized what Jack was saying, frowned at him, and said, “Okay? Well, of course, they're okay. They're perfectly fine. I might not have kids of my own, but I know how to take care of them. You think I'd let anything happen to those two little monkeys? For heaven's sake, Jack, I don't—”
“Did anyone try to follow you back here from the school? “ he asked urgently.
“And just what was all that nonsense about, anyway? “ Faye demanded.
“It wasn't nonsense. I thought I made that clear. Did anyone try to follow you? You did look out for a tail, like I told you to — didn't you, Faye?”
“Sure, sure, sure. I looked. No one tried to follow me. And I don't think—”
They had moved out of the foyer, into the living room, while they had been talking. Jack looked around, didn't see the kids.
He said, “Faye, where the hell are they?”
“Don't take that tone, for goodness sake. What are you—”
“Faye, damnit!”
She recoiled from him. “They're in the guest room. With Keith,” she said quickly and irritably. “They were put to bed at about a quarter past nine, just as they should have been, and we thought they were just about sound asleep when all of a sudden Penny screamed—”
“Screamed?”
“-and said there were rats in their room. Well, of course, we don't have any—”
Rats!
Jack bolted across the living room, hurried along the short hall, and burst into the guest room.
The bedside lamps, the standing lamp in the corner and the ceiling light were all blazing.
Penny and Davey were standing at the foot of one of the twin beds, still in their pajamas. When they saw Jack, they cried out happily—“Daddy! Daddy!”—and ran to him, hugged him.
Jack was so overwhelmed at finding them alive and unhurt, so grateful, that for a moment he couldn't speak. He just grabbed hold of them and held them very tightly.
In spite of all the lights in the room, Keith Jamison was holding a flashlight. He was over by the dresser holding the flash above his head, directing the beam into the darkness beyond the vent plate that covered the outlet in the heating duct. He turned to Jack, frowning, and said, “Something odd's going on here. I—”
“Goblins!” Penny said, clutching Jack. “They're coming, Daddy, they want me and Davey, don't let them, don't let them get us, oh please, I've been waiting for them, waiting and waiting, scared, and now they're almost here!” The words tumbled over one another, flooding out of her, and then she sobbed.
“Whoa,” Jack said, holding her close and petting he
r, smoothing her hair. “Easy now. Easy.”
Faye and Rebecca had followed him from the living room.
Rebecca was being her usual cool, efficient self. She was at the bedroom closet, getting the kids' clothes off hangers.
Faye said, “First, Penny shouted that there were rats in her room; and then she started carrying on about goblins, nearly hysterical. I tried to tell her it was only a nightmare—”
“It wasn't a nightmare!” Penny shouted.
“Of course it was,” Faye said.
“They've been watching me all day,” Penny said. “And there was one of them in our room last night, Daddy. And in the school basement today — a whole bunch of them. They chewed up Davey's lunch. And my books, too. I don't know what they want, but they're after us, and they're goblins, real goblins, I swear!”
“Okay,” Jack said. “I want to hear all of this, every detail. But later. Now, we have to get out of here.”
Rebecca brought their clothes.
Jack said, “Get dressed. Don't bother taking off your pajamas. Just put your clothes on over them.”
Faye said, “What on earth—”
“We've got to get the kids out of here,” Jack said. “Fast.”
“But you act as if you actually believe this goblin talk,” Faye said, astonished.
Keith said, “I sure don't believe in goblins, but I sure do believe we have some rats.”
“No, no, no,” Faye said, scandalized. “We can't.
Not in this building.”
“In the ventilation system,” Keith said. “I heard them myself. That's why I was trying to see in there with the flashlight when you came busting in, Jack.”
“Sssshhh, “ Rebecca said. “Listen.”
The kids continued to get dressed, but no one spoke.
At first Jack heard nothing. Then… a peculiar hissing-muttering-growling.
That's no damned rat, he thought.
Inside the wall, something rattled. Then a scratching sound, a furious scrabbling. Industrious noises: clinking, tapping, scraping, thumping.
Faye said, “My God.”
Jack took the flashlight from Keith, went to the dresser, pointed the light at the duct. The beam was bright and tightly focused, but it did little to dispel the blackness that pooled beyond the slots in the vent plate.
Another thump in the wall.
More hissing and muted growling.
Jack felt a prickling along the back of his neck.
Then, incredibly, a voice came out of the duct. It was a hoarse, crackling, utterly inhuman voice, thick with menace: “Penny? Davey? Penny?”
Faye cried out and stumbled back a couple of steps.
Even Keith, who was a big and rather formidable man, went pale and moved away from the vent. “What the devil was that?”
To Faye, Jack said, “Where're the kids' coats and boots? Their gloves?”
“Uh… in… in the kitchen. D-Drying out.”
“Get them.”
Faye nodded but didn't move.
Jack put a hand on her shoulder. “Get their coats and boots and gloves, then meet us by the front door.”
She couldn't take her eyes off the vent.
He shook her. “Faye! Hurry!”
She jumped as if he'd slapped her face, turned, and ran out of the bedroom.
Penny was almost dressed, and she was holding up remarkably well, scared but in control. Davey was sitting on the edge of the bed, trying not to cry, crying anyway, wiping at the tears on his face, glancing apologetically at Penny and biting his lip and trying very hard to follow her example; his legs were dangling over the side of the bed, and Rebecca was hastily tying his shoes for him.
From the vent: “Davey? Penny? “
“Jack, for Christ's sake, what's going on here?”
Keith asked.
