F. PAUL WILSON
MIDNIGHT MASS
- 1 -
ZEV . . .
Gasping in horror and revulsion, Zev Wolpin stumbled away
from St. Anthony's Church. He stretched his arms before him, reaching into the
dark for something, anything, to support him before he fell.
Leaves slapped his face, twigs tugged at his graying beard
as he plowed into foliage. His bike.. . where was his bike? He thought he'd
left it in a clump of bushes, but obviously not this clump. Had to find it, had
to get away from this place. But the dark made him disoriented ... the dark,
and what he'd just witnessed.
He'd heard whispers, stories he couldn't, wouldn't,
believe, so he'd come to see for himself, to prove them wrong. Instead .. .
Zev bent at the waist and retched. Nothing but a bubble of
bile and acid came up, searing the back of his throat.
The whispers were only partly true. The truth was worse.
The truth was unspeakable.
He straightened and looked around in the darkness. Wan
light from the crescent moon in the cloud-streaked sky made the shadows deeper,
and Zev feared the shadows. Then he spotted a curving glint of light from the
chrome on his bike's front wheel. He ran to it, yanked it by the handlebars
from its hiding place, and hopped on.
His aging knees protested as he pedaled away along dark
and silent streets lined with dark and silent houses, heading south when he
should have been going west, but away was all that mattered now.
Lakewoodwas a small town, maybe ten miles from theAtlantic
Ocean ; a place where the Rockefeller family was said to have vacationed. So it
didn't matter much if he headed south or north, he wouldn't be far from the
place he now called home. The town was once home to fifty thousand or more
before the undead came. Now he'd be surprised if there were a thousand left.
He'd heard it was the same all up and down the East Coast.
The exertion helped clear his mind. He had to be careful.
Prudent he hadn't been. In fact, he'd been downright reckless tonight,
venturing out after sundown and sneaking up on St. Anthony's. Schmuck! What had
he been thinking? He prayed he didn't pay for it with his life. Or worse.
He shuddered at the thought of ending up the victim in a
ceremony like the one he'd witnessed tonight. He had to find temporary shelter
until dawn. Even then he wouldn't be safe, but at least there wouldn't be so
many shadows.
The blue serge suit coat that had once fit rather snugly
now hung loose on his half-starved frame and flapped behind him as he rode.
He'd had to punch new holes in his belt to hold up the pants. He'd complained
so often about not being able to lose weight. Nothing to it, really. Simply
don't eat.
His ever-hungry stomach rumbled. How could it think of
food after what he'd just seen?
A shadow passed over him.
A blast of cold dread banished any concern about his next
meal. His aging neck protested as he glanced up at the sky, praying to see a
cloud near the moon. But the glowing crescent sat alone in a clear patch of
night.
No! Please! He increased his speed, his legs working like
pistons against the pedals. Not a flying one!
Zev heard something like a laugh above and behind him. He
ducked, all but pressing his face to the handlebars. Something swooped by,
clawing at the back of his coat as it passed. Its grip slipped but the glancing
impact was enough to disrupt Zev's balance. His front wheel wobbled, the bike
tipped to the left and hit the curb, sending him flying.
Zev landed hard on his left shoulder, his lungs emptying
with a grunt. His momentum carried him onto his back. What he saw circling
above him made him forget his pain. He rolled over and struggled to his feet.
He instinctively checked the yarmulke clipped to his thinning gray hair, then
gripped the cross dangling from a string around his neck. That might save him
in close quarters, but not from a creature that could swoop down from any angle.
He felt like a field mouse under the cold gaze of a hawk.
He started running. He didn't know where he was going but
knew he had to move. The bike was no good. He needed a tight space where his
back was protected and he could use the cross to keep his attacker at bay. One
of these houses, maybe. A basement, even a sewer drain—anyplace but out here in
the open where—
"Here! Over here!"
A woman's voice, calling in a stage whisper to his left.
Zev looked across an overgrown lawn, saw only a large tree, a pine of some sort
with branches almost brushing the ground.
"Quick! In the tree!"
A trap maybe. A team this could be—a winged one driving
prey into the arms of another on the ground. He'd never heard of anything like
it, but that meant nothing.
A glance over his shoulder showed him that the creature
had half folded its wings and was diving his way from above. No choice now. Zev
veered left for the tree and whatever waited within its shadowed branches.
He was almost there when the woman's voice shouted,
"Down!"
Zev obeyed, diving for the grass. He heard a hiss of rage,
felt the wind from the creature's wings as it hurtled past no more than a foot
or two above him. He lurched back to his feet and staggered forward. Pale hands
reached from the branches and pulled him into the shadows.
"Are you all right?" the woman said.
He couldn't see her—she was a shadow among the shadows—but
her voice sounded young.
"Yes. No. If you mean am I hurt, no."
But all right? No, he was not all right. Never again would
he be all right.
"Good." She grabbed his hands and pressed them
against a tree limb. "Hold on to this branch. Steady it while I try to
break it. Quick, before it makes another pass."
The dead branch sat chest high and felt about half an inch
in diameter. With Zev steadying it, the woman threw her weight hard against it.
The wood snapped with a loud crack.
"What are you—?"
She shushed him. "It's coming back."
She moved to the edge of the trees, carrying the branch
with her. Zev watched her, silhouetted against the moonlit lawn. Average
height, short dark hair were all he gained about her looks. He saw her crouch,
then hurl her branch like a spear at the creature as it swooped by on another
pass. She missed and high-pitched derisive laughter trailed into the sky.
