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Where Darkness Dwells

Page 11

by Glen Krisch


  The large cavern, which Ethan considered their town square, was lit with bonfires and oil lamps. Although on a smaller scale, the Underground resembled a town. People offered goods and services, albeit without a single token of currency exchanged. Money was useless in the Underground. Everyone shared in a communal subsistence. At the first hint of capitalistic behavior, Ethan would crush those individuals responsible.

  Clusters of people, both men and women, were quietly talking or playing cards. The majority were imbibing from their network of hooch stills in order to maintain the steady drunk that allowed them to remain halfway sane in their claustrophobic existence.

  "They've done it again." Thea pointed out the blood splatters along the floor leading to the pit.

  "Something must bind everyone who comes here" he said, looking away from the splatters. Only Thea could illicit such a guilty look from him.

  Thea stopped, crossing her arms. "Did you force me to fuck that poor girl?" She tapped her foot in the sticky redness for effect.

  "No, of course not."

  "Would you have thrown me into the pit when I refused?"

  "Thea, please. Not now."

  "It's disgusting."

  "Humans are disgusting." Ethan tried to hold her hand, but she shrugged him away.

  "You can stop this."

  "I said, not now, Thea." The look in his eye made Thea relent. She didn't take his hand as he wanted, but continued to walk by his side.

  His jaw clenched, Ethan begged off the constant approach of people wanting his private ear, or those who wanted to say hello and good day. His hand, now not so much rotting meat as warm flesh and soft skin, took hold of Thea's arm and rushed them through the rabble.

  Ethan Cartwright's accommodations were by far the most extravagant in the Underground. His quarters extended far into the hills and the dimensions would measure mansion-like above ground. He had a library, three bedrooms, a dining hall, and within the privacy of his two bathrooms, he had had flushable toilets installed. At the center of his expansive living room, a slow flow of water trickled into a man-made pond. He swam laps under candlelight almost everyday.

  "I'm sorry about what I said. It's just… you have such command of your people. If you just told them to end it." She pressed a hand against the still-healing muscles of his chest.

  "What am I to do, Thea? What can I do to change their lot?"

  "It's boredom. That's all. That's why they throw people to the pit. That's why they drink hour after hour. They're bored and they have nothing to do."

  "Again, I say, what am I to do?"

  She said nothing, but ran her fingers through the fresh blond hair sprouting at his temples. She had no response because there was no cure for the depravity of the Underground. Could there be a more reasonable damnation? She had her reasons for coming here. Her skin became more taut and smoother upon her visits. Her hair more luxurious. When she looked in the mirror, she saw herself as young as the day she left for California.

  After almost three years toiling in Hollywood, Thea reached her breaking point. A hack British director named Paul Hamilton-Hart attempted to convince her that a prominent speaking role in an upcoming movie was hers to have, if she could only find a way to persuade him into hiring her. It was a sign. Not a sign, but the sign. Directors reached for the casting couch card when an actress began showing her age. It was a sure way to sully her as she exited town, a worn hag lugging a battered suitcase.

  Thea didn't consent. She had more self-worth than to demean herself to that level. She returned home jaded, weeping in her father's arms when she first saw him. He never voiced a single question about her stay in California, though she saw the words niggling at him. He didn't want to know. He was just happy to see her home and safe.

  As Thea tried to get on with her life, working in her father's store, her mind would often drift to stories from her childhood. Tales of passages leading to an ageless respite. A place where time held no meaning. It took her several months to stumble across the access tunnel in the icehouse. When she found it, she felt foolish for having lived her entire life without knowing the Underground existed right below her feet. As she worked her way through the tunnels that first time, a group of watchmen captured her. They were on the verge of throwing her into the pit when Ethan stayed her execution. He took her into his life, and she accepted her role in his, even if at first her skin crawled at his touch.

