He could smell one of them in the air—they stank, had that stink of humanity—the wind was icy, and the stink made him want to retch. He clutched the mallet more tightly. The worst of it was, they smelled like people, just like people who maybe haven't bathed in a while, the strong stink of human flesh.
In the grove, at the edge of the property, he thought he saw someone standing there.
He felt for the tool belt, for the screwdriver.
He'd gone hunting once, when he'd been young, and learned of a phenomenon where a hunter, looking for deer, sometimes took a shot at another human being because the hunter wanted to see a deer so badly that he actually mistook a man for a deer. Not just any man, either—it was often a friend.
It was the problem with them; they looked so much like anybody else. You couldn't really know for sure until you plunged the screwdriver into them. It wasn't simple, Life. It wasn't gray, either—things were definitely black and white, at least for him. Good and Evil, and you're either for us, or against us. The only way to live, now. Well, the only way to survive.
But what if he was wrong? He could look in their eyes, but if he didn't see what he was looking for, would he kill them anyway?
Maybe I'm just a madman, maybe I had a breakdown and the stress of the shit-hole world has dropped down on my shoulders. Maybe I'm just another Ted Bundy or John Wayne Gacy out to hammer everyone I'm paranoid about into the ground, bash their faces so I don't have to see their eyes staring at me, twist the old Phillips head number two into that sweet little place between their ribs where a nice plump heart's just waiting to get skewered.
Have to keep my mind on right here, right now, no veering off. They'd want that—you go careening off the edge of a cliff in your mind, and they got you. Once they get you, they put you where they want, and who knows what happens to you, how they hollow you out like a canoe and turn you inside out and then you're not who you think you are, oh, no, boys and girls, you're something altogether different, and you look in the mirror, but you don't see yourself, no no no, you see something else and then you want to break the mirror because of what they did to you, no thank you, ma'am, I ain't buying none of that.
The sky was darkening—not much after four, but getting dark fast. Never find them in their hiding place—have to wait, sometimes,'til they come to you.
"Hey!" he shouted. Friendly-like, neighborly, putting the mallet behind his back a little so whoever was standing there wouldn't completely suspect him. They weren't too smart, these people, and when they were fresh, before they ripened, they had a little bit too much of what they used to have, so they weren't always the smartest things.
You are insane, the voice inside him said, this is just a dream, it has all been a dream, you've been drunk and abusing your wife and family and you drank a couple of six-packs of Rolling Rock and you went over the Edge.
(The voice in his head knew about the Edge.)
Someone came out from among the shadows of the grove. It wasn't an It or a Thing or a Them.
It was a boy. Straw-blond hair, pale skin, wearing a hooded sweatshirt with the hood pulled down. On the front of the sweatshirt, which was blue, were the words: If Virginia Is for Lovers, Then West Virginia's for Us Decent Folks. He couldn't actually read the sweatshirt from that distance; he just knew what the words said because he'd bought the sweatshirt for the boy, himself, not two days before, thinking it was kind of funny.
He knew the boy.
He's one of them, though.
The boy smiled.
Joe stood motionless. His fingers felt numb.
The boy started running towards the man, shouting.
Joe pulled the mallet from behind his back.
When the boy reached him, Joe took him in his free arm, and brought the mallet to the side of the boy's head, ready to bash it.
"You are insane," the voice inside said.
"Am I? Well, go to hell," he told it.
He held the boy's head tight in his arm, and stared down into those eyes as darkness blossomed all around them. He was looking for the light there, to see if he could see the boy's inspiration, if he could see the thing that fueled the boy. If it still existed there.
Tears shone in the boy's eyes.
"Dad? Daddy?"
Joe would only have a few seconds to perform the operation.
But he had to be sure.
He had come too far, from such a far-off land—the territory of sanity and reality—to lose it all in a moment's hesitation.
But he had to be absolutely sure that the boy was one of them before he carved into the boy's heart.
They were tricky that way, because you might slip up and stab one of your own kind—it wasn't like in the movies or books, where all it took was a good jab in the right place—it was bloody and you had to stab them over and over, until there was nothing left pumping—it was just like killing your own kind, only they weren't, they were another species, practically, and if you didn't hunt them down, they'd hunt you.
You'd be the deer in the forest to them.
The voice inside him said, You are tired of this, aren't you? You just want them to take you so you'll be one of them, so you won't have to fight anymore. You don't need to fight anymore. Everyone you love is gone, everything you've ever lived for, vanished. If you kill him, you kill yourself. Look at him, look at his face, his skin, his eyes, you were once like that, remember? When you were his age, in this very place, you set this in motion, you and your friends. What has brought you to this place? You have brought yourself. Who is this boy? He is you so many years ago, running through the groves, setting this in motion so that you will one day return only to pierce your son through the heart as a just sacrifice for what you and your kind have done.
