Authors: Gord Rollo
Tags: #Suspense, #Horror, #Fiction, #Occult & Supernatural, #Thrillers, #Organ donors
to m e , I was holding a pillow with it, about to murder
him using the strength of his own flesh.
"I'm sorry, Red," I said, knowing I had to say some¬
thing to make him understand. "I didn't have a say in
any of this, same as you. It's Dr. Marshall that caused
all this suffering. It's his fault. He put me to sleep and I
woke up looking like this. Please don't hate me."
Red Beard didn't say anything for a long t i m e , but he
was looking into my eyes again. His trembling slowly
subsided, but tears were still streaming out of his swol¬
len eyes. "I don't hate you, Mike. Christ, n o , you know
that. I j u s t can't take it anymore. I've hit the wall and I
wanna go away. Heaven or Hell or j u s t a big black hole
in the ground, I don't much care. Just get me out of
here, okay? Please."
I nodded, not trusting myself to speak right now.
Grabbing the pillow, I moved to the side of his bed and
numbly prepared to commit murder again.
"Promise me something, Mike?" Red Beard asked as
I was lowering the pillow.
"I'll get him, Red," I said, knowing what he needed
to hear. "Count on it, my friend. N a t h a n Marshall will
be dead within an hour."
I didn't have total faith in what I was saying, but ev¬
ery word came straight from my heart and I vowed to
do everything in my power to make it reality—or die
trying. Red Beard nodded and smiled. I smiled back,
then placed the pillow down on his face before he could
see me break down in tears.
C H A P T E R T H I R T Y - N I N E
Red Beard was gone and his death weighed heavily on
my mind. The pillow I'd used was still resting on his
face, a poor man's shroud if ever there was one. I'd been
too distraught—and I'll admit it, afraid—to remove the
pillow and look at him. I didn't want to see if he'd been
suffering in his last few moments. I wanted to believe
he was smiling under there, j u s t like Lucas had been,
but damned if I was going to find out. No way.
My head was spinning. I had to fight to keep my
thoughts moving in the right direction. If I stopped to
think too hard about what I'd j u s t done I'd go mad,
probably He down on the floor between Lucas and Red
and be done with it. I still had a j o b to do, though, and
more importantly, a promise to keep.
Before leaving the Bleeders' room I gathered up my
growing arsenal of weapons and supplies. I now had two
guns: Drake's and Jackson's; two knives: Drake's buck
knife and Junie's switchblade; a Bic lighter; and the
wooden grave marker.
Problem was, I couldn't carry it all. The knives could
slip into my pant pockets, no problem, but with my in¬
jured wrist I could only carry one of the guns. I could
stuff one down the front of my pants but with my luck
I'd probably blow my dick off. N o , one gun was surely
all I'd need. Drake's gun still had a full clip, so I grabbed
it and left Jackson's on one of the spare beds. I almost
left the wooden cross behind, but on a whim I stuck it
down the front of my shirt.
Last but not least, I made sure I cranked on all the
oxygen gas valves—one stationed at the head of every
bed in the room—before saying good-bye to Lucas and
Red and heading out into the fourth-floor hallway.
Thankfully, it was deserted, but I knew I'd really
have to be on my toes now. If Drake had come back to
the castle, no doubt the rest of his boys were back, too,
and none of them would let me walk on by like the
nurse and the orderly had done earlier. If I was spotted
again I was in big, big trouble.
Mind you, so was whoever spotted me because I was
armed and determined to go down fighting. I didn't give
a damn whether I got my throat cut in a fight or was
gunned down in a standoff, but I desperately needed to
get somewhere that I could ignite the gas before I let
them take me down.
And I knew j u s t the place.
I headed for the front stairwell.
My guess was all of the remaining security team
would be congregating down in Drake's office on the
ground floor. They'd be waiting to see what Drake
wanted to do next. They weren't stupid and would soon
start trying to reach their leader on the walkie-talkies,
but they'd stand around talking amongst themselves
for ten or fifteen minutes, at least, before anyone started
to get antsy. Then they'd spread out and start looking
for him, which didn't bother me because I wasn't going
anywhere near Drake's security office, or for that mat¬
ter, anywhere in the labs, operating theaters, or patient
rooms where the guards might eventually start search¬
ing. N o , I was going to the one place I didn't think they'd
bother looking—the tower room above the fourth-floor
stairwell at the front of the building.
Andrew's room.
It had been Drake's room when I first came here, but
now that Dr> Marshall no longer needed his wheelchair,
I'm pretty sure Andrew had been moved up there on a
permanent basis. Maybe they'd all slept in the tower
together. One big happy family. Regardless, if Andrew
was alive I knew that's where he'd be. Partly I wanted to
find him out of curiosity; I'll admit that. I wanted to
know what had happened to him. I needed to see if Dr.
Marshall's son was dead and gone or if he was wearing a
flesh suit the same as me—only his would be Bill Smith's
upgraded model with a hell of a lot less scars on it. The
main reason, though, was I knew the tower room had
several oxygen hookups and its small confined space
would be a perfect spot to spark the first explosion.
I considered trying to hunt down Dr. Marshall first
and pull an incredibly satisfying Rambo on him, ful¬
filling my promise to Red Beard as well as getting the
face-to-face revenge I so richly deserved, but I was smart
enough to know it was a bad idea. I had no idea where
Dr. Marshall might be, and any attempt to locate him
would probably get me killed—either by the insane
doctor himself, or by one of his guards—before I could
ignite the spreading gases. That was a risk I wasn't will¬
ing to take.
