Authors: Gord Rollo
Tags: #Suspense, #Horror, #Fiction, #Occult & Supernatural, #Thrillers, #Organ donors
buck knife in my right hand, and as quietly as I could,
started creeping toward Dr. Marshall's exposed back. I
only made it five feet before he turned and spotted me.
Noise hadn't given me away; it was Andrew. He'd been
facing me as I stepped clear of the stairwell and let's
j u s t say his poker face needed work. Andrew's eyes shot
wide open and damned if he didn't keep staring at me
until his father had turned around to see what was dis¬
tracting him.
Thanks, Andrew. Just the help I needed.
W h e n Dr. Marshall saw me, he didn't seem nearly as
shocked as his son. He actually looked happy, smiling a
big toothy out-of-his-freaking-mind grin that scared the
bejesus out of me. Fear wasn't an option right now, so I
threw caution to the wind and charged Dr. Marshall in a
wild offensive attack before he had a chance to defend
himself. I think my boldness surprised him, his smile
faltering as I rapidly closed the gap, bloody buck knife
held out in front of me like a medieval knight's jousting
lance.
Dr. Marshall spun around, searching for a weapon,
but there was n o t h i n g within arm's reach. I'd have taken
him right then, quick and easy, if my left knee had held
up for a few more strides. W i t h victory and revenge
literally five feet away, my knee gave out and I dropped
face-first to the carpet at Dr. Marshall's feet.
I
hit hard,
stars dancing in front of my eyes as my chin bounced
off the floor. My knee was t h r o b b i n g horribly, too, but
I had worse problems than pain. I had to shake it off
and get to my feet—fast.
Dr. Marshall had other ideas.
W h i l e I was sprawled on the floor, he stomped on my
hand, savagely grinding his heel down until I screamed
and released the knife. He kicked the blade under the
neatly made bed off to our left. Then he started kicking
me in the ribs, arms, and legs—anywhere he could get
a swing at—really laying the boots to me. I curled into
a ball and tried to protect my head.
K n o w i n g being defensive would only get me killed, I
uncurled and launched myself at his legs, grabbing
them and tugging him off balance. He tumbled to the
floor, landing with a satisfying
thump,
but he didn't
miss a beat and was back on top of me in seconds, flail¬
ing away at my head and chest with his fists.
I
landed a
few good licks of my own, but he was stronger than me
and had me pinned to the floor. My mind wasn't too
clear, what with the beating I was taking, but
I
was lu¬
cid enough to know I needed to get my hands on one of
my other weapons if I wanted to win this fight. Trouble
was, the gun was sitting on the top stair, out of the
equation. The switchblade was within reach, in my
right pant pocket, but with Dr. Marshall straddling my
lap, it was impossible for me to get at it.
Dr. Marshall smacked me once more in the face,
crushing my nose, nearly k n o c k i n g m e out cold. It didn't
hurt that much, but by the time I shook the cobwebs
from my head, he'd wrapped his long powerful fingers
around my neck and was trying to strangle me. The
surgeon's fingers were strong, digging into my flesh and
tightening like ten baby boa constrictors. I tried to
punch him in the face, but I didn't have much fight left
in my battered body and my punch barely fazed him.
He started smiling again, thinking he had me and there
was n o t h i n g I could do about it.
Wrong, asshole/
As my vision started to blur and my lungs screamed
for oxygen, I slipped my right hand inside my shirt and
grabbed hold of the last hope I had of surviving this
fight. My fingers tightened around the shaft of the
wooden cross, the marker that had been meant to adorn
my grave. Right sentiment—wrong body!
I pulled the cross free, my fist wrapped around the
top bar with the sharpened shaft p r o t r u d i n g out be¬
tween my second and third fingers, looking nasty, like
something Abraham Van Helsing might use on a vam¬
pire hunt. I drove the makeshift weapon up at Dr. Mar¬
shall's body with every ounce of strength I had left. He
saw it coming but couldn't get out of the way. The crude
wooden blade caught him in the throat, under his chin,
and all ten inches of the shaft slid up through the roof
of his mouth and into his brain, j a r r i n g to a stop when
the tip scraped the roof of his skull and my bloody
knuckles slammed into the bottom of his jaw.
Dr. Marshall went rigid for a moment, his fingers
clawing into my throat even tighter than before, but
then his body relaxed and his fingers went limp. I
tugged the cross out of his ruined throat and a torrent
of blood poured out of the wound down onto m e , a
crimson rain mixed with chunks of gray matter that
looked like oatmeal cookie dough. Dr. Marshall fell off
me, tipping over backward, dead long before he hit the
floor.
I should hare felt jubilant, whooping it up, celebrat¬
ing my grand victory over the man who'd ruined my
life, but I didn't. Emotionally, I didn't feel anything.
Spent, maybe. Empty. I lay on the bloody floor, covered
in gore, hurting like hell, and having a hard time catching
my breath. There was still work to do and I should be
getting at it, but man, I was tired. All I could think of
was how nice it would be to close my eyes and take a
nap—a quick power nap to recharge the batteries and
forget about all my problems for fifteen minutes.
Yeah, right. Who are you trying to kid?
If I closed my eyes now I knew the game was over. I'd
never get up again. The next sight I'd see was the barrel
of one of the security guard's guns as he kicked me
awake before putting a bullet in my head. I hadn't come
this far to quit now. Mind you, maybe with Drake and
Dr. Marshall now both dead, I didn't really need to blow
up the castle. I'd killed the two men most responsible
for the crimes committed here, so maybe I could j u s t
crawl over to the stairs, pick up my gun, j a m it in my
mouth and call it a life. N o t a bad idea.
