Terminal Island

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Terminal Island Page 25

by Walter Greatshell


  Henry cries out as the chains jerk taut…

  …then snap off.

  His arms and legs recoil as the horses stampede away, leaving him in one piece. Unable to comprehend, hyperventilating, Henry lies tensed for death as the loose ends of chain go jingling away behind the horses. Not all of them—one animal wheels around and comes back, its hooves thundering up as if to trample him to death. Henry opens his eyes to see the woman rider reaching down to him and shouting, “Grab on!”

  It is the deputy. He takes her hand and she hauls him to his feet. She has removed her mask, her long black hair flailing in the wind.

  “Put your foot in the stirrup and swing your leg over behind me,” she says, trying to help him and handle the horse and keep her gun trained on the approaching crowd all at once. “Hurry!”

  Henry does so, cringing from the pain of his spear wound. Though he has almost no strength left, she is able to haul him over the horse by brute force, wrapping his arms around her naked waist to keep him in place. Awkwardly clinging to her, his face mashed between her warm shoulder blades, Henry can feel the blood running down his leg and dripping off his toes. Like a stuck pig, he thinks.

  She takes off at a gallop, straight at them, and as one of the huntresses rides up raising a spear, the naked deputy fires a running shot that rolls the other woman backward off her saddle. Her gold mask is knocked loose, and Henry can see it is Lisa. But there are too many of them, pouring in from all sides, and now cars and trucks screeching up from the access road. There is no escape except over the side of the cliff, but Henry knows there can be no happy landing this time. In a moment he and the deputy will both be swarmed and taken down. Here come the dogs now.

  There is an escalating drone from the sea: a mechanical sound like a sawmill, muted beneath the cliff. All at once it burgeons to deafening proportions, levitating into view over the plateau’s rim and kicking up a furious trash-storm as it comes.

  A helicopter!

  It is white and orange and coffee-brown, with the words Channel Island Charters stenciled on its side. In his delirium it is the most wondrous sight Henry has ever seen, a heavenly vision every bit as fantastic as the seaplane that first carried him to this island. An angel.

  Clearing the ledge, it sideslips low over the field and lightly sets down as plastic bags whip up and around and are shredded by its howling rotors. A wall of flying debris blasts everyone on the ground, causing the mob to huddle behind each other or flee down the hill. The dogs scatter in confusion.

  The deputy’s horse rears up in panic, bucking them off, throwing the woman down on top of Henry as it tramples away through the crowd.

  Getting to her feet, she shouts, “Come on!” Her nose is broken and streaming blood.

  “I don’t know if I can walk!”

  “You’ll have to if you want to get out of here! Move!”

  She half-drags, half-carries Henry into the face of the gale, fending off foul shrapnel. Then they are there, ducking under the blades and stepping up through the open panel door.

  “Go!” she shouts to the pilot. “Go go go!”

  They lift off, banking away over the sea.

  “What just happened?” Henry calls over the engine noise as she buckles him in.

  “They shot the sheriff,” Deputy Myrtessa shouts back. “But they did not kill the deputy.”

  Chapter Thirty-Three

  TOPSY-TURVY

  Far out over the channel, with Catalina fading in the distance, Henry says, “I don’t understand this. Whose side are you on?”

  Deputy Myrtessa talks as she zips into green coveralls. “I’m on your side, Mr. Cadmus. We have something in common, you and me—or maybe I should say your mother and me: Both of us were born into this monstrosity and broke away. Oh yeah, I was a good little priestess of the Temple…and then one day when I was fifteen I ran away. Just flew the coop. For a few years I just lived on the streets of Hollywood, high on drugs, surviving any way I could. You don’t know how many years it took me to overcome my programming,” she says. “I don’t think I ever would have done it without the help of Carol Arbuthnot.”

  “Arbuthnot?”

  “He found me and checked me into a clinic where I was able to finally get my head straight. He got me a place to live and even hooked me up with the Sheriff’s Department—I took to that training like a duck to water, top of my class. I got my badge and found the Lord Jesus Christ on the same day. Once I was strong enough, clear enough, Arbuthnot explained who he worked for, and why they were so interested in me. He asked me if I would be willing to go back to the island. Be a mole, a sleeper. I prayed on it and agreed—it was penance for my sins. The next morning I applied for a transfer. You would think it would be hard for a rookie to get a plum assignment like Catalina Island, but no: As soon as I said who I was, that I was an islander, the transfer was expedited—somebody somewhere carried weight with the top brass. I was welcomed back to the Temple with open arms, the Prodigal Daughter. But they kept me on a tight leash; it was hard to gather useful evidence because nobody would trust me…until I made a sacrifice. Until I proved myself one of them. Today was that day, do you understand? The day it was all going to be revealed; everything Carol and I worked for, killed for. Then you come along and it all goes up in smoke. All that time and effort, years of patience, just to blow my cover over you. Why did Arbuthnot ask me to do that? What makes you so important?”

  Henry says, “I don’t know. But it’s all over now, isn’t it? You’re going to put an end to it?”

