Read At Fear's Altar Online

Authors: Richard Gavin

Tags: #Fiction, #Horror, #Short Stories (Single Author)

At Fear's Altar (5 page)

The natural layout of the footways seemed to have been restored, for Colin discovered that the lanes invariably led to the familiar groves, and in no time at all he found himself back at the main road, having cleared the route that was his daily wont, the selfsame route that had just yesterday played puckish games with him. Colin ate some of the food he’d brought and took a long draught from his canteen before concluding that he would try the paths again, this time making deliberate changes to his choice of crossroads, this time doing his best to get lost.
He once more took to the paths, zigging where he had previously zagged, cobbling together ever stranger combinations of paths. Every bend of the trail stoked his eagerness that he would soon feel the cool basement drafts creeping out from the reeds like luring fingers, but to no avail. Even shutting his eyes and roaming with literal blindness did not bring Colin any nearer to the marsh or the chapel.
Though his tricks had not accomplished Colin’s goal, they did manage to get him to the rim of the woods that was farthest from his home. Weary and overheated, he slumped down on a log and fished out his all-but-drained canteen. He was afraid. Not only had he been unsuccessful at relocating the church, but now even his memories of the place were growing muddied and ephemeral. Had his granddaughters’ version of yesterday been the bona fide one? The implications of this possibility left Colin cold. Perhaps Paula and Millie and whoever else were correct in their theories. He was, unbeknownst to himself, slipping.
He had almost mired himself fully in newfound woe when he spotted a horrible face in the brush, a face that lent immediate and shocking validation to his crooked memories of the chapel in the reeds.
The features were amorphous, but the presence was undeniable. Having been mined of its eyes, what stared out at Colin were two black pits. Colin dropped his canteen and marched over the stony path to get nearer to the object. The pair of hollow sockets was the only detail that was clearly visible. The rest of the face was mummified in a great webworm nest, which had been spun over the thin branches of a young maple. Colin stood a mere foot from the nest, watching as a few of its inhabitants squirmed over the dark face’s cheekbones or nestled into the great gape of its mouth. He couldn’t help but wonder whether the effigy had been carefully inserted into the nest or whether the bugs had spun it themselves. Perhaps they had woven their whitish gauze around the face to claim it as their own.
The complexion was dark, as though it had been hewn from a leadwood tree. Thorns from the effigy’s crown punctured the murky threads, allowing Colin to identify what it was he was looking at. Before he was even aware of what he was doing, he reached his hands into the openings where the nest sagged. He wriggled the thorns loose and then began the careful extraction. Webworms muscled across Colin’s fingers. He wondered if they were attempting to fight for what was theirs.
He freed the head without causing any major damage to the nest. Cradling it in his palms, feeling the sickening heft and studying the hideous features, Colin’s hands began to quake. The expression on the face was not one of pious suffering, or even of hurt; instead, it was an emblem of rancour, of unfathomable malice. The mouth was a carved maw. The lips curled back to reveal thick, misshapen teeth. Deep furrows had been gouged along the brow and around the pitted eyes, suggesting flesh stretched tight across bone. Fire seemed to have reduced the whole carving to carbon. Some of the darkness stained Colin’s hands. He glanced shamefully over either shoulder, sickened at the thought of anyone seeing him there, cradling such an awful thing. He prepared to return it to its nest but halted halfway.
The pocket of his puffer vest was unzipped before Colin even realized he had reached for it. He extracted the pair of coins that he had spotted yesterday morning. Something guided his hand and instructed him to plunk each silvery disc into the Messiah’s hollowed eyes. His payment for the Ferryman now in place, Colin delicately replaced the head in its nest, watching as the bugs writhed over it in delight.
An instant stark terror shot through him. All Colin could think was
‘What have I done?’
The old man began to run. The paths held their form, enabling Colin’s race back to the main road to be a thoughtless one. He narrowly missed being struck by a truck that was barrelling down the main road. The driver must have spotted Colin at the last instant, affording him just enough time to swerve and stir up a great fog of dust. The driver laid on his horn and screamed something as he sped on.