She returned to Zev, stopped on the other side of the
broken branch, and patted the front of his shirt. She pulled him close and
whispered in his ear.
"Your cross—tuck it away."
"No! It will—"
"Do as I say. They can see in the dark. And try to
look frightened."
Try? Who had to try?
She put an arm around him to hold him close, keeping the
branch between them.
Another whisper: "Pull out that cross when I tell
you."
Zev had no idea what she was up to but had nowhere else to
turn, so . . .
Her grip on him tightened. "Here it comes. Ready
..."
Zev could see it now, a dark splotch among the shadows of
the branches, wings spread, gliding in low, arms stretched out before it.
". . . ready . . ."
Suddenly it folded its wings and shot at them like a
missile.
"Now!"
As Zev pulled out the cross he felt the woman shove him
away. He lost his balance and tumbled back, saw her fall in the other
direction, felt a clawed hand grip his shoulder, heard the creature's screech
of triumph rise into a wail of shock and agony as it slammed against the trunk
of the tree.
Zev regained his feet amid the frantic and furious struggling
of the hissing creature. Its charging attack had opened a passage through the
branches, lightening the shadows. As he ducked its thrashing wings he realized
it had impaled itself on the broken branch. It flopped back and forth like a
speared fish, then pushed away from the trunk, trying to dislodge itself from
the wood that had pierced its chest.
Zev turned to run. Now was his chance to get away from
this thing. But what of the woman? He couldn't abandon her.
He spotted her standing behind the creature. She'd hiked
up her already short skirt and kicked at the thing's back, shoving it further
onto the branch. The creature howled and thrashed, and in its struggles broke
the branch off the trunk with a gunshot crack.
Free now, it whirled and staggered out into the moonlight.
Its wings flapped but couldn't seem to lift it. Perhaps ten feet beyond the
branches it dropped to its knees. The woman was right behind it, giving it
another kick. It rolled onto its back, clawing at the wooden shaft that jutted
two or three feet from its chest. Its movements were weaker now, its wings lay
crumpled beneath it. Howling and writhing in agony, it gripped the branch and
started to slide it out of its chest.
"No, you don't!" the woman cried.
She gripped the upper end, shoving it back down and
leaning on it to hold it in place.
"This is forBern !" she screamed, naked fury
rawing her voice. "This is what you made me do to her! How does it feel?
How does it feel?"
For an instant Zev wondered who was more frightening, this
screeching woman or the struggling monster she held pinned to the earth.
The creature clawed and kicked at her, almost knocking her
over. He had to help. If that thing got free ...
Mouth dry, heart pounding, Zev forced himself from the
shadows and added his own weight to the branch. He felt it punch deeper into
the thing's chest. Then a sickening scrape as it thrust past ribs and into the
ground beneath.
The creature's struggles became abruptly feebler. He saw
now that it was a female. It might have been beautiful once, but the sickly
pallor and the bared fangs robbed it of any attractiveness.
Finally it shuddered and lay still. Zev watched in
amazement as its wings shriveled and disappeared.
"Gevalt!" he whispered, although he didn't know
why. "You did it! You killed one!"
He'd heard they could be killed—all the old folk tales
said they could be - but he'd never actually seen one die, never even met
anyone who had.
It was good to know they could be killed.
"We did." She finally released her grip on the
branch but her gaze remained locked on the creature. "If you have a
soul," she said, "may God have mercy on it."
What was this? Like a harpy, she screeches, then she
blesses the thing. A madwoman, this was.
She faced him. "I'm sorry for my outburst. I... it's
just..." She seemed to lose her train of thought, as if something had
distracted her. "Anyway, thank you for the help."
"You saved my life, young lady. It's me who should be
thanking."
She was staring at him. "You're Rabbi Wolpin, aren't
you."
Shock stole his voice for a few heartbeats. She knew him?
"Why ... yes. But I don't recognize ..."
She laughed. A bitter sound. "Please, God, I hope
not."
He could see her now. Nothing familiar about her features,
no particular style to her short dark hair. He noticed a tiny crescent scar on
the right side of her chin. Heavy on the eye makeup—very heavy. A tight red
sweater and even tighter short black skirt hid little of her slim body. And
were those fishnet stockings?
A prostitute? In these times? Such a thing he never would
have dreamed. But then he remembered hearing of women selling themselves to get
food and favors.
"So, you know me how?"
She shrugged. "I used to see you with Father
Cahill."
"Joe Cahill," Zev said, feeling a burst of
warmth at the mention of his friend's name. "I was just over at his
church. I saw ..." The words choked off.
"I know. I've—" She waved her hand before her
face. "She's starting to stink already. Must be an older one."
Zev looked down and saw that the creature was already in
an advanced state of rot.
"We'd better get out of here," the woman said,
backing away. "They seem to know when one of their kind dies. Get your
bike and meet me by the tree."
Zev continued to stare at the corpse. "Are they
always so hard to kill?"
"I don't think the branch went all the way through
the heart at first."
"Nu? You've done this before?"
Her expression was bleak as she looked at him. "Let's
not talk about it."
When Zev wheeled his bike back to the tree he found her
standing beside a child's red wagon, an old-fashioned Radio Flyer. A book bag
emblazoned with St. Anthony's School lay in the wagon. He hadn't noticed either
earlier. She must have had them hidden among the branches.
