The Midnight Tour

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The Midnight Tour Page 11

by Richard Laymon


  “What are you, some kind of big time criminal?”

  Lib let out a laugh, then snorted. “Dat’s a good one. Bill ‘n me, big time. Bonnie ‘n Clyde. Dat’s us. Know what? Bill was nuttin’ but a chicken-shit bully wit da brain ob a worm.”

  “Was he your husband?”

  “Haw!”

  “Guess not.”

  “Wortless puck.”

  Sandy slowed down as she approached her turn-off. The road ahead looked empty. In the rearview, she saw only darkness and bits of moonlight. She swung onto the dirt tracks and powered her way up the hillside. Bushes squeaked against the sides of the car, scraped against its undercarriage.

  “Ya lib up here?”

  “Yeah. Me and my kid.”

  “How old’s yer kid?”

  “Six months.”

  “A baby.”

  “Yeah.”

  “Boy ‘r girl?”

  “Aw. Dat’s nice, real nice. But ya don’ gotta man?”

  “Just him.”

  “Bastard knock ya up ‘n run off?”

  “Knocked me up and got killed.”

  “Aw.”

  “Yeah.”

  “Did ya lub him?”

  “Yeah.”

  “Shit.”

  “Yeah.”

  “Lipe’s a bitch, den ya die.”

  “That’s what they say. Sort of.”

  Lib laughed. Then she reached over and patted Sandy’s leg.

  “Yer a good kid, Charly.”

  “Thanks.”

  As she drove over the crest of the slope, the car’s single headlight swept down from high in the trees and stretched across the clearing to her trailer.

  “That’s home,” Sandy said. “Should we hitch it up to your car and get out of here?”

  “We can try. Ya know how?”

  “Sure. My friend Agnes and I pulled it up here with her pickup truck. I helped her do the whole thing.”

  “Done it myselp a pew times,” Lib said. “Use to hab me a peller wid a boat. Course now, there’s dipprent kinds a hitches.”

  “I hope these’ll match,” Sandy said. “If they don’t, I guess we’ll . have to try Agnes.” She turned the car around, then backed it slowly toward the front of the trailer. “After it’s hooked up, we can go inside and get cleaned up and stuff before we take off.”

  “Good deal.”

  Sandy climbed out, leaving the engine running and the lights on. Lib met her behind the car.

  “They look like they’ll go together, don’t they?”

  “Reckon,” Lib said. “Hey, ya got any beer? My mout’s all busted up dis way. I could sure use me a cold beer. I tink it’d peel mighty good.”

  “I don’t have beer, but I’ve got a bottle of bourbon.”

  “Dat’d do. Me, I’ll get started hookin’ up dis shit. You go ‘n pine us dat bottle.”

  “Okay, sure.”

  Sandy hurried around to the side of her trailer, rushed up the wobbly stairs and opened the door. She stepped inside.

  She glanced around. Everything looked fine. The bottle of bourbon still stood open on the counter of the kitchen area. She grabbed it, started toward the door, then changed her mind and went on to Eric’s room.

  She rolled the bedroom door open a few inches.

  Standing motionless, she heard the slow, steady hiss of his breathing. A tightness inside her seemed to loosen and a coldness seemed to grow warm.

  He’s all right. He’s fine. Fast asleep.

  She quietry rolled the door shut, then crept away.

  Outside, she found Lib bending over the trailer hitch.

  “Can I give you a hand with that?” she asked.

  “Already got it. Just hang on hap a minute, an’ we’ll be all set. Ya got da booze?”

  “I’ve got it.”

  “Dare!” Lib stood up straight. Rubbing her hands on the front of her jeans, she came over to Sandy. She took the bottle, raised it to her lips, and filled her mouth with the bourbon. When her cheeks were bulging, she lowered the bottle. Sandy heard air hissing in and out her nostrils. Then came sloshing sounds. Lib’s cheeks sank in, ballooned, fluttered. She seemed to be working the bourbon around her teeth and gums as if it were mouthwash. After a while, she stopped swishing and started to swallow. Finally, she opened her mouth and sighed.

  “Ohhhh, Charly, dat’s a mighty pine drink. Takes da pain right outa my teet.”

  “You got some knocked out, I guess.”

