Berkley Street 09 Amherst Burial Ground
Page 1
Amherst Burial Ground
Berkley Series Book 9
Written by Ron Ripley
Edited by Emma Salam
Copyright © 2017 by ScareStreet.com
All rights reserved
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Keeping it spooky,
Ron Ripley
Table of Contents
Chapter 1: Out for a Hike
Chapter 2: Remembering the Past
Chapter 3: Stocking Up
Chapter 4: In the Enemy’s Camp
Chapter 5: Visiting Rights
Chapter 6: With Samson
Chapter 7: Choosing a Target
Chapter 8: Ben and Jesse
Chapter 9: Damage Control
Chapter 10: Securing the Alpha File
Chapter 11: Rousseau Goes to Amherst
Chapter 12: A Vengeance of His Own
Chapter 13: At Marie’s
Chapter 14: The Truth
Chapter 15: A Corner Lot
Chapter 16: Necessary Information
Chapter 17: In Cody’s House
Chapter 18: More Bad News
Chapter 19: In Amherst with Linda
Chapter 20: Getting His Hands Dirty
Chapter 21: A Problem Arises
Chapter 22: Questions without Answers
Chapter 23: A Cold Silence
Chapter 24: With His Dogs
Chapter 25: A Discussion on Mental Health
Chapter 26: Family History
Chapter 27: Setting Up a Cordon
Chapter 28: Success at Last
Chapter 29: Without Options
Chapter 30: Following the Leader
Chapter 31: A Chat with David
Chapter 32: David Goes Looking
Chapter 33: Nothing Works the Way It Should
Chapter 34: A Painful Awakening
Chapter 35: Cutting Down the Enemy
Chapter 36: A Dark Thrill
Chapter 37: Chasing Frank Down
Chapter 38: In His Room
Chapter 39: Entering the House
Chapter 40: Fear is an Infection
Chapter 41: In the Hospital
Chapter 42: At the Holiday Inn
Chapter 43: On the Village Green
Chapter 44: An Unpleasant Surprise
Chapter 45: Hope Springs Forth
Chapter 46: In the Hotel Room
Chapter 47: In the Woods of Amherst
Chapter 48: Clair Goes on the War Path
Chapter 49: After Nightfall
Chapter 50: A Decision is Made
Chapter 51: A History of Death
Chapter 52: A Harsh and Terrible World
Chapter 53: Manhunt
Chapter 54: The Second House
Chapter 55: Seeking to Establish Contact
Chapter 56: In Engberg’s House
Chapter 57: Finally Afraid
Chapter 58: In the Darkness of the Woods
Chapter 59: Traveling in Darkness
Chapter 60: Alone
Chapter 61: The Chestnut Tree
Chapter 62: On the Move
Chapter 63: Out of Options
Chapter 64: A Brief and Exuberant Joy
Chapter 65: His Distant Relation
Chapter 66: On the Gurney
Chapter 67: Two Weeks Later
Samson Bonus Scene Chapter 1: Sarah Coffin, June 1733
Samson Bonus Scene Chapter 2: A Growing Fear, July 1733
Samson Bonus Scene Chapter 3: Dinner, August 1733
Samson Bonus Scene Chapter 4: After the Hanging, September 1733
Samson Bonus Scene Chapter 5: Seeing the Unseen, February 2nd, 1734
Samson Bonus Scene Chapter 6: The Graves Have Grown, June 11th, 1739
Samson Bonus Scene Chapter 7: Before the Dawn Arrives, June 12th, 1739
Jonathan Bonus Scene Chapter 8: Enjoying the Afternoon, July 4th, 1976
Jonathan Bonus Scene Chapter 9: Denise Went for a Walk, July 7th, 1976
Jonathan Bonus Scene Chapter 10: Speaking with the Police, July 7th, 1976
Jonathan Bonus Scene Chapter 11: Looking at the Scene, July 7th, 1976
Jonathan Bonus Scene Chapter 12: An Unexpected Terror, July 9th, 1976
Jonathan Bonus Scene Chapter 13: The World Continues to Change, July 11th, 1976
Jonathan Bonus Scene Chapter 14: Awakened, July 11th, 1976
Jonathan Bonus Scene Chapter 15: A Painful Reality, July 11th, 1976
FREE Bonus Novel!
Chapter 1: Out for a Hike
Madison strolled along the game trail. The air was warm, a pleasant change to the cold winds which had ushered in May. She had found little time to get out and into nature, the demands of her law office and life in general cutting into her alone time. Madison chuckled at the thought.
Alone time had vanished with the birth of her son Felix, and her husband Mitchell still didn’t understand why she was cranky some nights.
Madison had been a self-sufficient individual ever since she had left for college when she was seventeen. Her marriage at thirty, and the subsequent offspring produced, had done nothing to curb her individuality.
Which was why on some days she ended up in Amherst for a quick hike. Her law office, located in Milford, was only a few minutes from her favorite hiking trails. She could take half a day, hike for a few hours, shower at her fitness club and be home without Mitchell being any the wiser.