Winded and drenched with sweat, Colin did his best to run for the remainder of the trek. He barely noted that a pale woman was gently rocking on her porch swing as he passed by her home. He shouted something to get her to stop staring at him, then jabbed his key into the front door. After several fumbling attempts he finally managed to gain entry and immediately locked the door and then drew every shade over every window. In that dim, impregnable cottage he hunched down and trembled. Much like yesterday morning, everything seemed to be moving with dizzying swiftness. Colin wondered if he would ever again feel centered, placed in the world.
He had almost managed to calm himself when a knock at his front door caused him to shriek. He scuttled against the wall, unable even to entertain the thought of opening the door.
A woman’s voice called out “Hello?” Though the words were muffled by wood, Colin was certain that the woman was now calling his name. Another knock. Colin held his breath. He could then hear the soft grinding sound of someone walking on his gravel driveway.
A silhouette darkened the blind. Again his name was spoken. Colin began to scream, unsure whether what was emerging from his throat were even words or just some animal reflex to scare off his stalker. Perhaps he was simply trying to drown out the awful voice.
When the shadow regressed and the noises ceased Colin almost wept with relief. It was only late afternoon, but he was exhausted by the day’s activities and decided to retire early. He undressed and crawled under the sheet, leaving the ceiling light on like a nyctophobic child.
Anxious that his dreams might drag him back to the paths or, God help him, someplace even worse, Colin slipped into sleep with remarkable ease.
He might have slept soundly until the following morning had it not been for a disruption that not only roused him, but petrified him to the point where he felt his bowels vacating.
The disruption had begun as noises; once again of someone prowling around his property. It was dark outside, and under the stark glow of his bedroom light Colin felt all the more vulnerable and exposed. He was sure that the defilers of the church had tracked him down. They had somehow intuited that he had breached their temple, had discovered the awful secrets of their faith.
Colin slithered out from beneath the soiled sheets, taking care to hunch out of sight of his open doorway.
From the front of the house came the telltale sound of his door opening.
Colin charged for the bedroom window. It was open to admit the cooling breeze, but he still had to plunge his naked frame right through the mesh screen. He landed in Bev’s fallow flowerbed with a thud that made his back and jaw ache. Scrabbling like some weird arachnid across the lawn, Colin bolted ahead, oblivious to where he might be headed.
A vehicle was parked in his driveway, and a passing impression of another figure on his lawn whipped past Colin’s periphery as he ran. He heard a woman screaming behind him. He raced across the road. Panicked, filthy, and stark naked, Colin charged on. If he could just make it around the main bend in the road, just enough to get out of sight, he could hide for a few seconds and collect his thoughts.
But his name was continually being shouted, and the terribleness of it made Colin run even harder.
He was in the woods now. It was dark, but at least the blackness occulted his shameful condition. He didn’t dare stop, not until he was deep enough to be totally out of sight of the main path. The earth was clammy and cold against his bare soles. The air was gelid and raw.
Finally, his throat constricted and his lungs raw, Colin collapsed among some dew-soaked greenery. He listened while the crickets and the toads lent a score to the night.
A woman called his name again, and Colin scrambled to his feet. He pivoted on one heel and then immediately fell down again.
The chapel was there.
It must have sprouted overnight like some weird mushroom. It was precisely as it had been when he’d first encountered it, save for one alteration: its front doors were now parted widely, welcomingly.
A flood of thoughts claimed Colin, questioning whether or not this was some kind of trap, or just maybe a sign of beckoning. He was still waffling about whether he dared enter the church when the figure came into view.
It stepped languidly from the chapel’s darkened hull until its frame was just barely visible in the moonlight. It paused in the archway, stretched its ropy arms outward to clutch either side of the doorframe. It held its crucified pose; an artist’s model who welcomed the attentive eye of its master.
The body was every bit as grey and firm as it had been when it was pinioned to its cross, but several new developments lunged at Colin and caused him to reel.
To begin with, the Messiah’s gender had changed, or perhaps Colin had simply never noticed that the graven image had full breasts. The grubby loincloth had also been stripped away, rendering the once chastely hidden cleft exposed. Also boldly uncovered were the scaly patches of stretch marks and the bountiful wrinkles of old age.