And Joe knew then that he was insane, because, although he was holding the boy and raising the mallet to strike, he saw what he thought was the light of day come up all around him, a color of light that he had never seen before, and the boy was not what he had seemed a second ago, but a creature of mutilation and putrefaction. The world became liquid all around them, until all light was like a river, and the man fumbled with the mallet and dropped it. He tried to reach for the screwdriver to press it into the boy's flesh before it was too late, but something grabbed his hand and pulled him through some land of opening, as if the world were only a removable layer of skin.
And on the other side, she stood there as beautiful as he had ever remembered her. Melissa.
She opened her mouth to speak, dark water spilling from between her lips.
"I know you're not her," he said. "I know I'm standing outside a barn, holding my son in my arms. There's a town just down the road. And apple trees. It's cold. It's getting on night. I know you can't be her. I don't know what you are, but I know you're not her." Was he shouting? He couldn't tell—his breathing was difficult. He felt a pain in his chest as his heart beat wildly. Unbidden tears streamed down from his eyes as he tried to see her as she was, rather than the way she presented herself.
Her face froze in its expression. Then, for a moment, he knew clearly that the voices within him were the beacon of his insanity: she was, indeed, who she looked like, and she was trying to talk to him, but the voices in his head were getting louder, more raucous, shrieking across his nerve pathways. He knew the world was not the insane place that he had been living in, that it could not be, that the creatures he had been slaughtering could not be anything more than simple human beings. His own obsessions had brought him to this.
He felt the screwdriver in his hand and turned its blade towards himself.
You failed once before, the clearest voice in his head said, so do it, do it right. Do it now.
He pressed the blade against his chest and was about to give it a good shove, when he felt a searing numbness in his leg, and he fell to the ground—the sound of a gunshot—a burning around his right calf. He closed his eyes. Rock salt? When he opened them, it was night, and the boy stood over him, looking at him. He could see th
e barn and the darkening sky. From nearby a man shouted, "What the hell are you trying to do to that boy?"
Shot, I've been shot, damn it, you don't shoot your own kind.
But of course you do, you always kill your own, it's the law of man.
And what you don't kill, the wild things get.
He looked up, and recognized the other man; it was Virgil holding the gun. He tried to cry out to him. Although he trusted no one at this point, he knew that Virgil thought that he was rescuing the boy from the clutches of a madman. Virgil would try to help the boy.
Joe knew it was too late, knew that they'd tricked him, almost made him kill himself, and now they would descend upon Virgil, too, and all would be lost.
The game was over.
Now he knew the boy was one of them. His son. Aaron.
The boy, who looked just like a boy, a perfect imitation, resembling so closely, in so many insignificant details his own son, looked at him.
Then the boy turned his head in the direction of the man with the gun and sniffed at the air just like a wild animal detecting its prey.
Joe lay there and for just a second, like another scent, came the smell of memory and all that had happened in just a few days. All that had turned him from a sane man into someone who believed that darkness had fallen across the universe.
He grabbed the boy in a full-nelson stranglehold. With his other hand, he brought the screwdriver to his chest, pressing on it. Tears blinded him, as he felt his son's pulse. His son began sobbing, trying to break away, but he held him there. He held Aaron close to him.
"Daddy," the boy gasped (but he's not a boy, he's a monster, he's one of those monsters, he's just pretending to be a boy, he crawled into the little boy suit after that creature ripped the life from Aaron, your son. He's a puppet, he's a repository for blood, an alien harvester, not your son! the voice in his head screamed).
"Please," the boy gasped as Joe carefully brought the mallet up—you have to act fast with them, you have to stop their hearts before they can get you, you have to eviscerate them to make sure they can't function.
Joe whisked the mallet through the air, but let it go, let it fly and land harmlessly on the ground.
Joe barely got to his knees, the pain in his leg too much.
"I can't," he said, letting go of the boy. He touched the frozen ground with his hands. He knew that it would get him. He knew that even though he had slain the dragon, that this boy It had created from his son's body would now destroy him.
But then, something lifted, a great stone, as if the universe had been darkened and was now redeemed by light. The sky seemed to tear apart for an instant, and then was whole again.
It's dead now. I didn't kill the monster down there. I killed it here, I didn't give in to it. All of what I did down in the mine would be nothing if I had sacrificed my own child.
He felt the boy's arms around his neck and heard voices, outside himself, voices which he didn't think he'd ever hear again:
"Joe? Is that you? Oh, my God, Joe!" Jenny cried out. He heard Hillary, too, bawling as if from hunger.
When Joe opened his eyes, he saw the miracle which he had not dared to hope for.
He saw his family again. His wife, his son, and daughter, not Its, not Things, not Drinkers of Blood, but his family, innocent and whole, and alive.
Alive.
He had believed in so much, but not in miracles. He grabbed his son, looking into his eyes. "Aaron? Aaron?"
His son was sobbing. Over his shoulder, Joe saw Jenny, her face filthy, her clothes torn, with Hillary in her arms. Joe cried out, not a word, but a yawp, a human cry of joy which he had forgotten that he had ever possessed.
They fell on him, arms around his neck, weeping, happy, ragged.
