From Darkness Comes: The Horror Box Set

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From Darkness Comes: The Horror Box Set Page 116

by J. Thorn


  “Freaky,” said Isaac.

  “Wait a second,” Freeman said. “How many of Kracowski’s treatments have you had?”

  “Five,” Dipes answered. “He said I was one of his favorites. Said I had so many problems I’d make a good case study.”

  “Aren’t you better yet?”

  Dipes said, “Look, someday when you got a few hours I could tell you the whole deal. But I don’t think we have a whole lot of hours left.”

  “How come?” Isaac said.

  “Because it’s going to open up.”

  “What’s going to open up?” Freeman was impatient, and had to remind himself that he was talking to a nine-year-old who still wore diapers. And who now claimed to have powers of precognition, the ability to see the future.

  “The door,” Dipes said. “The door to the deadscape.”

  Isaac said, “What’s the deadscape, anyways? People keep talking about it, but what does it look like?”

  Freeman had seen the deadscape as plain as day. To him, that world was as real as this one. Not everybody could triptrap, though. At least, not yet. But, if Kracowski’s experiments were giving people psychic powers, then who knew where it would end? What would happen if everybody in the world could read each other’s minds? And how would Freemen feel when his power was no longer so special?

  He asked Isaac, “Haven’t you had a treatment yet?”

  “No. Maybe I’m not screwed up enough to need curing.”

  “Give them enough time and they’ll find something,” Freeman said.

  “Well, they’re careful with me because my grandparents want me out of here, but no way am I going to get conditioned by some creepy old Jews. They believe Christians are out to wipe them off the face of the planet.”

  “They probably are,” Freeman said.

  “Plus they’d make me get good grades.”

  “Better the devil you know, huh?”

  Dipes tapped on the rail of Freeman’s bed.

  A couple of guys were talking across the aisle. One of them snickered.

  “Tell us what happens,” Freeman said to Dipes. “What you see.”

  “I don’t know what the deadscape is, all I know is there’s a white door in the floor. And the door swings open, and it’s real bright, and all these people pour out and their eyes are crazy and they want to get us—”

  “Calm down,” Freeman said.

  “They’re people, but they don’t have no bodies. They scream, but their lips don’t move. And we start dying. And I’m scared.”

  Freeman fought off an urge to hug Dipes and comfort the little guy. The only way to survive this thing was to worry only about himself, numero uno, the budget Clint Eastwood AKA the Kid, starring as The Man With No Name in his most insensitive role ever. Because the future was looking pretty bleak, even from the spiderhole view of a manic depressive.

  Whatever he’d seen in the deadscape was more than just a triptrap illusion, and couldn’t be explained away by screwed-up brain chemistry and misaligned neurons. Whatever walked down there was real. He believed without a doubt Dipes could see the future. At Wendover, everything was now believable, even the impossible.

  Especially the impossible.

  Isaac pulled his sheet over his head and made “whoooh” noises in imitation of a ghost. He lifted the sheet and stared at Freeman and Dipes, his face made eerie by the blue lighting. “Okay, let me get this straight. You’re trying to tell me a bunch of restless spirits are living in the basement—I mean, are dying in the basement. And they’re going to crawl out of the floor and do bad stuff to us. Okay, I’ll buy that, since we all know that ghosts do bad stuff because they’re jealous of us breathers and—”

  “Isaac, you talk way too much.” Freeman wished they would go to sleep so he could be alone with his thoughts of Vicky. He’d had enough doom and gloom for one day.

  To Dipes, he said, “When does this door of yours open?”

  “I can see the future. But I ain’t learned to tell time yet.”

  “Guys,” said Isaac. “Ghosts aren’t real. And nobody knows the future but God.”

  “What are you nitwits talking about?” It was Army Jacket, who had crept out from the shadows.

  Freeman felt brave in his despair, so he said, “Where’s your buddy?”

  “What buddy?”

  “Deke.”