  “Bill’s old head come bustin’ right in. I reckon it took out a whole passel of teet, top ‘n bottom—eight or ten ob ‘em. An’ I got all dese bleedin’ holes in my puckfn’ gums. But de booze sorta numbs ’em por me. Damn good stuff.”

  She filled her mouth again until her cheeks were bloated, shut her eyes and sighed through·her nose, then sloshed the bourbon all around for a while before swallowing.

  “Yer a mighty pine girl, Charly.”

  “Well, I’m glad the booze helps.”

  “I’m gonna hap to buy me some new teet.”

  “Yeah. There’s a lot of stuff we’ll need to do after we get out of ere. Are we all hitched up, now?”

  “Yep.”

  “Why don’t we go inside and get cleaned up? I’ll have to unhook us from the tanks, but that oughta be the last thing before we take off. Do you have any clean clothes to wear? I’ve got some in the trailer, but they’d probably be a tight fit on you.”

  “Da trunk,” Lib said, and filled her mouth again.

  Sandy went to the driver’s door of the car. Leaning in, she shut off the lights and engine, then pulled out the ignition key. She hurried to the trunk.

  While she unlocked it, Lib sloshed bourbon.

  Sandy raised the lid. Inside the trunk, she saw only darkness.

  She heard Lib gulping.

  Then Lib said, “Just reach on in.”

  She reached into the trunk. She wasn’t sure what she expected to touch—suitcases, maybe. Instead of luggage, however, her hands met soft piles of fabric.

  “Just grab me out sometin’,” Lib said. “Help yerselp, too. Ya look like ya might be a little low in da duds department.”

  “Thanks. I’ve got stuff to wear, but I’d have to track through a lot of blood to get to them.”

  “Take whatcha want.”

  Sandy lifted garments out of the trunk and held them high so she could see them in the moonlight. She put back a couple of dresses, a sport jacket, a pair of slacks, and an evening gown before settling on a two tops that appeared to be shirts or blouses.

  “These okay?” she asked.

  “Sure. Whatebber.”

  Sandy shut the trunk. “Let’s go inside and clean up before we put them on.”

  Lib nodded, then filled her mouth again.

  Sandy led the way. As she climbed the stairs, she warned, “Watch out you don’t fall on the way up. This thing’s kind of shaky.”

  At the top, she entered the trailer.

  And saw what she was carrying. The twin, short-sleeved blouses looked as if they were made of red silk. They gleamed in the lamp-light. They looked enormous. Stitched in swirling gold letters on the back of each were the words, Blazing Babes.

  Lib stepped into the trailer.

  Sandy turned around to face her. “Blazing Babes?”

  Lib grinned. Though her puffy lips were shut, some bourbon dribbled out. She shrugged. She swallowed. After wiping off her lips and chin, she said, “Me and Bill, we piggered it was maybe like a girl’s soccer team or bowlin’ team or sometin’.”

  “They aren’t yours?”

  “Sure dey are. Didn’t used to be, but dey are now.”

  “They’re stolen?”

  “Hey, sugar, damn near everyting I got’s stolen. I’m a teep. Been a teep all my lipe. Dat okay?”

  “I don’t know. Are you going to steal from me?”

  “No! What kinda lowlipe you tink I am? Yer my pard, aren’t ya?”

  “I guess so. But if we’re going to travel to
gether, you’ve gotta promise not to get us into trouble. I mean, we’ve both killed guys tonight. We need to disappear quietly. We can’t go around stealing things.”

  “Sure. I get it.”

  “No more crimes.”

  “Whatebber.” She raised her eyebrows. “So, pretty nipty blouses, huh?”

  Sandy smirked. “Real nifty. Let’s wash up and get them on. This way.” She led Lib to the bathroom and turned on its light.

  “You cart go ahead and use this. I’ll get cleaned up in the kitchen.”

  She draped one of the red blouses on a hook just inside the doorway for Lib, then stepped out into the hall.

  “Be done in a jip,” Lib said. She raised the bottle toward Sandy. “How ‘bout a sip?”

  “No thanks.”

  “Last call.”

  “You go ahead and finish it.”

  “Know what you are? A princess, dat’s what. A real puckin’ princess.”

  Sandy laughed and shook her head. “‘That’s me,” she said, then stepped away from the bathroom door. As she headed for her kitchen area, the shower started to run.

