The Complete Beast House Chronicles

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The Complete Beast House Chronicles Page 1

by Richard Laymon




  THE COMPLETE BEAST HOUSE CHRONICLES:

  The Cellar

  The Beast House

  The Midnight Tour

  Friday Night in Beast House

  Richard Laymon

  Copyright © 1980, 1986, 1998, 2007 Richard Laymon

  The right of Richard Laymon to be identified as the Author of the Work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

  Apart from any use permitted under UK copyright law, this publication may only be reproduced, stored, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means, with prior permission in writing of the publishers or, in the case of reprographic production, in accordance with the terms of licences issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency.

  First published as an Ebook in this omnibus edition by Headline Publishing Group in 2012

  All characters in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

  Cover photo © Sascha Burkard/Shutterstock

  Cataloguing in Publication Data is available from the British Library

  eISBN: 978 0 7553 5936 1

  HEADLINE PUBLISHING GROUP

  An Hachette UK Company

  Carmelite House

  50 Victoria Embankment

  London EC4Y 0DZ

  www.headline.co.uk

  www.hachette.co.uk

  Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  About the Author

  Praise for Richard Laymon

  Also by Richard Laymon

  The Cellar

  The Beast House

  The Midnight Tour

  Friday Night in Beast House

  Richard Laymon wrote over thirty novels and seventy short stories. In May 2001, The Travelling Vampire Show won the Bram Stoker Award for Best Horror Novel, a prize for which Laymon had previously been shortlisted with Flesh, Funland, A Good, Secret Place (Best Anthology) and A Writer’s Tale (Best Non-fiction). Laymon’s works include the books of the Beast House Chronicles: The Cellar, The Beast House, The Midnight Tour and Friday Night in Beast House. Some of his recent novels have been Night in the Lonesome October, No Sanctuary and Amara.

  A native of Chicago, Laymon attended Willamette University in Salem, Oregon, and took an MA in English Literature from Loyola University, Los Angeles. In 2000, he was elected President of the Horror Writers’ Association. He died in February 2001.

  Laymon’s fiction is published in the United Kingdom by Headline, and in the United States by Leisure Books and Cemetery Dance Publications.

  Praise for Richard Laymon:

  ‘This author knows how to sock it to the reader’ The Times

  ‘A brilliant writer’ Sunday Express

  ‘No one writes like Laymon and you’re going to have a good time with anything he writes’ Dean Koontz

  ‘In Laymon’s books, blood doesn’t so much as drip as explode, splatter and coagulate’ Independent

  ‘Stephen King without a conscience’ Dan Marlowe

  ‘Incapable of writing a disappointing book’ New York Review of Science Fiction

  ‘A gut-crunching writer’ Time Out

  ‘This is an author that does not pull his punches . . . A gripping, and at times genuinely shocking, read’ SFX Magazine

  Also by Richard Laymon and published by Headline

  The Beast House Chronicles:

  The Cellar

  The Beast House

  The Midnight Tour

  Friday Night in Beast House

  Beware!

  Dark Mountain

  The Woods are Dark

  Out are the Lights

  Night Show

  Allhallow’s Eve

  Flesh

  Resurrection Dreams

  Alarums

  Blood Games

  Endless Night

  Midnight’s Lair*

  Savage

  In The Dark

  Island

  Quake

  Body Rides

  Bite

  Fiends

  After Midnight

  Among the Missing

  Come Out Tonight

  The Travelling Vampire Show

  Dreadful Tales

  Night in the Lonesome October

  No Sanctuary

  Amara

  The Lake

  The Glory Bus

  Funland

  The Stake

  *previously published under the pseudonym of Richard Kelly

  THE CELLAR

  Richard Laymon

  Contents

  Title Page

  About the Book

  Dedication

  Prologue

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Epilogue

  The deeper the tourists go into the Beast House, the darker the nightmares become. But the worst part is beneath the haunted structure. Don’t even think about going into the cellar . . .

  To

  Clayton Matthews

  Prologue

  Jenson grabbed the radio mike. His thumb froze on the speak button. He looked again at the upstairs window of the old, Victorian house across the street, and saw only the sheen of the moon on the glass pane. He lowered the mike to his lap.

  Then a beam of light again flashed inside the dark house.

  He raised the mike to his mouth. He forced his thumb down on the button. ‘Jenson to headquarters.’

  ‘Headquarters, go ahead.’

  ‘We’ve got a prowler in Beast House.’

  ‘Ten-nine, Dan. What’s the matter with you? Speak up.’

  ‘I said we’ve got a prowler in Beast House!’

  ‘Jeezus! You’d better go in.’

  ‘Send me a back-up.’

  ‘Sweeny’s ten-seven.’

  ‘So phone him, for Christsake! He never eats anyplace but the Welcome Inn. Phone him.’

  ‘Just go in, Jenson.’

  ‘I’m not going inside that fucking place alone. You get Sweeny out here, or we can forget the whole thing.’

  ‘I’ll try to raise Sweeny. You stay put, and keep an eye on the place if you’re too yellow to go in. And watch your language on the airways, buddy.’

