by D.B.Adams
A long plaintive wail emanated from the cardboard box. Whether Jacob had seen the box or heard the cry first, he could not be sure, but he was certain that the pitiful sound came from the box. At once he was regretting taking the short cut from the Burger bar to the car park, he had always felt uncomfortable using it after dark. The passage between the Record shop and the Butchers was only just wide enough for one person and it was badly lit with a single bulb. Where it opened out behind the shops, anyone could be hiding in the dark out of sight of the High Street, hardly visible in the shadows from the vast empty car park.
Still he had something else to worry about this time because there was that cry again, audible above the sound of the fans on the refrigeration unit at the back of the Butchers shop. It was a heart rending sound of loneliness, pain and hunger, that brought back memories of childhood punishments, when Jacob's mother locked him in his bedroom without any dinner or supper. He could hear her voice even now, all these years later, "You disgusting little monster". What was that awful sound? What should he do about it? Leave it probably, let some one else sort it out. Nobody had helped him then locked in his bedroom or in the dark under stairs cupboard, shivering in his wet pyjamas, his cries drowned out by his mothers ranting and the loud rumble of the washing machine.
The cry went on long and pathetic, rising and falling in pitch. It was probably some kittens, the abandoned and unwanted offspring of a family pet, discarded by a callous owner. If it was and if he opened the box, what then? He would then feel responsible for them, would have to take them home. No, better to leave them for someone else, not his problem. But the cry was echoing round the alley, echoing inside his head, there was something about it that sounded almost human. Perhaps it was a baby shut in the box, he thought, in the dark.
He couldn't leave a baby shut inside a box, alone in the dark. Jacob knew how that felt, to be shut in, how you could not breathe, how you began to sweat, how you could feel the blood rushing and roaring through your temples and the contents of your stomach rising in your throat. The waves of panic that wash hot and cold through the body.
And Jacob knew if there was any chance that it could be a baby, he had no choice but to look inside the box. He was within a foot of the cardboard box when suddenly there was a slight movement from the box and the crying ceased, all was quiet except the thrum of the fans in the butchers shop wall. The top of the box was sealed with wide brown parcel tape, Jacob managed to get his fingernail under the end and peeled off the tape in one go. Pulling open the flaps he stared into the shadowy darkness, trying to make some sense of the shape within. It didn't look like a baby, in fact there seemed to be more than one set of eyes blinking back at him. "Kittens, I was right the first time" he thought, reaching in with both hands to pick one up. Taloned hands grabbed both his wrists, sudden and vice like, searing pain shot up his arms.
He yelled out and tried to pull away. The claws pulled back, hard and sharp, digging into his flesh and forcing him off balance. Jacob realised that there was no way he could stop himself falling head first into the cardboard box. As his head entered the box more small clawing hands grabbed at it, pulling at his hair and ears, he felt the sharp talons enter his nostrils, dig into his neck and shoulders. Even as his chest passed into the box Jacob was aware of the wet and warm, strangely comforting feeling spreading through the front of his trousers.
Then as the claws pulled the rest of his body down into the darkness, he felt the hot and cold waves of panic running through his body. As he struggled for breath, the blood roaring in his ears, his shouts of terror began to subside, turning first into a whimper, then into a long plaintive wail
by Zen McCan
I believe things can happen that change your whole life. . .
I first saw her on the old railroad bridge south of town when I was fourteen. Coming back from fishing the muddy river I took the wood planked walkway that paralleled the train tracks on the steel bridge.
She was standing midway across, hands resting on the rusty waist high railing. She watched silt choked water swirl slowly past feet below. The town was small, so I would have known her unless her family was new or she was visiting.
The girl didn’t look up until I was beside her, staring dumbly at her like she was some circus freak. I was at that point in my life when the opposite sex occupied a great deal of my thinking but I was at my worst advantage as to what to do or say.
She looked at me with violet eyes from under heavy dark lashes.
"Hi." I stammered.
"Hello." She flipped a long braid of raven hair over her shoulder and down her back.
In place of the usual summer teenage uniform of jeans or cut-offs and T-shirt she wore a dress.
"I’m Josh . . . Josh Riggins. Just coming back from fishing."
She looked at the pole and tackle in my hand. "I could tell." There was just a hint of teasing smile at the corners of her mouth.
"You must be new in town because I know pretty much everybody. It’s hard to be a stranger around here. I’ve lived here all my life so I know about everybody."
She turned and leaned an elbow on the rail. "I didn’t think anybody came here."
"They don’t much." I pointed down river to where automobiles crossed the river. "Since we got the bridge."
"Why are you here Josh Riggins?"
"Short cut. Wanted to get home there’s a baseball game on. Royals and the Cards playing a three game series."
"I’m Amanda but everybody calls me Manda."
"It’s nice to meet you Manda. What are you doing on this rusty bridge?"
The girl looked back to the river. "I like to watch the water."
"That dirty old stuff. It’s more mud than water. I think all the fish choked to death on that liquid dirt."
When she smiled her eyes crinkled up at the corners.
"The water looks like a painting that’s always changing. If you stare at it long enough it’s like you’re moving instead of the water."
I looked down into the slow moving eddies, so brown and filthy that it cast no reflection other than some glints of sun light.
"You just move here or something." I asked as I watched the water and got the disorientating feeling that I was sailing along on the worn out old railroad crossing.
"Or something."
I looked up at her and lost the feeling of movement. The sudden stop gave me a dizzy feeling.
"I’m here visiting. I’m surprised you were here."
"What’s so strange about it?"
"I was expecting someone else that’s all."
That made it pretty clear at least to me. "Oh, a boy friend. I’ll get going, I understand. Pretty girl waiting in a sort of secret meeting place."
The girl laughed hard at me. So hard that it brought spots of color to the pale skin of her cheeks.
"I’m sorry." She gasped. "I’m not laughing at you. Just what you said. You complimented me, belittled yourself and found a way to duck out of our conversation. That’s pretty good use of words."
"I still need to get going."
"I’m not waiting for a boyfriend. Please stay, it might be awhile before they show up. I don’t get much chance to talk to people my own age. I travel a lot."
"Okay, for a bit. But I want to hear the end of the game."
"It’s a deal I’ll let you go by then. Nothing is going to happen until the ninth inning anyway."
"What?"
"Nothing. Why don’t you try your luck off the bridge." She nodded toward my pole.
I shrugged and baited my hook then let the line drop into the water.
"So who are you visiting?"
She was quiet for too long.
"The Johnson’s."
"Johnson’s? There’s just Mr. Johnson since his wife got killed a couple months ago. Rammed her car into a tree down on the quarry road."
"That’s him, Tim Johnson."
"See I told you I knew everybody around here. What is he? Like your uncle or something?"
"Yeah . . . on my mom’s side. What’s school like here?"
"It sucks . . ."
We talked for the longest time. At least I think it was a long time because the next thing I knew the sun was sliding down the horizon. Amanda asked questions about everything and answered none. Every time I asked about her she quickly changed the subject.
"I don’t think whoever you were going to met is coming." I finally told her.
"I guess not today." She answered looking up toward town. "You should probably go if you want to finish listening to the baseball game."
I had forgot all about it. I reeled in my line and grabbed my tackle box
"What about you? You could walk with me."
"I’ll wait here for a while, just to make sure they don’t show up. You better hurry that game is about over. I think the Royals can win it."
I went past her toward town. Once I was to the end of the bridge I called back to her.
"Will I see you again?"
I could she her smile. "I would like that Josh Riggins. Maybe so."
* * * *
Two doors down from my house my friends Danny Correll and Pete Landry were in the garage drinking sodas and eating potato chips as they listened to the game on a radio.
"Where have you been shitbird? The Royals are getting waxed." Pete acted as if my presence could save the Royals from yet another shellacking.
I pulled up a milk crate to sit on and grabbed the bag of chips from Danny.
"I went fishing. What’s the score?"
"It’s three to one Cards bottom of the eight. I don’t see any fish. You never stay fishing this long if they aren’t biting."
"I met a girl." I told them around a mouth full of chips. "Got any more soda’s?"
"A girl. What was she a mermaid?" Pete laughed.
"She’d have to be half catfish if you caught her in that muddy water. Probably got long whiskers like an old mud cat." Danny said coming back from the old refrigerator and tossed me a can of RC cola.
"Actually she looked kind of like Elizabeth Taylor in National Velvet."
"Well that’s nice since you look like Mickey Roonie." Pete smiled.
"Where did you find this girl?"
"She was on the old railroad bridge." I told them.
"What was she doing there." Danny asked stealing the chip bag back from me.
"She said she was meeting somebody there."
"Her boyfriend. I’m surprised he didn’t kick your butt."
"She said it wasn’t her boyfriend, doesn’t matter they never showed up."
"Who is this girl anyway?" Pete asked. "I’ve never seen any lonely beauty around here."
"Her name is Amanda. She’s here visiting her Uncle Tim Johnson."
"Tim Johnson, that crazy bastard ain’t got any family since his kid drowned and his wife wrapped herself around that tree." Pete told us with authority.
Pete’s dad was the local mortician. By close proximity Pete had a very casual attitude toward death and the dead. According to his stories filled with graphic details he had seen numerous dead bodies in all manner of disrepair.
"At the funerals for the baby and later for Tina Johnson there was about ten people. All of them friends of the family. She was an orphan and his family all croaked years ago."
"Why would she lie?" Danny asked.
"Maybe her family is close to Mr. Johnson and she just thinks of him like an uncle."
"I don’t remember seeing any girl like you’re talking about around for the funeral. Why anybody would claim that guy is beyond me." Pete shook his head. "He’s been wigged out ever since his family bought the farm."
"That guy is off the deep end dude. He looks like hammered shit, he doesn’t work just sits at home all day or out at the cemetery. My dad says it some kind of weird that the guy hasn’t punched his own ticket just like his wife did."
"Guys shut up." Danny screamed. "The Royals got two men on they can tie or win it."
She had said the Royals would win. Well, not so much would win as could win. I guess there’s a difference.
* * * *
That evening I walked ten blocks out of my way to look at the Johnson house. The grass was overgrown and there was only one light on in the kitchen. There were no vehicles parked in the driveway or at the front curb. If Tim Johnson had company they were gone now.