Madison rolled her eyes at the complaints he would issue. While he had relished the idea of being a stay-at-home father when she was pregnant with Felix, the reality of it was far less entertaining.
Mitchell complained on an almost daily basis about how his work suffered. More than once, she had been tempted to inform him that a writer who didn’t get steady work to begin with, couldn’t complain.
She shook her head and turned her thoughts to the path before her. It was a narrow game trail, wide enough for her to move along without disrupting any plants growing between the thick trunks of the oaks and elms around her. The trees had a curious aura to them, and part of the reason she enjoyed hiking in Amherst. They were among the few, old forest trees she had seen.
This particular path, off General Amherst Road, was new to her. She had read about it online from a few blogs. Most of the articles had been about going to visit the trail, and none of those had been about the hike itself.
The whole trail had an air of mystery to it, and it thrilled Madison. There was no mystery in her marriage, no excitement. Nothing thrilling at her workplace. She had even considered a membership with the Ashley Madison website, in spite of the security risks attached to a site dedicated to extramarital affairs. In the end, with the pros outweighing the cons, she had decided against it.
So Madison was left with the trails.
She adjusted the straps on her backpack as she came to a fork in the path and stopped. The trail to the right showed more use, the dirt packed down and the branches of a few bushes broken and pushed back.
On the left, Madison saw the complete opposite.
The trail was faint, almost as if it hadn’t been used in years. Not even the prints of animals marred the loose earth.
Left
it is, she thought, and followed it.
For nearly an hour, she moved along the trail as it skirted granite boulders and ran along streambeds. When the path dipped down she slowed her pace, careful not to twist an ankle. She had injured herself in the past on a lone hike, and the return trip had been horrifically painful.
Madison looked around as the trail leveled out and widened. The trees were farther and farther away from the sides of the path, and the underbrush faded away. Soon it disappeared altogether, but within twenty feet, it was replaced with thick, twisted brambles. Ahead of her, a dark shape caught her eye and Madison paused to look at it and get a drink of water.
A huge, flowering chestnut tree towered at the end of a small clearing. It was massive, perhaps a hundred feet tall and without a doubt, the largest she had ever seen. Unable to take her eyes off it, Madison walked towards the tree.
Soon she found her way blocked by the brambles. Madison ignored them, pushing her way through even as the long, sharp thorns pierced her skin and snagged her clothes. Around her the forest darkened, the long boughs of the chestnut blocking out the sun. A gray twilight wrapped around her and it seemed as though the brambles pushed in closer with each drop of blood she spilled.
Then she was through them, stumbling into a small burial ground.
The grave markers were old. Tall, thin pieces of slate with arched tops and images of death carved into them. There were only twenty or thirty of them, standing upright in perfect order. Dead grass clung to the earth around each stone, and beyond the markers was a house.
The building consisted of a single floor, the roof sagging in the middle and a large, brick chimney protruding from the center. Heavy shutters hung on the windows flanking either side of the doorway, which lacked any sort of door.
And all of it was beneath the tree’s tremendous limbs. An entire world separate from the rest of New Hampshire.
Madison smiled, a warm, joyous feeling wrapping around her. It was then that she noticed the little boy. He sat on a rock by the doorway. His face was cherubic and his hair was pulled back in a small ponytail. The boy’s clothes looked handmade, and they were cut in a fashion Madison had only seen in history books about the early New England colonists. He seemed to be somewhere between eight and ten years of age, and he smiled at her when their eyes met.
Several of his teeth were missing, which gave him an even more endearing appearance.
“Hello,” he said, waving at her.
“Hello,” Madison replied, offering a little wave.
“Are you on your way to meeting?” the boy inquired.
“Meeting?” she asked, confused.
“To town,” the boy said, grinning. “Are you going into town?
“No,” Madison answered. “I’m just out walking.”
“Ah,” the boy said, nodding.
In a dull, absent way Madison understood she couldn’t look away from the child. He commanded all of her attention.
And she was fine with that, smiling at him.
He smiled back.
“What’s your name?” he asked, the gentlest of lisps in his pronunciation.
“Madison,” she answered.
“Would you like to know my name?” he said.
Madison nodded.
“I am Samson,” the boy said, his lips hardly moving as he spoke. His eyes narrowed and for the briefest of moments, there was a cruel glint to them.
Then it was gone and Madison knew it had been some sort of twist of the light.
“Would you sit with me?” Samson asked. “My mother has been gone a long, long time.”
Madison nodded, choking back a sob at the idea of the beautiful boy being alone and without his mother. A faint memory of her own child tugged at her, but it wasn’t enough to stop her from entering the burial ground.
The air vibrated as she stepped past the first headstones, the slate shimmering on the edges of her vision.
Samson’s smile broadened and he clapped his hands with enthusiasm.
The joyous look on his face quickened her step, and in a few heartbeats, she stood before him. Madison stared down at him, her heart pounding in her chest.
“Will you sit with me?” he asked.
Madison sat on the ground, folding her legs under her. A hard object pushed into her thigh and she reached down, pulling it out from beneath her. It was a bone, nearly a foot in length and yellow with age.