She said, "You mentioned you were at St. Anthony's.
Why?"
"To see if what I'd heard was true." The urge to
retch gripped Zev again. "To think that was Father Cahill's church."
"He wasn't the pastor."
"Not in name, maybe, but they were his flock. He was
the glue that held them together. Someone should tell him what's going
on."
"Oh, yes. That would be wonderful. But nobody knows
where he is, or if he's even alive." I do.
Her hand shot out and gripped his arm, squeezing.
"He's alive?"
"Yes," Zev said, taken aback by her intensity.
"At least I think so."
Her grip tightened. "Where?"
He wondered if he'd made a mistake telling her. He tried
not to sound evasive. "A retreat house. Have I been there? No. But it's
near the beach, I'm told."
True enough, and he knew the address. After Joe had been
moved out of St. Anthony's rectory to the retreat house, he and Zev still
shared many phone conversations. At least until the creatures came. Then the
phones stopped working and Zev's time became devoted more to survival than to
keeping up with old friends.
"You've got to find him! You've got to tell him!
He'll come back when he finds out and he'll make them pay!"
"A mensch, he is, I agree, but only one man."
"No! Many of his parishioners are still alive, but
they're afraid. They're defeated. But if Father Joe came back, they'd have
hope. They'd see that it wasn't over. They'd regain the will to fight."
"Like you?"
"I'm different," she said, the fervor slipping
from her voice. "I never lost the will to fight. But my circumstances are
special."
"How?"
"It's not important. I'm not important. But Father
Joe is. Find him, Rabbi Wolpin. Don't put it off. Find him tomorrow and tell
him. When he hears what they've done to his church he'll come back and teach
them a lesson they'll never forget!"
Zev didn't know about that, but it would be good to see
his young friend again. Searching him out would be a mitzvah for St. Anthony's,
but might be good for Zev as well. It might offer some shape to his life ... a
life that had devolved to mere existence, an endless, mind-numbing round of
searching for food and shelter while avoiding the creatures by night and the
human slime who did their bidding during the day.
All right," Zev said. "I'll try to find him. I
won't promise to bring him back, because such a decision will not be mine to
make. But I promise to look for him."
"Tomorrow?"
"First light. And who should I say sent me?"
The woman turned away and shook her head. "No
one."
"You won't tell me your name?"
"It's not important."
"But you seem to know him."
"Once, yes." Her voice grew thick. "But he
wouldn't recognize me now."
"You can be so sure?"
She nodded. "I've fallen too far away. There's no
coming back for me, I'm afraid."
She'd been through something terrible, this one. So had
everyone who was still alive, including Zev, but her experience, whatever it
was, had made her a little meshugeh. More than a little, maybe.
She started walking away, looking almost silly dragging that
little red wagon behind her.
"Wait..."
"Just find him," she said without turning.
"And don't mention me."
She stepped into the shadows and was gone from sight, with
only the squeaks of the wagon wheels as proof that she hadn't evaporated.
Father Joe Cahill and a prostitute? Zev couldn't believe
it. But even if it were true, it was far less serious than what Joe had been
accused of.
Maybe she hadn't sold herself in the old days. Maybe it
was something she had to do to survive in these new and terrible times.
Whatever the truth, he blessed her for being here to help him tonight.
But who is she? he wondered. Or perhaps more important,
who was she.
CAROLE . . .
Carole hid the red wagon behind the bushes along the side
of the house, then climbed the rickety stairs to the front porch, unlocked the
door, and stepped inside. That was when the voice spoke. It had been silent the
whole long walk home. Now it started in again.
<Hotne sweet home. Is that what you're after thinking
now, Carole? And don't be thinking that the good deed you did tonight will be
offsetting the mortal sins you committed earlier this evening. It won't. Not by
a long shot!>
"Quiet," Carole muttered. "I need to
listen."
She'd been in this house two weeks now, and she'd made it
as secure as possible. As secure as anything could be since her world ended
last month.
Last month? Yes... six weeks this coming Friday. It seemed
a lifetime ago. She never would have believed everything could fall apart so
fast. But it had.
Despite her security measures, she held her breath,
listening for the sound of someone—or something—else in the house besides her.
She heard nothing but the breeze stirring the curtains in the upstairs bedroom.
It had been warm when she'd left but the night had grown chilly. May was such
an untrustworthy month.
She fished the flashlight out of her shoulder bag and
turned it on, then off again—just long enough to orient herself. She wasn't
worried about the light being seen from outside—the blankets draped over the
windows would prevent that. She wanted to save her batteries, a rare and
precious commodity. When she reached the stairs she flicked the light on again
so she could step over the broken first tread. She noticed little splatters of
blood on the banister and newel post. She'd clean them up in the morning, when
she could use natural light.
When she reached the bedroom she closed the window and
quickly undressed.
<Sure and you may be able to remove those whore
clothes, Carole, but you can't remove the stain of what you did in them>
Carole had no illusions about that. She pulled on a baggy
gray sweatsuit and slipped beneath the covers, praying the voice would let her
sleep tonight. The night's labors had exhausted her.
She thought of Rabbi Wolpin, and that made her think of
Father Cahill, and that led to thoughts of St. Anthony's and the school where
she'd taught, and the convent where she'd lived...
She thought of her last nights there, less than six weeks
ago, just days before Easter, when everything had been so different...
GOOD FRIDAY ...
