Jack: Secret Histories
Page 1
ALSO BY F. PAUL WILSON
REPAIRMAN JACK
The Tomb
Legacies
Conspiracies
All the Rage
Hosts
The Haunted Air
Gateways
Crisscross
Infernal
Harbingers
Bloodline
THE ADVERSARY CYCLE
The Keep
The Tomb
The Touch
Reborn
Reprisal
Nightworld
SHORT FICTION
Soft and Others
The Barrens and Others
The Peabody-Ozymandias
Traveling Circus & Oddity Emporium
OTHER NOVELS
Healer
Wheels Within Wheels
An Enemy of the State
Black Wind
Dydeetown World
The Tery
The Select
Virgin
Implant
Deep as the Marrow
Mirage (with Matthew J. Costello)
Nightkill (with Steven Spruill)
Masque (with Matthew J. Costello)
The Christmas Thingy
Sims
The Fifth Harmonic
Midnight Mass
EDITOR
Freak Show
Diagnosis: Terminal
SECRET HISTORIES
F. PAUL WILSON
A TOM DOHERTY ASSOCIATES BOOK
NEW YORK
This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, organizations, and events portrayed in this novel are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.
JACK: SECRET HISTORIES
Copyright © 2008 by F. Paul Wilson
All rights reserved.
A Tor Teen Book
Published by Tom Doherty Associates, LLC
175 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10010
www.tor-forge.com
Tor® is a registered trademark of Tom Doherty Associates, LLC.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Wilson, F. Paul (Francis Paul)
Jack : secret histories / F. Paul Wilson.—1st ed.
p. cm.
“A Tom Doherty Associates Book.”
Summary: Teenaged Jack begins to uncover some unsuspected talents in himself after he and his friends, the clever, imaginative Weezy and her brother Eddie, discover a corpse deep in the mysterious Pine Barrens near their New Jersey home.
ISBN-13: 978-0-7653-1854-1
ISBN-10: 0-7653-1854-7
[1. Interpersonal relations—Fiction. 2. Pine Barrens (N.J.)—Fiction. 3. Coming of age—Fiction. 4. Supernatural—Fiction. 5. Mystery and detective stories.] I. Title.
PZ7.W69385Ja 2008
[Fic]—dc22
2008005225
First Edition: June 2008
Printed in the United States of America
0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
They discovered the body on a rainy afternoon.
1
“Aren’t we there yet?” Eddie said, puffing behind him.
Jack glanced over his shoulder to where Eddie Connell labored through the sandy soil on his bike. His face was red and beaded with perspiration; sweat soaked through his red Police T-shirt, darkening Sting’s face. Chunky Eddie wasn’t built for speed. He wore his sandy hair shorter than most, which tended to make him look even heavier than he was. Eddie’s idea of exercise was a day on the couch playing Pole Position on his new Atari 5200. Jack envied that machine. He was stuck with a 2600.
“Only Weezy knows,” Jack said.
He wasn’t sweating like Eddie, but he felt clammy all over. With good reason. The August heat was stifling here in the Pine Barrens, and the humidity made it worse. Whatever breeze existed out there couldn’t penetrate the close-packed, spindly trees.
They were following Eddie’s older sister, Weezy—really Louise, but no one ever called her that. She liked to remind people that she’d been “Weezy” long before The Jeffersons ever showed up on the tube.
She was pedaling her banana-seat Schwinn along one of the firebreak trails that crisscrossed the million-plus acres of mostly uninhabited woodland known as the Jersey Pine Barrens. A potentially dangerous place if you didn’t know what you were doing or where you were going. Every year hunters wandered in, looking for deer, and were never seen again. Locals would wink and say the Jersey Devil snagged another one. But Jack knew the JD was just a folktale. Well, he was pretty sure. Truth was, the missing hunters were usually amateurs who came ill equipped and got lost, wandering around in circles until they died of thirst and starvation.
At least that was what people said. Though that didn’t explain why so few of the bodies were ever found.
But the Barrens didn’t scare Jack and Eddie and Weezy. At least not during the day. They’d grown up on the edge of the pinelands and knew this section of it like the backs of their hands. Couldn’t know all of it, of course. The Barrens hid places no human eye had ever seen.
Yet as familiar as he was with the area, Jack still got a creepy sensation when riding into the trees and seeing the forty-foot scrub pines get thicker and thicker, crowding the edges of the path, and then leaning over with their crooked, scraggly branches seeming to reach for him. He could almost believe they were shuffling off the path ahead of him and then moving back in to close it off behind.
“See that sign?” Eddie said, pointing to a tree they passed. “Maybe we should listen.”
Jack glanced at the orange letters blaring from glossy black tin:
NO FISHING
NO HUNTING
NO TRAPPING
NO TRESPASSING
No big deal. The signs dotted just about every other tree on Old Man Foster’s land, so common they became part of the scenery.
“Well,” he said, “we’re not doing the first three.”
“But we’re doing the fourth.”
“Criminals is what we are!” Jack raised a fist. “Criminals!”