  ‘Ten-four.’

  Patrolman Dan Jenson put down his radio mike and looked at the distant upstairs window. He saw no sign of the flashlight. His eyes moved to other windows, to the hooded darkness of the balcony over the porch, to the windows of the room with the peaked roof, then back again.

  There, in the nearest window, the slim white beam of a flashlight made a quick curlicue and vanished. Jenson felt his skin shrivel as if spiders were scurrying up his back. He rolled up his window. With his elbow, he punched down the lock button of his door. The spiders didn’t go away.

  Inside the house, the boy was trying hard not to cry as his father pulled him by the arm from one dark room to the next.

  ‘See? Nothing here. Do
you see anything?’

  ‘No,’ the boy whimpered.

  ‘No ghost, no boogie man, no monster?’

  ‘No.’

  ‘All right.’

  ‘Can we go?’ the boy asked.

  ‘Not yet, young man. We haven’t seen the attic yet.’

  ‘She said it’s locked.’

  ‘We’ll get in.’

  ‘No. Please.’

  ‘The monster might be waiting for us in the attic, right? Now where was that?’ He pulled open a hall door and shined his flashlight inside. The beam illuminated an empty closet. Roughly, he pulled the boy behind him towards a door farther up the narrow corridor.

  ‘Dad, let’s go home.’

  ‘Afraid the beast will get you?’ The father laughed bitterly. ‘We’re not stepping outside this cruddy old house until you admit there is no beast. I won’t have a son of mine cowering and whimpering his way through life, jumping at shadows, afraid of the dark.’

  ‘There is a beast,’ the boy insisted.

  ‘Show it to me.’

  ‘The guide, she said . . .’

  ‘The guide handed us a load of bull. That’s her job. You’ve gotta learn to know bull when it smacks you in the face, young man. Monsters are bull. Ghosts and goblins and witches are bull. And so is the beast.’ He grabbed a knob, jerked open the door, and swung the beam of his flashlight inside. The staircase was a steep, narrow tunnel leading upward to a closed door.

  ‘Come on.’

  ‘No. Please, Dad.’

  ‘Don’t no me.’

  The boy tried to free his arm from his father’s grip, but couldn’t. He began to cry.

  ‘Stop blubbering, you little chicken.’

  ‘I want to go home.’

  The man shook him violently. ‘We-are-going-up-those-stairs. The sooner we get into the attic and look for this monster of yours, the sooner we’ll leave here. But not a minute earlier, do you hear me?’

  ‘Yes,’ the boy managed.

  ‘Okay. Let’s go.’

  At his father’s side, he started up the stairs. The wooden steps groaned and squeaked. The flashlight made a bright, small disc on each stair as they climbed. A halo surrounded the disc, dimly lighting their legs and the walls, and the next few stairs.

  ‘Dad!’

  ‘Quiet.’

  The disc of light swung up the stairway and made a spot on the attic door high above them.

  The boy wanted to sniff, but was afraid to make a sound. He let the warm fluid roll down to his upper lip, then licked it away. It tasted salty.

  ‘See,’ the father whispered. ‘We’re almost . . .’

  From above them came a sound like a sniffing dog.

  The man’s hand flinched, squeezing pain into his son’s arm. The boy took a single step backward, probing for the stair behind him as the attic door swung slowly open.

  The flashlight beam pushed through empty darkness beyond the door.

  A throaty laugh crept through the silence. It sounded to the boy like the laughter of a very old, dry man.

  But it wasn’t an old man who leapt through the doorway. As the flashlight dropped, its beam lit a snouted, hairless face.

  When the scream came, Dan Jenson knew he couldn’t wait for Sweeny. Pulling his 12-gauge Browning off its mount, he threw open the patrol-car door and leapt to the street. He dashed across it. The ticket booth was lighted by a streetlamp. The big wooden sign above it spelled ‘BEAST HOUSE’ in dripping letters meant to resemble blood.

  He shoved the turnstile. It held fast, so he vaulted it.

  More screams came from the house, screams of pain torn from a child.

  Sprinting up the walkway, Jenson took the porch steps two at a time. He tried the door. Locked. He pumped a cartridge into the shotgun chamber, aimed at the lock face, and pulled the trigger. The 00 shot slammed a hole through the door. He kicked. The door whipped back. He stepped into the foyer.

  From above came tearing sounds and breathless animal grunts.

  Enough moonlight poured through the front windows to show him the foot of the staircase. Grabbing the bannister post, he swung himself on to the stairs. Blackness swallowed him. With one hand on the railing to guide him, he climbed. At the top of the stairs, he stopped and listened. Grunting, snarling sounds came from the left.

  Cocking the shotgun, he jumped into the hallway and whirled to the right, ready to fire.

  All was dark except for a puddle of brightness spilling across the hall floor. It came from the end of a flashlight.

  Jenson wanted that flashlight. Needed it. But it lay far down the hall, close to the black centre of the quick, loud, gasping sounds.

