The Nest

Home > Other > The Nest > Page 16
The Nest Page 16

by Gregory A. Douglas


  The man got in and slammed the door, liking the solid sound of the well-­fitted metal. Then he asked his wife, “What’s that?”

  “What’s what?”

  Tom Laidlaw pointed to the floor beside the woman’s shoe. A roach was resting there.

  Deirdre Laidlaw said calmly, “Look at the size of that goddamn cockroach!”

  Her husband made a flipping gesture with the back of his large, freckled hand. “Scrootch it out of here.”

  The woman screwed up her face. “You do it, hero mine!”

  Her husband leaned across her lap.

  “Don’t get fresh.” She slapped at his hand. “You won’t respect me in the morning.”

  “Ouch!” Tom Laidlaw cried out, clutching his ear. He came up so suddenly he banged his head on the steering wheel. “What the hell!”

  “My God!” Deirdre Laidlaw shrieked at the same time. Blood was running down the side of her husband’s face and she saw an enormous cockroach, easily four inches long, disappearing, disappearing into her husband’s right ear!

  The woman swiveled to him with a gesture of help, but her hands remained frozen, with her fingers curved before his face as if she were holding an invisible bowl. She was looking at another huge roach biting into her husband’s right eye.

  In the next instant, she was screaming with a different horror. First there was a fluttering at her forehead like a large moth’s wings; then an excruciating needle going through her face, a fire lasering into her skull.

  While she could see out of one eye, Deirdre Laidlaw had to live with the inconceivable sight of great cockroaches coating her husband’s face, a vicious, quivering crust of filth. Feeling blood on her own face, she knew the misshapen creatures were eating at her flesh just as she witnessed them shearing away her husband’s nose. She did not want to die, but she was grateful for death’s release from the horror.

  SIX

  Sheriff Amos Tarbell heard the cries before he saw the cars. What he witnessed as he swerved into the Tinton driveway hit him like a hammer, so that the police car skidded out of control and banged into a tree opposite the Laidlaw jeep. His head hit the wheel and he felt blood starting. He was too stunned even to reach for his handkerchief. He sat there with blood streaming onto his tan uniform, watching with bulging eyes the impossible spectacle of Deirdre and Tom Laidlaw being devoured by cockroaches.

  Sitting upright in the jeep, the two looked like unnatural wax figures out of a horror museum. Their eyes were gone. They stared back at the sheriff from blank sockets from which gore was trickling. Right before his eyes, their skulls were being cleaned of muscle and flesh by a thousand scurrying bugs. Still-­living shreds of their skin quivered with raw nerves, looked like white worms squirming over the bone-­white of their scalped skulls.

  The Laidlaws, before Sheriff Amos Tarbell’s eyes, looked like two cadavers in an anatomy class held in hell. The bloodied bones made a gruesome tableau of skeletons driving a jeep.

  The word “piranha” ribboned through Tarbell’s brain like a red-­hot wire. Clearly, these people had been taken by surprise, had been absolutely helpless, unable to defend themselves in any way . . .

  So this was the vicious, the inconceivable, explanation of the island’s mysterious disappearances! This was the meaning of Stephen’s reluctance, his questioning about roaches eating leather belts, clothing, and the rest!

  The sheriff was seeing it for himself now, understanding the fate of the missing Tintons, of Hildie, of her girls—and, by God, of those men off the ferry! This is what would have happened to himself, Dorset, and Homer if they had not escaped the insect army chasing them when they had the rabbit trap.

  Bile was in the man’s mouth, but this was no time to be sick. The sheriff clearly heard the clicking of the roaches’ hard mandibles and teeth, the hissing of their tumbling battle to get at the human flesh. Above all, he heard the grinding of what he had been unable to believe when the scientists had described it—how insects like these roaches could eat into bone, chew through it, saw it and cleave it and splinter it. Could grind it into powder that they lapped up.

  He was watching it happen! He wiped the blood that was dribbling into his own eyes. He batted a roach away from his face. He ground into reverse and shot the police car around, spraying gravel on two wheels.