Before I went to bed I called Pete.
"How did Tim Johnson’s kid die?"
"It was a baby. The mother left it in the tub for a minute when the phone rang or something and it slipped under the water."
"What about Mrs. Johnson? You said she killed herself. I thought she had a car wreck."
"She smacked a tree out on the quarry road doing about a hundred miles an hour, no skid marks, no swerving to avoid it. Hit dead on. My dad says the grief was to much for her."
"Thanks Pete."
"Did you go visit your sweetie?"
"I walked by. The place looks barely lived in. I didn’t see anybody."
"I told you. She lied to you for some reason. Maybe she’s a gypsy or something casing the town for the rest of her band so they can rip off the unsuspecting citizens."
"You need mental help Pete." I hung up on him.
* * * *
The next morning I was up early. I rode my bike to the Johnson house. In case Amanda and her family were staying at the motel in Hobbs Corner, the next town over, and that they would be back today.
When I rounded the corner there was a car pulling out of the drive. I put my head down and kept pedaling as it passed me, watching it out of the corner of my eye.
The driver was the only occupant, Tim Johnson. I turned around and followed. It wasn’t hard to do in such a small town. Once he turned and started out Sunset Street I knew where he was going, the cemetery.
Mr. Johnson pulled to a stop, got out of the car and walked to a pair of graves that were new enough that the grass hadn’t grown back over their raw surfaces. There weren’t even real grave stones, just those little metal markers. I stopped my bike on the far side of his car and waited, hoping to talk to him when he left the cemetery.
The minutes passed and I started to get impatient. I concentrated my gaze on his back trying to get him to return to his car. The harder I stared the more obvious it was that his shoulders were shaking. My ears strained for sound and finally it came to me, faintly at first and then stronger. The braying sobs of a man with no care of discovery.
I walked toward him across the dewy grass trying to make some natural noise to warn him of my approach. I was as silent as a ghost the one time I wished for sound.
He was drawing in great gulps of air and releasing them as tear soaked breaths.
"Mr. Johnson are you alright?"
He turned his face to me not with a start from fear or shock but with a resigned sigh.
"Who are you?" He asked with a soggy sniff to clear his nose.
"My name is Josh Riggins Mr. Johnson."
He looked closer at me.
When I looked back at him it was much like looking at a dead man. His skin had the tint of ash and was much thinner and more deeply lined than a man his age should be. His hair was in need of a cutting and hung greasy and limp around his face. But it was his eyes that shook me the most. It was like glimpsing eternity. They seemed to be bottomless and unfocused. Almost as if there was nothing but pain behind them.
"You’re Jack Riggins boy?"
"Yes sir."
"What do you want?"
"I saw you here sir and I wanted to make sure you were alright . . ."
"I am fine. If you could just leave me alone." He said turning back to the graves.
"Actually sir that was a lie. I followed you here to talk to you."
"What? I don’t even know you, I barely know your father. Just leave me alone." His voice sounded as hollow as his eyes looked.
"Mr. Johnson yesterday I talked to a girl her name was Amanda."
His back stiffened.
"I met her at the railroad bridge. She said she knew you."
He didn’t look at me but his voice seemed to be drying up a little, taking on some life. "You must be mistaken, I don’t know any Amanda.
"She told me you were her uncle. That her family was visiting you. I came by last evening to see her and it didn’t look like anyone was at your home."
He was wringing his hands in front of him. "I don’t know why you’re doing this but I don’t know any Amanda and there is no one visiting me. I’m trying to spend a few minutes with my wife and daughter if you’ll just let me be."
He walked rapidly back to his car. Before he got in he turned to me.
"If she were visiting me why would she be way down at the railroad bridge?"
"I don’t know sir. She said she was waiting to meet someone. I’m sorry to have bothered you. She must have been lying." I stood with my hands shoved in my pockets.
"If you see her again let me know."
"I will sir."
* * * *
I rode my bike to the railroad bridge for some reason thinking that when I got here she would be standing in the same place. The bridge was empty.
I walked down to where we had stood the day before, hoping that something in the air would give me answers. Why would she lie to me, was she a run away or some kind of criminal like Pete had suggested? Had she simply picked a name at random and been lucky enough to pick a name I knew? I didn’t think any of my ideas were any truer than what she had told me.
The trip home took me by the grade school playground. There in one of the swings was the girl, Amanda. She was watching me as I rode. From this distance, I could just make out a small smile on her face. This morning she wore jeans and a sweat shirt with the sleeves cut off. She pointed at something and I followed with my eyes just in time to avoid crashing into a telephone pole.
I stood with my feet on the ground straddling the cross bar of the bike. Amanda got up and went to the see-saws motioning me over. I left my bike at the curb and went to where she stood.
"Get on." She said choosing an end of the see-saw. Once I was on she lifted her feet but nothing happened. I out weighed her and so controlled the balance. I pushed slightly with my toes to start the teeter-totter motion.
"Did your team win the game?" Her hair was loose today and it billowed out around her face.
"Yes. How did you know?"
"A lucky guess."
We traded high and low points in the cool morning air.
"Did your friend ever show up yesterday?"
"No. I might have better luck today."
"I went to Mr. Johnson’s house last night."
She didn’t seem surprised. "Did you find what you were looking for?"
"You weren’t there."
"You came to see me? How sweet." Her smile was a constant thing, her eyes never leaving me.
"I talked to Mr. Johnson this morning. He said he doesn’t know you."
"Mr. Johnson has been under a lot of stress lately. He sometimes doesn’t know what he’s saying or doing."
"I’ve never heard anybody call their uncle Mister before."
She hopped off her seat when she was at the top, landing nimbly like a cat.
"Let’s do the merry-go-round, come on Josh Riggins."
She grabbed one of the bars and started running. Once she had it going to a satisfactory speed she jumped on and lay down on her back.
"Make it go faster Josh."
I grabbed the bars as they passed, flinging each away from me with all my strength, pushing the carousel faster and faster, unsure of how to continue our conversation. My curiosity demanded I question this mysterious girl but a kind of fear kept me from it. I was afraid I would frighten her away by asking too much.
"Get on. Ride with me." She called.
I jumped on and laid down. Our heads almost touching.
"You don’t even know Mr. Johnson do you?"
"That’s not true I do know him. I’m just sure he never expected me."
"You’re not traveling with your family are you." Some strands of her long hair fluttered across my cheek.
"Not really." Her voice was very quiet.
"Are you a run away?" The cloud’s overhead were spinning like pinwheels in the powder blue sky.
"Sort of." There was a pause. "You won’t tell on me will you? At least until I see who I came to see. Because if you do we won’t be able to see each other anymore."
I had no reply. There were too many thoughts in my head.
"Where do you stay?" I finally said. Asking what I thought of as a harmless question.
"I found a way to sneak into the school. Don’t worry I won’t tear anything up. Foods not a problem . . . I have money."
"Will you keep my secret Josh?" She pleaded.
I thought about it. "For now."
She reached over and took my hand in hers. "Thank you."
"Why don’t you just go to whoever it is that you are supposed to meet? Wouldn’t that be easier?"
She rolled over and propped herself up on one elbow her hand still grasping mine.
"You’re smart Josh and I know you’re curious. But you have to promise no more questions, or we can’t see each other anymore. I’m taking a terrible chance as it is, but I like you and since you came along on the bridge I figure what can it hurt."
"Okay Manda, no more questions."
She sighed. "I have to meet this person at a certain spot. No place else will do."
I knew she had told me more than she felt she should, trying to satisfy my questions.
I jumped up and started pushing the merry-go-round. "This train is slowing down and we can’t have that. Hang on Manda here we go, faster than light."
She sat up laughing. Laying her hand on top of mine again on the metal bracing.
"Woo, woo." She imitated a train whistle.
Again we talked away the hours as we played like two little kids on the swings and slipper slides. Once the sun was high over head we stopped to catch our breath.
"Do you like ice cream Manda?"
"Who doesn’t?" she asked.
"We could go get some. At the drug store, it’s not far."
She looked away toward the river. "I’d like to Josh, more than anything. But I have to be getting to my meeting."
"Will I see you again? I mean if you have this meeting today will you just leave?" My eyes were downcast.
She moved close beside me. "I will try to see you again no matter what happens." She leaned against me and I could feel her heart beat like the fluttering of a bird. She kissed my cheek very lightly.
"Don’t follow me Josh. You have to promise." She whispered.
"I won’t." I promised myself as much as her.
Her lips brushed mine and then she was walking away. "See you Josh Riggins."
"Mr. Johnson asked me to tell if I saw you again. What should I do?"
"What do you think?"
The child in me saw a distinct difference in not telling about something if it didn’t come up in conversation and not telling an adult about something that they had asked about. One was a deletion the other was an out right lie. The coming adult in me said that I had made a promise and that maybe Amanda’s business was no one’s but her own, even though she was no older than me.
"Royals by two today Josh. Impress your friends."
* * * *
The Royals won by two that afternoon but my heart wasn’t in it. Even when Pete and Danny sat looking at me with their mouths agape at my pre-game prediction.
My gaze kept going to the south out the door of the garage. To the river and the rail bridge, wondering if she had made the meeting that she was waiting for.
Who was she. All I knew was her first name and that she had asked for my trust and friendship. The touch of her lips was still hot on my mind.
" . . . Christ you fruit, are you in a coma? Earth to Josh. Come in
Josh." Pete was shouting at me.
"What?" I stammered back.
"I ask if you saw your girl friend?" Danny snickered.
"No." I lied. It came easy to my tongue. It was just one word like yes, only the opposite.
"She was probably some hippie run away. Already blowed out of town with some trucker."
"Pete you have a twisted sense of things. I have to go, I have some stuff I need to do."
"See you later moon-unit. Going home to stare into space and make some more ball game predictions?"
"Exactly asswipe."
"See you Josh." Danny replied.
"See you when you get back to earth." Pete sneered.
* * * *
I rode straight to the Johnson house. It looked deserted but I rang the bell anyway. Curtains rustled in the living room and the door swung open.
Tim Johnson stood in the opening a bottle of whiskey in his hand, he looked even worse now than he did this morning. Another ten years could have been wrung from his life.