  Army Jacket’s eyes were black as beetles. “He ran away. He could blow this joint any time he wanted to.”

  “Sure. And he didn’t invite you to run away with him. A goon like him needs a brainless sidekick. It’s hard to picture Deke out there in the real world, getting by on his wits.”

  “Don’t be a smartass.”

  “Somebody around here better be smart. Because we’re in trouble.”

  “What the hell is this ‘ghost’ stuff?”

  “Ghosts are what got Deke. Down in the basement.”

  “Bull. That’s baby crap.”

  Dipes stuttered in the presence of his tormentor, but managed to say, “Wuh—we had those treatments. Now we can see through the walls.”

  Army Jacket snickered. “I had the treatment, too, and I’m not crazy yet. Unless they’re giving you some pills or something. If they are, I want some.”

  “Ghosts aren’t real,” Isaac said.

  “Oh, yeah?” Freeman said, pointing to the wall on the far side of the dorm. “Try telling her that.”

  Against the painted cinder blocks, flickering like the image cast by an old film projector, the woman without eyes smiled her dead smile.

  CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT

  Bondurant stepped back from the window. Dawn was still an hour away, and he knew he’d be unable to sleep until the sun rose. No matter how much he drank.

  Since fleeing the basement, he’d wandered the halls of Wendover, flashlight in hand, trying to forget what he’d seen. Or what he thought he’d seen. The memories were blurred now, softened by Kentucky bourbon and that trick of the night that allowed you to delude yourself.

  Now he was checking out the dark rooms where classes and group sessions were held on the second floor. All the rooms were empty.

  No, not empty. The stink of something strange clung to the shadows, and a couple of times he’d seen movement from the corners of his eyes. But when he turned his head, the fluttering shapes evaporated. He was in a room near Kracowski’s lab.

  Damn Kracowski. He was the cause of all this. So what if he’d brought in money? The Lord had no place in this new Wendover, where machines and ghosts ruled.

  Bondurant sat in one of a circle of chairs and flipped off the flashlight to save batteries. He closed his eyes and felt for the chair beside him. Kids sat here and tried to solve their problems, trapped in this evil church of psychology, with an overly-educated counselor serving as minister. If Bondurant had his way, the little sinners would bend in prayer instead, talking to God instead of each other.

  Group therapy was one of the few trends that had survived endless waves of supposed bright ideas. Newer, better, smarter, the counselors kept coming up with fresh roads into the human mind, all the while neglecting the soul. The soul was the only thing that needed healing. Let the Lord take care of the rest.

  Bondurant felt for the flask in his coat pocket, pulled it out and twisted the lid free. He held the flask in the air.

  “The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want,” he said. The words bounced off the cinder block walls.

  He put the flask to his lips, tasting the sting of liquor around the rim. He drank, but only a few drops remained. He pushed his tongue against his teeth and took a deep breath. Wendover’s air was full of dust and dead things.

  The bourbon was gone. He was alone.

  “I don’t have a problem,” he said to the dark room.

  That’s what they always say. He’d read enough case files to know that even young children could become alcoholics. But Bondurant wasn’t an alcoholic. Because alcoholics had problems with drinking, and he had no problems. He occ
asionally sinned, but his sins were forgiven because someone had died for them. Someone else’s blood had washed those sins away.

  The solution was so simple that he could never understand why the psychological establishment didn’t embrace it with joy.

  But his head swam too much to wrap completely around the angry thought, and he slumped in his chair. This was his church, he realized. Not a church in the way the Baptists built them, strong and expensive, like military bunkers. This was a mental church, standing under a steeple of his own solitude and power.

  Out there, in the real world, he was nothing but a suit and a handshake. Even at his expensive home in Deer Run Estates, he was just a shadow passing between the furniture, no more substantial than the photograph of his ex-wife that rested on the mantel. Here at Wendover, he was important. He had value. He was admired and appreciated, even loved.

  Loved by the weak, and by those he tried to lead to salvation.

  He sat in the circle of chairs.

  His group.