  The Laidlaws were beyond help, that was tragically plain. Before the demons got at him, he had to get to the lighthouse with his terrible discovery. The unspeakable theories of the Harvard scientists were proving correct! Yarkie Island might have to call in the Coast Guard, the National Guard, the whole damn United States Army to stamp out—to try to stamp out—the invasion of the murdering roaches.

  HAVOC

  ONE

  Peter Hubbard was bent over a microscope when Elizabeth Carr came out of the kitchen into the laboratory. With the lunch things tidied up, Bonnie had gone to lie down for a rest. The Yarkie men were all off on their assignments. The expected storm was in higher gear, rattling the windows now, nearing full strength. The woman could see the driven sea beating at the shore outside. The waves had become threatening breakers, and the gale was whirling sand and leaves all around the creaking lighthouse. Sand was gritty on the floor in every room, sifting in through the cracks everywhere. But there was no rain yet.

  Elizabeth asked, “Where’s Wanda?”

  Hubbard spoke without taking his eyes from the instrument. “She’s phoning Chatham, trying to reach Craig­. We need some special supplies.” He explained no more. The harsh crescendo of the wind brought his head up. The building was machine-­gunned with shells and stones whipped by the storm. He asked anxiously, “Can Craig get back in this weather?”

  Elizabeth smiled confidently. “He’s got the power under him and the know-­how on top. This isn’t half as bad as it sometimes gets. He’ll be here, with whatever you asked for.”

  “You people are terrific,” Peter Hubbard applauded genuinely. Elizabeth noted that he included her among the Yarkie group. Well, he was right.

  What the two scientists had already done with the long-­unused room reflected their own special teamwork. Every kind of glass apparatus was set out neatly on the scrubbed tables. Liquids of different colors were boiling everywhere, sending curlicues of steam over the retorts and jars that rested on tripods above Bunsen burners. Tubing of glass and rubber twisted and turned in intricate patterns. From titration apparatus, which Elizabeth recognized from her sophomore lab work, colorless drops were falling slowly into a receptacle of liquid turning darker purple.

  On shelves along one wall, empty flasks and cages awaited the specimens the scientists hoped the men would bring in.

  Elizabeth returned Hubbard’s praise. “You and Wanda have done a fantastic set-­up here.”

  “We’ve got the reagents ready,” the biologist commented. “We’ll be able to analyze the poisons, for one thing.” He gestured at some of the boiling flasks. “And Wanda is trying to determine the pheromonic possibilities . . .” Hubbard left his stool and approached Elizabeth. “We ought to have a talk, you and I.”

  Elizabeth looked away evasively. “About what?”

  He smiled. “Something’s wrong with our pheromones.”

  His manner disturbed the woman, and she moved to leave. “I don’t want to interfere with your work.”

  He said promptly, “I’m talking about the freeze you’ve been giving me, Elizabeth.”

  “Freeze?”

  “Aside from your travelogue about Yarkie last night, you’ve conspicuously managed to avoid a direct word.”

  “I’m sorry,” she said. “I didn’t mean to be unfriendly.” But the coldness of her voice belied the sentiment. Elizabeth felt stiff and uncomfortable. The warmth in Peter Hubbard’s voice was confusing in a situation already too confused. She wished Wanda Lindstrom would come back into the lab. To keep the conversation impersonal, Elizabeth pointed to the roach specimen the biologists had taken from the rabbit and placed in a covered jar. “It’s amazing,
isn’t it?”

  The misbegotten bug was scuttling about, unpausing. Its antennae were straight up, like two trolley poles reaching for an invisible power line. The roach kept trying to climb up the side of the container. Sliding back, it sometimes landed on its back. Then its feet and antennae and mandibles went into a frenzy; its body arched in spasms of instinctual determination until, somehow, without any real purchase on the slippery glass, it regained its normal position. Shivers ran up the woman’s spine. That damned thing will climb out of there yet! she thought with goose pimples.

  “No,” Peter Hubbard smiled grimly, watching her. “It won’t manage. Don’t worry.”

  “I’m worried about the men,” Elizabeth told him. “Suppose they do find a nest. Won’t they be in terrible danger?”