"You again. Part two of your little prank?" He drank from the bottle.
"I don’t know what you’re talking about Mr. Johnson. You told me to tell you if I saw her again."
"This Amanda girl, right?" He weaved a little in the doorway and I thought he might topple over.
"Yes sir. Why don’t we go inside sir, so you can sit down."
He flopped down on his haunches back resting on the door jamb.
"We can sit right here. What did this girl look like kid? This Amanda?"
I felt embarrassed for him. That someone might pass by and see him in such a sorry state. I was too young to understand the depths of some grief.
"She’s very pretty. Violet eyes and black hair, lots of wavy black hair. She said everyone calls her Manda."
He let out a keening wail, trying to get to his feet. "Why are you doing this? Why would anyone be so cruel? My wife and daughter are dead. What enjoyment can you get from this?"
He swung the bottle drunkenly at me. I ducked under it easily and it smashed into the wall of the house. The momentum of his movement caused Mr. Johnson to trip himself up and fall to the ground. He was unable to regain his feet and lay struggling on the ground.
I helped pull him to a standing position with a hand under his arm, pushing him back into the house as I did so. The house had the closed up heated smell of an animal lair. I steered the wreck of a man to the sofa in the living room. He lay down on it in a heap.
"Mr. Johnson I don’t mean you any harm. Everything I’ve told you is true. I hardly know more than you. The girl, this Amanda seems sad and lonely. I think she’s some kind run away. For what ever reason she thinks she knows you. I’m going to go now and I won’t bother you again." I turned to go.
"Where did you see her this time?" He sobbed.
"At the school playground, but she left there. Said she was going to met this person she’s supposed to meet."
I didn’t turn back to him instead I kept my gaze downcast. It fell on a photograph on the coffee table. There was a framed picture with the glass shattered out of it. I picked it up to get a better look, Mr. Johnson and a woman obviously in happier times.
A lamp snapped on. The woman in the picture could be Amanda’s sister, the hair and eyes a perfect match
"My wife Tina. That was taken on our honeymoon."
He was sitting up studying my face.
"I have to go. I won’t bother you again." I felt leaden fear in my stomach. There was something I could not understand at work here.
"Did your friends put you up to this prank? Go scare the crazy man, describe his wife to him. See if we can drive him around the bend?"
"No Mr. Johnson that’s not it at all. I told you I won’t bother you anymore."
"No, no you won't." He replied with an even gaze and an iciness his voice. "Tell them they needn't have bothered. I've decided no one is going to bother me. Now get the hell out of my house."
I fairly ran from the house, but called out as I slammed the door. "I think she wants to see you Mr. Johnson."
* * * *
I spent the rest of the day in my room making every attempt to listen to a ball game on the radio. The girl Amanda and Mr. Johnson filled my thoughts. Who was she and what was her purpose here? Had Mr. Johnson’s comment meant what I thought it meant? Was he so locked in his sorrow that taking his own life seemed the solution?
Evening was coming, the summer sun was losing its heat and the light was beginning to soften. I had no idea who won the ball game. My mother shouted to me that supper would be in half an hour as I ran out the kitchen door.
I pedaled to the Johnson house as fast as my legs would carry me. Pounding on the door brought no answer, I tried to look in the heavily draped windows. Every glimpse of the dark interior was empty.
I raced to the railroad bridge. Mr. Johnson's car sat at the end of the street that paralleled the tracks through town to the river. My gaze went immediately to the crossing. There was no one there. My stomach sank, I was too late.
The sorrow had been too much for him. The desire to end his loneliness and guilt had outweighed his hold on life. I stood near the hood of the car, afraid to go down to the river. His body would have been swept away by the current but the thought of going so soon to the place a man had ended his life kept me from moving.
"She never came." A voice startled me from my fear struck meditation.
I spun to the direction of the voice.
Tim Johnson sat behind the wheel of the car. Eyes bloodshot, shoulders slumped in dejection.
My heart was thudding so loudly I thought my chest would burst.
"Mr. Johnson, you...I thought..."
"Come to see your handy work? Where's your friends?"
I walked to the open window.
"My friends have nothing to do with this. There's no sick game like you think. I only know what she told me and what I feel from you. Mr. Johnson I can't begin to know what you're going through but I can't think that your wife or your child would want you to stop living."
My daughter drowned in a moments careless accident. Barely four months old and we lost her. My wife felt the guilt so heavy that she took her own life to end it. I couldn't save either one of them and now I don't want to be without them anymore. Is that so wrong?"
"I can only imagine how much you miss them, but to end your life because theirs is over. That can't be right. Do you think what your wife did was right?"
"Right? What could possibly be right about my family being taken from me. A baby, a tiny baby and a beautiful woman that never intentionally hurt a soul."
"So you know that your babies death wasn’t her fault?"
He hung his chin to his chest and sobbed. "I never blamed Tina. I knew it was an accident. No matter how horrible it was, I never blamed her."
"Would you want her to give up on life if you had it to do over Mr. Johnson?"
"No of course not."
"Would she want you to give up?" I wasn’t even sure where the words were coming from but they poured out to this broken man, trying to help him find comfort and courage.
"Would she want you to give up?" I repeated.
"No." He shouted. "No she wouldn’t."
"Would your baby want you to give up?"
"No, Goddamnit."
"Respect them Mr. Johnson."
He started the car and pulled away from the curb.
"She never came. I thought she wanted to see me."
I looked down at the rusting hulk that spanned the river. Maybe she was gone for good. Had I been duped into playing some cruel trick on Tim Johnson?
I felt worn out and empty but couldn’t resist the urge to go down to the bridge, waiting to see if she would come to stand on its worn wooden planks waiting for some mysterious meeting. I stood watching the swirling water until full darkness came and the water and the night blended as one. Crickets chirped and night birds fluttered, no Amanda.
I pedaled home and got chewed out by my mother for missing supper. I ate the plate she had saved for me cold and went to bed.
The next morning milky sunlight through the window woke me. A pearly fog covered the neighborhood, clinging to everything like a wet shroud. I played with my breakfast, trying to let the sun burn away the depressing vapor.
My mother picked up the bowl of soggy cereal. "If you’re not going to eat it don’t play with it. Go on outside see if you can get some of this blue funk blown off of you. Go. Supper is at 5:30, be here."
Her talk of a blue funk made me realize that if I was depressed by the fog what would Mr. Johnson be like?
I pedaled like a madman, his garage door was up, the car gone. The cemetery, he goes to the cemetery in the mornings. I streaked through the fog.
Once in the cemetery I pedaled slowly, out of respect for the dead and a goose fleshy fear of foggy cemeteries, to the spot where his wife and baby were buried.
No Mr. Johnson, but the small metal markers had been replaced with the actual head stones:
Beloved Wife Tina Marie Johnson 1949-1974
Cherished Daughter Amanda Jane Johnson 1974-1974
The metal markers hadn’t even listed the child’s name. Had it been published in the obituary? Had the girl seen the name there?
The only other place I could think to look for Mr. Johnson was the crossing. I pedaled that direction disregarding my fear of the dead and cutting directly across any grave between me and the gate.
In the shallow valley that formed the river bottom the fog lay as heavy as a wool blanket. It deadened sound and distorted distances. I was nearly on top of Mr. Johnson’s car before I saw it. This morning the interior was empty.
The crossing bridge was hidden in the mist. I walked in its direction following the overgrown foot path. Near the end of the bridge a shape separated itself from the fog, Mr. Johnson walking toward me.
"I saw the markers this morning Mr. Johnson. I didn’t know your daughters name before that I swear." I began in way of explanation.
His face was still haggard and unshaven but it had somehow changed. There was some focus of light in his eyes, a color of life to his cheeks.
He nodded. "Almost no one knew. My wife and I were having a terrible time picking out a name. Jane was my mothers name, Amanda was Tina’s grandmother, we just couldn’t decide."
There was a smile on his face. The first I had seen.
"I started calling her Manda. That’s what they called Tina’s grandmother until she died at eighty-three. Almost no one knew, she was so little when we lost her."
"Are you all right Mr. Johnson? You look different."
He laughed. Not a hollow empty thing, but full of mirth.
"I am surprisingly well for the first time in a long time."
He looked back at the bridge. "I never would have believed . . . "
He turned and looked at me. "She’ll want to see you I’m sure. She said you were a great help to her. Thank you."
He put a hand on my shoulder and squeezed. "I’ll wait at the car if you want."
I nodded and he walked away.
I went down onto the bridge. My footfalls dull thuds on the planks.
She was there at the center. Today she wore cheerleaders outfit, with ponytails. She didn’t look up until I was right beside her.
"Hello Josh. What do you think?" She held her arms up and spun around. The red and white pleated skirt opening like a parasol.
"I think it would have been fun. Maybe date the captain of the football team. What about you?"
"I don’t think dating cheerleaders is really going to be my thing. I’m not that good a jock."
"You never know. I really like you." She motioned to her outfit. "And I’m a cheerleader."
"I think this is different." I leaned against the railing.
"You’re probably right. You kind of put me in a fix showing up the way you did that day. But it all worked out and I’m glad I met you."
"What do you mean?"
"It’s funny how some of it works. I was supposed to meet my dad on the bridge that day. I was only four months old so I couldn’t very well meet him that way and make much sense. So when he came down here to jump in the river and saw me I would have been about his age. We would have had a long talk and hopefully he wouldn’t have done it."
"I’m really confused."
"Instead you came along and I ended up like this, your age. Dad saw us and it scared him off. So in a way you saved his life that day and I think everyday since then."
I looked into her eyes again. I knew what I felt needed to be said.
"You're not real are you?"
She touched my cheek and smiled. "I'm as real as anything you'll ever see. I'm as real as you."
Amanda kissed me on the mouth. The first time I had ever really kissed a girl.
She pulled away and looked at me. Before she could say a word I grabbed her shoulders and kissed her back.
When I let her go she took in a deep breath.
"So you don't forget me." I explained.
She had a blush to her cheeks. "Go home Josh I have to go."
"I'll never see you again will I?"
"I told you I'd never say good-bye. It may be awhile before we see each other again but we will I promise." Her eyes looked soft and misty.
"It's not fair." I complained.
