“Yeah,” said Lottie, her voice trembling. “Yeah, we do.”
Connelly looked at her, then at the others. They did not look much like killers. They spoke the words but he saw desperation
in them rather than resolve. These were not monsters or machines but anguished people clinging at a chance to put things right.
But here at the penultimate moment a trickle of doubt worked into them, one by one. All except perhaps Pike… And then Connelly
wondered about himself.
We’ll figure it out, he reasoned. We got to.
Monk said to them, “We have just met, yet we know each other.”
Pike said, “Are you inviting us to join you? For the moment?”
“Don’t see why not. We get more folk we got a better chance of getting him.”
“That’s so,” said Pike. And he spat in the fire and watched it sizzle and gripped his heavy walking stick and began to wait.
As evening fell their purpose weighed more heavily upon them. Their eyes grew flat and in that instance all of them were one
person, one grieving heart and one vengeful hand. Yet each also felt they were alone in their suffering, for they had endured
a loss that made the world a gray and silent place, barren and unpopulated.
“When should we go?” said Roonie softly. “When should we go?”
Monk looked at the sky overhead. “Don’t know much about killing. It’s almost night. I suppose now is as good a time as any.”
“I would suppose,” said Pike.
They did not move at first. They sat still until the sky was dark, like a dome had fallen across the country, trapping them
and blocking out all light. Then they dumped dirt on the fire and stood without speaking and walked west, like ghosts passing
through the empty fields, simply obeying the red song inside of them without thought.
Mr. Shivers
It was less than two miles. Within minutes they saw a clutch of buildings silhouetted against the bleak light of the dying
sunset. There was something wrong with the light in the distance, like it was shining through greased glass, but they paid
it no mind.
“Where’ll he be?” asked Hammond.
“Inn,” said Monk. “I hope.”
They spread out and approached the town in a tight half-circle. They saw no people, no animals, no sign of life save for a
few lit windows among the buildings. At the outskirts they moved among the structures like hunters in a forest, seeking cover
and shadow and lines of sight. Still nothing stirred.
“Whole damn place is dead,” said Roosevelt.
“Seems to be,” said Pike.
“What the hell’s going on?”
“I can’t say.”
There was a crash from a general store and a man came running out from the back with arms full of food and bottles of alcohol.
He wore overalls and a straw hat barely kept together and he had no shoes. He stopped when he saw them watching, then turned
to run before one of the twins stepped out and stopped him, grabbing his arm.
“Let me go!” he cried. “Let me go!”
“What’s this nonsense?” said Pike as he strode up.
“Let me go! You bastards let me go!”
As they struggled one of the bottles fell from the man’s arms and shattered on the ground. He shrieked like a child and kneeled
over it, crying, “You broked it! You done broked it! Why’d you have to do that?”
“Be quiet,” said Pike.
“You done broked it! I had to go to all that trouble and everything and you all just ruined everything! Why, you—”
Pike slapped him hard, once, then twice. A trickle of blood began to form at the corner of the man’s mouth and he whimpered.
“Will you be quiet?” asked Pike.
He nodded.
“What’s happening here? Where’re all the people?”
“They left,” he said, and sobbed and rubbed at his mouth.
“Why? Where?”
“Don’t know where. They left ’cause there was no reason to stay. Farms all dried up, got bought out, got dug up. There’s only
a few here now.”
“And where are they?”
“Most left just now. A storm’s coming. You can take what you want. The place is deserted. You can just go in and take whatever
you want,” he said, and smiled like this tip could fix everything.
“Get out of here,” said Pike, and threw him aside. The man hurried to grab what he had dropped and ran down the street without
looking back. Pike turned to the others. “This doesn’t change anything.”
“No,” said Connelly.
They found the inn, a long, low-slung building that could have been built with the same primitive tools and designs of fifty
years ago, even a hundred years ago. An oil lamp fluttered and swung in the window as the wind picked up. Connelly, Pike,
and Monk entered while the others kept watch outside. The inn seemed abandoned as well until a short, fat man with a droopy
mustache poked his head out of the back.
“What the hell?” he said. “Are you folks crazy or something?”
“No,” said Pike.
“There’s a goddamn storm coming in, don’t you know to get cover?”
“We know. We’re looking for someone.”
“Oh?”
“Yes. Someone who may be staying here.”
“Only got one man who’s staying here.”
“Does he have a scarred face, by any chance?”
The innkeeper looked at them, suspicious. “He might. What do you want with him?”
“Where is he?” asked Monk.
“I don’t like this,” said the innkeeper.