  “I’ve given them specific instructions. They’re not on ‘search and destroy,’ ” he said. “They’re on ‘search and reconnaissance.’ ” He used the phrase from his Air Force service. “But what I want to tell you is how glad I am we had a chance to be together on the beach last night.”

  Surprised, Elizabeth turned away from the roach flask. She remained silent. Her heart was beating faster than she wanted it to.

  “I thought about you for a long time—” Hubbard stopped and looked deeply into her gray eyes. “I’m glad I’m seeing you here, this way, instead of in your father’s house.”

  Elizabeth was suddenly and unhappily conscious of how much she looked like a housemaid, hair tied up, apron around her slacks. She knew what he meant. In Cambridge, she had been just Professor Carr’s “kid.” Now Peter Hubbard was seeing her for the first time as the woman she had become, a woman of her own mind and values.

  His gaze was penetrating, and he was saying, “As a scientist I prefer things orderly, Liz. I don’t like false theories cluttering up the place.”

  Elizabeth found herself more uncertain and perplexed. What was he driving at?

  “Some people call me blunt,” he smiled at her. “And especially right now we don’t have time for beating around bushes, do we?”

  Elizabeth nodded, though she wasn’t sure what she was agreeing with.

  Hubbard blew pipe smoke toward the flask holding the roach and watched the insect shake its antennae as its atmosphere thickened through the air holes in the cover. “So I would like to tidy up our relationship, yours and mine . . .”

  “Do we have ‘a relationship’?” Elizabeth let herself smile. She untied her apron and tossed it onto a chair. Her hands pushed back her long brown hair. She knew her cheeks were flushed, and suddenly she didn’t mind.

  The man brought her up with a frank, unexpected declaration. “Liz, I am not now nor have I ever been in love with Wanda Lindstrom!”

  Elizabeth was shocked. His was a directness indeed, beyond any preparation or anticipation. He was demanding, “You have believed that, haven’t you?”

  Elizabeth Carr’s head came up and she answered him with her own gathered force. “I have never considered it any of my business.”

  “Well, I would like to make it your business.”

  Elizabeth’s heart raced anew as Peter Hubbard’s words flowered in her mind. He was adding, “We are going to see a lot of each other, not just here but when we get back to Cambridge.” He was blowing smoke at the cockroach again. Elizabeth thought it was the damnedest way for a man and a woman to be reaching toward each other. “If you want to,” he said quietly.

  She did not hesitate. She could be as honest as he was. He was right. If she had misunderstood about Wanda Lind­strom, there wasn’t enough time, or energy, in life itself for hypocrisy now. “I want to, Peter. I want to very much.”

  She hoped he would kiss her. She had feared he might in the moonlight the night before, but she would welcome it now. She was glad when he brought her to his chest, and she yielded in a quick confession of her long-­suppressed feeling for him.

  Peter Hubbard’s lips on Elizabeth Carr’s young mouth were firm and tender. His kiss stirred the woman in ways she had for years forbidden herself to imagine. Now it was real. Her own lips let the man know her emotion.

  In their embrace, neither one heard the door open.

  “Excuse me!” The door slammed shut before they could separate. It had been Wanda Lindstrom’s voice, clearly shocked and distressed.

  Hubbard kept his arm around Elizabeth. “It’s all right, Liz. Wanda is a good friend and a good colleague, but she knows it’s nothing more.”

  Elizabeth rubbed a finger over her mouth doubtfully. “This won’t bother your work—?”

  “Nothing will interfere with Wanda’s work. It’s one reason she’s so great at it.”

  The door opened again. The biologist entered as if for the first time, except that her face was ashen. Business-­like, she said to Hubbard, “I couldn’t find Craig, but the police chief at Chatham will try to get the material we want. He’ll reach Craig at the fire department with it.”

  “Good!” Hubbard said, equally businesslike. “Thank you.”

  Elizabeth hurried to the kitchen door, picking up her apron.

  Dr. Lindstrom called after her quickly. “You don’t have to leave, Elizabeth!”