  Her attraction for him had grown since that day he saved her life. He hadn't pressured her as the Hollywood directors had. He always acted a gentleman; it was she who had to convince him to consummate their relationship. Ethan wasn't attractive in any standard sense of the word. But power transformed. It made the lame appear cunning, while the ugly became unique. It took her a long time to trust him. He could be quick-tempered and ruthless with his followers, but just as quickly he could surprise her with his tenderness. He was a man, and she had never met a man outside of her father who could be trusted, but over time, she had let her guard down around him.

  "I want you to live with me. Don't return aboveground. Never leave this place," Ethan said. His lips met hers, and this time, she didn't hesitate. She returned the pressure of his lips in equal measure, holding him in her arms. She broke the embrace at just the right moment, when she had his full attention.

  She paused, looking at this man who appeared to be not much older than herself, but who was in actuality the father of the oldest living person within Coal Hollow's town limits. His skin was so white the blue veins at his temples seemed to shift just below the surface--baby nightcrawlers floating in buttermilk. His eyes were pink with bloodshot.

  A jagged purple scar started at his collarbone and terminated just above his groin. He never spoke of the wound other than to say he received it while fighting for the Army during the Second Seminole War. Sometimes he would cry out in his sleep. Thea would never try to wake him from his nightmare; instead, listening intently, she would try to learn more of her benefactor from the gibberish spilled from his dreaming mind. His dreams would reveal little, just snippets of barked orders, and distressing cries for mercy. He was a pitiful sight, thrashing in his sheets, batting away some unseen aggressor with his fists.

  Though he convalesced long ago, the scar remained, so embedded in his flesh that even the powers of the Underground would never completely heal him.

  She realized she hadn't responded; she had been staring off into the flame of an oil lamp. She looked up, Ethan waiting on her answer. "I can't do that."

  "But I can't live without you. Just stay with me, Thea. It's what I want."

  She ran her fingers through his hair. No one else would dare defy him. And she could, to an extent. "It's what I want, too. In time; we must be patient. You need me above. You need me to hear things, and I can't do that here."

  Ethan looked at her with unguarded longing. He caressed her cheek. Judging his defeated expression, he knew she was right. "Okay. Until things die down. Until all of this business about those damn fool boys dies down."

  Thea felt the warmth through Ethan's touch, and wondered for the thousandth time how such a place as the Underground could exist. A place where life and death were such flighty concepts.

  Her mother's oft-spoken words caught her off guard:

  Love makes you old, love blinds you and bends your will…

  She kissed Ethan once more, and then left him standing by the doorway. She gave him a long-lashed wink as she crawled onto the bed. Ethan's hands were at his sides, fingers twitching, expectant. He looked so lost right now, a little boy. There was still something human looking back at her. She didn't want to admit her feelings were deepening. Becoming more than just convenience. Becoming real.

  Love makes you old, love blinds you and bends your will, her mother would say, but sometimes… sometimes that's okay.

  With deliberate slowness, she started to disrobe. She could do this now; feel comfortable with this, with Ethan. She opened her blouse and let it fall from her should
ers. She watched his eyes pan across breasts that would never sag, her slim hips and toned legs.

  "I'll make certain no one will come to know this place." Ethan joined Thea in bed. "Then, I won't ever let you leave me."

  Candlelight danced on his bleached-white skin as he kissed her neck. She ran her hands along his sides, then around to his shoulders, pulling him close. His skin should have decayed long ago, yet he gave off a heat that would one day consume her.

  4.

  Jacob shifted the pick-up into a lower gear, the engine grinding like a wounded animal. It lurched forward, smoothing out as they left the driveway, heading north. His mom didn't flinch when the truck caromed through an unforgiving pothole. Jimmy had taught his little brother how to drive a few years prior, thinking that another driver would come in handy around the farm. It had gotten to the point that his mom would head for the passenger side whenever they went for a drive. In his mom's eyes, he was becoming a man. Without Jimmy, she would still see him barely out of diapers.

  Ellie sat between them, gripping her rag doll. His mom was scanning the road, the fields, anything within eyesight, searching for Jimmy.