  Lost in the blackness.

  “What would Jesus do?” he asked the silence. No one answered. Some group this was. You come in expecting to be understood but all you got were stupid stares.

  He spoke louder now, a preacher at the lectern. “Jesus would say, ‘Take another drink,’ that’s what Jesus would say.”

  “Sounds good to me,” came a voice from the darkness.

  Bondurant shuddered himself alert, thinking he’d drifted into unconsciousness. “Who said that?”

  “Me,” said the voice.

  Bondurant’s hand trembled around the flashlight. He put his thumb on the switch, but was afraid to see the thing that had spoken. It was a female voice, calm and doomed and coming from a chair across the circle. He wondered if it was the woman with the smiling scar, the one who had disappeared into the wall. She had never spoken, though, except with her eyes. This one had a voice.

  It couldn’t be one of the staff. He would have heard the door open, and the halls were all lit by faint security fixtures. No one had entered. Except through the walls, or maybe down from the sky. Or up from the floor. From the deadscape.

  “You’re not supposed to be in here,” Bondurant said.

  “I belong here.”

  “Who are you?”

  “Me.”

  Bondurant’s pulse pounded against his skull. He was drunk and dreaming, that was all. He wasn’t sitting here talking to nobody. “I’m Francis,” he said.

  Three voices came in unison from the darkness. “Hello, Francis.”

  He groped for the flask again and remembered it was empty.

  “Do you have a problem, Francis?” came one of the voices, this one from his left, a female voice scratchy from cigarettes.

  He looked at the window, a square of lesser gray against the black. He prayed for sunrise. The Lord would deliver. That was one of His favorite tricks, tempting the faithful with despair and fear. But Bondurant’s faith was strong.

  “I don’t have a problem,” he said, surprised that his voice was steady.

  “Sure,” came a man’s voice two chairs from Bondurant’s right. “None of us got problems. Only solutions, right?”

  “Amen,” said the woman across the circle.

  “Wait a minute,” Bondurant said. “You guys are talking about my drinking, right?”

  “Ah, so you admit it. That’s the very first step.”

  “Step,” he said. “I’m not going anywhere.”

  “We understand, Francis,” said the scratchy woman. “We’ve been there. We know what it’s like.”

  Bondurant wanted to stand and stagger for the door, but his legs were limp. He wiped the sweat from his palms onto his slacks. His necktie was choking him, and he struggled for breath. The room with its invisible walls and invisible people seemed to grow smaller.

  “Leave me alone,” he shouted.

  “We can’t,” said the man. “We love you too much.”

  “I have the love of the Lord,” he said. “I don’t need yours.”

  “Ah, so you accept a higher power. That’s another step toward healing.”

  Bondurant found the strength to rise, though his legs quivered like saplings in a thunderstorm. “I don’t need to be HEALED.”

  Silence.

  Bondurant clenched his fist around the flashlight, ready to lash out.

  The woman across the circle whispered, “So much anger. So much pain. Francis, you don’t have to fight it anymore. Just surrender.”

  He sat again, slumped, defeated, scared.

  The man spoke from darkness. “We know it’s hard. You’re under a lot of pressure. All these brats to take care of, who wouldn’t need a drink?”

  Bondurant put his head in his hands and nodded.

  “Social Services breathing down your neck all the time, fund-raisers, a board of directors to please, everybody expecting you to keep on smiling no matter how much crap they feed you,” said the scratchy woman, only she was no longer to his left, she was standing behind him.

  A new voice came, a child’s voice, small and lost. “It’s okay, Mr. Bondurant. We forgive you.”

  “Forgive,” he said. Only the Lord’s forgiveness mattered. Sins weren’t measured on earthly scales, only by He who judged. No mere child had the right to feel sorry for Bondurant.

  “For the spankings,” said the child.

  Bondurant felt as if a sock were stuffed in his throat. He only spanked in those instances when he knew he wouldn’t be reported. Like all successful predators, he chose his victims carefully. And now some stupid little snot-nose was telling him it was okay to bend the sinning little twerps over his desk.