The Holy Father says there are no such
things as vampires," Sister Bernadette Gileen said.
Sister Carole Hanarty glanced up from the pile of
chemistry tests on her lap—tests she might never be able to return to her
sophomore students—and watched Bernadette as she drove through town, working
the shift on the old Datsun like a long-haul trucker. Her dear friend and
fellow Sister of Mercy was thin, almost painfully so, with large blue eyes and
short red hair showing around the white band of her wimple. As she peered
through the windshield, the glow of the setting sun ruddied the clear, smooth
skin of her round face.
Sister Carole shrugged. "If His Holiness said it,
then we must believe it. But we haven't heard anything from him in so long. I
hope ..."
Bernadette turned toward her, eyes wide with alarm.
"Oh, you wouldn't be thinking anything's happened to
His Holiness now, would you, Carole?" she said, the lilt of her
nativeIreland elbowing its way into her voice. "They wouldn't dare!"
Momentarily at a loss as to what to say, Carole gazed out
the side window at the budding trees sliding past. The sidewalks of this
littleJerseyShore town were empty, and hardly any other cars were on the road.
She and Bernadette had had to try three grocery stores before finding one with
anything to sell. Between the hoarders and delayed or canceled shipments, food
was getting scarce.
Everybody sensed it. How did that saying go? By the
pricking in my thumbs, something wicked this way comes...
Or something like that.
She rubbed her cold hands together and thought about
Bernadette, younger than she by five years—only twenty-six—with such a good
mind, such a clear thinker in so many ways. But her faith was almost childlike.
She'd come to the convent at St. Anthony's two years ago
and the pair of them had established instant rapport. They shared so much. Not
just a common Irish heritage, but a certain isolation as well. Carole's parents
had died years ago, and Bernadette's were back on the Auld Sod. So they became
sisters in a sense that went beyond their sisterhood in the order. Carole was
the big sister, Bernadette the little one. They prayed together, laughed
together, walked together. They took over the convent kitchen and did all the
food shopping together. Carole could only hope that she had enriched
Bernadette's life half as much as the younger woman had enriched hers.
Bernadette was such an innocent. She seemed to assume that
since the Pope was infallible when he spoke on matters of faith or morals he
somehow must be invincible too.
Carole hadn't told Bernadette, but she'd decided not to
believe the Pope on the matter of the undead. After all, their existence was
not a matter of faith or morals. Either they existed or they didn't. And all
the news out ofEurope last year had left little doubt that vampires were real.
And that they were on the march.
Somehow they had got themselves organized. Not only did
they exist, but more of them had been hiding inEastern Europe than even the
most superstitious peasant could have imagined. And when the communist bloc
crumbled, when all the former client states andRussia were in disarray,
grabbing for land, slaughtering in the name of nation and race and religion,
the undead took advantage of the power vacuum and struck.
They struck high, they struck low, and before the rest of
the world could react, they controlled allEastern Europe .
If they had merely killed, they might have been
containable. But because each kill was a conversion, their numbers increased in
a geometric progression. Sister Carole understood geometric progressions better
than most. Hadn't she spent years demonstrating them to her chemistry class by
dropping a seed crystal into a beaker of supersaturated solution? That one
crystal became two, which became four, which became eight, which became
sixteen, and so on. You could watch the lattices forming, slowly at first, then
bridging through the solution with increasing speed until the liquid contents
of the beaker became a solid crystalline mass.
That was how it had gone in Eastern Europe andRussia ,
then spreading into the Middle East andIndia , thenChina . And last fall,
intoWestern Europe .
The undead became unstoppable.
All ofEurope had been silent for months. Officially, at
least. But a couple of the students at St. Anthony's High who had shortwave
radios had told Carole of faint transmissions filtering through the
transatlantic night recounting ghastly horrors all across Europe under undead
rule.
But the Pope had declared there were no vampires. He'd
said it, but shortly thereafter he and theVatican had fallen silent along with
the rest of the continent.
Washingtonhad played down the immediate threat, saying
theAtlantic Ocean formed a natural barrier against the undead.Europe was quarantined.America
was safe.
Then had come reports, disputed at first, and still
officially denied, of undead inWashington,DC , running rampant through the
Pentagon, the legislators' posh neighborhoods, the White House itself. ThenNew
York City . The New York TV and radio stations had stopped transmitting. And
now...
"You can't really believe vampires are coming to
theJerseyShore , can you?" Bernadette said. "I mean, that is, if
there were such things."
"It is hard to believe, isn't it?" Carole said,
hiding a smile. "Especially since no one comes toJersey unless they have
to."
"Oh, don't you be having on with me now. This is
serious."
Bernadette was right. It was serious. "Well, it fits
the pattern my students have heard fromEurope ."
"But dear God, 'tis Holy Week! 'Tis Good Friday, it
is! How could they dare?"
"It's the perfect time, if you think about it. There
will be no Mass said until the first Easter Mass on Sunday morning. What other
time of the year is daily mass suspended?"
Bernadette shook her head. "None."
"Exactly." Carole looked down at her cold hands
and felt the chill crawl all the way up her arms.
The car suddenly lurched to a halt and she heard
Bernadette cry out. "Dear Jesus! They're already here!"
Half a dozen black-clad forms clustered on the corner
ahead, staring at them.
"Got to get out of here!" Bernadette said and
hit the gas.
The old car coughed and died.