EPILOGUE
THE RIVER RUNS
1
From the Journals of Joe Gardner, when he was twelve:
It wasn't just me, it was all of us. I could feel it. I don't know what it was. It touched me and seemed to read my mind and make what I was thinking come true, almost. I don't get it. But Hopfrog was part of it, and Melissa, too.
I think we slew a dragon.
2
Joe had some fight still in him. He had belief in the universe at his back, faith that the cosmos was good, that love survived even death. He found strength in these thoughts. With my family back, my boy, my daughter, my beautiful, wonderful wife with me again... They made a big funeral pyre with most of the bodies of the dead; they didn't want to take the risk that there was still a spark of the vampire in any of the corpses. Some of the other bodies were left where they were. There was time enough for the authorities to come down over the Malabar Hills and deal with what had happened.
Jenny was strong. Joe wasn't sure if he had expected that or not. Later, they would both deal with the horror and the grief. Virgil, in his hunt for the children, had found Jenny and the kids huddled together in the sacristy of the St. Andrew's Episcopal Church. There were others, hidden, too, in places where there were crosses and symbols and concrete expressions of man's beliefs. The Night Children attacked his mother's house, his mother fought bravely, Jenny said, but she was attacked before Jenny could help her. Jenny had gotten Aaron and Hillary out of the house and had made it the three blocks to the church. Jenny had no faith, no religion, but she instinctively knew to go someplace where others had beliefs and creeds. She told Joe she would've gone to a synagogue or a mosque, or even a tent revival, if any of them had been within the town limits, but St. Andrew's was the nearest incarnation of religion she could find. "I took them there because I didn't know where else to go," she said.
Joe didn't bury his mother, but left her remains in her bed, covered with his grandmother's quilt, as if she were just taking a nap and might awaken at any moment. He thought: She still lives in my dreams, so I have not lost her, only her body which had become ravaged with ill health and the markings of some alien being.
Virgil Cobb, who Joe recognized after all these years as a man who loved his mother deeply, stayed at the house with her.
"I'll be fine," he said, "I just don't want to leave her alone, even now. You go get some help, send some people over here to clean this place up. I'll make some tea, and wait."
"I know that you loved her," Joe told him, feeling his anger dissolve about the affair his mother had with this man. In its place, he felt kinship, as if both held the flame of her memory.
As he and his family left Anna Gardner's house, he thought he heard his old buddy Hop wishing them all well. There was something in his benediction that was like a soft touch on the shoulder, a nudge from a friend to continue to go up that road, to care for and protect the living, because somehow the dead would get along just fine.
The rain mixed with snow kept coming 'til noon.
They gassed up at Cally's ValCo Gas. It was less strange than Joe had thought it would be to steal fifteen bucks worth of premium unleaded.
He looked at the town, at Colony, and saw nothing but the markers of time in the form of stone and wood and steel. It was like viewing a corpse, a loved one who has died, and knowing that she is not there, not in that shell, that the one you loved had already moved on in her journey to some distant land. So, too, Colony had vacated its shell, and the ghost town that remained seemed as slight as a pile of leaves waiting to turn into debris.
In the car, back on Main Street, Becky and Tad fell asleep in the backseat. Aaron snoozed a little, but seemed to start with fear every time the car hit a bump in the road. Hillary was fairly calm—Joe doubted that she was even aware of what she had experienced. Jenny said, "Maybe we should keep hunting them. Maybe we didn't stop all of them."
Joe shook his head. "There was only one. The rest were the dragon's hands and eyes and teeth. I believe it's gone. It's done." He was not sure if this were true, but for that moment, he knew it was more important to get the hell out of Colony than to debate the finer points of the unknown.
They drove out of town, along R
iver Road, and took the turn off to Lone Duck Road.
Here, the rain turned to snow. Joe was worried that the Skylark might not make it if the road were to freeze over. But the tires, bald as they were, cleaved to the road.
The storm seemed to calm.
When they were almost to the Paramount Bridge, Becky gasped, waking.
She pointed ahead. "It's gone."
Through the wipers, slicing across the windshield, Joe saw what she meant.
The Paramount Bridge was still there, at least skeletally, but edges of it had been struck by lightning and were blackened and smoldering.
Joe pulled over and parked in front of it. He stepped out of the car. Becky and Tad also got out. Jenny stayed back with her children. Joe looked at them and shook his head. "Something has always kept me from crossing that bridge to get out of town."
Tad said, "Maybe that's good. Maybe we've always needed you here. I know Dad did."
Joe looked at that boy and could not help but hug him. They walked to the edge of the road, right where the blackened and smoking bridge began.
Snow on face, eyes, lips, Joe sat down and tossed a stone into the river. The water was running high and fast, just as if it were oncoming spring instead of oncoming winter.
He turned to Tad, who sat down beside him, and said, "Would you look at that."
Snow was in his hair. The rain had stopped. Nothing but the whiteness of snow slowly blanketing the dead-grass hills and frosting the ridge and banks of the far shore.
"Would you look at that river," Joe said. He could not laugh, or cry. "It's so clean, that water, right now. You can drink that water."
Nights Towns: Three Novels, a Box Set Page 29