“Easy with that.” Eddie looked around. “Old Man Foster might hear you.”
Jack called to the girl riding twenty feet ahead of them. “Hey, Weez! When do we get there?”
She usually kept her shoulder-length dark hair down but she’d tied it back in a ponytail for the trip. She wore a black-and-white—mostly black—Bauhaus T-shirt and black jeans. Jack and Eddie wore jeans too, but theirs were faded blue and cut off above the knees. Weezy’s were full length. Jack couldn’t remember if he’d ever seen her bare legs. Probably white as snow.
“Not much farther now,” she called without looking around.
“Sounds like Papa Smurf,” Eddie grumbled. “This is stupidacious.”
Jack turned back to Eddie. “Want to trade bikes?”
Jack rode his BMX. He’d let some air out of the tires for better grip in the sand and they were doing pretty well.
“Nah.” Eddie patted the handlebars of his slim-tired English street bike. “I’m all right.”
“Whoa!” Jack heard Weezy say.
He looked around and saw she’d stopped. He had to jam on his brakes to keep from running into her. Eddie flew past both of them and stopped ahead of his sister.
“Is this it, Smurfette?” he said.
Weezy shook her head. “Almost.”
She had eyes almost as dark as her hair, and a round face, normally milk pale, made paler by the dark eyeliner she wore. But she was flushed now with heat and excitement. The color looked good on her. Made her look almost … healthy, a look Weezy did not pursue.
Jack liked Weezy. She was only four months older, but his January birthday had landed him a year behind her in schoo
l. Come next month they’d both be in Southern Burlington County Regional High, just a couple of miles away. But she’d be a soph and he a lowly frosh. Maybe they’d be able to spend more time together. And then again, maybe not. Did sophs hang with freshmen? Were they allowed?
She wasn’t pretty by most standards. Skinny, almost boyish, although her hips seemed to be flaring a little now. Back in grammar school a lot of the kids had called her “Wednesday Addams” because of her round face and perpetually dark clothes. If she ever decided to wear her hair in pigtails, the resemblance would be scary.
But whatever her looks, Jack thought she was the most interesting girl—no, make that most interesting person he’d ever met. She read things no one else read, and viewed the world in a light different from anyone else.
She pointed to their right. “What on Earth’s going on there?”
Jack saw a small clearing with a low wet spot known in these parts as a spong. But around the rim of the spong stood about a dozen sticks of odd shapes and sizes, leaning this way and that.
“Who cares?” Eddie said. “If this isn’t what you dragged us out here to see, let’s keep going.”
After hopping off her bike, she leaned it against a tree and started for the clearing.
“Just give me a minute.”
His curiosity piqued, Jack leaned his bike against hers and followed. The knee-high grass slapped against his sweaty lower legs, making them itch. A glance back showed Eddie sitting on the sand in the shade of a pine. Jack caught up to Weezy as they neared the spong.
“They just look like dead branches someone’s stuck in the sand.”
“But why?” Weezy said.
“For nothing better to do?”
She looked at him with that tolerant smile—the smile she showed a world that just didn’t get it. At least not in her terms.
“Everything that happens out here happens for a reason,” she said in the ooh-spooky tone she used whenever she talked about the Barrens.
He knew Weezy loved the Barrens. She studied them, knew everything about them, and had been delighted back in 1979, at the tender age of eleven, when the state passed a conservation act to preserve them.
She gestured at the sticks, not a dozen feet away now. “Can you imagine anyone coming out here just to poke sticks into the ground for no reason at all? I don’t—” She stopped, grabbed Jack’s arm, and pointed. “Look! What’d I tell you?”
Jack kind of liked the feel of her fingers gripping his forearm, but he followed her point. When he saw what she was talking about, he broke free and hurried forward.
“Traps! A whole mess of traps.”
“Yeah,” Weezy said, coming up behind him. “The nasty leg-hold type. Some dirty, rotten …”
As her voice trailed off Jack glanced at her and flinched at her enraged expression. She looked a little scary.
“But they’ve all been sprung.” He started walking around the spong. “Every single one of them.”
“Whoever did this is my hero,” she said, following close behind. “Didn’t I tell you that everything that happens out here—”
“—happens for a reason,” Jack said, finishing for her.
Clear as day that someone had set up a slew of traps around the perimeter of the spong, planning to trap any animals that stopped by to drink from the water in its basin.
And just as clear, someone else had come by with a bunch of dead branches and used them to tap the trigger plates, springing the traps and making them harmless. In some cases the steel jaws had snapped right through the dead wood; in others it had only dented it, leaving the branch upright.
“Got to be at least a couple dozen along here,” Jack said.
“Not anymore.”
She bent, grabbed one of the trap chains, and started working its anchor loose from the sand.
“What are you doing?”
“Watch.”
As the coiled anchor came free, Weezy grabbed it and the trap itself, then hurled the whole assembly into the spong. The two ends swung around on their chain like a boomerang before splashing into the shallow water and disappearing beneath the surface.
She turned to him, brushing the sand from her hands.
“Come on, Jack. We’ve got work to do.”