"Oh, no!" Bernadette wailed, frantically pumping
the gas pedal and turning the key as the dark forms glided toward them.
"No!"
"Easy, dear," Carole said, laying a gentle hand
on her arm. "It's all right. They're just kids."
Perhaps "kids" was not entirely correct. Two
males and four females who looked to be in their late teens and early twenties,
but carried any number of adult lifetimes behind their heavily made-up eyes.
Grinning, leering, they gathered around the car, four on Bernadette's side and
two on Carole's. Sallow faces made paler by a layer of white powder,
kohl-crusted eyelids, and black lipstick. Black fingernails, rings in their
ears and eyebrows and nostrils, chrome studs piercing cheeks and lips. Their
hair ranged the color spectrum, from dead white through burgundy to crankcase
black. Bare hairless chests on the boys under their leather jackets,
almost-bare chests on the girls in their black push-up bras and bustiers. Boots
of shiny leather or vinyl, fishnet stockings, layer upon layer of lace, and
everything black, black, black.
"Hey, look!" one of the boys said. A spiked
leather collar girded his throat; acne lumps bulged under his whiteface.
"Nuns!" "Penguins!" someone else said. Apparently this was
deemed hilarious. The six of them screamed with laughter.
We're not penguins, Carole thought. She hadn't worn a full
habit in years. Only the headpiece.
"Shit, are they gonna be in for a surprise tomorrow
morning!" said a buxom girl wearing a silk top hat.
Another roar of laughter by all except one. A tall slim
girl with three large black tears tattooed down one cheek, and blond roots
peeking from under her black-dyed hair, hung back, looking uncomfortable.
Carole stared at her. Something familiar there...
She rolled down her window. "Rosita? Rosita
Hernandez, is that you?'
More laughter. " 'Rosita'?" someone cried.
"That's Wicky!"
The girl stepped forward and looked Carole in the eye.
"Yes, Sister. That used to be my name. But I'm not Rosita anymore."
"l can see that."
She remembered Rosita. A sweet girl, extremely bright, but
so quiet. A voracious reader who never seemed to fit in with the rest of the
kids. Her grades plummeted as a junior. She never returned for her senior year.
When Carole had called her parents, she was told that Rosita had left home.
She'd been unable to learn anything more.
"You've changed a bit since I last saw you. What is
it—three years now?"
"You talk about change?" said the top-hatted
girl, sticking her face in the window. "Wait'll tonight. Then you'll
really see her change!" She brayed a laugh that revealed a chrome stud in
her tongue.
"Butt out, Carmilla!" Rosita said.
Carmilla ignored her. "They're coming tonight, you
know. The Lords of the Night will be arriving after sunset, and that'll spell
the death of your world and the birth of ours. We will present ourselves to
them, we will bare our throats and let them drain us, and we'll join them. Then
we'll rule the night with them!"
It sounded like a canned speech, one she must have delivered
time and again to her black-clad troupe.
Carole looked past Carmilla to Rosita. "Is that what
you believe? Is that what you really want?"
The girl shrugged her high thin shoulders. "Beats
anything else I got going."
Finally the old Datsun shuddered to life. Carole heard
Bernadette working the shift. She touched her arm and said, "Wait. Just
one more moment, please."
She was about to speak to Rosita when Carmilla jabbed her
finger at Carole's face, shouting.
"Then you bitches and the candy-ass god you whore for
will be fucking extinct!"
With a surprising show of strength, Rosita yanked Carmilla
away from the window.
"Better go, Sister Carole," Rosita said.
The Datsun started to move.
"What the fuck's with you, Wicky?" Carole heard
Carmilla scream as the car eased away from the dark cluster. "Getting
religion or somethin? Should we start callin you Sister Rosita now?"
"She was one of the few people who was ever straight
with me," Rosita said. "So fuck off, Carmilla."
By then the car had traveled too far to hear more.
* * *
"What awful creatures they were!" Bernadette
said, staring out the window in Carole's convent room. She hadn't been able to
stop talking about the incident on the street. "Almost my age, they were,
and such horrible language!"
The room was little more than a ten-by-ten-foot plaster
box with cracks in the walls and the latest coat of paint beginning to flake
off the ancient embossed tin ceiling. She had one window and, for furnishings,
a crucifix, a dresser and mirror, a work table and chair, a bed, and a night
stand. Not much, but she gladly called it home. She took her vow of poverty
seriously.
"Perhaps we should pray for them."
"They need more than prayer, I'd think. Believe me
you, they're heading for a bad end." Bernadette removed the oversized
rosary she wore looped around her neck, gathering the beads and its attached
crucifix in her hand. "Maybe we could offer them some crosses for
protection?"
Carole couldn't resist a smile. "That's a sweet
thought,Bern , but I don't think they're looking for protection."
"Sure, and lookit after what I'm saying,"
Bernadette said, her own smile rueful. "No, of course they wouldn't."
"But we'll pray for them," Carole said.
Bernadette dropped into a chair, stayed there for no more
than a heartbeat, then was up again, moving about, pacing the confines of
Carole's room. She couldn't seem to sit still. She wandered out into the hall
and came back almost immediately, rubbing her hands together as if washing
them.
"It's so quiet," she said. "So empty."
"I certainly hope so," Carole said. "We're
the only two who are supposed to be here."