"Things happen for a reason. Don't forget that. You helped save my dad’s life. You have a way with people that you should use." She held my hand and I didn't want her to let go but I knew it was coming.
"Where will you go?" I asked.
"Not far really."
"I'll never forget you."
"You better not, otherwise how would I find you again. Now go."
I turned and walked off the bridge toward town. Every fiber of my being wanted to look back but I knew I shouldn't. I was afraid that if I looked back I would see some transparent sparkling image of my imagination, of my insanity fading from sight. If I didn’t looked back she would always be there on that bridge like the first time I saw her. . .
* * * *
"What happened the last few days?" I asked Mr. Johnson.
"I don’t know, I don’t understand any of it. I only know in my heart that it was real and that I owe you a debt of gratitude That I hope I can repay someday."
"You don’t owe me anything." I looked back at the fog. "I only wish that . . ."
* * * *
When I came into the clinic the first patients of the day were ready to be seen. It was still a small town and I knew almost everyone by sight.
Linda Pomaroy the receptionist smiled at me from her desk.
"Morning Dr. Riggins."
"Good morning Linda. Does Alice have the first patient ready for me to work on?" I rubbed my hands together in a mock parody of a mad scientist.
"Room two." She laughed. "But Alice called in sick. She said she would be in later."
"Nothing serious?"
Linda shook her head to the negative. "Just the flu. They sent a temporary over from Hobbs Corners to help out until Alice is back up."
I walked to the number two exam room. "Call Alice and tell her I will stop by her house later to see her, so she can stay in bed and rest please."
"Sure doctor."
In the exam room was a mother and coughing child. More flu to battle.
"Hi Katie." I said kneeling down to get closer to the little girls level. She managed a small smile despite her illness. "Still having problems with this darn flu?"
The little girl nodded and stifled a cough.
"Fever still up there Jennifer?"
"Yes I've used the Diamatap and those medicated suckers you gave for her sore throat but she doesn't seem to be improving."
As I looked at the little girls eyes I heard the door to the exam room open and close behind me.
"Well I tell you what this little Chickadee may have hatched out something more serious than the flu. Maybe she found some strep throat out there somewhere. We'll check it out and maybe prescribe some antibiotics. Nurse could you get me a ..."
A tongue depressor appeared near my hand. A nurse with as much ESP as Alice from the hospital at Hobbs Corner. I was impressed.
"Thank you...I'm sorry Linda didn't give me your name. Say Ah for me Katie. I'll need a swab too please."
The swab appeared by my hand.
"Here you are Doctor Riggins. My name is Amanda, but everyone calls me Manda."
I looked up into a pair of violet eyes framed by long dark lashes.
"How?" I croaked.
"We can make choices where I'm from too."
"Fifteen years, were you not sure until now?"
"It was only a second to me, I swear. I got there and came right back here. You’re the one that let so much time pass. That happens here, not where I was."
Mother and daughter were staring at us.
"She's a ghost." I explained.
"Of course she is." Jennifer replied, thinking I was joking with her. "Just what I always thought a ghost would look like."
"No I mean..." I tried to explain.
Amanda put a finger on my lips.
"Actually I was an angel, but I’m retired now." She told the mother.
The little girl laughed. "Angels don’t retire."
Amanda bent down. "Sure they do sweetie. It’s just that most times nobody notices."
by:Gareth Barsby
Chapter 1
It was December the first in the uncanny country of the apparitions and spirits and in a old-fashioned, crumpling mansion-house, coffins creaked leisurely in a room with pictures of famous people, cobwebs and Christmas trees.
The things in the coffins were the skilful spirits society. Now, the skilful spirits society weren't the kind of ghosts you'd see in Halloween.
Put it this way. If you made a chart of how many specters came out at Halloween, you'll never have had the skilful spirits society. These are the species of ghosts who come out at Christmas which included Sam Smart, Gary the graveyard guardian, Wilbur the wraith, Percy the pumpkin and Bill the bogyman.
These were sharp-witted phantoms which were the only ones to talk and were marvelous to any ghost in the universe. That day, the phantoms had a scheme. "Let's plan a Christmas party for our phantasm pals. "Wilbur cried.
"But how," moaned Gary. "Loads of ghosts adore Halloween greater than Christmas." What could they do?
Chapter 2
"We need amusement! Music! Superior stuff! Ahem!" Bill cried out. "Fabulous idea! That's what we need! And we know who has it!" Therefore, the specters went to the nation of oddities and weirdoes to see the head with the taste of recreation, Darren the dragon!
He was watching the news when the skilful spirits society scurried straight through the wall of his home. "Well, well, if it isn't the skilful spirits society! What have you come to me for?" "We need a man (or dragon) of entertainment and you're just the thing we need!" explained Sam in an thrilled sort of way. So, at the skilful spirits society's house, Sam was explaining to Darren what they needed him for.
Chapter 3
"Why did the cricket team give up cricket? Dracula took all the bats!" Darren was practicing his distraction after the talk. Then, he sang MONSTER MASH two times and even played uncanny melodies on a organ. "Superb! Superb!" cried Wilbur.
"You better watch out. You better cry. You better shout. I'm telling you why. The specters and phantoms...are here!" sang Darren. Sam and his mates clapped very loud. "We're spooky ghosts in the phantom worrrrrrld. We're real, not plastic. Dracula's fantastic!" chanted Darren. "You're a dragon of entertainment, all right!" said Wilbur, in a "That was marvelous "voice. "Listen," exclaimed Darren. Then he sang, "Jingle bells, the swamp monster smells.
The vampire bats are here. The eerie ghosts are having a huge host with monsters with pointed ears. "Couldn't be better!" said Percy.
Chapter 4
Darren's music went on and on. It was so good that the skilful spirits society made a disco. The other phantoms of the world heard the great music. The ghosts bolted to the house of the skilful spirits society. Then, Darren saw all the guests and let them do the cha-cha and did the organ tunes. Before long, Darren said, "Alright, do the sea monster dance." Ever heard of the sea monster dance? It's like the conga but it has ghosts and monsters. Darren's music has only been heard in December but it was too scary to be in the music library. He could muddle words too.
I. Overwhelming evidence notwithstanding, thin and bespectacled Luke Matthews didn't believe in ghosts, werewolves, warlocks, witches, or demons. "To Hell with the Devil" had become a favorite expression of this tall,
stooping intellectual, voiced particularly around fellow graduate students, who admired Luke for his abandonment of belief.
To Luke, sitting now in his parent's living room, puffing on his pipe, watching the red glow of the setting sun, and studying the spire of the old Parker House through the leafless trees in the front yard, Hell was a fabrication of the Church and, therefore, a delusion. The views of this thin bespectacled man were reinforced by Neitzche, Marx, and Derrida, whom he claimed in seminar after seminar as his most significant influences. A doctoral student in English, studying at a major California university, Luke was finishing a dissertation applying deconstructive principles to Bronte's Wuthering Heights. His parents, now away at a church revival this evening, were proud of him. Sitting on the faded green couch he had slept on as a child, Luke put his pipe to his mouth and reflected: during his college years, he had seen the superstitions of his ancestors uprooted like weeds, each tossed onto the pile of cultural discards that Luke kept in the back of his mind, just in case some day he might need a bit of trivia to impress colleagues and students gathered around him to learn about his most recent publication.
Evening shadows darkening, Luke wondered how he was going to use this weekend. He was glad his parents were gone, because that gave him the freedom he needed. Between semesters and burnt-out from too many books, papers,
and seminars, Luke wanted a boost, a thrill. He needed to do something different, he told himself, something that he would remember when he was working on his dissertation in his small attic room just off the campus. In fact, he was tempted to visit the old Parker House, the rickety brick and wooden two story Victorian affair located on the corner of Seventh and Taylor, just a block away. Superstitions aside, the place had a creepy appeal.
Luke had vivid recollections of the place. Even in the light of day during his childhood and adolescence, the old Victorian house had always seemed dark; looking at the place was like gazing through darkly transparent film. For another, throughout his youth, as he had made a point of walking past the deserted place to the local convenience store or to the home of one of his friends, Luke had occasionally heard awful sounds coming from the Parker house, particularly at night. When he was twelve, walking past the place around midnight in late November, he had heard scream after scream, something his father attributed to demonic spirit. Once, when he was sixteen and walking back to his house from his girlfriend's on the darkest night of the year, Luke had seen a light flickering through a corner second story window and a shadow bouncing onto the shade. If Luke were making these stories up, his parents knew, at least the boy's delusions had a solid foundation.
That foundation was his grandfather. During the first eighteen years of his life, Luke had heard stories about the Parker place from his grandfather, a crazy old coot who had lived with the boy and his parents from the time Luke was five and had made it evident, to his dying day, that he despised everyone in the family save Luke.
Routinely, Grandfather Matthews would drag Luke into the family room after a winter meal of steak and mashed potatoes, sit the boy on his lap five feet from the fire, and fill his grandson's head full of Parker house stories. Sometimes, as Luke listened to the old man in the darkly carpeted and paneled room, he could swear that his grandfather was trying to scare him to death.
II. "Take the murder and dismemberment of Cassie Russell over thirty years ago," Luke had told his friends a week before, as over beer at a topless tavern near the university he had tried to explain his warped childhood. "That was one of Grandpa's favorites, one that the old man added a bit more blood to each time he had told it. Cassie was high school student who made extra cash delivering pizzas and made the mistake of knocking on the door of the Parker house on Halloween in 1965. Odd thing was," Luke had remembered with a shiver, "no one had lived in that old house
since the early '50's. Poor little girl. Anyhow, according to Grandpa, that was the last anyone ever saw Cassie alive; a month later, some teenagers found her body, or the remains of it, scattered and decomposing over the basement floor in the old house. 'Stench was unbelievable, Grandson,' the old man growled at me, tobacco stains on his shirt, beard, and teeth. 'An' blood everywhere: on the walls, on the carpet, on the TV, on the dining room table. Even more curious, little Luke: Cassie's eyeballs was gone.' No one ever explained what the boys were doing in the house, which had not been lived in for years. 'Cassie was sure as hell a cute little thing,' Grandpa would conclude, smacking his lips and looking wistfully into the distance."