“You could throw that inside, along with the others,” Samson said, nodding towards the doorway.
Madison did so, the bone vanishing into the darkness and landing with a clatter. It sounded as though it had struck a pile of the same.
At the noise Samson laughed, clapping his hands again as he fixed an intense stare upon her. Smiling, the little boy leaned forward and said, “Are you excited to sit with me?”
“Yes,” Madison replied, her own voice sounding distant in her ears. Then she asked, “Are you excited?”
“Oh, yes,” he said with sudden, mock seriousness. “And do you want to know why?”
Madison gave a nod.
“Because,” Samson whispered, “I’ve been alone for an awfully long time.”
Chapter 2: Remembering the Past
Shane stood on his back porch in the warm sunlight, staring down into the pond. He looked at the cats’ tails as they bent in the wind, watched the water ripple from the same. The water remained dark, impenetrable. Even after Vivienne had been chased away, there was no escaping the memories she had left with him.
A shudder rippled through him and Shane took his cigarettes out. His hand trembled as he lit one and returned the pack to his pocket.
The back door opened and Frank stepped out of the kitchen, a bottle of water in his hand as he walked over to a deck chair and sat down.
“You alright?” Frank asked.
“That’s a tough question to answer,” Shane said, tearing his attention away from the pond and sitting down in the other deck chair.
“Not really,” Frank replied. “You either are, or you’re not. Pretty basic.”
Shane shrugged. “Guess I’m not then.”
“What’s bothering you?” Frank asked.
“Everything about the Watchers,” Shane answered. “I want more information on them. I want to know why exactly they’re gathering up haunted buildings. How long have they been doing it? What’s the real end game? And I don’t feel like I achieved what I wanted, not for Mason and his wife. Not for anyone who’s died because of the Watchers.”
“How much more can you do?” Frank asked, his brows furrowed with concern. “Hell, Shane, you’ve taken some serious beatings. Honestly, you look like someone stuck you in a fire, changed their mind, and then dragged you back out over broken glass.”
“Thanks,” Shane grumbled.
“Hey, it’s the truth,” Frank said. “Why don’t we find someone a little younger, maybe some of Abbot Gregory’s brothers. They can start to dig around more. See what’s out there and what can be done.”
Shane shook his head. “I can’t do that. I know what’s out there, Frank. I won’t send them into it. The Watchers are my responsibility.”
Frank’s cellphone rang and cut Shane off.
“Hold on,” Frank said, putting his water down and digging his phone out of a pocket. “Hello?”
Shane waited as Frank nodded and said, “Yeah. No, we’re both here. Come on by.”
“Who was that?” Shane asked after Frank had ended the call.
“Hm? Oh, that was David,” Frank said. “You know, the naked guy in Borgin?”
Shane snorted, repeating, “The naked guy.”
After a moment he asked, “Just David?”
Frank looked away as he replied, “Far as I know.”
Shane sighed and shook his head. “He almost never goes anywhere without Marie.”
Frank sagged in the chair and turned his head back to Shane. “Strength in numbers.”
“It’s aggravating,” Shane snapped, pushing himse
lf to his feet.
“We need all the help we can get,” Frank stated. “And she can definitely handle herself.”
“That’s never been in doubt,” Shane said over his shoulder. “I don’t like having her around. Seems like she still blames me for Kurt Warner’s death, the cop killed at Slater Mill. Not to mention all the emotional baggage.”
“On her end or yours?” Frank asked.
“I don’t have emotional baggage,” Shane grumbled.
Frank didn’t respond to the statement, remaining silent as Shane pulled out another cigarette and lit it off the first. As he exhaled into the warm air, Shane twisted around to face Frank. “Do you think today would be a good day?”
Frank hesitated, then nodded. “Might as well. My arm’s healed up. Marie’s in good shape. David doesn’t seem any worse for the experience up in Borgin. And you, man, I think you’re made of steel sometimes.”
“No,” Shane responded. “I’m just stubborn is all. Think David will want to talk about the Watchers?”
“I’m hoping that’s why he’s on his way over,” Frank admitted.
“Good,” Shane said, facing the pond once more. He glared at it for a few moments, waiting until he finished the fresh cigarette before turning away.
Shane knew she wasn’t around anymore, but the child in him still hid in the dark and whispered about her.
“What are you looking for?” Frank asked in a low voice.
Shane forced himself away from the railing and gave his friend a small smile before he said, “Something that isn’t there anymore.”
And with his back to the nightmares of his past, Shane went into the kitchen.
Chapter 3: Stocking Up
Clair never doubted herself in regards to the Watchers. She had seen that the organization was faltering under the doddering leadership of Harlan, and the necessary steps had been taken. Had there been someone more suitable than herself to run the organization, she would have backed them.
There hadn’t been, and Clair was fine with that as well.
The pressures of the Watchers were acceptable to her, and she thrived under them.
Over the past few months, the organization had suffered setbacks from Shane Ryan, but she recognized them for what they were; setbacks, and nothing more.