  Shotgun pointed up the hallway, he dashed towards the flashlight, his shoes pounding echoes, his own sharp breaths masking the rasp of the other breathing. Then his foot came down on something round like a club, but soft. Maybe an arm. His other foot kicked a hard object, and he heard its teeth clash shut as he stumbled headlong into the darkness. The shotgun mashed his fingers against the floor.

  Stretching his right arm, he reached the flashlight. He swung its beam in the direction of the grunts.

  The creature loosed its teeth from the nape of the boy’s neck. It turned its head. The skin of its face was white and puffy like the belly of a dead fish. It seemed to smile. It writhed, freeing itself from the boy.

  Jenson dropped the flashlight and tried to raise the shotgun.

  He heard soft, dry laughter, and the beast took him.

  Chapter One

  1.

  Donna Hayes put down the telephone. She rubbed her trembling, wet hands on the covers, and sat up.

  She had known it would happen. She had expected it, planned for it, dreaded it. Now it was upon her. ‘I’m sorry to disturb you at this hour,’ he’d said, ‘but I knew you’d want to be informed immediately. Your husband was released. Yesterday morning. I just found out, myself . . .’

  For a long time, she stared into the darkness of her bedroom, unwilling to swing her feet down to the floor. Darkness began to fade from the room. She could wait no longer.

  The Sunday morning air was like cold water drenching her skin as she stood up. Shivering, she bundled herself into a robe. She stepped across the hallway. From the slow breathing inside the room, she knew that her twelve-year-old daughter still slept.

  She went to the edge of the bed. A small shoulder, covered with yellow flannel, protruded from the top of the covers. Donna cupped it in her hand and gently shook it. Rolling on to her back, the girl opened her eyes. Donna kissed her forehead. ‘Good morning,’ she said.

  The girl smiled. She brushed pale hair away from her eyes and stretched. ‘I was having a dream.’

  ‘Was it a good one?’

  The girl nodded seriously. ‘I had a horse that was white all over, and so big I had to stand on a kitchen chair to get on him.’

  ‘That sounds awfully big.’

  ‘It was a giant,’ she said. ‘How come you’re up so early?’

  ‘I thought you and I might just pack our bags, get in the Maverick, and take ourselves a vacation.’

  ‘A vacation?’

  ‘Yep.’

  ‘When?’

  ‘Right now.’

  ‘Wow!’

  It took nearly an hour to wash up, dress, and pack enough clothes for a week away from the apartment. As they carried their luggage down to the carport, Donna fought a strong urge to confide in Sandy, to let the girl know that she would never return, never spend another night in her room or another lazy afternoon at Sorrento Beach, never see her school friends again. With a sense of guilt, Donna kept quiet about it.

  Santa Monica was grey with its usual June morning overcast as Donna backed on to the road. She looked up and down the block. No sign of him. The prison authorities had left him at the San Rafael bus depot yesterday morning at eight. Plenty of time for him to arrive, look up her address, and come for her. But she saw no sign of him.

  ‘Which way do you want to go?’
she asked.

  ‘I don’t care.’

  ‘How about north?’

  ‘What’s north?’ Sandy asked.

  ‘It’s a direction – like south, east, west . . .’

  ‘Mom!’

  ‘Well, there’s San Francisco. We can see if they’ve painted the bridge right. There’s also Portland, Seattle, Juneau, Anchorage, the North Pole.’

  ‘Can we get there in a week?’

  ‘We can take longer, if we want.’

  ‘What about your job?’

  ‘Somebody else can do it while we’re gone.’

  ‘Okay. Let’s go north.’

  The Santa Monica Freeway was nearly deserted. So was the San Diego. The old Maverick did fine, cruising just over sixty. ‘Keep an eye out for Smokey,’ Donna said.

  Sandy nodded. ‘Ten-four, Big Mama.’

  ‘Watch that “Big” stuff.’

  Far below them, the San Fernando Valley was sunny. The smog’s yellow vapour, at this hour, was still a barely noticeable smudge hanging low over the land.

  ‘What can your handle be?’ asked Sandy.

  ‘How about “Mom”?’

  ‘That’s no fun.’

  They nosed down towards the valley, and Donna steered on to the Ventura Freeway. After a while, Sandy asked permission to change the radio station. She turned it to 93 KHJ and listened for an hour before Donna asked for an intermission, and turned the radio off.

  The highway generally followed the coast to Santa Barbara, then cut inland through a wooded pass with a tunnel.

  ‘I’m sure starving,’ Sandy said.

  ‘Okay, we’ll stop pretty soon.’

  They stopped at Denny’s near Santa Maria. They both ordered sausage and eggs. Donna sighed with pleasure as she took her day’s first drink of coffee. Sandy, with a glass of orange juice, mimicked her.

  ‘That bad?’ Donna asked.

  ‘How about “Coffee Mama”?’ Sandy suggested.

  ‘Make it “Java Mama,” and we’ve got a deal.’

  ‘Okay, you’re “Java Mama.”’

  ‘Who are you?’

  ‘You have to name me.’

  ‘How about “Sweetie-Pie”?’

  ‘Mom!’ Sandy looked disgusted.

  Knowing they would have to stop for gas within an hour’s driving, Donna allowed herself three cups of the dark hot coffee with breakfast.

 

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