  Well, he knew it was okay, because the Lord had assigned him the mission. Who cared what the Department of Social Services thought when he had higher authorities to please? The rod and staff comforted. He wore out their rear ends until they howled for mercy.

  Because, beyond everything else, Bondurant was merciful. He’d learned that from the Lord, and from the Scripture. Mercy tempered all acts, though sometimes you had to be righteous and vengeful.

  “You need to open up,” the scratchy woman said.

  “Open up?” Bondurant didn’t know what frightened him more, sitting in a room with people who didn’t exist or being put on the spot.

  “Don’t be afraid,” whispered the child, and now his voice was very close, so close that Bondurant should have felt the exhalation on his face.

  Bondurant recognized the voice. Sammy Lane, the boy who had died in that botched restraint hold two years ago at Enlo. That was the home’s most shameful moment, bringing the Social Services storm troopers into Bondurant’s life. Sammy became the poster child for reform, his grinning photo splashed across the newspapers for weeks until another controversy pushed the death to page five. Then he was gone, nothing but a black mark on the system’s record.

  Until now.

  Because Sammy was back, offering Bondurant forgiveness.

  “I didn’t have anything to do with it,” Bondurant said. “I wasn’t even there when you died—I mean, when it happened.”

  “They said you gave the order,” Sammy said. “And I wasn’t being mean or anything, this girl pulled my hair so I kicked her and the counselor twisted my arm behind me and took me to the time-out room, and of course I hated it because nobody likes to be locked in the dark, so I shoved the counselor and he wrapped his arms around me and told me to calm down and I couldn’t breathe but he wouldn’t let go and I didn’t have enough breath to tell him to stop and the next thing I knew I was dead.” Little Sammy paused. “But it’s okay now.”

  Bondurant wept, the salt stinging his bloodshot eyes. He was innocent. The investigation had cleared him. Even the counselor had gotten off, taking a plea agreement that barred him from ever working in child services again. Everyone was satisfied with blaming it on the system instead of individuals. Enlo’s financial support had suffered a little, but Bondurant waxed his smile and faced the storm and then t
he storm blew over. And Bondurant took the director’s chair at Wendover.

  Everyone had forgotten.

  Except Bondurant.

  And Sammy.

  “We all have problems,” said the scratchy woman.

  The man said, “My shrink asked me all these questions, but she was a woman so I couldn’t answer. Reminded me too much of my mom. Later, I wrote the answers on little pieces of paper and slipped them in the back of the television in the rec room.”

  “That’s crazy,” said Bondurant, glad he didn’t have to respond to Sammy.

  “They said I was crazy but I was only in love,” the scratchy woman said. “Love is nothing but internal bleeding.”

  “It’s not my fault,” said the man from the darkness.

  “I didn’t love you, I loved the doctor. They took away my cigarettes so I chewed tin foil. I pulled the staples out of magazines and swallowed them. Then I found some loose nails in the paneling and ate them. By the time they opened me up, it was too late.”

  “I don’t want to be opened up,” Bondurant said.

  The woman who was standing too close behind him said, “Let out what’s inside.”

  A cold touch like the end of a frostbitten finger trailed down the back of his neck. “I’m scared,” Bondurant said.

  “We’re all scared.”

  “We’re all scared,” whispered Sammy, in his tiny voice.

  The gray around the window had grown lighter. Bondurant closed his eyes. The sun was climbing over the mountains outside, and soon he would be able to see the things that were talking to him in this empty room.

  “Well,” came a new voice, a strong and confident man’s. “That’s enough for one session. We don’t want to solve all our problems, or I’ll be out of a job.”

  Bondurant forced his eyelids to stay shut, trembling with the effort. The room was as cool as October, and Bondurant caught a faint whiff of dirt and decaying leaves.

  Sammy’s voice was at his ear. “Bye, Dr. Bondurant. See you around.”

 

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