Authors: Jeff Mariotte
“They
materialize
, that’s it, they materialize out of nowhere, then they do their dirty work, and then they vanish again.”
“You’ve seen this?”
“After Betty was killed, I didn’t go back into the house. I buried her and then I went out into the woods, because I’d seen ’em coming from there. I lived in that forest for days, as much animal as human I guess, trying to learn where they came from, if they had a leader, that kind of thing, you see? And what I found out was that they weren’t there and then they were, and there wasn’t any kind of sign you could see, anything that would tell you when or where they might materialize. One appeared right in front of me one night—almost on top of me—and I wondered what would have happened if he had appeared exactly where I happened to be standing instead of an inch away. Didn’t ask him, of course, I 202 SUPERNATURAL
tore his head off with my ax. That worked as good as shooting, seemed like. They ain’t all that sturdy anymore, is the thing. They’re strong, but they’ve been dead and they seem happy enough to go back to it.”
“So we were on the right track,” Sam said. “They
are
the reanimated dead.”
“All we gotta do now is figure out who’s reanimat-ing them, and maybe why, then,” Dean said. “And put a stop to it.”
“Which isn’t exactly right back where we started,” Sam said. “It’s just back in the same neighborhood.
Mr. Baird, do you know of anyone who would have a grudge against Cedar Wells? Anyone who might be behind these attacks?”
Baird gripped his right elbow with his left hand and clicked the index finger of his right hand against his small yellow teeth. “I moved away from town after that second forty-year. Nineteen and sixty-six, that was. There was an element coming to town I didn’t much care for—besides the dead folks, that is. And I couldn’t see staying in town without Betty anyway. I didn’t go far away, about fifteen miles as the crow flies, longer on the roads. But I kept track of the dates, of course, just in case it happened again. I was ready, I’ll tell you that. Knew what I had to do, too. I had to come back to town and try to stop it.”
“And you’ve been doing that,” Sam said. “Which is why you’ve been spotted around some of the crime scenes. But what we need to know is, who do you think is behind it in the first place? There had to be someone who started the cycle of murders every Witch’s
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forty years, and if we can find out who, we might be able to put a stop to it forever.”
“I guess I didn’t tell you up front,” Baird said. “The fi rst time, in ’twenty-six? My family worked on a big cattle ranch, and lived there, too. The attacks that killed my pa, my aunt, and our neighbor all happened on ranch property. My ma, afterward, she was convinced that the ranch had something to do with it all.
That something had happened there that brought this evil down on the place. She wouldn’t have anything to do with it after that, moved to town—even though I told her the killings happened in town, too, that the ranch wasn’t alone in that regard, no way, no how.”
“Do you believe her now? Do you think the ranch is behind it all?”
Baird grinned. The effect reminded Dean of a cartoon vulture eyeing a particularly tasty morsel.
“Heck, boys, I don’t know. I don’t care much for Cedar Wells or the ranch or any of it. The only reason I’ve stayed alive and come back for the forty-year was that I hate those ghosts or whatever they are more than I hate everything else. I’ve thought on it and thought on it, though, and I suppose the ranch might be where it all started.”
“Can you take us there?” Dean asked him.
“Oh, that old ranch was sold years ago. Split up into smaller parts, developed into housing areas and whatnot, I don’t know. Whatever might have been there once, it’s most likely plowed up, cut down, or paved over by now.”
Howard Patrick unlocked the door to his realty office on Main Street, stepped inside, and fl ipped on the switches that not only illuminated the overhead fl uorescent fixtures but also the Christmas tree, animated Grinch, and electric menorah he kept in the front window from December first to January fifth every year. If he could have found an electrical Kwanzaa display, he would have put that in too, particularly since he and his wife and two kids had taken to celebrating Kwanzaa four years before, in addition to Christmas, wanting to instill in the kids a firm sense of their African heritage—but mainly because he wanted his business, Kaibab Realty, to be all-inclusive. Everyone needed a place to live, and he wanted to be the guy who helped everybody buy or sell theirs.
On the way to his desk he stopped and turned on the radio, to a satellite station that played noth-Witch’s
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ing but holiday tunes. Johnny Mathis came on singing “The Christmas Song,” and Howard smiled. He liked comfortable things; the comforts of a well built home, a fat bank account, family, and the comfort of a familiar song. He tapped the thermostat’s Up arrow and the furnace kicked on.
His desk was made of oak, blond and polished, and it was a good thing it had sides because he hadn’t seen the top of it in years. Paper completely obscured it: listings printed from online, flyers, notes, a couple of contract packages waiting for people to drop by the office to sign, folded newspaper classifi eds, and more; once, he found a commission check that had worked its way to the bottom of a pile and stayed there for two months. The only place there wasn’t paper was under his phone.
After hanging his coat on a hook, he sat down and put his briefcase on the floor by his feet. From it, he drew a laptop, which he set on the desk on top of several random paper objects. He opened it up and turned it on. Another day at the offi ce.
The first thing he did was to check his e-mail account. More and more business was done online every day. He hadn’t yet reached the point where he could show and sell a house without ever leaving his desk, but that day was coming, he believed. Already online listings replaced the miles and miles of driving to every possible home that had once characterized the job. Clients often came to him with specifi c properties in mind that they had found on the Web and wanted to see in person once before making the offer 206 SUPERNATURAL
they’d already decided on—sometimes with the help of online mortgage calculators.
Today he had nineteen e-mails in his in-box. Three were spam, which he deleted. Four were personal.