  The Bradshaws lived off a nameless dirt road a mile north of where Teetering Road forked from Main Street and downtown. If there was an upper crust in Coal Hollow society, the Bradshaws sat atop that crust. Louise's grandfather had been on the board of the Grendal Coal Company, and the money amassed in that capacity had stayed within Coal Hollow Township upon his retirement when the company moved away. Years ago they had allowed their surrounding fifty acres sprout to forest. Instead of a typical farmhouse, her grandfather had built a sprawling three-story Victorian, complete with intricately styled veranda and a steepled turret. Jacob thought the house looked more like a castle, totally out of place nestled in the woods growing from the unending prairie.

  "You stay here with Ellie," his mom said when he made the slight left turn into the driveway. They passed through ornate iron gates and followed the tree-lined drive to the house.

  "Mom--" he said, not sure how to argue his case. He wanted to hear the conversation with Louise, but he understood it would be easier to gather information if he wasn't around.

  "Were you going to say something?" Her eyes narrowed.

  "No. No ma'am."

  "I didn't think so. This is important, Jacob. Louise might have information on Jimmy's whereabouts."

  "Okay."

  He slowed the truck to a stop, the creaky brakes whining the whole way. If the Bradshaws hadn't seen the truck pull up the drive, they would've heard it approach.

  "Wish me luck," his mom said as she left the truck.

  His mom knocked on the door. When Mrs. Bradshaw opened the door, she paused as if unsure as to what to do. After an unbearable moment, she gave his mom a stiff hug. While not as poor as the Fowlers, Jacob's family had never gotten along well with the Bradshaws, well, except for Jimmy, he supposed. His brother got on real well with Louise, probably too well after reading his journal.

  His mom looked back at the truck before following Mrs. Bradshaw inside. Checking the house for movement, he saw people through a shear curtained window.

  "What's Louise gonna know?" Ellie asked quietly. Her feet rested on the hump in the middle of the cab floor. Jacob had almost forgotten about her.

  "She might know where Jimmy is." He kept his eyes on the window, hoping to see his mom or Louise. The Bradshaws were strict parents; he knew this from Jimmy's grumbling after coming home from visiting Louise. Her parents permitted them to meet on their porch. They would allow them to sit on the porch swing, but would often show up with cookies or glasses of sun tea. Her parents wouldn't let Louise get into the truck with Jimmy, and wouldn't even permit them to meet in town. Obviously, they had worked hard to get around her parents' rules.

  "She don't know a thing. Jimmy came to our house, and he'n George went out alone."

  "Louise might know something from earlier. We think he might've run off to the army."

  "How could he run off if he came to our house? They both went missing at the same time."

  "You don't know for sure if Jimmy came to your house. Do you?"

  "No, I was asleep until Georgie took the gun from the wall."

  Jacob looked away from the window and into Ellie's wide and watery eyes. When he had discovered Jimmy's journal, it seemed like the answer to their prayers. He hadn't taken the time to analyze the possibilities. Now, sitting with Ellie, he knew his mom was wasting her time. Even if Ellie was asleep until George woke her when he picked up the gun, it made no sense that Jimmy wouldn't be there.

  "You know, whatever got Georgie, it got Jimmy, too."

  Ellie's words cut to the bone. Jimmy wasn't safe and on his way to some boot camp. At best he was missing, at worst, dead. Jacob told his mom he would stay in the truck, but he had to hear what they were talking about. He just had to.

  "You wait here." Jacob opened the door, hopped down, then eased it closed, not wanting to make any noise. He slinked up the dirt drive and then up the veranda steps. He got even lower, keeping under eyesight from the windows. The gauzy curtains blew in the slight breeze just above his head. He looked back to see Ellie gripping the edge of the truck's window, her watery eyes blinking with surprise.

  Jacob heard his mom's voice through the open window.

  "How old are you Louise?" his mom asked.

  He couldn't hear the girl's response.

  "Seventeen? That's old enough. I was fifteen when I married. Had Jimmy before I was your age. It's tough, but there's worse things in the world."

  "Mrs. Fowler--" a man's voice said. Jacob assumed it was Mr. Bradshaw.