  But Elizabeth found herself deeply disquieted. She made an excuse. “I don’t like being in the same room with that cockroach. It gives me the willies.” Having made the statement, she realized it was more than an excuse. Every time she looked at the endlessly scurrying insect she felt a malign force emanating from the flask. Peter could say all he wanted to about the creatures being mindless automatons, but she intuited a power that would not rest until it had its way with them, all of them.

  Wanda Lindstrom gave her a smile. “It won’t get out, Elizabeth.”

  They were interrupted by the appearance of Elias Johnson, returning from the village. The noise of the wind and the blowing sand against the building had masked the sound of his engine pulling up. Taking off his mackintosh, he snorted, “Wish it would get to the rain! Damn wind blowing to tear your hair out, but those tarnation clouds won’t let go!” He came to them rubbing his gnarled hands. “Anything new here?”

  Hubbard answered crisply, “Yes, Elias. Wanda and I have done some more work on the specimen. It’s no ordinary roach. We have got a mutation, without question. It’s not one of those horror-­movie inventions—these insects remain quite close to normal. The changes are well within the parameters of minor adaptive alterations, like the greater power in the leg and body muscles, the stronger mandibles and teeth. What really gives us concern is that these changes are coupled with a much more mature nervous system than anything we have ever seen in this or related species.”

  The old man sat down heavily, and passed his hand over his forehead. “Everything you said has been going around in my head over and over, but I still can’t believe it.”

  Hubbard understood the man’s difficulty in coming to grips with the extraordinary development. To impress him with the enormous number of biological “curiosities,” he added another textbook fact, “You know, Elias, there are some ants with so strong a bite that if you try to pull them away, the ant’s head will separate from its body before its teeth will let go!”

  The old eyes widened. “Thunderation!”

  Elizabeth gasped, “I never heard of that!”

  The scientist said wryly, “African natives take advantage of it. When they’re wounded, they get an ant to bite them to hold the flesh together.”

  With a sour smile, the old man said, “A living Band-­Aid, eh?”

  Wanda Lindstrom concluded for Hubbard, “People simply don’t realize how inventive Nature has been through the millions of years of evolution.”

  Elias Johnson turned puzzled eyes to the scientists. “Could these big bastards be what you call ‘communicating’ with the regular cockroaches we have around the village?”

  The woman looked to Hubbard. “The Bra­tella germanica?”

  Johnson grunted, “Huh?”

  Hubbard said, “That’s the ordinary h
ousehold cockroach. No, I don’t think so . . .”

  Johnson told him, “People are complaining about cockroaches running around in broad daylight.”

  Wanda Lindstrom frowned to Hubbard. “They might be sensing some of the new pheromones, Peter. They wouldn’t quite connect up, but it could make them abnormally restless.”

  “Possibly . . .”

  Elizabeth was impressed again by the immediate rapport between the two. There was a relationship that could not be denied.

  Johnson said, “But the big buggers are out there in the woods! Miles away!”

  The woman told him, “Pheromones can travel great distances. There’s a female moth, for instance, that sends out just one hundred millionth of a gram—and you can’t get much smaller than that. With it she can excite a billion males a mile away. Another species can reach as far as seventeen miles! Who says we humans are ahead of insects?” It was her way of telling Elizabeth that she understood the embrace she had witnessed. Elizabeth was relieved. The last thing she wanted was unnecessary tension in the lighthouse. The common problem was too pressing, the stakes too high. Right now a love triangle, if there was one, seemed of small importance.

  A sharp clanging outside interrupted the group. There was a thumping, clattering, and grinding of heavy metal that shook the building. Through the window there came a whooping and shouting. The alarm in the room turned to quick laughter when they saw it was Russell Homer. He was in his yellow machine of triumph, his great bulldozer chariot, standing jauntily on the seat, waving his hat in circles of victory.

  The group hurried out, cheering the man. He lowered the bulldozer scoop with the delicacy of a chef handling a soufflé. “There’s a thousand of your specimens in there!” he crowed.

  Inside, Peter Hubbard took over. “What I’m going to do,” he instructed Wanda Lindstrom, “is punch one hole in the cover, so the roaches can get out only one at a time. You hold the trap jars over the hole, tightly.”

 

‹ Prev