  She tossed the other Blazing Babes blouse onto the kitchen counter, stepped to the sink and turned on the hot water. She took a clean dishwashing cloth out of the drawer.

  Without a mirror, she couldn’t see how her face looked.

  She assumed it must be a mess, though. Because, looking down, she could see her shoulders and arms and breasts and belly: they were filthy and scratched and even smeared with blood, here and there. Her shorts were dirty in front. Her legs had taken the same kind of punishment as her torso.

  I probably need a shower worse than Lib does.

  “What she needs,” Sandy whispered, “is a puckin’ dentist.”

  Laughing softly, she soaked her cloth with hot water. Then she bent over the sink and started to wash her face.

  She supposed she ought to use soap.

  Soap seemed like too much bother.

  This’ll be fine.

  The hot, sodden rag felt very good on her face. Water spilled down her neck and chest. She leaned against the edge of the sink, hoping to keep her shorts from getting wet. But when she started mopping her breasts, so much water sluiced down her belly that she knew it was hopeless. She tried to stop some of it with the rag. Too much got by, so she tucked the rag under her chin, took a step backward and reached for her belt, figuring to get out of the shorts before they became completely drenched.

  Should’ve taken them off in the first...

  Someone screamed.

  Sandy’s heart slammed. Her hands jumped away from her belt.

  She whirled around and ran for the bathroom, the dish cloth sliding down from under her chin, clinging to her chest, falling down between her breasts.

  She shoved a hand into the right front pocket of her shorts.

  She pulled out the small revolver from Slade’s glove compartment.

  And wondered if it was loaded.

  Sure it is. Has to be.

  And it had to be Lib screaming. Who else could it be?

  But why? .

  Slade on the move, not really dead?

  Nobody in the hallway.

  Through the roaring in her own head, Sandy realized that the scream had stopped.

  She lurched to a halt at the bathroom’s open door.

  The wet cloth unpeeled itself from her belly, tumbled, brushed her left thigh and fell to the floor.

  The shower curtain was shut. She couldn’t see through it. So she raced across the floor and threw it wide open.

  Lib was standing in the shower stall, feet wide apart, knees bent, clutching Eric with both hands as if she’d braced herself and caught him in mid-leap.

  She was breathing hard.

  Water still sprayed from the shower nozzle.

  Lib’s naked body was smudged with bruises. Bruises the size of a fist. The size of an open hand. The size of a knee. Others the size of a bite, a pinch. Brown ones, purple ones, green ones, yellow ones.

  She’d been beaten up plenty, over a long period of time.

  Tonight must’ve been once too often.

  Eyes fixed on Eric, she didn’t look at Sandy.

  After a while, she drew Eric in against her chest. As she cradled him, her eyes met Sandy’s. “What is he?” she asked, her voice soft.

  “My kld.”

  “Yer pet?”

  “My baby. I’m his mother.”

  “No poolin’?”

  “No fooling.”

  “Well, I’ll be.” Shaking her head, Lib gently stroked Eric’s back. “Sorry. I screamed like dat. Da little shit scampered in, ya know, and scared da hell outa me.”

  Nodding, Sandy lowered the revolver. “Don’t call him a little shit,” she said.

  “What’s his name?”

  “Eric.”

  “Hiya, Eric. I’m Lib. Dat’s short for Libby.” To Sandy, she said, “Can he talk?”

  “No.”

  “He’s sure an ugly little pucker. What’d his dad look like?”

  The same as him. And he isn’t ugly.”

  “Cute-ugly.”

  “That’s better.”

  “Is he human?”

  “Sort of.”

  “Looks like he’s part sometin’ else. Like a bald monkey, or da creature prum da Black Lagoon or sometin’. But cute. Cute as a button.” To Eric, she said in baby talk, “Yes, you are.”

  Then she kissed his forehead.

  “You can’t tell anyone about him,” Sandy said. “He’s my secret. And now he’s your secret. He’s the last of his kind—at least I think . he is—rand they’ll kill him if they ever find him.”

  “Who? Who’d wanta kill him?”

  “Damn near everyone. To them, he’s a monster. A beast.”

  Lib’s eyes widened. “Is he one ob dem Beast House beasts?”

  “His father was.”

  “Holy smokin’ Jesus. Ya tellin’ me dey’re real? I always piggered dey was made up. Like Martians, ya know? Or werewoops or sometin’.”