Only after he had noted these details did Colin’s eyes tilt hesitantly upward. If he were to see this shape moving without a head it would have been too much to bear. He was certain that such an aberration would have broken him. But the figure’s head had been restored. Had he played a part in this miracle, this weird resurrection? Perhaps by leaving the coined head to drift down the Styx Colin had unwittingly played a profound role in a rite that was utterly obscure to him.
The face was masked in the grubby linen that had once served as the loincloth. The fabric had been wound and rewound over the head, as elegantly as mummy wrappings, as tautly as the dressing of a head trauma victim. The eyes were clearly visible and were a vibrant electric blue that practically illuminated the forest. The mouth and the nose were swathed. As the shape stepped nearer, Colin could see the fabric that was stretched across the mouth pulsing in and out like a tiny heart as the creature drew breath in and out.
She was soon near enough for him to touch her, but Colin dared not. He recognized the liver spots and moles that darkened the pale flesh like dollops of sludge. Yes, the shrivelled wood-skin was indeed familiar to him. The couple simply stood, as innocent as the primal betrothed marvelling at their Garden.
But Colin’s Eve swiftly departed. She began to run, stealthy as a frightened doe.
He set off after her. No longer concerned about his pursuers finding him, Colin called out to the woman, called out to her by using Beverly’s name. Her passage through the starlit mire was a graceful, noiseless cascade; the antithesis to his stumbling, sloshing maraud.
Then all at once she stopped and turned about to face him. She raised her arms and Colin did the same, feeling himself growing erect at the possibility of her touch.
With stigmata hands the figure clawed the loincloth from her head. The mask unravelled and sank into the swamp. Colin was at last able to see what it was he had been chasing.
The woods called his name. Another distant voice cried
“Dad?!”
He answered by screeching and running harder than he had ever known possible. He thundered wildly ahead; a beast without reins, a being with no boundaries. But as fast as he was moving, Colin felt as though the world was spinning faster still.
Form and structure and meaning were pulled to bits and scattered every which way, so great was the world’s new velocity. He could still hear the pounding of feet close behind him, and the distant sound of his name ringing through the trees. He was lost in the night that was swallowing him, lost in the night inside his head.
Yet for all the searing panic, there was also a mild breeze of carelessness, of freedom. He’d become unfettered from all the littleness to which he’d clung in order to stake his place in the world. All was lost, every bit as lost as he was.
He kept running. He no longer feared for his safety, for Colin knew that before any of his hunters could find him he would first have to find himself.
“I am numb
With the lonely dust of devildom.
Thrust the sword through the galling feter,
All-devourer, all-begetter;
Give me the sign of the Open Eye,
And the token erect of the thorny thigh,
And the word of madness and mystery,
O Pan! Io Pan!”
—Aleister Crowley,
Hymn to Pan
The Abject
1
E
arth’s End was only moments away and she still had nothing to say to him.
As the jeep negotiated the rugged mountain road, Petra caught herself meshing her hands across her middle in a protective gesture. When she remembered this was unnecessary she crumpled inside and allowed her arms to drop.
“Jee-zus!” Tad blurted as they bounced over a pernicious pothole. After the next hairpin turn, the steepness of the incline forced Tad to fumblingly jerk the gearshift into second, then first. He thudded his foot down on the accelerator. “Do me a favour, call Charlie and ask how much farther it is. I’m afraid this thing’s going to fall apart around us if we don’t get there soon.”
She reached for her purse and began the quest for her cellphone. Charlie’s hello was a peep beneath the rumble of engines and the roar of the jeep’s open windows.
“Hey,” Petra cried. “How much farther is this place? Tad’s getting a bit nervous.” She pressed the phone hard against her ear. “Charlie says you should chill out.” She hoped her tone was not too gleeful; just enough to jab at Tad’s already ornery mood. “He also said to tell you the End is nigh.”
As she snapped the phone shut, Petra heard Tad mutter something she was sure was an insult.
“First a flight from Providence to Vancouver,” his hand moved in prima donna sweeps as he ranted, “now a four-hour drive up this mountain range. Your
friends
really know how to show their guests a good time.”
A dozen retorts, ranging from witty to outright caustic, swam through Petra’s mind. Certain that whichever reply she chose would be the wrong one, she opted to look silently out at the sycamores and yews, which were reduced to grey-green smears as the vehicle rattled past them.

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