He stared at her, surprised by the wild look in her eyes …
“But—”
“These rats don’t check their traps for three or four days at a time.”
“How do you know all this?”
“I read, Jack.”
“So do I.”
“Yeah, but you read fifty-year-old magazines. I read about what’s really going on in the world.” She pointed to a trap. “Three days in one of those. Think about it.”
He did, imagining himself a fox or possum or raccoon with a broken leg caught in the steel jaws, hungry and thirsty, with water just a couple of dozen feet away but unable to get to it. It made his gut crawl.
Without a word, he bent and worked an anchor free of the ground, then followed Weezy’s example and tossed the trap into the water.
“Two down. How many more to go?”
He found her staring at him with a strange light in her eyes.
“About thirty.”
“Then we’re gonna need help.” He turned and waved to Eddie. “Over here! You gotta see this!”
As Eddie made his way toward them, Jack and Weezy bent again to the task of ripping out the traps and hurling them into the drink.
Eddie arrived and gawked at what they were doing. “Are you guys crazy? You can’t do that!”
Jack held up a trap. “Really? Watch.”
He tossed it into the water.
Eddie slapped his hands against the side of his head. “What if Old Man Foster comes along and catches us?”
Weezy said, “Well, his signs do say, ‘No Trapping.’ We’re just helping him out.”
“That means no trapping by anybody else. We could be in hellacious big trouble.”
Jack doubted that. Old Man Foster was just a name. No one had ever seen the guy. Everyone knew he owned this big piece of the Barrens and that was about it. Though nobody saw them go up, fresh No Trespassing signs appeared every year. Sometimes poachers would take them down, but before you knew it they’d be back up again.
Another mystery of the Pine Barrens. A very minor one.
As for Eddie, Jack wasn’t sure if he was acting as the voice of good sense, or trying to duck the work of pulling out the traps. He hated anything more strenuous than working a joystick.
“Look,” Jack told him. “The sooner we get this done and get on our way, the less chance we’ll have of being caught. So come on. Get to it.”
Eddie obeyed, but not without his trademark grumbling.
“Okay, okay. But I don’t have to ask whose idea this was. It’s got my crazy sister written all over it.”
In a flash Weezy was in his face. “What did you say?”
Eddie gave her a sheepish look. “Nothing.”
“You did! I heard you! Hasn’t this been talked about a million times?” Eddie nodded without looking at her. “Right,” she said. “So you keep your mouth shut or someone’s going to hear about this.”
Eddie sighed, saying, “Okay, okay,” and returned to working on a trap.
Baffled, Jack caught Weezy’s eye as she turned from her brother. “What—?”
“Family matter, Jack.” She turned away. “Don’t worry about it.”
Jack wasn’t worried. But he couldn’t help but wonder. He’d known these two all his life. What was this all about?
2
“Okay,” Weezy said, stopping her bike. “Here we are.”
After sinking all the traps, they’d pedaled like mad away from the spong. Along the way, Jack had wished for a few clouds to hide the sun and cool the air, but the sky ignored him. At least now they’d arrived at their original destination.
Jack followed her gaze. “It’s just some burned-out patch.”
Fires wer
e common in the Barrens during the summer. Tourists and nature lovers came to camp and sometimes got careless with their campfires or Coleman stoves or cigarettes. Same with poachers. And many times Nature herself took the blame, setting a tree ablaze with a bolt of lightning.
Usually a ranger in a fire tower, like the one on Apple Pie Hill, would spot the smoke and send out an alarm. Then the local and county volunteer fire companies would go racing to the scene along the fire trails. But the smaller fires started during a storm often would burn only an acre or two before being doused by the rain.
“Not just any burned-out patch.” She motioned Jack and Eddie to follow. “Come on. I’m going to show you something no one else—except for me—has seen in a long, long time.”
Eddie said, “Aw, come on, Smurfette—”
She stopped and turned to him. “And you can cut the Smurfette bit. Unless you like ‘Pugsley.’”
“Okay, okay. But what about the firemen who put out the fire? They must have seen it.”
“No firemen for this one.”
Eddie snorted. “You psychic now?”
“Check it out.” She gestured around them. “What’s missing?”
Eddie and Jack did full turns.
“Green trees?” Jack said.
Weezy shook her head. “Litter. There’s no litter. Firefighters always leave coffee cups, candy wrappers, Coke cans, Gatorade bottles, all sorts of stuff. But not here. Ergo …”
Jack knew from his father that ergo was Latin for “therefore,” but a glance at Eddie showed he hadn’t a clue.
He checked the ground again. Not even a gum wrapper. Weezy didn’t miss a trick.
As they followed her into the burned-out area, Jack noticed how the pine trunks had been charred coal black. The remaining needles high up were a dead brown, and the usual spindly little branches sticking out here and there lower down the trunks had been burned off. But the trees weren’t dead. Every single trunk was sprouting new little branchlets, pushing them through the scorched crust of the bark and sporting baby needles of bright green. Everyone had heard of the Sears DieHard battery. These were nature’s die-hard trees.