Domino Falls

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Domino Falls Page 17

by Steven Barnes

“Instead of a space invasion, it’s a freak invasion,” he said. “Same difference. And there’s something else …”

  The night assumed a deeper silence between their words.

  “What?”

  “A miracle,” said chubby Moe, and Sonia almost rolled her eyes. The only miracle, she thought, would be if this guy ever got a girlfriend.

  “You’ve seen a miracle?” Sonia said.

  “No,” he admitted. “But … some of the Gold Shirts did. Right, Chris? And one day, we’ll all see it.”

  “That’s the rumor,” Chris said, noncommittal. His mood had changed.

  “Come on,” Sonia whispered to Chris playfully. She kissed his cheek. “Tell me.”

  Chris’s face turned bright red even in the firelight. “Not one day,” he said. “Soon. Everybody at the mansion’s excited about something. Then the townies will have to shut up and take Wales seriously.”

  Cindy Lou suddenly pointed. “Hey, see that? Maybe it’s starting now.”

  A large dark pickup truck was headed toward the mansion from town, driving so fast that it kicked up a cloud of dust. Red brake lights flared.

  “Nah,” Chris said. “I’d have heard.” He kept watchful eyes on the mansion while the others played on. “That’s weird.”

  “What’s so weird about it?” Sonia said. “People don’t drive onto the ranch?”

  “I know that truck,” Chris said. “He doesn’t exactly have an invitation.” He propped up his binoculars to get a better look, a pose that reminded her of Piranha. Or Terry. She sidled a bit closer to him, but he had forgotten her.

  “Whose truck is that?”

  “I can’t discuss work stuff, Sonia,” he lectured her, and her face turned red. He was the one who’d brought up the truck, trying to impress them. But she didn’t argue.

  Moe was in the midst of trying to give Sonia instructions on the dice game when Chris stood up and put on his Gold Shirt, carefully buttoning it to his collar.

  “You said you’re off tonight!” Cindy Lou complained.

  “Just curious,” Chris said. “I’m gonna ride the scooter over.”

  He cast an apologetic glance at Sonia, almost an afterthought. He had promised to ride her back to the Motel 6 on his scooter. Now what?

  Chris held his hand out to her. “Come with me,” he said.

  “I’m just a civilian. You sure that’s okay?” She didn’t hide her sarcasm.

  He winced and smiled apologetically. “I’m sure. We won’t get too close.”

  Could she feel the mushroom already? The night seemed to dance before Sonia’s eyes as Chris pulled her to her feet.

  During the quick ride to Wales’s gates, cool air caressed Sonia’s face as she wrapped her arms around Chris’s narrow waist. She wished she could enjoy the ride, but she could tell right away that something was wrong.

  The large black Chevy truck was parked outside the gate.

  “Wales!” a man’s voice boomed. “Send her out here right now!”

  Chris sounded shocked as he coasted to a stop. “What the … ?”

  “I’m guessing this is weird too?” Sonia said.

  “Townies aren’t this bold.”

  Sonia recognized the man at the gate as Brownie, who had stood up at dinner that first night to ask about his daughter. Apparently, he’d come to ask again. More forcefully. He shook a crowbar in the air. “So help me, I’ll break in!”

  “Stay here,” Chris said to Sonia. “Don’t get any closer.”

  The scooter was parked fifteen yards back from the gate, near an old oak, and Sonia was happy to keep her distance. It had been a long time since she’d been alone in the dark. She cursed herself for leaving her gun in the room.

  An army of Gold Shirts clustered behind the gate. Maybe … twelve? And like Chris, more were on the way; she heard running footsteps from the mansion, getting closer. A stampede of bad news.

  And the mushroom was definitely kicking in, because the night had a surreal feel: colors brighter, sounds sharper. A megaphone erupted so loudly that Sonia was sure the Threadies could hear it back at their fire, or maybe all the way to town: “Step away from the gate, or you will lose electricity privileges!”

  “If she doesn’t want to go, let her come out and tell me herself!” Brownie shouted.

  The megaphone went on: “Breaking and entering will get you expelled from Threadville.”

  “You gonna throw me out of my own town?” Brownie said. “My town is called Domino Falls! You can stick Threadville up your ass!”