“Where?” repeated Pike.
“You boys get out of here. I don’t want you here. Get out.”
Pike walked around the countertop and the innkeeper opened his mouth to shout when Pike’s fist slammed into the wall above
the man’s head. The innkeeper cowered before Pike, shielding his face with his arms. Connelly started forward but Monk put
his arm in front of him, though he was trembling. Pike grabbed the innkeeper and thrust him back on the counter and clapped
his hand over the man’s mouth before he could yell.
“You stay quiet,” said Pike to the innkeeper. “You scream and I will make sure you never walk or write again, do you hear
me? I have walked miles and miles to find this man and I will have no issue walking over you, sir. Now where is he? Is he
here?”
The innkeeper shook his head, terrified.
“Then where is he?” said Pike, and took his hand away.
“He left,” whispered the innkeeper.
“Left? Where’d he go?”
“He said he was going for a walk. He does it every night but he said he was doing it again this time. I said he was crazy,
just like you all are, you bastards. He said he was going for a walk and I said the sky was about to come down on him but
he paid it no mind.”
“Which way did he go?”
“Up the street,” said the innkeeper, and pointed. “That a-way.”
Pike left him where he was and they walked out. The others crept out of the shadows and joined them in the road.
“Well?” said Roosevelt.
“He isn’t here, Mr. Roosevelt,” said Pike. “He went for a walk. The man said he does it every night.”
“So where’d he walk?” asked Roonie.
Pike nodded up the road. “So I suppose now it’s hide and seek,” he said, and spat.
They organized a search party as quickly as they could, each taking pairs. Connelly was paired with Roosevelt and they would
travel with the twins. They each took a street and, if needed, decided they would search what few houses there were.
“No one’s here anyways,” said Lottie. “The damn place is a ghost town. Ghosts won’t care if we bust in.”
“Amen,” Roonie said.
Connelly and his group moved north and wandered among the alleys and the stores. A handful of slums squatted toward the edge
of town, along the ditches and the bridge and a scattered half dozen trees. They walked along fences and looked into yards
and began to search the homes.
“You ever broke into a house before?” said Roosevelt.
“No,” Connelly said.
He chuckled. “It’s easy. Sort of fun. Can’t see it being fun with no one around, though. Sort of spoils it.”
The twins picked a ruined shack with no door, but for some reason Connelly was compelled otherwise. He would not want that,
he realized. The scarred man would not want something so poor and already hopeless. He would want something comfortable. Something
homey. Something warm. It would be of no worth to violate something already destitute.
“Where you going, Connelly?” asked Roosevelt as Connelly walked away from the twins, but he made a motion with his hand and
Roosevelt was quiet.
He found a house trying its best to look nice. It was shabby and old but it had a fresh coat of white paint and its yard had
once been clean and organized. Rows of flowers in the front. A doormat. A knocker and a mailbox. It was a home more than simply
a house.
This would be the place, he knew. Connelly’s instincts said so in a way that had no words.
“Stay out here,” he said. “Stay here and watch. Watch if he comes out. If he does, yell.”
“You think he’s in there?” Roosevelt said.
“We’re about to find out.”
Connelly surveyed the house once more in the pallid light. There was no noise but the wind. He pushed the fence out of the
way and came up the front walk. Windows dead. Door slightly ajar. Something had come here and disturbed this dead place, like
an animal whose path had stirred up fallen leaves.
He stood on the porch, minding the creaking boards, and pushed the door open a bit. Its hinges squawked and he winced, then
squatted and spat on them and tried once more. Now it was barely a whisper. He moved to look about in the doorway but saw
nothing, then he took off his shoes and padded inside.
Everything was dark and cramped. A hallway led away before him and there were stairs up to his left. Pictures hung from the
walls and sat on shelves, their glass catching the light from the street and shining slick. The wind picked up, battering
the windows, the panes rattling in their frames. Besides that there was no noise at all. The sense of abandonment was overpowering,
and Connelly felt like he was not in a home but some stone chamber far below the earth, with narrow atriums splintering off
into the dark.
He moved down the hallway and came to the kitchen. Cupboards all closed. Dishes on the countertop. A child’s drawing on the
far wall.
On the table was a light. A single candle, its flame innocently dancing on the tabletop. Next to it was a placemat and a dish,
a nice one, white with flowers on the edge. Probably the nicest dish in the house. But in its center was a muddy brown stain,
almost a smear. It was copper or red at the edges. A knife and fork sat directly to the sides of the plate, also stained.
