The Haunted
Page 32
The last thing in the world he wanted was to pass by that chair, but there was something he had to do, and he gathered his courage and walked forward, not looking at the rocking chair, though he could see its movement in his peripheral vision, and he could hear it.
Creak.
His focus was on the wall ahead, on the rectangular board that he would have to pull out in order to get to the secret compartment.
Creak.
Then he was past the rocking chair and could no longer see it, not even in his peripheral vision. He crouched down near the wall, used his fist to tap the board, and pulled it aside when it came loose. Bending down, he looked into the secret compartment.
And saw, inside, on top of the small hill of dirt, his grandpa’s bloody head.
James awoke—
—in his bedroom, at home.
It was night, it was dark, and he was confused, disoriented. He was supposed to be in his grandma’s room, and for a moment he thought he was still dreaming. Then he sat up, felt the familiar reality of his bed below him, saw the outlines in the darkness of his movie posters on the wall, smelled the musty odor that his room got sometimes when their house was closed up for too long, and he knew that he was really back home.
Was he alone in here?
The thought terrified him. Their house was scary enough when everyone was home. But if he was the only one in it …
Maybe this was just another dream.
No. Why try to fool himself? He knew it wasn’t. How he had come to be here and why, James had no idea. The only thing he did know was that he needed to get out of the house as quickly as possible. He was in his pajamas and wasn’t wearing shoes, but though he still had some clothes in his closet and could probably find an old pair of sneakers to wear, he didn’t want to waste the time it would take to find them. He had to get out of here now, and he jumped out of bed, running through the darkness, down the hall, down the stairs, to the front door—
And he couldn’t open it.
He turned the lock, jiggled the handle, pulled as hard as he could, but no matter what he did, the door wouldn’t budge.
To his left, a light switched on, and the suddenness of it made him jump. He looked to his left, toward the living room. A single lamp was on, and it shone on only one section of wall, illuminating what should have been his mom’s framed Vincent van Gogh poster from the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.
Should have been … but wasn’t.
For inside the frame was a giant picture of the Old Maid, a poster-size version of the most dreaded card in that terrible game, and she was staring directly at him, her eyes scowling, her mouth grinning, a juxtaposition that made her look completely and utterly insane.
A low noise came from somewhere, constant and cracked and high-pitched, and it took him a moment to realize that it was coming from the picture.
And that it was laughter.
As he watched, the Old Maid began rocking back and forth, and her scowling eyes lightened, her eyebrows moving up until she looked downright jolly. Somehow that was worse, and James jiggled the door handle one last time before heading into the kitchen to try the back door. If he couldn’t open it, he’d break a window and get out that way.
Did the phone work? he wondered. Maybe he should call his dad and—
He tripped over something lying in the doorway between the hall and the laundry room, his arms flailing wildly to keep himself from falling. He ran into the washing machine and quickly put his hands on it to steady himself before turning around to see what he’d stumbled over.
It was his grandpa.
James let out a shocked cry. The old man wasn’t headless, the way he had been in his dream, but he was unmoving and curled up on the ground. Was he dead? James thought so, but was afraid to find out.
His grandpa stirred, moaned.
James jumped, startled. Immediately he went back to the doorway and dropped to his knees, touching the old man’s shoulder. “Grandpa?” Maybe they’d both be able to get out of here together. “Grandpa?”
A skinny arm shot out, a dry, cold hand grabbing James’s wrist and holding tight. He tried to pull away, but the grip was strong, and then his grandfather sat up, grinning crazily. Struggling to free himself, James made a fist and used it to pound on the hand that was holding him.
His grandpa’s other hand swung in from the right and slapped James hard on the side of the head.
James burst into tears. He couldn’t help it. The pain was tremendous, but that wasn’t the only reason he was crying. There were emotions at work, emotions he didn’t even understand. But that didn’t stop him from hitting his grandfather, moving from hand to arm, trying anything he could to get away, curving his fingers into claws and trying to scratch that old, cold skin.
The other hand hit the side of his head again, causing his right ear to ring.
The hand holding his wrist let go, but now both of the old man’s hands were slapping him. Hard. Left side of the head, right side of the head, left side of the head, right side of the head …
Still sobbing, James tried to scramble backward, but his grandpa kept coming at him, hitting, smiling.
Only it wasn’t really his grandpa. He didn’t know how he knew that, but he did, and it made it much easier to do what he had to do.
James threw himself backward, landing hard on his butt, then jumped instantly to his feet and kicked the old man hard in the face. He felt the nose give way beneath his heel, and he expected to see blood, but there was none. Only a crooked nose above that crazy grin.
Blood was coming out of his own ears. Both of them. He could feel it trickling down. His hearing was muffled, although that didn’t matter much right now, and he wondered whether he’d been hit hard enough to do permanent damage.
His grandpa started to stand, and James kicked him again, then ran into the kitchen. As he’d expected, as he should have known, the back door was jammed, too, just like the front door. He didn’t have as much time to try to get it open, because his grandpa was coming after him, but he wiggled and pulled hard enough to know that even if he did have more time, it probably wouldn’t make much difference.