  Maybe it was only the mushroom, but Sonia felt attuned to every motion, every nuance of the scene before her, as if she were standing inside of it. Noticed Brownie shifting nervously from leg to leg, as if he wanted to run. Heard a slight tremor in the man’s voice on the megaphone. Adrenaline crackled like lightning.

  Slowly, the double gates began to open, folding inward. Sonia gasped. Three rows of Gold Shirts stood in formation, the first row kneeling, all of them pointing rifles like an image from the Civil War. Sonia’s heart withered when she realized the men looked like a firing squad.

  Sonia was afraid Brownie would charge in or the Gold Shirts would charge out, but both sides held their ground.

  “Go back home, Brownie! Bring up your grievances through proper channels!”

  “Proper?” Brownie spat. “What the hell does that mean? Is that a joke? Let me hear her say it in her own words. Just send her out!” Brownie’s shout might have been heard even through the mansion walls, but his voice was angrier now. He slammed the crowbar against the fence, and it clanged like a bell.

  “Counting to three, Brownie,” the man on the megaphone said.

  He didn’t have to say what would happen when he reached three, at least not to Sonia. She already knew. Her racing heartbeat made her dizzy.

  “You don’t have any right to keep her from me!” Brownie said, surging toward a scream. “Where’s my little—” He raised the crowbar again and started to bring it down.

  No one counted to three. The crack of a single rifle shot silenced Brownie, and he crumpled mid-sentence. On the ground, Brownie groaned loudly.

  Sonia’s scream came out as a loud gasp. She felt herself running toward the gate, as if a Super Nurse version of her could treat Brownie, unharmed by bullets. She might have made it to the gate if someone hadn’t grabbed her around the waist, lifting her from her feet. “No!” a man said, and it took her a few seconds to realize it was Chris. He pulled her toward the Chevy, off to the side, his heart hammering through his gold shirt.

  Sonia pushed past him to crane her head around and see what was happening.

  Brownie’s face was contorted in pain, turning red, and a host of personnel were running out of the mansion toward the gate. Everyone moved with a strange fluidity, almost slow motion, and Sonia remembered the mushroom. Could it all be a bad dream?

  A tall, blond-haired young woman ran ahead of the others. She looked ethereal dressed in a semisheer white dress, angelic, her hair whipping behind her. “Daddy?”

  “Sissy!” Brownie wheezed when she leaned over him. He lay on his side, a giant bloodstain was growing fast across the back of his shirt, an ugly exit wound.

  Tears ran down the woman’s face as she stared at her father with shocked disbelief. She gaped at the blood on her fingertips when she touched him.

  “Baby … I just wanted to know … you were all right.” Brownie’s voice was faint.

  Sissy trembled, unsteady. She looked at her father and then around at the onlookers, seeming confused about where she was. Who she was.

  “Daddy, you’re ruining everything!” the young woman said. Her face and voice were flat with contempt. “Why didn’t you listen to me?” Blood bubbled from the wound in his chest.

  She didn’t notice. “You shouldn’t have come,” she said. Then turned and walked away.

  Twenty-one

  Threadville is wrapped in darkness. A fog bank obscures the town hall, with hazy tendrils floating a
cross storefronts like questing fingers. Kendra can’t remember how she got back to town. Where is Terry? How will she walk back alone in the dark?

  Half a block ahead, a lone figure stands in a reddish haze in the center of the road.

  “Terry?” she tries to call out, but her voice is a mosquito’s whine.

  And the figure doesn’t look like Terry. He—if indeed it is a he—is taller than Terry, and so thin he seems a scarecrow.

  Kendra stops walking.

  A drizzle begins, playing across her face. But when she wipes her cheek, she realizes it isn’t rain—confetti? A wisp of thin red thread nestles along her fingertip. Gently twirling threads tickle her cheeks. When she looks up, she sees threads falling as if she’s the sole marcher in a street parade.

  But she’s not the sole marcher, she remembers. It is waiting for her.

  The reddish haze haloing the figure brightens and fades, a heartbeat gaining strength. Come to me, Kendra, a voice says, filling the street, the air, even the ground beneath her feet. You’re ready now. Do not be afraid.

  Although Kendra has never been more afraid, she takes one step closer to the figure, sees its bald scalp glowing in its odd light.