The little convent was half empty even when all its
residents were present. And now, with St. Anthony's School closed for the
coming week, the rest of the nuns had gone home to spend Easter Week with
brothers and sisters and parents. Even those who might have stayed around the
convent in past years had heard the rumors that the undead might be moving this
way, so they'd scattered. Carole's only living relative was an aunt, her
mother's sister Joyce, who lived in Harrisburg and usually invited her to spend
Easter and the following week with her; but she hadn't invited her this year,
and wasn't answering her phone. She had a son inCalifornia ; maybe she'd gone
to stay with him. Lots of people were leaving the East Coast.
Bernadette hadn't heard from her family inIreland for
months. Carole feared she never would.
So that left just the two of them to hold the fort, as it
were. The convent was part of a complex consisting of the church itself, the
rectory, the grammar school and high school buildings, the tiny cemetery, and
the sturdy old two-story rooming house that was now the convent. She and
Bernadette had taken second-floor rooms, leaving the first floor to the older
nuns.
Carole wasn't afraid. She knew they'd be safe here at St.
Anthony's, although she wished there were more people left in the complex than
just Bernadette, herself, and Father Palmeri.
"I don't understand Father Palmeri," Bernadette
said. "Locking up the church and keeping his parishioners from making the
stations of the cross on Good Friday. Who's ever heard of such a thing, I ask
you? I just don't understand it."
Carole thought she understood. She suspected that Father
Alberto Palmeri was afraid. Sometime this morning he'd locked up the rectory,
barred the door to St. Anthony's, and hidden himself in the church basement.
God forgive her for thinking it, but to Sister Carole's
mind Father Palmeri was a coward.
"Oh, I do wish he'd open the church, just for a
little while," Bernadette said. "I need to be in there, Carole. I
need it."
Carole knew howBern felt. Who had said religion was an
opiate of the people? Marx? Whoever it was, he hadn't been completely wrong.
For Carole, sitting in the cool, peaceful quiet beneath St. Anthony's gothic
arches, praying, meditating, and feeling the presence of the Lord were like a
daily dose of an addictive drug. A dose she andBern had been denied today.Bern
's withdrawal pangs seemed worse than Carole's.
The younger nun paused as she passed the window, then
pointed down to the street.
"And now who in God's name would they be?"
Carole rose and stepped to Bernadette's side. Passing on
the street below was a cavalcade of shiny new cars—Mercedes Benzes, BMW's,
Jaguars, Lin-colns, Cadillacs—all withNew York plates, all cruising from the
direction of the Parkway.
The sight of them in the dusk tightened a knot in Carole's
stomach. The lupine faces she spied through the windows looked brutish, and the
way they drove their gleaming luxury cars down the center line ... as if they
owned the road.
A Cadillac convertible with its top down passed below;
four scruffy occupants lounged on the seats. The driver wore a cowboy hat, a
woman in leather sat next to him. Both were drinking beer. When Carol saw the
driver glance up and look their way, she tugged onBern 's sleeve.
"Stand back! Don't let them see you!"
"Why not? Who are they?"
"I'm not sure, but I've heard of bands of men who do
the vampires' dirty work during the daytime, who've traded their souls for the
promise of immortality later on, and for ... other things now."
"Sure and you're joking, Carole!"
Carole shook her head. "I wish I were."
"Oh, dear God, and now the sun's down." She
turned frightened blue eyes toward Carole. "Do you think maybe we should .
. . ?"
"Lock up? Most certainly. I know what His Holiness
said about there not being any such things as vampires, but maybe he's changed
his mind since then and just can't get word to us."
"Sure and you're probably right. You close these and
I'll check down the hall." She hurried out, her voice trailing behind her.
"Oh, I do wish Father Palmeri hadn't locked the church. I'd dearly love to
say a few prayers there.
Sister Carole glanced out the window again. The fancy new
cars were gone, but rumbling in their wake was a convoy of trucks—big,
eighteen-wheel semis, lumbering down the center line. What were they for? What
did they carry? What were they delivering to town?
Suddenly a dog began to bark, and then another, and more
and more until it seemed as if every dog in town was giving voice.
To fight the unease rising like a flood tide within her,
Sister Carole concentrated on the simple manual tasks of closing and locking
her window and drawing the curtains.
But the dread remained, a sick, cold certainty that the
world was falling into darkness, that the creeping hem of shadow had reached
her corner of the globe, and that without some miracle, without some direct
intervention by a wrathful God, the coming night hours would wreak an
irrevocable change on her life.
She began to pray for that miracle.
* * *
Carole and Bernadette had decided to leave the convent of
St. Anthony's dark tonight.
And they decided to spend the night together in Carole's
room. They dragged in Bernadette's mattress, locked the door, and
doubled-draped the window with the bedspread. They lit the room with a single
candle and prayed together.
Yet the music of the night filtered through the walls and
the doors and the drapes, the muted moan of sirens singing antiphon to their
hymns, the muffled pops of gunfire punctuating their psalms, reaching a
crescendo shortly after midnight, then tapering off to ... silence.
Carole could see that Bernadette was having an especially
rough time of it. he cringed with every siren wail, jumped at every shot.
Carole shared Bern's terror, but she buried it, hid it deep within for her
friend's sake. After all, Carole was older, and she knew she was made of
sterner stuff. Bernadette was an innocent, too sensitive even for yesterday's
world, the world before the undead. How would she survive in the world as it
would be after tonight? She'd need help. Carole would provide as much as she could.