Not bothering to respond, having no time or patience for questions and answers just now, Jack pointed the flashlight at the vent again and glimpsed movement in the duct. Something silvery lay in there; it glowed and flickered like a white-hot fire — then blinked and was gone. In its place, something dark appeared, shifted, pushed against the vent plate for a moment, as if trying hard to dislodge it, then withdrew when the plate held. Jack couldn't see enough of the creature to get a clear idea of its general appearance. Keith said, “Jack. The vent screw.”
Jack had already seen it. The screw was revolving, slowly coming out of the edge of the vent plate. The creature inside the duct was turning the screw, unfastening it from the other side of the flange to which the plate was attached. The thing was muttering, hissing, and grumbling softly while it worked.
“Let's go,” Jack said, striving to keep his voice calm. “Come on, come on. Let's get out of here right now.”
The screw popped loose. The vent plate swung down, away from the ventilation outlet, hanging from the one remaining screw.
Rebecca hustled the kids toward the door.
A nightmare crawled out of the duct. It hung there on the wall, with utter disregard for gravity, as if there were suction pads on its feet, although it didn't seem equipped with anything of that sort.
“Jesus,” Keith said, stunned.
Jack shuddered at the thought of this repulsive little beast touching Davey or Penny.
The creature was the size of a rat. In shape, at least, its body was rather like that of a rat, too: low-slung, long in the flanks, with shoulders and haunches that were large and muscular for an animal of its size. But there the resemblance to a rat ended, and the nightmare began. This thing was hairless. Its slippery skin was darkly mottled gray-green-yellow and looked more like a slimy fungus than like flesh. The tail was not at all similar to a rat's tail; it was eight or ten inches long, an inch wide at the base, segmented in the manner of a scorpion's tail, tapering and curling up into the air above the beast's hindquarters, like that of a scorpion, although it wasn't equipped with a stinger. The feet were far different from a rat's feet: They were oversize by comparison to the animal itself; the long toes were triple-jointed, gnarly; the curving claws were much too big for the feet to which they were fitted; a razor-sharp, multiply-barbed spur curved out from each heel. The head was even more deadly in appearance and design than were the feet; it was formed over a flattish skull that had many unnaturally sharp angles, unnecessary convexities and concavities, as if it had been molded by an inexpert sculptor. The snout was long and pointed, a bizarre cross between the muzzle of a wolf and that of a crocodile. The small monster opened its mouth and hissed, revealing too many pointed teeth that were angled in various directions along its jaws. A surprisingly long black tongue slithered out of the mouth, glistening like a strip of raw liver; the end of it was forked, and it fluttered continuously.
But the thing's eyes were what frightened Jack the most. They appeared not to be eyes at all; they had no pupils or irises, no solid tissue that he could discern. There were just empty sockets in the creature's malformed skull, crude holes from which radiated a harsh, cold, brilliant light. The intense glow seemed to come from a fire within the beast's own mutant cranium. Which simply could not be. Yet was. And the thing wasn't blind, either, as it should have been; there wasn't any question about its ability to see, for it fixed those fire-filled “eyes” on Jack, and he could feel its demonic gaze as surely as he would have felt a knife rammed into his gut. That was the other thing that disturbed him, the very worst aspect of those mad eyes: the death-cold, hate-hot, soul-withering feeling they imparted when you dared to meet them. Looking into the thing's eyes, Jack felt both physically and spiritually ill.
With insectile disregard for gravity, the beast slowly crept head-first down the wall, away from the duct.
A second creature appeared at the opening in the ventilation system. This one wasn't anything like the first. It was in the form of a small man, perhaps ten inches high, crouching up there in the mouth of the duct. Although it possessed the crude form of a man, it was in no other way humanlike. Its hands and feet resembled thos
e of the first beast, with dangerous claws and barbed spurs. The flesh was funguslike, slippery looking, though less green, more yellow and gray. There were black circles around the eyes and patches of corrupted-looking black flesh fanning out from the nostrils. Its head was misshapen, with a toothy mouth that went from ear to ear. And it had those same hellish eyes, although they were smaller than the eyes in the ratlike thing.
Jack saw that the man-form beast was holding a weapon. It looked like a miniature spear. The point was well-honed; it caught the light and glinted along its cutting edge.
Jack remembered the first two victims of Lavelle's crusade against the Carramazza family. They had both been stabbed hundreds of times with a weapon no bigger than a penknife — yet not a penknife. The medical examiner had been perplexed; the lab technicians had been baffled. But, of course, it wouldn't have occurred to them to explore the possibility that those homicides were the work of ten-inch voodoo devils and that the murder weapons were miniature spears.
Voodoo devils? Goblins? Gremlins? What exactly were these things?
Did Lavelle mold them from clay and then somehow invest them with life and malevolent purpose?
Or were they conjured up with the help of pentagrams and sacrifices and arcane chants, the way demons were supposedly called forth by Satanists? Were they demons?
Where did they come from?
The man-form thing didn't creep down the wall behind the first beast. Instead, it leaped out of the duct, dropping to the top of the dresser, landing on its feet, agile and quick.
It looked past Jack and Keith, and it said, “Penny? Davey?”
Jack pushed Keith across the threshold, into the hall, then followed him and pulled the door shut behind them.
An instant later, one of the creatures — probably the manlike beast — crashed against the other side of the door and began to claw frantically at it.
The kids were already out of the hall, in the living room.
Jack and Keith hurried after them.
Faye shouted, “Jack! Quick! They're coming through the vent out here!”
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