When his friends(all doctoral candidates) refused to believe this, but waited for more in breathless anticipation, Luke had lit his pipe and hit them with another Grandpa Matthews story. "Okay. So listen to this. Five years after the discovery of Cassie Russell, the dead and disemboweled bodies of two of these teenagers-a boy and a girl-were found hanging by their necks from a rafter in the attic of the old Parker house. The murderer had tied black nylon chord five times around the neck of each victim. An autopsy report showed the boy and the girl had been disemboweled before the time of their deaths. 'Eyes of the boy and girl was missin', just like Cassie,' the old man told me. 'Maybe the mice ate 'em, the eyes, that is, heheheh,' the old man had chuckled. Jesus, what a mean old bastard.
"Then Grandpa would carry me over to the family room window and point with a crooked and trembling finger in the direction of the Parker house, just visible in evening light through the trees. 'House got some evil in it, boy.' the old man had wheezed, always struggling for air. 'People stupid enough to try to tear the thing down generally died.' The mean old man, actually smiling at me, always followed this up with accountings of some of the 'accidents': the body of city councilman Ed Jeffries, his heart cut out and stuffed into his mouth, had been found on the bloodied kitchen floor; the mangled eye-less body of Susan Thompson, former Miss Idaho contestant, had been discovered dangling upside down from a ceiling fan in the master bedroom on the second floor."
III. Of course, Luke thought to himself as he sat in his parents' family room in Boise, his friends had thought he was making the stories up. No self-respecting Ph. D., one of Luke's friends had remarked, would ever take those stories seriously; doing so was equivalent to believing in the devil, a character now regarded in intellectual circles as nothing more than a harmful fiction, capable of nonetheless inspiring incredibly dark deeds.
Now a young man on the verge of getting his Ph. D. in English, Luke actually missed the old man(who had died of congestive heart failure four years ago) and wondered as he sat puffing his pipe and gazing out the window, waiting for the darkness, how any sane individual could possibly believe the old man's stories let alone the explanation the community accepted: that the house was haunted. Indeed, to prove to himself that there was no basis for any superstitions regarding the old house, Luke had called a former girl friend last night and asked her to spend part of the next evening with him in the old mansion. "Consider it a cheap thrill," he had commented, smugly. "Sure, Luke," Misty had quickly responded, "I like cheap thrills," and Luke remembered then that in high school Misty had been one of those promiscuous beauties that would do anything for a thrill, which had included(on the night of Luke's graduation) taking on Luke and thirteen of his buddies in the back seat of her car.
IV. Luke met Misty in front of the store on seventh and Main, six blocks from the old mansion. A gorgeous brunette with a figure that would give the Pope an erection, Misty wore a blue Boise State sweater, blue jeans, and boots. Luke had worn his frayed green tweed jacket, leather patches on the elbows, faded jeans, and red tennis shoes. From there, full moon overhead, they walked hand-in-hand into the center of town, where they dined at Angel Fong's, an over-priced Chinese restaurant situated in the basement of one of the city's banks.
Misty sat across the table from Luke in the darkened dining room and sighed as she remembered the old Parker place. "Me and my friends usually stayed the hell away from that place, let me tell you, except for once, " Misty droned on, dipping bread in her soup. "Once, Shelly and me threw rocks at the house when we seen someone inside. Shelly's rock went through one of the front windows. That was pretty fuckin' funny. Kind of a cheap thrill, I guess."
Glancing around the room to make sure no one had heard the Misty, Luke remembered the story. It had been on a night after a local high school football game that Misty and Shelly, drunken sluts, had decided to drive by the old Parker place in North Boise and spend an hour or two just throwing rocks at the house. The broken window had become legendary in the Boise high schools, Shelly a local hero, when suddenly, one day after Halloween night
Shelly's nude body had been found in the foothills just overlooking Boise, her beautiful body impaled on a sharp post, her eyes ripped out of their sockets.
"Sometimes," began Misty, taking a noisy sip from her wine glass and looking at Luke, "sometimes, late at night, I get this creepy feeling, like something watching me, like, Jesus, these fuckin' eyes that I know come from that old house. Then I think about Shelly, about how they found her. No eyes and shit. Jesus, sometimes I sit up in bed and cry I get so scared, and Jesus that's when Mom comes in to tell me that it's all right and to shut the hell up. 'You shut the hell up, Misty Jean!!' she'd yell. 'Me an' your old man's tyrin' to sleep.' "
Studying Misty, who at twenty-four was more beautiful and more stupid than he had remembered, Luke slowly chewed his raw steak, savoring the juices. Between bites, he asked her if she still wanted to go to the Parker mansion. "Just a cheap thrill," Luke said.
"Oh, hell yes. Hell, hell, hell, yes, I do!" exclaimed Misty, loud enough for the elderly couple at the next table to overhear and stare at the loud young woman. "I don't believe that shit. No one believes that shit." She drained her wine glass and gesture to Luke that she wanted a refill. Then, turning to the old couple, Misty asked, "You folks still believe that shit?"
V. Later that night, they entered the house easily enough, climbing a tree and jumping onto the roof, breaking a window, and getting in through what must have been a guest bedroom. Luke had brought a flashlight, which
he flipped on as soon as he and Misty were inside.
The dark pine dresser and wall shelves, Luke noticed, flashing his beam around the room, were immaculate, an unusual touch for an abandoned place. He saw no dust anywhere. Too, the frame, Victorian-styled bed looked freshly
made. The only unusual item was the smell: The air was saturated by a thickly metallic odor that made Luke think of blood. Hanging from the ceiling was a chandelier, and when Luke tried the light switch the room lit up in a reddish glow, like a bonfire.
"Jesus," exclaimed Misty, almost breathless, "Jesus, what a place. Jesus."
"Sure is some place," responded Nick, still surprised by the cleanliness.
"Wanna go on?" asked Misty, anxiously.
Immediately, as he nodded, Luke saw a mental image of a corpse dangling bloodily from a full moon and sensed that something was terribly wrong with the house. Sworn, however, to resist impulses predicated on superstitions, Luke looked at the girl. "Fuck, yeah," he said, feeling a slight tremble in his voice, "let's see this place."
And so Misty and Luke explored the mansion, turning on the chandelier lights in the long hall way outside the bedroom, then creeping down the hallway and entering the rooms upstairs one by one. They found the huge master bedroom, saw the ceiling fan and a dressing table stacked with very old photos of people that Luke assumed has once lived in the place. The people in the photos looked cold and sullen.
Next, they crept downstairs into the darkness, flicked on the light switch at the bottom, and walked into the largest and most grandiose living room either one of them had ever seen, filled with padded nineteenth century high-backed chairs, three couches with wooden and bending backs, a grandfather clock that, oddly, was still ticking and keeping the correct time. From there, they walked to the dining room, which was more of a hall, and looked at the long oaken table ringed with old wooden chairs, all of which looked brand new to Luke.
When they walked through the kitchen in the back of the house and noticed an open door seemingly inviting the intruders down into the cellar darkness, Misty stopped in her tracks.
"What's the matter?" asked Luke, who had grown bolder and bolder the longer they stayed in the house.
"Ain't goin' down there, boy friend," said Misty, pointing to the open door.
"Why?" asked Luke. "Can't be a thing down there." As he said the word, Luke felt chilled, sensed something huge and dark passing inches from him, saw in his mind's eye two red eyes blazing directly at him. His heart jumping
into his throat, Luke reminded himself that what he had seen was superstition.
"Shit, babe," Luke responded, shaken but imitating a cockiness which his fellow grad students had come to admire, "then I'll go myself." Luke started towards the door, sensing still that he was moving into danger.
"Luke, Luke, shit, honey, please," whined Misty.
"Please, what?"
"Please don't go into that fucking dark hole. I get a bad feeling about this, Luke. Somethin' not right here. Shit. Like those eyes I told you about I dream about."
Instead of seeing in Misty's fear evidence confirming his own suspicions, Luke pushed onward. He had to go down the dark stairs now. Besides, he needed the rush.
"I'll be back in a minute," Luke said, approaching the entrance. "Anyway, to Hell with the Devil."
"That's a cute thing to say, Luke, but what the hell about me?" Misty whimpered, and Luke wondered if she were attempting to make him feel sorry for her or if she were frightened. He decided this was an emotional ploy on her part.
"You'll be all right, sugar pie," he assured her. "And it won't be totally dark. The moon is full tonight and even without the flashlight," and here he turned his light off, "you can see just about everything."
Luke was right. In the light of the moon, everything in the old kitchen was visible: the linoleum floor, the old refrigerator in the corner, the shelves, the huge sink, everything.
"Ok, Luke. Fuck it. OK, " Misty said, resigned. "But hurry back."
Giving Misty a kiss on the cheek, Luke turned the flashlight on and bounded down the stairs, wondering what he would find when he reached the bottom.
It was when Luke stepped onto the cold concrete of the cellar floor that he knew that he had made a fatal error. The revelation hit like and shovel against the side of the head. Panicked, he flashed the light across the walls of the cellar just as the door at the top of the stairs slammed shut.
He waited, breathless, heard the blood pounding in his brain. Then, he heard footsteps lumbering over the floor above him in the direction of Misty, heard Misty scream. Luke made out unmistakable sounds of a struggle, rapid footsteps indicating Misty was running to escape, heavier footsteps of her pursuer. Then, he heard her shout for him, heard her scream again and again, was reminded of the sounds of a huge animal caught in a trap. As if awakened from a dark dream, he rushed up the stairs, three steps at a time, and threw himself against the cellar door. The door, made of hard, thick wood, did not budge, so he threw himself against the door again and again, frantic, as Misty's screams suddenly stopped. Wondering if his girl were dead, Luke bounded back down the stairs, searched the cellar frantically with his flashlight, passing the beam over walls and floor again and again, nearly giving up hope when he saw something glittering in the darkness in the back of the cellar. Luke ran towards the object, light revealing that he had found a huge ax whose wooden handle seemed as fresh as it would have been had Luke purchased the tool that very day.
Luke rushed back up the stairs, flashlight in one hand and ax in another and, two steps before the door, lay down his light so that the beam shone on the door, raised his ax and swung. At the first chance, the blade struck in the wood, but Luke easily pulled the weapon free. Luke swung again, and again, and again, finally piercing through the wooden door. With several more swings, Luke created a rectangular opening through which, as he dropped his ax, he could reach the door handle and unlock and open the door.