Besides, it was pointless. If Dr. Marshall was still in
the building when the explosion went off—and I was
99 percent sure he was—he was going to get what was
coming to him, whether I was standing there to see it
happen or not. Sure, I'd have loved to see the look on
his face knowing I'd gotten the last laugh on the rich
psycho, but knowing without a doubt he was going to
die along with his cruel staff members and his unethi¬
cal medical secrets was good enough for me.
As soon as I opened the door leading into the front
stairwell I heard voices. Two people, their voices muf¬
fled, neither one sounding happy. They were clearly ar¬
guing, but I couldn't make out what about. I prepared
to duck back into the fourth-floor hallway, but no foot¬
steps were coming up the stairs and I figured I could
slip into the tower room before anyone spotted me.
Quiet as a mouse, I climbed the last staircase, and was
halfway around the corner when I realized the voices I
was hearing were getting louder, clearer.
Someone's in the tower room.
Andrew? Who else?
This wasn't good. Definitely not part of the plan. I
inched up the stairs, hearing the voices clear enough
now that I recognized one of them as Dr. Marshall's.
My heart shot into my throat, fear trying to strangle
me, but I fought it hard, swallowing the anxiety down
with the soothing realization that I'd be getting my
chance at personal revenge after all. The other voice
sounded familiar but I couldn't place it yet. My gun at
the ready, I took another few steps up and peered over
the riser to see who Dr. Marshall was arguing with.
It was Andrew, but not the Andrew Marshall I re¬
membered meeting. He was no longer a disembodied
man trapped in a glass tank, but like me, his body had
been made whole again. He sat upright, strapped into a
silver high-backed wheelchair equipped with a head
brace, near the skillfully restored stained glass window
I'd tried to take a header out of on my last visit to this
room.
Although Andrew was fully dressed, wearing a dark
blue wool sweater and baggy j e a n s , I knew he was trans¬
planted into Bill Smith's flesh suit, which accounted for
his familiar voice. It was Bill's voice I was hearing. An¬
drew had inherited his benefactor's vocal chords along
with the rest of his body. I hadn't known Bill for long,
but k was kind of creepy hearing his voice. Made me
wonder again whose voice I was speaking with.
Doesn't matter^ don't get sidetracked. Just run up there
with your gun blasting.
I was full of good ideas today, but that wasn't one of
them. I wasn't sold on the notion of shooting Dr. M a r
shall. A bullet was too clean of a way for him to go out. I
was also worried about the shot being heard all over the
building and Drake's guards coming on the run. Be¬
sides, I wanted to hear what they were shouting about,
so I stayed put, listening in on their argument.
"You're a fool," Dr. Marshall said to his son. "An
un
grateful
fool. I've spent my life trying to help you walk
and you want to quit on me now when we're this close
to success?"
"Success?" Andrew yelled back. "You call
this
suc
cess? Look at m e , father. You cut my real body away
piece by piece until there was nothin' left, then you try
sewing me up inside another man's dead body, but guess
what, Dad, I still can't walk."
"I know that, Andrew. And I transplanted you into
another man's
living
body, not dead. There's a big dfference."
"Not to m e , there isn't."
"The problem was you were in the submersion tank
for too long. The infection spread to your spine and
shut down a lot of your neuropathways, basically leav¬
ing you a quadriplegic in your new body. Don't worry,
though, we aren't out of options yet, son. All we have to
do is take a few steps back. We'll get another flesh suit
for you, only this time what we do is leave the spinal
column of the donor intact and j u s t transplant y o u r
head onto the healthy neck. I can do it, son, I swear I
can!"
"Oh Christ! W h a t ' s next after that, Dad? You gonna
j u s t scoop my brain out and dump it into another
stranger?"
"I won't have to, Andrew. This time it'll work. You
have to trust me."
"No way. Never again. I don't want to live like this
anymore, Dad.
Please.
I can't handle being cut apart
again. You have to stop this insanity."
"Never! I'm going to make you walk again, Andrew.
One day, you'll thank me."
"No, Dad. I won't. You treat me like a lab animal and
expect me to worship your genius like the other sheep
around here. I hate you for what you've done. You can't
make me go through that again. I'd rather die."
"Don't be so naive. Of course I can make you, and I
will. W h o ' s going to stop m e ? "
From my hiding place on the stairs, I knew that was my
cue. Ii" ever there was a time for me to play the action
hero, this was definitely it. In the movies, this was where
any good secret agent worth his salt steps out into the
open and confidently says, "I will." Unfortunately, this
wasn't the movies. I had no intention of being so civil
and—let's face it—stupid enough to give away the ele¬
ment of surprise I was going to need.
For all my big talk about finding Dr. Marshall and
getting my face-to-face revenge, I would have preferred
to have found this room empty and gone about my plan
of blowing up the castle quietly, without complications.
That obviously wasn't going to happen, but if I was
forced into confronting Marshall, I could at least do it
on my own terms, hopefully sneaking up and taking
him out before he knew I was there. I was too banged
up and exhausted for another fight.
Just shoot him, then,
my conscience suggested again,
but I dismissed the notion a second time. It would be a
cowardly thing to do—which I had no problem with at
all—but I couldn't risk having Drake's security team
hearing the shot. N o , the gun was out, which left me
with only two options. Drake's knife was sticky, liter¬
ally painted red with his blood, but so too was Junie's
blade that I'd killed Jackson with. I really didn't have
any desire to touch either one again but I had to so I
went for Drake's. I'd have to push the blade release but¬
ton on Junie's and in this cramped stairwell I was fairly
sure Dr. Marshall would hear the sound of the blade
sliding out. Maybe not, but it wasn't worth the risk.
I laid the gun down on the top stair, grabbed the