The easy road wasn't in the cards for m e , though.
There would be files, and lab reports, and j o u r n a l s , and
videotapes, and who knew what other proof around
here that would show that what N a t h a n Marshall had
been working on actually worked. He was out of his
mind, insane with his obsession to help his son, but
those things aside—he
was
a brilliant man. There was
no denying his crazy Frankenstein experiments were a
whopping success. I couldn't bite a bullet and leave all
that documentation lying around for some other scien¬
tist to discover. The police would turn it all over to
someone higher up the ladder, and eventually the gov¬
ernment scientists would swarm this place like ants to a
honey jar. That was unacceptable.
Sure, Dr. Marshall's work had the potential to help a
lot of people but it wouldn't work out that way. Some¬
one with power would corrupt things, maybe see the
potential to create soldiers that could be continually
re-fitted with new bodies after their current ones broke
down or were damaged. They wouldn't need to retrain
troops—all they had to do was take the experienced
soldier's head and give him a nice new strong body to
fight another day with. Maybe none of that would ever
happen and I was j u s t being paranoid, but the thought
of an army of super soldiers scared me, and the vision
of warehouses full of readily available flesh suits danc¬
ing in their watery tanks chilled me to the bone.
No way. Bring this place to the ground, Mike. Don't leave
nothin' but a big smoking hole.
My mind made up, I tried to sit up and get moving.
Bad idea. My k n e e , wrist, ribs, nose, and body hurt so
bad
I
didn't think there was any way
I
could ever get to
my feet. For a heartbeat, I seriously worried that I
might be too beaten and battered to carry out my plan,
but I pushed those negative thoughts aside. It was
crunch time.
Get up, man! If not for you, get your ass up and do this for
Junie and for all the other innocent people who've died here
while Marshall and Drake were playing God.
That got me moving, and although I felt like I'd
gone fifteen rounds with Lennox Lewis, I gritted my
teeth and stood up. My head spun again, and I nearly
went down, but I took several deep breaths and man-,
aged to stay on my feet.
I
ignored Andrew for the moment. He'd been sitting
silently through everything that j u s t happened, staring
at me now like I was from outer space.
I
didn't know if
he was relieved I'd killed his father or in massive shock,
but before I dealt with him
I
had to crack open all the
gas valves in the room while I still had the strength to
do it.
Silently, I went back to work.
C H A P T E R F O R T Y
The tower room was t u r n i n g out to be a better place to
start the chain of explosions than I'd originally thought.
N o t only were there four oxygen gas valve stations in
the room, but there was also a row of six large stand-up
oxygen tanks strapped together against the far wall. It
looked like they were there strictly as a backup to the
plumbed-in system, a fail-safe j u s t in case the regular
system wasn't working. There was also a portable ethylene cylinder hooked to the metal safety rail on the
side of Andrew's bed. I cranked them all wide open,
and then sat down on the bed to wait for the gases to
saturate the room. W h e n this place went up, it was go¬
ing to be one mother of a boom.
Too bad I won't be around to see it.
W i t h the work done, I couldn't ignore Andrew any¬
more. I didn't want t o , anyway. I wanted to talk to him
while we still had the chance. He was sitting in his
chair with a funny look on his face, silently watching
me with an accusing glare that made it hard for me to
know where to start. Sure I was sorry he'd been forced
to watch me kill his father, but I wasn't the least bit
sorry about what I'd done. It would have been nice to
do it cleaner, but it didn't change the fact that N a t h a n
Marshall had to die—that he
deserved
to die—arid I'd
do it again without hesitation. Hopefully I could ex¬
plain my reasons to Andrew, but I wouldn't blame him
if he hated me.
"Listen, Andrew, my name is Michael Fox and I just
wanted you to know—"
"Are you going to blow this place up?" he asked.
His first question didn't have anything to do with his
dad and that caught me off guard. "Ah, yeah. That's the
plan, anyway. Look, I'm real sorry about—"
"Will it work?" he cut me off again. "I mean, you're
using more than just the gas in this room, I hope. This
is a big building."
I didn't know how to respond to the way Andrew was
acting. Didn't he want to discuss his father's death?
Maybe not. I decided j u s t to play along. "I know it is.
I've opened every gas valve I can find in the building,
and not j u s t the oxygen. I found a shitload of portable
ethylene and ether tanks down on the second and third
floors. Even better, before I started sneaking around, I
caused a massive oxygen and natural gas leak hi the base
ment. Gas has been free-flowing and mixing throughout
the building for quite a while now. I can't guarantee it,
but my guess it there won't be much left of this place
once I'm done."
"Good," Andrew said, and shocked me by smiling.
For a moment I wondered if he might be as crazy as
his old man, but I soon realized it was a genuine smile.
He was honestly happy and relieved to hear what I'd
been up to.
"You're okay with that?" I asked.
"Absolutely. Listen, Michael, if I could step out of
this chair, I'd do the same thing."
That was good to hear. N o w , for the hard question.
"And y o u r father? I hope you understand—"
"He was an evil bastard that got what he deserved,"
Andrew said, his quiet tone layered with years of bitter¬
ness and deep-seated, hatred for the man lying between
us on the blood-soaked floor. "I understand perfectly.
Don't get me wrong, there was a day I loved my father
dearly, thought he could do no wrong and was a saint
for trying so hard to help me. That was before I found
out how many people he was hurting on my behalf. I
begged him to stop, but he j u s t wouldn't listen."
"It's a shame," I said, trying to find some words that
might allay his guilty feelings. "Your father was a bril¬
liant m a n — "
"He was brilliant, sure, but his brilliance took a
detour into madness and crazy obsession somewhere