The door opened, and feeling himself exhausted, Luke called out, "Misty!! Misty! Where are you? Where are you? Say something!"
He listened and behind the silence he heard something, a rhythmic panting which grew louder and louder, like two great beasts fucking each other. Terrified, Luke dropped his ax and walked in the direction of the sound, walked up the stairs, down the hall, and finally into a room right next to the one through which he and Misty had first gained entrance to the mansion. Nearly crazed by terror, Luke pointed the flashlight in front of him, thought he saw something large in the middle of the very small dark room, listened for Misty, and then shining the light directly in front of him again realized what it was that he was looking at. He had found Misty.
VI. In the brilliant moonlight, he could see her arms and legs were bound by rope and tied to steel rings protruding from each of the four walls. Misty was suspended horizontally in the dark space, three feet or so off the floor, her nude body in a spread-eagle position. The rope that bound her arms and legs had been pulled so tight that Misty could not move. Her face was turned away from him. The figure looked grotesque, seeming to float in the air.
Breaking into a cold sweat, paralyzed, heart thumping wildly, Luke felt himself go numb, wondered what he was doing in this room on this night. For several minutes, unmoving, he stood and tried not to look towards the face, certain the eyes had been removed, sure that he was going to get sick or pass out. Then, he heard a voice he did not recognize rasp, "Hey, can you believe this shit?", and knew the girl had turned her head towards him. Glancing up and down her body, avoiding her eyes, he saw that her wrists and ankles bore red burn marks from where the rope had rubbed against the flesh, could actually feel the girl's pain as she weakly struggled to get loose. Then, with morbid fascination, he watched the blood trickling down her left arm from the rope and in the direction of her bare breast and wondered what he should do about it. Misty's breasts and flat stomach bore scratches that suggested a struggle.
Mesmerized, stupidly almost, Luke stared at the body dangling spread-eagle in front of him, had trouble acknowledging that bound before him was a girl he had known since grade school. Feeling immersed in something so dark and dreadful that it was almost palpable, he gazed now at the golden rings piercing her nipples and pussy, wondered when Misty had decided to go in for piercing, actually felt himself slightly aroused.
Summoning courage, he slowly looked up, towards her face, noticed that Misty's cheek and forehead bore deep cuts, realized she was bleeding slightly from the nose and mouth, and then forced himself to look at her eyes.
With a tremendous sigh of relief, he realized that Misty still had her sight but he could read only emptiness there, as if something had scooped out her soul.
He looked at the girl, felt delirious, actually thought of running his hand over her breasts, lightly touching her crotch when he heard her whisper, mockingly, "Hey, little man, hey, little man; he's here. He's here. He's here. And you are fuckin' dead, dead, dead." This couldn't be Misty, he told himself, struggling to stay rational. This wasn't her voice. She sounded diabolical.
"What?" Luke asked, stunned. "What are you saying?" It occurred to him that this girl, grotesquely suspended, felt no pain.
"I said," the girl growled, guttural, her voice coming from deep within her, "he's here, you stupid miserable mother fucker. Somewhere in the house, shit pot. And, you baby boy blue, Mr. To-Hell-With-the-Devil, he's gonna eat you alive." At this, Misty smacked her lips; she actually seemed to enjoy this moment.
Luke stepped back, looked at the body before him, glanced at the room around him, felt the room beginning to spin, and desperately struggled to focus on the task at hand.
"Who's here?" Luke asked, terror sweeping through him, weakening him. "Who, who, who are you talking about?"
"Who do you think, shit head?," she said slowly, laughing, looking at Luke through glazed animal eyes. "Whatever it was had a huge, huge dick, much larger than your own, and it fucked me-throbbed deeply and deliciously inside me--and I loved it."
Nick paused, fascinated yet repelled.
"Hey, little man, " she asked, smiling, beginning to pant heavily, "you can fuck me now. You can fuck me to death. I'm in position. Put that little pecker inside me. It'll be a real cheap thrill."
Dazed, he looked at her, her mouth open, her face bloodied, then said, "What the hell is going on here? What is this? What the hell has happened to you?" Even as he spoke, he wondered why he had asked, felt a mixture of fear and pleasure, knew that something was watching him, zeroing in on him.
Slowly, almost unable to move, he turned, looked into the darkness, illuminated by the moonlight, searched for whatever it was that had locked him in the basement and raped this girl. While he could see no one, he sensed darkness passing through the house, a cold dark breeze looking for him, felt the eyes of evil boring into him, knew that whatever it was had the power to take to the pit of Hell.
Panicked, wanting to run, he knew he had to free Misty. It was imperative that he do so. So he turned back to her, reached into his pocket, took out his Swiss army knife, opened it, and put the blade of to the straps binding her legs. Frantically as he worked and she giggled, regardless of the pressure he put on his knife, he could not cut the rope.
"Jesus Christ," Luke whispered, falling to his knees, knowing the situation was hopeless. "Jesus, Jesus, Jesus."
"He won't help you now, little man," said Misty, slowly turning her face towards him and staring maliciously. "Go ahead, little man: fuck the daylights outa me. You'll like it. I certainly will. C'mon. Gimme that thrill you promised me."
The rustling behind him, like the wind in the tree outside his parents' house, made his heart stop, the hairs lining the back of his neck bristle, turned his nose, ears, arms and legs ice-cube cold. He shivered, hoped this night would soon be over, felt something brush his shoulder, knew something large and dark and scaly was passing behind him, put his head down and took a deep breath, then stood up, turned and walked through the door into the hallway.
VII. It happened so fast that Luke didn't have time to react: a sharp hook arcing perfectly toward him and cutting into and through his stomach; the sensation of being lifted off the ground; the searing, darkening pain; the sound of someone screaming like a beast; the sudden nausea as the sharp thing ripped into his stomach; the stench of his own blood; finally, the sensation that he was gliding out of his own body, leaving his own bloodied and mutilated form, on the verge of beginning something new and indescribably horrible.
Suspended in the hallway at a point near the ceiling, he looked below, saw his own body limp and bleeding, pierced by an enormous hook; the hook in turn was connected to a chain that dangled from the ceiling. He wondered if somehow he had come under Divine Judgment for believing the wrong things, knew he had been given over to a darkness so vast that it stretched forever beyond his imagination, knew for the first time that evil was a tangible mass.
Floating, he studied his corpse, swinging on the chain, blood dripping onto the carpet, felt incredibly light, felt no pain, thought of Misty in the next room, somehow willed himself into the room where he looked down on the nude body, realized that Misty had died seconds before and then looked into the blazing red eyes of an enormous dark mass hovering before him, thought for an instant of his grandfather, then felt himself gripped by a force whose strength he had never known, saw the massive dark wings of this thing. He felt himself moving at light speed down an endless
dark corridor, heard the screams of millions who had suffered the same condemnation in previous centuries, saw the glow of the Lake of Fire at the end of the dark corridor, sensed Misty was waiting for him, and knew he would travel this corridor for eternity.
Now this is one of my favorite stories!
At Tarantula Lil's
by Richard Logsdon
I. Worn around the edges, yet dreaming of vampire strippers, Professor Michael Haddux drove his dilapidated black ‘85 Buick Le Sabre into the parking lot of Tarantula Lil’s. It was getting late, approaching midnight, and a full moon shone brilliantly overhead like a fluorescent clock. His heart racing with nervous excitement, Michael had decided to risk his good reputation in the academic community for one night at the club that Time magazine had described as the wildest and dirtiest strip club in America.
"This could be a delightfully enjoyable, even bloody night," murmured Professor Haddux to himself as he parked out back of the club, turned off the ignition and climbed out of his car. Because of recurring nightmares and severe episodes of depression, he hadn’t slept well for days. He thought that he vaguely remembered having taken his medication that morning.
Adjusting his bright red tie, he walked toward Tarantula ‘Lil’s, the new topless-bottomless nightclub on the corner of Oakey and Western Avenue in industrial Las Vegas. Though not difficult to find, this club--a hangout for dealers, prostitutes, gang bangers, and real estate salesman--was one most people avoided like the plague. It was said that packs of hungry dogs roamed the streets adjacent to the club. Seeking extreme measures, Michael was hoping that this titillating environment would bring him out of his depression.
Tonight, the professor noted that the blood-red moon hung seemingly suspended a few feet from the furiously blazing neon sign that for miles around served as the club’s landmark. As he walked toward the music pounding helter-skelter through the club walls, the professor imagined that he could reach up and touch the moon.
An English professor with a special interest in Pynchon and Nabakov, Michael was mesmerized by the flashing green and black neon sign that extended 100 feet in the air from the club roof; at the top of the sign, a few feet from the moon, a metallic spider clung to its symmetrical web. From the web, red neon droplets flowed, cascading like a bloody waterfall onto the top of the club and to the street below. For Michael, it was like something out of a delicious nightmare, the symbol of a universe collapsing upon itself and creating a progressive degeneration toward evil.
As he approached the dark entrance, he was bathed in the moons crimson glow. As tired, possibly even delirious as he was, the thought thrilled Michael, and he raised his arms in praise to the full-moon, imagining a river of blood winding its way through the dark labyrinth of history and into his heart. He felt strangely energized, temporarily redeemed from the exhaustion that had consumed him for days. The club’s reputation for evil didn’t faze the professor. In fact, the rumors of demonic activity—a wonderful fiction, he thought, sort of like the law of entropy--pulled on his dark soul like a magnet, fascinating him. Going to the club was like being literally drawn into a novel by Anne Rice. It was a stimulant. He remembered that two months ago a local high school principle had been beaten to a black and blue pulp in the unlit parking lot behind Lil’s. The principle’s nude body had been found one morning in a green and black dumpster just beyond the rear door; the man’s body had been mutilated, the face an unrecognizable puzzle of slashes, double-puncture marks extending from head to foot. The object possibly of some occult sacrifice, the body had been nearly drained of blood.