But for all the imagined horrors conjured by the night
noises, the silence was worse. No human wails of pain and horror had penetrated
their sanctum, but imagined cries of human suffering echoed through their minds
in the ensuing stillness.
"Dear God, what's happening out there?"
Bernadette said after they'd finished reading aloud the Twenty-third Psalm.
She huddled on her mattress, a blanket thrown over her
shoulders. The candle's flame reflected in her frightened eyes and cast her
shadow, high, hunched, and wavering, on the wall behind her.
Carole sat cross-legged on her bed. She leaned back
against the wall and fought to keep her eyes open. Exhaustion was a weight on
her shoulders, a cloud over her brain, but she knew sleep was out of the question.
Not now, not tonight, not until the sun was up. And maybe not even then.
"Easy, Bern—" Carole began, then stopped.
From below, on the first floor of the convent, a faint
thumping noise.
"What's that?" Bernadette said, voice hushed,
eyes wide.
"I don't know."
Carole grabbed her robe and stepped out into the hall for
a better listen.
"Don't you be leaving me alone, now!" Bernadette
said, running after her with the blanket still wrapped around her shoulders.
"Hush," Carole said. "Listen. It's the
front door. Someone's knocking. I'm going down to see."
She hurried down the wide, oak-railed stairway to the
front foyer. The knocking was louder here, but still sounded weak. Carole put
her eye to the peephole, peered through the sidelights, but saw no one.
But the knocking, weaker still, continued.
"Wh-who's there?" she said, her words cracking
with fear.
"Sister Carole," came a faint voice through the
door. "It's me ... Rosita. I'm hurt."
Instinctively, Carole reached for the handle, but
Bernadette grabbed her arm.
"Wait! It could be a trick!"
She's right, Carole thought. Then she glanced down and saw
blood leaking across the threshold from the other side.
She gasped and pointed at the crimson puddle. "That's
no trick."
She unlocked the door and pulled it open. Rosita huddled
on the welcome mat in a pool of blood.
"Dear sweet Jesus!" Carole cried. "Help me,
Bern!"
"What if she's a vampire?" Bernadette said,
standing frozen. "They can't cross the threshold unless you ask them
in."
"Stop that silliness! She's hurt!"
Bernadette's good heart won out over her fear. She threw
off the blanket, revealing a faded blue, ankle-length flannel nightgown that
swirled just above the floppy slippers she wore. Together they dragged Rosita
inside. Bernadette closed and relocked the door immediately.
"Call 9-1-1!" Carole told her.
Bernadette hurried down the hall to the phone.
Rosita lay moaning on her side on the foyer tiles,
clutching her bleeding abdomen. Carole saw a piece of metal, coated with rust
and blood, protruding from the area of her navel. From the faint fecal smell of
the gore Carole guessed that her intestines had been pierced.
"Oh, you poor child!" Carole knelt beside her
and cradled her head in her lap. She arranged Bernadette's blanket over
Rosita's trembling body. "Who did this to you?"
"Accident," Rosita gasped. Real tears had run
her black eye makeup over her tattooed tears. "I was running ...
fell."
"Running from what?"
"From them. God ... terrible. We searched for them,
Carmilla's Lords of the Night. Just after sundown we found one. Looked just
like we always knew he would ... you know, tall and regal and graceful and
seductive and cool. Standing by one of those big trailers that came through
town. My friends approached him but I sorta stayed back. Wasn't too sure I was
really into having my blood sucked. But Carmilla goes right up to him, pulling
off her top and baring her throat, offering herself to him."
Rosita coughed and groaned as a spasm of pain shook her.
"Don't talk," Carole said. "Save your
strength."
No," she said in a weaker voice when it eased.
"You got to know. This Lord guy just smiles at Carmilla, then he signals
his helpers who pull open the back doors of the trailer." Rosita sobbed.
"Horrible! Truck's filled with these ... things'. Look human but they're
dirty and naked and act like beasts.
They like pour out the truck and right off a bunch of them
jump Carmiila.
They start biting and ripping at her throat. I see her go
down and hear her screaming and I start backing up. My other friends try to run
but they're pulled down too. And then I see one of the things hold up
Carmilla's head and hear the Lord guy say, 'That's right, children. Take their
heads. Always take their heads. There are enough of us now.' And that's when I
turned and ran. I was running through a vacant lot when I fell on ...
this."
Bernadette rushed back into the foyer. Her face was drawn
with fear. "911 doesn't answer! I can't raise anyone!"
"They're all over town." Rosita said after
another spasm of coughing. Carole could barely hear her. She touched her
throat—so cold. "They've been setting fires and attacking the cops and
firemen when they arrive. Their human helpers break into houses and drive the
people outside where they're attacked. And after the things drain the blood,
they rip the heads off."
"Dear God, why?" Bernadette said, crouching
beside Carole.
"My guess ... don't want any more undead. Maybe only
so much blood to go around and—"
She moaned with another spasm, then lay still. Carole
patted her cheeks and called her name, but Rosita Hernandez's dull, staring
eyes told it all.
"Is she ... ?" Bernadette said.
Carole nodded as tears filled her eyes. You poor misguided
child, she thought, closing Rosita's eyelids.
"She's died in sin," Bernadette said. "She
needs anointing immediately! I'll get Father."
"No, Bern," Carole said. "Father Palmeri
won't come."
"Of course he will. He's a priest and this poor lost
soul needs him."
"Trust me. He won't leave that church basement for
anything."