The rest were related, in one way or another, to his business. Reading those and trying to respond—
growing increasingly frustrated that everything he sent out bounced right back, and when he tried to call tech support he found that call wouldn’t go through either—took an hour and eleven minutes. He closed the window, looked at the clock, leaned back in his desk chair, and stretched his legs out.
Eight fifty-six. At nine he usually liked to walk around the block, stop in at the Wagon Wheel for a cup of joe and once in a while a doughnut or a slice of apple pie. He’d greet friends and neighbors, leaving them with the impression that good old Howard Patrick was a great guy with whom they should do business whenever they found themselves in the market.
Time for one quick phone call before he went. He had tried yesterday to get through to Juliet Monroe, because he had a party coming in from California on Monday who was interested in a ranch property like hers. She hadn’t answered her phone, which was unusual for her. He’d left a message on her voice mail but gotten no call back, which was even more unusual. He’d tried Stu, her ranch hand, at his place in town, again with no response. Finally, he dropped her an e-mail, but there had been no reply in his in-box.
She could have gone out of town, although ordi-Witch’s
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narily she would tell him if she had any such plans.
But even when she did, she usually checked her voice mail. And she was anxious to sell the place, so she’d jump at a chance to show it.
He had a key, of course, and could show it without her there, but he always liked to have express permission before going into someone else’s home.
He checked her number and dialed it. Four rings, then voice mail picked up. He listened to the out-going message, then the beep, and said, “Juliet, this is Howard again. It’s Saturday morning, and this fellow will be here on Monday morning to look at ranch properties. I’ve shown him your listing and he’s very interested, so please get back to me and let me know if it’s okay to bring him around on Monday. Thanks, and have a terrifi c weekend.” People in town sometimes called him “Mr. Terrific,” because he tended to use that word when anyone asked him how he was or how business was or how the family was or how did he like the weather.
“Terrific,” he’d say, “just terrific!” He didn’t mind the nickname. It helped instill a positive impression of him, and success in life was about positive impres-sions.
That good old Howard Patrick, good old Mr.
Terrific, he’s got a good business going there. He
could probably sell my house for me.
Maybe Juliet had simply forgotten to tell him that she was going away for the weekend. No harm, no foul.
But then again, something sour was going on in 208 SUPERNATURAL
Cedar Wells. Everybody was talking about it, and the whispers had become full-blown exclamations since early yesterday. People were being killed, but nobody knew by whom, or why. And Juliet, living alone on that ranch, would be as vulnerable as anyone. Then there was the trouble with the e-mail and phones.
Instead of going to the Wheel, he would take his half hour and run over to Juliet’s. Just to put his mind at ease.
Verify. Never mind trust, just verify.
That had been Dad’s advice, Dean argued, and Sam remembered the lessons, too. In a hushed conference, with Harmon Baird waiting outside the motel room door—even there he carried his rifle, but coming through town they had seen other
people bearing visible weap-
ons, so no one was likely to pay much attention to that—they had discussed what he’d told them, fi nally agreeing that they needed to see if he was just blowing smoke or if he knew what he was talking about.
He seemed pretty certain of his statements. And he had been at multiple scenes, which indicated a better understanding of the attackers than most people had. But they had to make sure.
So they were standing in the woods. Tall pines blocked the morning sun, which was only now beginning to burn through the clouds. A breeze from the north carried a chill and the threat of more bad weather. Dean carried the pump-action Remington, Sam the sawed-off. Both wore sidearms as well, and Witch’s
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had stuffed their pockets with rock salt shells and extra bullets.
With the sawed-off tucked under his left arm, Sam held an infrared thermal scanner. He trained the double green laserlike beams this way and that, and they spiked off on separate paths into the trees. As he moved it around, he watched the device’s small screen for any indication of paranormal activity.
“Anything?” Dean asked.
“Nothing.” They might as well have been hunting deer, except if they had, they probably would have found something by now. As it was, Sam couldn’t shake the feeling that they were wasting time. Baird said they came out of the woods, but there were a lot of woods around here, so even if he was right, they might simply have been in the wrong spot. Then again, Baird was also ninety-one years old, and the fact that he sounded mostly coherent didn’t mean that he wasn’t suffering dementia of some kind.
“Maybe there’s somewhere else we should try, Mr.
Baird?” he asked. People could be dying while they froze their asses off in the forest.
“Plenty of places, yeah, boy,” Baird said, that weird spaced-out smile he sometimes wore fl ashing across his face. “But one’s as good as the next. Can’t know where they’re comin’, or when, so you just have to guess. Guess and hope, that’s what it is.
Guess and hope.”
“I’m getting a little tired of hoping,” Dean said. “I want to shoot something.”
210 SUPERNATURAL
“You’ll get your chance, young one. Believe that, yessir. You’ll get your chance, ’fore too much longer.”
How can you be so sure,
Sam wanted to ask,
if
you don’t know where or when they’ll show up?
He had already learned that it was hard to get straight answers out of Baird most of the time, so he didn’t bother asking. Baird knew what he knew, it seemed, and didn’t worry about the rest of it. Same could be said of anyone, Sam supposed. Maybe Baird’s convic-tion was something like religious faith. Sam believed in a higher power, and Dean didn’t. Sam didn’t have any special knowledge that Dean lacked, hadn’t seen or heard or met God. He just felt like there had to be something more than science could describe, because so many of the things they had seen and fought also seemed to exist outside of scientifi c understanding.
So, without Dad’s much-vaunted verification, he believed.
As Baird seemed to believe that killing spirits would materialize in these woods.