And, as he lit a Camel filter cigarette, put it between his lips and continued his walk, Haddux excitedly recalled that it was here, two years ago, that one of the most memorable out-door executions in the recent history had been carried out as the decapitated body of a local under world kingpin--an Asian-American who had cornered the drug and pornography business revolving around Tarantula Lil’s-- had been found dangling at the end of a long black cable tied to the metallic spider. The man’s body, a grappling hook through the back, had been fried a crispy black. Perhaps, thought the rummy Haddux, I am half in love with easeful death.
Particularly intriguing to the professor were rumors that Tarantula Lil’s was a rendezvous for vampires. No academic in his right mind believed in vampires, but Haddux had never considered himself sane. Certainly, recently, he had been right on the edge. On many occasions in the past three or so years, during a full-moon—in fact for the past week--he had sensed himself undergoing an inexplicable transformation.
During these periods, he experienced bloody hallucinations, found himself incredibly thirsty, desired bloodied steak, had visions of himself having sex with some horned female creature from the deep. During the past week, knowing he was swirling into a psychotic vortex, he felt he could see and talk to the dead alone at night, a realization that brought him back to his psychiatrist’s office. Indeed, Haddux revealed during the most recent therapy that on top of a serious chemical imbalance he had a severe vampire fixation, likely the product of a cultural psychosis fed by vampires movies and vampire literature.
II. As he opened the heavy black glass entrance door, Haddux was overcome by the hypnotic music, the rhythm and beat of something clearly Satanic pounding intrusively into his soul, and he tingled with manic excitement as he stood in the darkness just inside the entryway, allowing darkness to fill him.
Two topless gorgeous but deathly pale redheads, obviously twins, stood in front of him. As one, the girls smiled and said, "Good evening, sir, and welcome to Tarantula Lil’s." Paying the required ten dollar entry fee, Haddux strode into the room of exotic dancers, the atmosphere a mixture of alcohol, cigarettes, and rock, and slowly, but with great ease, glided to a table just below center stage.
Smoke hung in thick blue clouds in the darkly reddish air of the club, swirling with a life of its own, and he hungrily watched the three black dancers on the stage before him. One girl had a huge live green python wrapped around her neck. Looking around, he saw that there was one stage in each of the four corners of the room, each occupied by a single nude dancer surrounded by men of all ages, some sitting and staring at tits and pussy, some standing in an effort to get closer and maybe grab a little touch.
It was just as he had ordered his fourth Bloody Bill from the gorgeous, scantily clad cocktail waitress that a tall girl with dark blue eyes, blood-red lips, flowing black hair, a white transparent top, and a short green and white plaid dress approached him. She had a flower tattooed on one arm. She smiled and, gently, sweetly, sadly asked, "Mind if I sit down?" The girl’s eyes were dancing pools of dark blue that made Michael quiver with uneasiness.
"My name’s Charlie," the girl began, offering her hand to shake and sitting in the chair right next to Haddux.
Professor Haddux finally took the girl’s warm, soft hand in his own damp hand, nervously brought it to his lips to kiss, and replied, "And my name’s Michael." Relatively new to the striptease scene, Michael wondered how to strike up a conversation with the girl and considered asking her if she had ever read Conrad' Heart of Darkness.
He was saved the effort when the girl casually pulled up her blouse to expose the darkest nipples he had ever seen. Then, like a brick against the head, it struck Haddux that he had seen the girl before, possibly in the pages of one of his favorite novels. His feeling of unease grew, and he wondered if he should leave.
"So, whaddya do for a living?" the girl asked, getting up from her chair and plopping herself down onto Haddux’ lap. She put an arm around his shoulders and drew his head near to her. She rested the other hand between his legs. Wide-eyed, he examined her gorgeous nipples.
"I’m an English professor at the local college," he stated, increasingly apprehensive. For some reason, he knew she knew his profession. He wondered if she were a former student.
"Really?" the girl asked, her face seeming to glow in the dark place. "Oh, my, how interesting!" At that moment, smiling, curious, she made Michael think of medieval paintings of angels, and Michael didn’t believe in angels.
The two of them said nothing for the next five minutes. Fighting extreme nervousness, the result no doubt of fatigue and failure to stay on top of his medications, he stroked her hair and occasionally touched a nipple with his tongue, attempting to generate euphoria within himself. She giggled in turn and gently massaged him. "Relax," she whispered.
"So where have I seen you before?" Haddux stuttered, breaking the silence. Her presence was still unsettling, and he was now starting to sweat. "You look familiar."
"Where do you think you’ve seen me before, stud?" Charlie responded,playfully, almost knowingly.
"How about at church?" he tried to joke, his heart racing. "That old Pentecostal thing on the corner of Bruce and Lamb."
"Well," began Charlie, laughing, "I may go to church from time to time, but I ain’t Pentecostal."
"How about in a Saturday evening bowling league?" Michael teased again, hoping to make himself relax.
"You kidding? " came the amused response. "Only morons bowl."
"True," said Haddux, intrigued by the girl’s quickness. "How about the bookstore? Did you work in a bookstore? Maybe an adult book store."
"No books for this chick," said Charlie.
Smiling, Michael played his trump card: "Uh, how about in my dreams...or would it be your dreams? Did I see you in last-night’s dream?"
Obsessed with nightmares as with vampires, Michael was sure of the answer.
The long stunned silence, the widening shock in the girl’s eyes, suggested to the professor that he had struck pay-dirt. And, sure enough, he knew that he had seen this woman in his dreams last night, the night before that, and the night before that. His blood froze as he finally recognized her by her gentle dark eyes, her long raven hair, her flower tattoo, and her dark nipples.
Ill. In this dream, the world was ending, the night sky a frightening display of exploding stars, run-away meteors, and an enormous black hole that hung just above the planet. The overriding fear was that the sunwas going to explode.
In the dream, Michael had seen himself suspended by a cable from the tower on top of Tarantula Lil’s, a grappling hook through his back. Swaying in the steady desert breeze, he realized that he was dead as adoor nail, a burnt-to-a-crisp person.
He remembered that it was midnight as he hung suspended, dead but quite conscious, and the metallic spider at the top of the tower had extricated herself from her web and was slowly making its way toward him. In the dream, terrified, he had forced his eyes shut, and when he had opened them again, he had seen dozens of spiders, all climbing down the tower and headed in his direction.
The nightmare didn’t end there. Like a thief in the night, trailing a blue and golden cloud, an explosion of light, Charlie--or someone who looked like her--had come flying out of the night sky, her yellow cloak billowing about her, huge wings clearly visible. Completely nude, she had come in response to his screams.
In the dream, as he had looked up at Charlie and behind her, he could see the black hole widening and drawing near, threatening to swallow them. In the midst of the high howling winds, his eyes fixed on Charlie, he had heard the singing of angels, had begged her to help him, and had wept uncontrollably. She did nothing. Absolutely nothing. He wondered, in the dream, if she were going to eat him. It was at this point that he always awoke, sobbing.
lV. Boundaries between the fantastic and the real having disintegrated, Michael recalled looking in the dream into the girl’s darkly penetratingeyes, the same eyes that now looked into his at Tarantula Lil’s.
"I saw you in my dreams," he muttered, unsure of what to say beyond this. He knew his therapist would have reminded him that this was no way to start a conversation. He suddenly felt his tiredness catching up to him.
"That’s right," she assured him.
"You’re an angel?" Stunned silence prevailed.
Then, "Maybe," she said.
"Or a devil?" he asked.
"What do you think?" she responded, almost offended.
Perhaps, he thought, I am hallucinating, a probably reaction to mixing alcohol with anti-psychotic drugs. "But angels and devils don’t exist," he asserted, trying to maintain control. "Vampires don’t exist.
The devil doesn’t exist."
She stared at him knowingly. "You’re sure of that, baby?" was all she said.
"And what are you here for, to save me...?" Michael knew that if this woman considered herself an angel, the answer would likely be yes.
"Of course?" she stated, simply.
He gazed into her eyes and took a long sip on his drink. Maybe, he thought, she just wanted to play him for the sucker and take his money. He didn’t know what he thought. Suddenly, he wanted rest from the anxiety this woman seemed to bring.
"Look around you, study the dancers, watch the main stage," she said, kissing the tip of his nose, "and maybe you’ll see it."
See what? he wondered. He hated conversations like this, those that pushed him to the boundary between sanity and insanity. Suddenly, he could feel the black ice of panic rising to the surface of his conscious mind as he considered her words. It was the panic he had fought every night for the last week. He took a deep breath and tried closing his eyes. In his mind, he caught an image of himself drinking this girl’s blood.
He rambled as if under a spell. "Sometimes," he said in a barely audible voice, words tumbling from his mouth, "I think I’m a vampire. I see a shrink about this, what, delusion." Why the hell am I saying this?
he wondered. He was now shaking.
"I know. You’re seeing Dr. Leonora Russell right now. Try to relax, honey. Please, please, relax, Michael."
He paused, fighting panic, wondering if there were any other way she could have gotten this information. He knew there had to be.
"I go to Russell--actually, I’ve been to several therapists in the past several years--and she treats me as if I’m mildly, harmlessly insane."
"You’re no vampire, Michael," Charlie assured him, addressing his worst fear and putting her arm around his neck and kissing him on the forehead. He lips were warm. She also continued to caress him. "That thought is--what can I call it—an ‘unhealthy manifestation from the dark side.’" Her dark eyes blazed furiously at him when she said this.
He thought he could see a red glow coming from somewhere within the darkness of her eyes.
"What?" mumbled Michael, unsure of what he had just heard, disturbed by what he thought he had seen in her eyes. Good and evil did not exist as actual dichotomies, as far as he was concerned. They were no more that literary fictions, useful for discussing novels and short stories, fabrications of the nightmare world he was nightly drawn into. "Some people call them evil spirits. They want to kill you."
"What? Why?" Michael asked, his heart pounding wildly, wondering if he were going to die, his nightmares rushing to the surface of his consciousness. He had had a morbid fear of his own extinction since childhood.
"Evil needs no reason for destroying the good. Evil always seeks to destroy the good simply because it’s good." It suddenly occurred to Michael that this woman could have extracted this definition of evil from just about anywhere.
The conversation seemed disconnected, moving forward by fragments that suggested an entirely other level of conversation was going on between him and the dancer. However, this girl, he thought to himself, couldn’t possibly be an angel. She couldn’t be. The claim she made about herself was preposterous. Suddenly, in a burst of shrewd awareness, he knew she had been putting him on.