  No, she realizes. She can’t go to this creature. If she does, everything will change. Something worse is waiting for all of them. Not just Freak Day, but something beyond Freak Day. Unimaginable.

  “Leave us alone!” Kendra tries to scream. “We don’t want you here!”

  Her pitiful voice barely carries into the air.

  The creature chuckles, impossibly loud.

  We’re already here, the voice hisses.

  Kendra woke, sitting up straight in bed with a gasp so strangled she expected to wake up underwater, drowning. But she was only in her bed.

  A dream, she assured herself. In her half-waking state, she remembered an earlier dream about freaks tearing down her walls, but this latest nightmare felt worse. All she remembered was a shadowy voice raking across her spine, so real she could almost feel her eardrums vibrating from the sound. Couldn’t she?

  A whine came from beside her bed, and Hipshot’s muzzle appeared. Kendra wrapped her arm around his neck.

  “I’m okay, boy,” she said. “I’m okay.” After she’d said it a half-dozen times, she finally believed it.

  She was at the motel. Safe.

  A figure was curled beside her on the bed, and she almost reached out to touch Terry when she remembered that she wasn’t in Terry’s room. She had decided to go bunk with the girls, to make sure Sonia found her way back. Ursalina was snoring in the next bed, so it was Sonia in bed beside her. The Con Goddess had made it home after all.

  Kendra gazed at the digital watch Terry had given her: four a.m. At least Sonia had made it safely back from her adventures with the Gold Shirts. She hadn’t disappeared into Wales’s mansion like the other missing girls. Yet.

  Kendra was about to rest her head on her pillow when she heard soft crying beside her. “Sonia?” Kendra said, touching her shoulder. “What happened?”

  Sonia’s only answer was a sob.

  December 23

  At dawn, they had their first Council since the quarantine house. Ursalina had hunted down Dean and Darius and brought them too, all of them crowded into the girls’ room. The sun wasn’t quite up, so they looked ghostly in the light from two fluorescent battery lamps.

  Terry felt nauseous from Sonia’s story. He’d asked her to keep her voice down a dozen times while she told them what she’d seen at the ranch. “Remember,” Terry reminded them again. “The walls are thin.”

  “You’re sure the guy’s dead?” Piranha said.

  “I know what dead looks like,” Sonia said.

  They looked at each other, trying to see what the others were thinking. Terry combed his hair away from his face slowly, his habit since he was a kid when he needed to think. His mind raced with possibilities, none of them good. He could feel Kendra staring at him, but he didn’t look at her.

  “Makes you wonder how often people get shot around here,” Terry said.

  Sonia sighed, wiping tears from her face. “Chris swore he’d never heard about anybody shot at the mansion,” she said.

  “Chris?” Piranha said pointedly.

  Silence chilled the room until Sonia went on, ignoring Piranha’s question. “He said there are shootings in town, but it’s the usual stuff—domestic disturbances, arguments. They have a Citizens Patrol and people get expelled. Never anything involving Wales.”

  “It involves Wales now,” Kendra said.

  Darius looked at Kendra. “We asked Jackie about Rianne, and yeah, she’s not happy about it. But she didn’t want to come to this meeting. Her advice: Don’t make waves.”

  “Did we invite her?” Sonia said. “Did we ask for her advice?”

  “A man is dead,” Kendra said.

  “Who isn’t dead these days?” Darius said.

  Ursalina moved to the front of the room. “I was just thinking the same thing as Darius.” She angled for lead position, so Terry stepped aside to make room for her. “So what if a couple of grown women are in there with Wales, or a drunk guy shows up at Wales’s gate? That’s our business? Why?”

  “They shot him, Ursalina,” Kendra said, angry.

  “I listened to Sonia’s story like my life depended on it,” Ursalina said. “She said a weapon-wielding man got shot when he tried to break through the gate. Are you kidding me? That’s way more courtesy than we got in my neighborhood. Don’t make him a martyr. Get the whole story.”

  Terry hated to admit it, but he wished he’d said it first. Were his feelings for Kendra muddling his thinking? Kendra’s eyes begged Terry to back her up, but Terry looked away. “Ursalina’s right,” he said. “Sonia saw a guy shot in front of her—that’s hard. But we don’t know enough to say what’s going on.” Kendra’s look was scathing, a look that said she would deal with him later. Or not.