Connelly paused, then reached out to touch the smear. It was still wet. He lifted his fingers to his nose and sniffed. Its
scent was thick and coppery and he knew without doubt it was blood of some kind.
A black fly alighted on the fork. It twitched and flew to the plate, then back to the fork. It was joined by another fly,
then another, their reedy whine near impossible to hear over the wind. Connelly looked around, then glanced into the living
room. There he saw the blue light filtering through the window outside, yet it was strange. The light or the room itself seemed
almost alive. Everything moved and pulsated, everything shuddered.
Then he noticed a low, wet buzzing coming from in the living room. He thinned his eyes and walked in.
The air was thick with flies, dozens of them at least, swarming through the air. They filled the room and seemed to make the
shadows twitch. As he stood in the darkness he felt them invade his arms, his neck, his legs. He suppressed a shiver and tried
to see where they were coming from. They seemed to be pouring out of one of the walls.
He approached and saw he was at the top of the stairs to the basement. They led straight down, ending at a small brown door
with cracked paint. Connelly reached forward and pawed at the air and felt a string hanging from the ceiling. He pulled and
nicotine-yellow light filled the stairs from the bulb above. The door seemed to change, to move in the light like it was awoken
or disturbed. It was slightly ajar and Connelly could see the oily-black forms of the flies flowing out its crack, as though
the basement was bleeding or leaking.
Suddenly a wave of stench washed over him, thick and heady, like the door before him had exhaled a putrid sigh. He almost
staggered back, unable to bear it. His eyes watered and he turned his head to the side and the flies seemed to increase, like
they were fleeing something from the basement, something that was waking up and stirring to greet him and pushing out that
horrible stink.
How long has he been here, thought Connelly. Days? Weeks? It couldn’t have been more than a few days.
He took a step down toward the basement, hesitated, then took another. He could be down there, he thought. The scarred man
could be down there. But Connelly did not know if he could bear to see what the man had been doing for so long. What foulness
had been gestating here in this deserted town, what prey had he been feeding on? And feeding was what he had been doing, after
all.
Connelly rubbed his mouth and wondered what had been on that plate.
He stopped halfway there, the door staring up at him like some brown, blind eye. He held his hand to his mouth yet again and
fought back retching.
No. He could not do this.
He walked back up the stairs and took a breath. As he did there came a tapping noise from upstairs, quiet and brittle. He
froze and listened. It did not stop.
Connelly sped up the stairs and through the kitchen and came to the stairs leading to the second floor. He put his foot on
the first step and the tapping halted.
He waited. No other sound came. He treaded up the stairs on the balls of his feet, gazing into the darkness. He could see
nothing, no movement, no light. He was nearly to the top when the sound of the wind rose and he felt air in his face. He thought
for a moment and leapt forward and rushed around the right doorway at the top of the stairs.
Some room, a child’s room, but on the west wall was an open window with the wind blasting through.
He raced to the window and looked out. There was no pole or fence or tree to climb down near the window, yet he had felt it
open and the pressure change. Someone had been in here and opened the window, opened it to escape, he felt sure of it. He
looked again. The yard was below him and beyond that the trees and the creek, but after that there was nothing. The trees
raged and shook in the wind. Besides them and the swirls of dust he saw nothing move.
He heard something. There was a sound in the wind. A howling, like an animal. Something screaming in the violent night.
Connelly sprinted back downstairs and out the front door and saw Roosevelt standing in the street, shielding himself from
the wind. “What the hell is that?” he shouted, but Connelly was already following his ears and running for the creek.
The howls grew louder. As he dodged through the trees Connelly saw him ahead. A man kneeling over a crumpled form on the bridge,
shaking the thing before him and screaming wildly. Connelly slowed and walked forward. It was Jake. Snot and spit ran down
his face as he shrieked yet again. Connelly looked at the thing at Jake’s knees and could only tell it was Ernie by the clothes
he was wearing. Blood shone black in the quivering starlight and the night seemed to go mad.
The others ran up behind him. They looked at the slain man and began screaming and swearing. Some went to try and pry Jake
from his brother but he snapped and struck at them and clung ever tighter. Pike and Hammond began running through the streets
and the nearby fields, crying that the scarred man could not be far, not far. Lottie struggled to hold Jake back and called
to Connelly to help her, but he turned and followed Hammond and Pike.
He tried not to think about how the man had gotten out of the house and how he had gotten to Ernie so fast. How he had done
what he did and moved on. Connelly couldn’t think of such things because then he might be something more than a man and then
Connelly might not be able to do anything at all.