  “We’re going to try. The problem is one of credibility—there is a culture of denial in this country. A complacent society that increasingly believes only what it wants to believe. Reason itself has become a disposable commodity, a losing concept that is gradually being phased out to make way for more marketable product. We’re back to bread and circuses…”

  As the deputy talks, Henry’s attention is drawn down to the ocean. He can see the helicopter’s shadow on the water, and there is something odd flying above it, a tiny speck matching the helicopter’s speed. It is moving in such perfect tandem that Henry takes it for an optical illusion—a mote or a sun flare. It is hypnotic, flickering, and the longer he stares, the more certain he becomes that the thing is solid, some kind of ball, and furthermore is rising towards them. It is growing. Trying to rub it out of his eyes, Henry feels an unwarranted rush of adrenaline—What is that?

  Turning to the deputy, Henry asks, “Can you tell me what that is?”

  Pressing a bloody wad of tissue to her nose, she brusquely looks down and says, “Kelp.”

  “Not in the water—that thing hovering there.”

  She shakes her head impatiently. “I don’t see anything.”

  “How can you not see it? It’s right—”

  “Mr. Cadmus, please.” She and the pilot are conferring by radio with the mainland.

  Henry backs off and looks out again. His heart skips a beat.

  The thing is less than a hundred feet away, still floating as if invisibly joined to the copter. It is spinning like a small, grayish-pink orb, its surface lopsided and wrinkled.

  It looks like…meat, is Henry’s first thought, and moment he thinks it he dismisses it as too ridiculous.

  But it gets closer…and closer. And all the time it only looks more like a weird ball of flesh. A tumor-like thing, an embryo rolling in gelatinous albumin. It is surrounded by a thin corona of darkness, a negative halo. Henry finds that by rapidly blinking his eyes he can almost see it clear. Subliminal flashes of something terrible and familiar…it has a face.

  Jerking his gaze back to the security of the cockpit, Henry has the scare of his life:

  The thing is still in his line of sight, now hovering within the helicopter.

  It is superimposed against the cabin as if Henry’s own eyes are projecting it there—as if it is not within the aircraft at all, but within himself! A veined pink moon looming in his mind, inescapable. As he shrinks backward in his s
eat, the thing suddenly balloons larger than life and jerks still, filling his entire field of view as if touching face to face, a living planet of fear, deafening with its roar. Henry involuntarily screams.

  Oh God no—

  It is that hideous, leering Idol, the very head of Iacchus. Not a fright mask, but Iacchus Himself, a monstrous, chthonic Buddha, huge eyeballs bugging out of their sockets with rabid pleasure, flabby mouth agape and tongue lolling between His yellowed tusks with slavering anticipation. It is a face out of a schizophrenic nightmare, pulsating and quivering with all-consuming passion.

  In the depths of total, abysmal terror, Henry comprehends the meaning of Iacchus/Zagreus—the duality of the deity that is the duality of the human soul—the bright angel and the dark, the carrot and the stick. And he understands with perfect clarity how no one ever gets away. How the island goes on and on and on…

  Root-like tentacles are twining around him; his ears are filled with mad cackles. Henry’s hands flail about for something to use as a weapon, and seize upon a cold metal handle—a gun!

  “NO!” Henry shouts, firing into the face of that thing, blasting away at point-blank range until the hammer snaps on empty chambers. The face wobbles with each shot, then abruptly collapses in upon itself as if pricked with a pin. In an instant it is gone.

  Henry feels a sudden physical euphoria—not victory, but the sharp sensation of falling. The helicopter is diving towards the sea. Trying to brace himself, he looks around in confusion.

  The pilot and Deputy Myrtessa are both dead, their hands limply gesturing in free-fall, both shot through the head. There is blood everywhere; the cabin stinks of smoke. Wind whistles through bullet holes in the windshield. The view outside is of a dizzying upside-down ocean, all natural laws temporarily suspended. Henry drops the gun as if it is burning hot and it spins upward in a drunken trajectory.

  With the inverted world rushing up to meet him, there is no time for Henry to do anything but pray, but he can’t think of who to pray to. And perhaps it doesn’t matter anyway.

  Somehow he knows he’s going to live.

  Acknowledgments:

  Santa Catalina Island and the lovely town of Avalon are real, but the way I depict them is largely my own invention; by no means should it be mistaken for accurate travelogue. Go at your own risk.

  I’d like to thank Ross E. Lockhart and the rest of the Night Shade team for their nerve and extraordinary talent. I also want to thank my agent, Laurie McLean, for her expertise and enthusiasm; my family and friends, who keep me sane on a daily basis; and most of all you, the Reader, without whom there would be no books. Yes, you are my god.

  About the Author

  Walter Greatshell is the author of the Xombies trilogy, the cyberthriller Mad Skills, and the gargantuan horror-satire Enormity (written under the pen name W. G. Marshall), as well as various short stories, plays, and nonfiction essays. As a freelance journalist he interviewed Mickey Spillane; as an actor he performed in the play Bohemia West by the late Andy Kaufman. He has lived all over the world, but right now he is happy hanging around Providence with his wife and son.

  Read more on his website:

  www.waltergreatshell.com.

  Table of Contents

  PART I: DISINTEGRATING NICELY

  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

  PART II: ANGEL’S TRUMPET

  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

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Chapter Thirty-One

  Chapter Thirty-Two

  Chapter Thirty-Three

  Acknowledgments:

  About the Author

 

 

 


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