  “They’re real. You’re holding one.”

  Shaking her head slowly, Lib eased Eric away and lifted him in front of her face. “Look at ya,” she said to him in a gentle, lilting voice. “Just look at ya. Wowy, wowy. I sure wish I’d known yer old man.”

  “Do you promise not to tell on us?” Sandy asked.

  “Sure. Cross my heart an’ hope to die.”

  “If you tell, you will die. I’ll see to it.”

  “We’ll be a pamily, da tree ob us.”

  Pocketing the revolver, Sandy stepped over to the shower stall. She reached out for Eric. Lib passed the child gently into her hands. “See ya later, baby,” she said.

  Sandy saw tears in the woman’s eyes.

  “Are you all right?”

  “Nebber had me no pamily bepore.”

  Feeling a tightness in her throat, Sandy smiled at Lib and said, “I don’t know if we’re quite a family yet, but I reckon we’re partners.”

  “Pards.” Lib sniffed, then reached out and squeezed Sandy’s shoulder. “Pards to da end.”

  Chapter Ten

  THE DAY TOUR II

  After the brilliant sunlight, the gloom inside Beast House made Owen feel as if he’d stepped into a dark closet. He took off his sunglasses. That helped.

  “Good morning,” said a guide who was waiting inside the doorway. The nameplate on the front of her tan shirt read SHARON. Blonde, blue-eyed, slender and deeply tanned, she was the best-looking guide so far. “Station Number Two is just inside the parlor there, but feel free to wander anywhere.”

  “Thanks,” Owen said.

  As they crossed the foyer, he noticed people starting up the stairway and others wandering into a narrow corridor beside the stairs. A couple came out of the parlor. He recognized them from the group in front of the porch. He thought they’d been on the bus, too, but wasn’t sure. They didn’t act as if they recognized him or Monica.

  Which didn’t s
urprise him.

  Put a set of earphones on someone, he’d noticed, and the rest of the world pretty much disappears. Everything goes away except the sounds inside the person’s head.

  In the parlor, Owen found half a dozen people standing near a plush red cordon, gazing at the body on the floor. He couldn’t find a sign to confirm that this was the second station of the tour; maybe someone was standing in front of it. But Janice on the tape and Sharon had directed them here. Also, some of the tourists looked like those who’d been gathered near the porch stairs.

  Monica didn’t seem to be in doubt. She thumbed her cassette player into action. Owen went ahead and turned his on.

  “Welcome to Station Two,” said Janice’s voice. “You should be in the parlor, where Ethel Hughes was the first to die on the night of August 2, 1903. That’s her body, stretched out on the floor beside the couch.”

  Owen stared at the wax figure. It was sprawled on the floor, one leg up, its foot still resting on the seat cushion of the couch. There was terror on Ethel’s face. She looked as if she’d died in the midst of a scream. Her white gown was bloodstained and shredded. Its tatters hung down her body, showing skin that had been savagely torn by claws and teeth.

  Owen was surprised by the near nudity of the figure. The way the gown was ripped, Ethel’s breasts were bare except for the nipples. Her hips and legs were exposed. Only a few dangling strips of white cloth saved her from being completely naked below her waist.

  “Ethel was the sister of Lilly Thorn.” Owen heard Janice saying through his earphones. “She actually lived in Portland, Oregon.

  “Earlier that summer, Lilly had sent her children away to stay with Ethel, so that she could be alone in the house. She’d apparently wanted privacy in order to indulge in certain adult behaviors that are beyond the scope of our tour.”

  After a brief pause, Janice’s voice continued. “On about June 29, Ethel returned to the Thorn house with Lilly’s two children. She then stayed on, possibly planning to attend Lilly’s wedding to the local doctor. Here’s Maggie to tell you about it.

  “‘Ethel Hughes, Lilly’s sister, was in this very room on the night of August the second, 1903. She’d come down for Lilly’s wedding, which would’ve been the next week if tragedy hadn’t suddenly struck down their plans. Tragedy being the beast. Nobody knows how it got into the house, or where it come from. But it snuck up behind the couch and took Ethel unawares while she was busy reading her Saturday Evening Post. It jumped her and ripped her up till she looked just like you see her—all torn and dead.”

 

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