James ran into the dining room, aware that the house had become an enclosed box. He was trapped in here. There was no way for him to escape, and eventually his grandpa would probably catch him. If he could only break a window or use the phone … But the old man was right behind him, and all James had time to do was run.
The last thing he wanted was to go through the living room, but he had no choice, and he sped past the framed picture of the Old Maid, not looking at it but hearing beneath his slapping footsteps and ragged breathing the Old Maid’s cracked, high-pitched laugh. He was determined not to go upstairs—that would be a trap—so he ran back into the hallway, making a circle. Except the hallway was different. It had changed since he’d hurried through here only a few moments before. The walls were darker, as was the floor, and there was an extra door just before the one to his parents’ bedroom—which had been open but now was closed.
He was afraid to go anywhere that he hadn’t been already, so, like a little kid, he stayed on the same track—hallway, laundry room, kitchen, dining room, living room, hallway—although he checked behind him to make sure that his grandpa was still giving chase. He didn’t want to turn a corner and find that the old man had switched directions and was waiting for him. No, his grandpa was still back there, and James sped up, dashing through the laundry room into the kitchen.
He could see through the window that it was already starting to get light outside, which meant it was nearly morning. When his dad discovered that he was gone, he’d figure out where he was and come and rescue him.
All James had to do was stay alive until then.
His dad would save him.
He was still running, moving through the dining room again and toward the living room and the Old Maid. The basement door had a lock, he remembered suddenly. Whatever had taken over his grandpa might be a
ble to pick locks or ignore them or even walk through doors, but there was a chance that it couldn’t, and if James could get over there and lock himself in, he might be safe. At least for a little while.
It was worth a shot.
He ran into the hallway again, as fast as he could, sliding around the corner, and this time the door that led to the laundry room was the only door. He sped through it, and instead of passing by the entrance to the basement, he stopped and tried the knob. It opened easily, and he turned on the light and stepped inside, quickly closing the door and fumblingly turning the latch until he heard the lock click.
Any hope James had had that he’d been able to slip into the basement unnoticed disappeared instantly when the doorknob rattled loudly behind him as he hurried down the stairs. He reached the bottom just as his grandpa—or whatever had taken over his grandpa—slammed into the door, trying to break it down. It was an old house, and the door was thick and solid, so James didn’t really think the old man’s body would be able to break in. But he remembered the steely hardness of the cold hand that had gripped his wrist, and he knew that while it wasn’t likely, it was still possible, and he looked around frantically until he found a box big enough to hide behind. He moved an overstuffed Hefty bag aside, got behind the box, moved the Hefty bag back and crouched down, waiting.
His dad would come. His dad would find him. His dad would save him.
He knew he would.
He knew he would.
Thirty-four
“Where is he?” Claire screamed at her mother.
“I don’t know!” the old woman sobbed.
Julian stepped between them. “I think we all know where he probably is.”
“I’m going over there!” A string of saliva flew out of Claire’s mouth as she spun hysterically around and ran toward the front door. “I’m going to get him! I—”
Julian grabbed her shoulders. “Stop it!” he ordered. “Get a grip!” His own hold on sanity was little more than tenuous, but someone had to be in charge. “Megan needs you! Go over to the hospital and stay with her and make sure she’s all right!” He turned to his mother-in-law. “You stay here, in case he comes back or Roger comes back or …” His brain couldn’t think of a way to finish the sentence, and he just let it trail off.
Marian was wiping her eyes. “And you?”
“I’m going over there. I’ll find James and bring him back.”
Claire was still hysterical. “We couldn’t find Dad there! What if you can’t find James? What if you—”
“The longer I stay here, the more time we’re wasting. Go! Take the van. I’ll take the car.” He didn’t wait for a response, and somehow the decisiveness of his words and the determination of his actions seemed to grant him authority. Claire didn’t argue with him but started talking to her mother, telling her mom to call the hospital the second James came back. He wanted to say good-bye to her, give her a kiss, tell her that he loved her, but any indication that this wasn’t going to go perfectly would undermine her confidence and might send her over the edge, so he said nothing as he closed the door behind him.
His last glimpse was of Claire giving her mom a hug.
Then he was hurrying out to the driveway, out to his in-laws’ Civic. He got in, backed out and sped away, hoping he’d be able to find James. And hoping that, if he did, his son would be alive.
Daddy!
Julian pushed that thought out of his mind.
There was far more traffic than there should have been, and he seemed to hit every red light along the way. Several times, he ended up hitting the steering wheel in frustration as he just missed a yellow light, wondering whether the delay would cost him or whether, if he had sped through the red light, he would have been stopped by a cop and ticketed, wasting even more time.
Julian played it safe, just in case, but he grew increasingly agitated as he drove, the short trip seeming to take forever.
Finally, he turned onto Rainey. The houses looked like they’d been abandoned for months instead of days. There were no cars in any driveway, and every tree, shrub, plant or blade of grass was dead. In the middle of the block was his own house, and while he understood that all of the homes here were haunted or corrupted, he knew that his house was at the center of it; in his house lived the source.
He pulled into his driveway, opened the car door. The neighborhood was silent, and the second he got out of the vehicle, he heard his son’s cry. “Daddy!”