Michael could feel his panic subsiding as he felt himself regaining control. Breathing easier, Charlie still sitting on his lap, her gorgeous tits exposed, he wondered if he were out of his mind. He had just bought into a paranoid delusion, affirmed by someone who likely made her life turning tricks for horny men. This girl, this Charlie, was a stripper who was playing him for a fool.
"Go away, honey," he coldly and abruptly stated, glaring at the woman on his lap. He was tense as a board.
"Michael," she responded, in tone somber, "you are on the verge of a terrible mistake. You want me with you. Right here, honey. They can’t hurt you as long as I’m with you. But if you refuse me, if you invite me away, I gotta go. You sure you want me gone?" She smiled. He wondered if she were laughing at him.
He was certain that she was. "Off my lap, babe," barked Michael, confidence returning. He partially stood up and nearly dumped Charlie on the floor.
"All right, Michael!" shouted Charlie, smarting from the fall, aware that others were watching. People from adjacent tables watched; the hugely muscled bouncers from over by the door started their intimidating walk though the room and toward Michael.
"It’s all right, fellas!" Charlie yelled to the bouncers, pulling her top over her breasts and then holding up a right hand. "It’s okay. I’m all right. This guy will leave soon enough."
As the bouncers stood their ground ten feet away, Charlie approached Michael, took both of his hands in hers, asking him not to send her away. "If you send me away, I gotta go, can’t return," she whispered.
"You won’t be able to call me back." Her eyes were whirlpools of blue darkness; Michael felt he was in danger of falling in.
Convinced more than ever that he was dealing with a lunatic, Michael, silently said, "Please, leave. Now. I want someone else."
For an instant, stunned, Charlie stared at him, her deep dark eyes touching him, and for a second Michael got the distinct impression that he was making a mistake. But he persisted, backing away from Charlie.
With that, Charlie gave one glance back at Michael, who was smiling and cock-sure that he had seen through this woman’s ploy. She said "Get out, now, Michael," and gracefully walked away. As she did so, the bouncers shrugged their shoulders, looked at him, one wagging his finger at Michael, and slowly walked back toward the entrance.
V. Now, thought Michael to himself, it’s time to relax. Letting the music of Aerosmith fill him, he ordered another drink and looked around the room for an available dancer. He didn’t have to wait long.
"Hi," came a soft, almost lilting voice from behind him. He looked around and saw one of the Oriental dancers looking down at him "Would you like some company, big boy?"
"Sure," responded Michael, moving the empty chair away from the table so the new dancer could be seated. This dancer, though incredibly beautiful, had harsh gray eyes that seemed to look into him, making him uneasy again. He decided to force himself to relax.
She had long crinkly blonde hair(obviously dyed), a gorgeously thin body, small breasts, and killer legs. Michael approximated her height at 5’9". She should have been a dancer with one of Las Vegas big stage shows, he thought. She was the most beautiful woman he had ever seen.
"My name is Lucy," said the girl in broken English, easing herself into the chair, looking directly into Michael’s eyes, and putting her hand between his legs. "You wanna dance, horny son-of-a-bitch?" the woman asked, moving closer to Michael and lightly kissing him on the mouth.
Something about the girl unnerved Michael, who nonetheless found himself hugely aroused. Recently, Michael assured himself, most everything unnerved him.
"You like Lucy, yes?" the girl asked, patting the bulge between Michael’s legs. "Big prick??"
"Very much," whispered Michael in a hoarse voice. As he felt himself drawn to this woman, he glimpsed an image in his mind of a bat entering a very dark cave.
"Then let’s you ‘n’ me go to the back room," Lucy said, standing and taking Michael by the hand. Michael noticed Lucy’s long fingers, her blood-red fingernails. "You gonna be my bitch," she said.
Michael allowed himself to be led, as if he had no will of his own. He simply wanted to try to enjoy the evening. Though something about the girl urged caution, Michael couldn’t wait to get to the back room where both of them could become extremely intimate. In a fleeting moment of panic, his mind filled with the image of this woman sucking his manhood and his life right out of him. Michael fought within himself, feeling himself moving to the edge of psychosis.
The back room was so dark that Michael couldn’t see the hand in front of his face at first. Yet he heard people whispering, like ghosts in the attic. Unable to find his own way, he therefore allowed Lucy to guide him to a couch at the far end of the room. By the time he sat down, he was beginning to make out images of couples seated in couches scattered about the room. Lucy was next to him, one arm around his shoulders. She put her free hand between his legs and easily massaged him into hardness.
"The next songs, sweet willy," Lucy said, softly, "we dance."
"Sounds fine to me," Michael responded, feeling breathless to be in the presence of someone so beautiful. He thought of sleeping as she danced.
In a minute, the present song over, Lucy rose to her feet, removed her panties and, with the beginning of a piece by Boston, began to dance, gliding up and down his body like a snake, sitting on his lap, placing the crack of her ass over his bone and rocking back and forth. Michael relaxed, certain he had entered the gates of heaven when Lucy turned around, put both arms around him and began kissing him on the forehead, the cheek, and the neck.
As he let her make love to him, Michael put his hand between her legs and brushed her pubic hairs. Images of paradise flooded his mind when he felt a sharp prick on his neck followed by the slow flow of warm liquid.
Quickly reacting, remembering instantly Charlie’s injunction to leave, Michael sat up and ran his hand over his neck. He held his hand before him. In the dark light, Michael could make out enough of his hand to see, barely, that it was stained by something dark. Surely, it was his own blood.
"What the hell?" he asked, frightened, glancing at Lucy, who had been looking away from him. When Lucy turned slowly around to face him, terror coursed through him like electricity, and he saw that she was grinning grotesquely, her mouth filling her whole face. Then he noticed the long sharp teeth, touched at the ends with a dark stain. He knew now he had been pulled right into a vampiric nightmare.
For a minute, he stared at the face, his brain spinning from the realization that the vampire stories about Tarantula Lil’s were true.
Maybe, just maybe all things were true. If not, this woman was wearing fangs and had just bitten him on the neck, drawing his own blood. Michael didn’t really know what to think.
With a sudden effort, Michael tried to push the Oriental girl off his lap and onto the couch, but he could not match her iron-like strength or grip. Easily, she kept her arm locked around Michael’s neck and used her other arm to move Michael’s left arm down to his side. He couldn’t budge her.
Too frightened to speak, a piece by the Blue Oyster Cult climaxing in the background, he stared at the ghoulishly grinning face before him and knew he had reached the moment of his own dying. Then, glancing behind Lucy, he noticed three or four other strippers approaching him, all with the same ghastly, ghoulish grins, all bearing their teeth, all bearing long sharp teeth. He thought he could hear them snarling. They were like spiders crawling though the black hole of his recently recurring nightmare. He noticed that no one else was seated in the room.
Giving a second effort, Michael sprang up from the couch and, determined to live to see another sunrise, bolted for the door to the dark room. Passing through the entrance to the room, he continued to run to the main glass doors, where he was abruptly stopped by the largest, most muscular bouncer he had ever seen. The guy had a ring in his nose, one in his ear, and on his left arm a tattoo of a pentagram.
Solid muscle, the man before him stood at least 6’5".
"Gotta leave," whined Michael, anxious to get around the man and out to his car and away from Tarantula Lil’s.
"Gotta stay," came the big man’s raspy retort. "Gotta stay for the girls’ dinner," he said.
Not wanting to stick around for an explanation of the remark, Michael quickly dodged around the big man and burst through the doors into the cold autumn night. He heard howling all around him and, looking across the parking lot, saw huge mangy growling dogs moving between the cars lot toward him.
Turing away to sprint to the unoccupied street, Michael heard a loud hissing noise and realized that someone or something was near him and almost on him. Sure enough, with his next stride, he felt the huge hissing thing land on his back, bringing him crashing to the ground in a cloud of dust. Barely turning, thinking of the web overhead, he could see that it was one of the black strippers, the one that had performed with the python. Now, transformed, she was a beast, a predator, who had obviously found her prey.
As his body came crashing to the pavement, he heard the shuffling of feet through gravel and knew that more were following. Looking up, he noticed six young women, scuttling like spiders to gather around him, grotesquely grinning, their fangs visible. These were the vampire strippers of his dreams, and dream had become reality at Tarantula Lil’s.
Attempting to rise, he found he couldn’t move and, putting his hand to the side of his face and taking it away again, realized that he was bleeding profusely from a serious head wound. Panicked, he struggled to rise again as the girls moved over closer, put their mouths down to kiss him and then attacked him collectively with all of their strength, biting him again and again, everywhere: his head, his arms, his hands, his stomach.
After what must have been only several minutes, he could feel himself drifting out of this world as he turned his mind to Charlie. He realized that, as unlikely as it had seemed, Charlie was obviously an angel.
Bleeding profusely, his mouth foaming red, Michael sputtered, "Charlie!!Charlie!!" but it was too late as Michael looked overhead at the full moon. Once again, it reminded him of a clock; indeed, time had run out for Dr. Michael Haddux as the biggest of the girls shrieked and brought an iron-pipe crashing upon his shoulder blade and then his head.
Knowing that Charlie had left the planet, Michael sank back to the earth, watching (suddenly as if from above) the girls go to work on him, kicking him, biting him, clawing his flesh to get at his blood.
Floating in an explosion of transcendent light, Michael looked down at the dark patch where one of the girls kicked his corpse again and again to the side of the head. Floating, he wondered where and who he was.
~~~~~~~~~~
When they had all finished drinking the corpse’s blood, two of the vampire strippers picked up his legs and dragged the body to the huge green and black dumpster that sat thirty feet away from them. Then, with an effort, they lifted the bloodless soul-less corpse off the ground and over their heads and tossed it in the huge garbage container.
Surely a symbol that the end of the age had arrived, the huge green and black landmark sign continued to blaze over head, the droplets of blood cascading downward from the metallic spider and, at that particular instant, into the dumpster and onto the body. The garbage inside the dumpster was bathed in a bloody glow.
The body would be discovered two weeks later, by a cocktail waitress, mutilated and decomposing and covered by a thick web-gauze.
© Richard Logsdon November 1998
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