  "I don't know what you're trying to get at. I know you must be a nervous wreck with Jimmy missing. I just don't know what you expect from my daughter."

  "I just want to know if she thinks Jimmy ran off."

  "Ran off?" Mr. Bradshaw asked.

  "I have reason to believe Jimmy enlisted in the army."

  "You think Louise might know something about this?"

  "Why, yes."

  "Our children might have courted, Mrs. Fowler, but they're still children. They talked socially, sure, but with supervision. I would never allow--"

  "Dad?"

  "Louise?" Her father sounded shocked at his daughter's interruption.

  The girl spoke so softly Jacob could barely hear. "Mrs. Fowler, I… I think he did. He was saying something--the last time he was over for tea--he said he might enlist." Her voice periodically broke with emotion. "He said he wanted to get away from Coal Hollow. Said there was no future in such a small town."

  "Fine. Mrs. Fowler, you have your answer. I'm sorry for you and your family. I hope you hear from Jimmy soon. I wouldn't have permitted Louise to associate with him unless I thought he was reputable."

  "Okay, Mr. Bradshaw, I'll let you get back to your family." Her voice was strained and on edge. Jacob was surprised she'd given up so easily.

  Jacob heard bustling as people rose from their chairs. He scurried back to the truck. Ellie had the driver's side door open and waiting for him. His mom exited the house, Mrs. Bradshaw watching her leave from the open door, her fingers fretting about the lace bodice of her dress.

  "Ellie--"

  "Don't worry, I won't say nothing." Her lips twisted at a sly angle. "Tell me about it later."

  With a sigh, his mom hopped into the cab. "That man doesn't know a thing."

  "Mr. Bradshaw?" Jacob asked.

  "He doesn't think his daughter could have a sinful thought in her head. He had no idea what I was talking about, and her mother, well, she just stood back and stared at me like I was speaking French."

  "Did Louise say anything?"

  "No, not really, but she didn't have to open her mouth. I could see it in her face. She's going to have Jimmy's baby. I'm just wondering how long it'll take for her parents to notice."

  "And Jimmy?"

  "It's just like I suspected. As soon as adulthood stares him in the face
, he runs off. Sheriff Bergman's looking into the Peoria enlistment office for me. If he doesn't get back to me soon, I'm going to go out there myself."

  Jacob was about to repeat what Ellie had mentioned, but his mom's expression stopped him short. She didn't look happy, but seemed somewhat relieved. He didn't want to hurt her or ruin what little hope she had. There wasn't much sense to Jimmy running off, even if Louise was pregnant. He had gone off somewhere with Ellie's brother, somewhere where they needed to tote around her father's over/under. Now, George was dead, Jimmy was missing. Jacob still had no answers.

  5.

  By Cooper's second day working for Henry Calder, he was relaxing to the routines of the store. For the most part, he knew where everything was kept and the job itself wasn't demanding. He could help a customer find an item, or track down a mop to clean up a mess. Only sharing his workplace with a corpse prevented him from relaxing completely. Each time he filled a wooden tote with stock to bring upstairs or when he had to cut a hunk of ice, he would make sure the folds of burlap hadn't shifted, that George Banyon was really and surely dead. Every time, at least to his own eyes, the burlap hadn't moved. Even so, it didn't get any easier.

  After showing Cooper around the day before, Henry Calder had checked in on Cooper a couple times today, just to see if the place was still running and in one piece. Midmorning he had told him what a nice job he was doing, and then retreated to his study to smoke his pipe. He was surprised how quickly Calder handed over so much responsibility, but he wouldn't question his motives as long as it limited his time in the icehouse. From what Cooper could see, Thea wasn't much of a help to her father--he had seen her only briefly since he started--so Henry probably relished the idea of someone else making sure things ran smoothly.

  Cooper was chasing cobwebs near the ceiling with a rag-topped broomstick. The jangling bells above the door made him turn with a start. The sun was hot, intensifying through the newly cleaned windows. A thin sheen of sweat coated his face.

 

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