  “I know you won’t believe me,” Kendra said, looking away from him. “But we need to find a way to leave here. This affects all of us. It’s not just about Brownie.”

  Terry sighed. He didn’t want to challenge Kendra, but what were his choices? “Kendra, I respect your instincts, you’re smart as hell, but all you’ve said is you have a feeling. That’s not enough to start talking about leaving the best place left in the whole world. And going back out there, where the world has gone to shit.” His voice shook at the end. Terry heard an imaginary gunshot, this one at close range. He nearly flinched.

  “I’m not going anywhere,” Ursalina said. “Punto.”

  “Me neither,” Piranha said. “I’ll push my luck getting rich as a scav. I’m through with running, hunted down by pirates and biters.”

  “And the Beauty’s gone,” Terry said. “I’d feel naked out there without her. Worst-case scenario, say one of us had been shot last night. What would we do now? Steal cars? Go on foot and leave most of the supplies? We’re stuck here—for now. So why don’t we concentrate on figuring out what happened?”

  “I’ll tell you what happened,” Sonia said. “I saw a man shot to death because he wanted to talk to his daughter. I thought I’d painted a clear picture.”

  Piranha turned to Sonia. “You said his own daughter said it was his fault.”

  The look Sonia gave Piranha made Kendra’s earlier glare seem tame. “Chuck, think about it: He’s her father. Her family. She’s not affected by that? The guy’s bleeding to death right there, and she practically cussed him out.”

  “Some of them have it coming, Sonia,” Terry said. He couldn’t help the poison in his voice. He hadn’t thought about his stepfather in a long time, but the rage was still fresh. “We don’t know that family. My neighbors never knew what was going on in my house. Once that door closes …” He shrugged.

  “She wasn’t acting normal,” Sonia said. “It was like she was brainwashed.”

  Ursalina laughed. “Now it’s brainwashing? Are you kidding?”

  “Use y
our imagination,” Kendra said. “Everybody’s in shock after the freaks, and this guy acts like he’s a god. You’ve never heard of Stockholm syndrome? Deprogramming? Wales was a crowd-pleaser before Freak Day. Now he’s got his own kingdom.”

  “Easy, Dr. Freud,” Ursalina said. “I’m still waiting for the reason I’m even having this conversation.”

  “Knock knock,” Dean said. It sounded like the setup of a joke, but he wasn’t smiling. They all went silent, waiting.

  “Who’s there?” Darius said.

  “I’m So Glad.”

  “I’m So Glad who?”

  “I’m So Glad nobody’s taken a bite out of me today.” Dean’s deadpan delivery couldn’t be called a punch line. He stared straight at Kendra with blank eyes.

  Ursalina sniggered, pounding Dean’s fist.

  “Anyway,” Darius said, “the general feeling over here? Ignorance is bliss.”

  “But you’re not ignorant,” Sonia said. “Did I tell you the way his daughter acted? She didn’t care at all. He was just roadkill. That’s just wrong.”

  “Spare me the morality lecture,” Darius said. “Maybe there’s more to the story?”

  “There always is,” Piranha said.

  “Could be some stupid politics that are none of our business,” Ursalina said. “Half of them want to worship the sun, the rest want to worship the moon. I don’t care. My only politics are food, a bed, and my rifle.”

  They thought they had it all figured out. Kendra looked as if she was about to hit someone or she might cry. The shooting sounded like a bad situation, but Kendra and Sonia wouldn’t win the others with emotion or moral outrage. What was worth giving up their belongings and risking everything to go back on the road?

  “If Terry had been the one who’d seen it, you’d take his word,” Sonia said.

  Terry groaned. This argument felt like a slowly breaking bone. When it was over, something would have changed between them all. “That’s not true,” Terry said.

  “Sure it’s true,” Sonia said. “All of you would. We’d be halfway to gone.”

  “You sound halfway to gone,” Piranha said. “What are you on, Sonia?”

  Sonia’s face snapped away from Piranha when he asked her; he’d struck a nerve. Terry had thought maybe he’d imagined it, but Sonia seemed a step behind her usual self, like part of her was sleepwalking. If she’d been out doing some kind of drugs with the Threadies, how could they trust her judgment?

 

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