It was just like in his dream, and, horrified, thinking he’d been granted a glimpse of things to come, he ran up the driveway, past the side of the house. But there was no hole in the center of the backyard.
“Daddy!”
The voice was coming from inside the house, though how it could be so clear and loud Julian did not understand. It occurred to him that it was not James at all, but he’d never know whether that was true unless he checked, and he ran across the patio and opened the back door, bursting into the kitchen.
“Daddy!”
James’s voice was coming from the basement, and Julian rushed over to the door with a sinking feeling in his gut, remembering what Claire had seen Pam and her husband, Joe, doing down there.
“James!” he called. “I’m coming!”
The basement door was locked. He had no key for it—he wasn’t sure there was a key—so he began kicking the door as hard as he could, aiming the heel of his shoe at the metal plate framing the knob and the lock. He wasn’t sure what good that would do, since the door opened outward, but after two good hard kicks, he heard a metallic clank, and when he tried opening the door again, there was wiggle room.
“Daddy!”
“I’m coming!” Julian yelled. He kicked the door again. And again. And this time when he tried to twist the knob, it turned, and the door swung open. The light was already on downstairs, and as he hurried down the steps, he saw that all of the bags and boxes, all of the odds and ends they’d stored down here were gone. There was only one thing on that basement floor.
The hole.
It was the same hole as in his dream, though it was inside rather than outside. That made no logical sense, but it was true, and Julian rushed down the remaining steps, acutely aware of the fact that his son’s screams had stopped, that the basement was silent. He could hear his own footfalls and the thumping of blood in his ears, but nothing else.
Reaching the bottom, he crossed the few feet it took to get to the edge of the hole and peered down. An arm’s length below the surface, not holding desperately on to a small protruding root, as in his dream, but caught on that root by the back of his pajamas, was James.
Instantly, Julian flopped onto the ground on his stomach, stretching his arm down in an effort to grab the boy. Unlike in the dream, he was able to reach, and his fingers grasped the curved collarless pajama top. He started to pull but realized that James might be too heavy for him to hold with one hand. The material of the pajama top might rip as well. Adjusting himself, scooting forward, Julian used both hands, getting one under each of his son’s armpits, and, wiggling backward, managed to pull him up and out.
He fell backward onto the hard cement floor, holding the boy to him, tears rolling down his cheeks. It took him a moment to realize that James was limp in his arms, and for a brief, heart-stopping second, he thought that he’d failed, that he hadn’t saved his son, that the boy was dead. But then he felt movement beneath his hands, looked into James’s face, saw the fluttering of his eyelids and knew he was alive. The boy was hurt, though. There were bruises on his face and dried blood in his ears, and while he might be alive, he wasn’t conscious.
Julian stood, reached down and picked his son up, the way he had when he was a baby. He wasn’t a baby anymore, though, was almost too heavy to carry up the stairs, but Julian did it.
He expected to be stopped, expected roadblocks to be put up, expected some sort of opposition, but he was allowed to reach the top of the steps, walk through the kitchen and leave the house without inc
ident. James was getting really heavy, and Julian kept talking to him as he staggered down the driveway toward the car, hoping for a response. There was none, but that didn’t stop him from trying, and he continued asking James whether he was all right, kept on begging him to wake up, even as he placed him temporarily upright and leaned the boy’s weight against himself so he could get the rear door of the car open.
Déjà vu. This was twice in two days he’d had to do this with one of his children, and it was just as awful and frightening the second time around. After maneuvering his son onto the backseat and quickly closing the door, Julian immediately got in, started the car, swerved backward onto the street and headed for the hospital.
It was déjà vu in more ways than one. He thought of the way James had been calling for him, crying out desperately for help.
“Daddy!”
He had sounded almost exactly like Miles.
But he wasn’t Miles.
And he was alive.
Julian lied.
As soon as he knew that both kids were going to be all right, he left Claire at the hospital, telling her that he was going to get Megan’s iPhone and James’s DS so that the two of them would have something to do besides watch TV. But he had no intention of returning to his in-laws’ place or picking up anything.
He was heading back to his house.
He had no plan, didn’t know what he was going to do, but for the past twenty-four hours everything he knew, everything he’d learned, everything he’d seen, everything that had happened had all been swirling around in his mind, and he was sure the answer was in there somewhere, if only he could find the key to unlock it. Maybe if he went back to the house, it might trigger something in his brain, give him an idea, help him figure out what to do. Because his father-in-law was missing, and both his son and daughter were in the hospital. It needed to end here. He had to put a stop to this. Now. Before something even worse happened.
He’d considered asking Rick to come with him. He would have liked some moral support as well as the additional muscle, but he refused to drag another person into this. Enough people had been put in harm’s way already. This was something he needed to do himself. Although even as the thought occurred to him, Julian recognized its essential stupidity. Police didn’t go after criminals alone. Firemen didn’t fight fires alone. He recognized also that the idea that he should go into that house by himself was not his own. It had been placed in his brain, implanted there. He did not fight it, though, did not slow down or call Rick or Patrick for help, but increased his speed so he would get to the house faster.