"But he must!" she said almost childishly, her
voice rising. "He's a priest."
"Just be calm, Bernadette, and we'll pray for her
ourselves."
"We can't do what a priest can do," she said,
springing to her feet. "It's not the same."
"Where are you going?"
"To ... to get a robe. It's cold."
My poor, dear, frightened Bernadette, Carole thought as
she watched her scurry up the steps. I know exactly how you feel.
"Bring my prayer book back with you," she called
after her.
Carole pulled the blanket over Rosita's face and gently
lowered her head to the floor.
She waited for Bernadette to return ... and waited. What
was taking her so long? She called her name but got no answer.
Uneasy, Carole returned to the second floor. The hallway
was empty and dark except for a pale shaft of moonlight slanting through the
window at its far end. Carole hurried to Bern's room. The door was closed. She
knocked.
"Bern? Bern, are you in there?"
Silence.
Carole opened the door and peered inside. More moonlight,
more emptiness.
Where could—?
Down on the first floor, almost directly under Carole's
feet, the convent's back door slammed. How could that be? Carole had locked it
herself—dead-bolted it at sunset.
Unless Bernadette had gone down the back stairs and ...
She darted to the window and stared down at the grassy
area between the convent and the church. The high, bright moon had made a
black-and-white photo of the world outside, bleaching the lawn below with its
stark glow, etching deep ebony wells around the shrubs and foundation plantings.
It glared from St. Anthony's slate roof, stretching a long wedge of night
behind its Gothic spire.
And scurrying across the lawn toward the church was a slim
figure wrapped in a long raincoat, the moon picking out the white band of her
wimple, its black veil a fluttering shadow along her neck and upper back—
Bernadette was too old-country to approach the church with her head uncovered.
"Oh, Bern," Carole whispered, pressing her face
against the glass. "Bern, don't!"
She watched as Bernadette ran up to St. Anthony's side
entrance and began clanking the heavy brass knocker against the thick oak door.
Her high, clear voice filtered faintly through the window glass.
"Father! Father Palmeri! Please open up! There's a
dead girl in the convent who needs anointing!"
She kept banging, kept calling, but the door never opened.
Carole thought she saw Father Palmeri's pale face float into view to Bern's
right through the glass of one of the church's few unstained windows. It hovered
there for a few seconds, then disappeared.
But the door remained closed.
That didn't seem to faze Bern. She only increased the
force of her blows with the knocker, and raised her voice even higher until it
echoed off the stone walls and reverberated through the night.
Carole's heart went out to her. She shared Bern's need, if
not her desperation.
Why doesn't Father Palmeri at least let her in? she
thought. The poor thing's making enough racket to wake the dead.
Sudden terror tightened along the back of Carole's neck
.... wake the dead...
Bern was too loud. She thought only of attracting the
attention of Father Palmeri, but what if she attracted ... others?
Even as the thought crawled across her mind, Carole saw a
dark, rangy figure creep onto the lawn from the street side, slinking from
shadow to shadow, closing in on her unsuspecting friend.
"Oh, dear God!" she cried, and fumbled with the
window lock. She twisted it open and yanked up the sash.
Carole screamed into the night. "Bernadette! Behind
you! There's someone coming! Get back here now, Bernadette! NOW!"
Bernadette turned and looked up toward Carole, then stared
around her. The approaching figure had dissolved into the shadows at the sound
of the shouted warnings. But Bernadette must have sensed something in Carole's
voice, for she started back toward the convent.
She didn't get far—ten paces, maybe—before the shadowy
form caught up to her.
"NO!" Carole screamed as she saw it leap upon
her friend.
She stood frozen at the window, her fingers clawing the
molding on each side as Bernadette's high wail of terror and pain cut the
night.
For the span of an endless, helpless, paralyzed heartbeat,
Carole watched the form drag her down to the silver lawn, tear open her
raincoat, and fall upon her, watched her arms and legs flail wildly,
frantically in the moonlight, and all the while her screams, oh, dear God in
Heaven, her screams for help were slim, white-hot nails driven into Carole's
ears.
And then, out of the corner of her eye, Carole saw the
pale face appear again at the window of St. Anthony's, watch for a moment, then
once more fade into the inner darkness.
With a low moan of horror, fear, and desperation, Carole
pushed herself away from the window and stumbled toward the hall. Someone had
to help. Along the way she snatched the foot-long wooden crucifix from
Bernadette's wall and clutched it against her chest with both hands. As she
picked up speed, graduating from a lurch to a walk to a loping run, she began
to scream—not a wail of fear, but a long, seamless ululation of rage.
Something was killing her friend.
The rage was good. It shredded the fear and the horror and
the loathing that had paralyzed her. It allowed her to move, to keep moving.
She embraced the rage.
Carole hurtled down the stairs and burst onto the moonlit
lawn—
And stopped, disoriented for an instant. She didn't see
Bern. Where was she? Where was her attacker?
And then she saw a patch of writhing shadow on the grass
ahead of her near one of the shrubs.
Bernadette?
Clutching the crucifix, Carole ran for the spot, and as
she neared she realized it was indeed Bernadette, sprawled face down, but not
alone. Another shadow sat astride her, hissing like a reptile, gnashing its
teeth, its fingers curved into talons that tugged at Bernadette's head as if
trying to tear it off.
Carole reacted without thinking. Screaming, she launched
herself at the creature, ramming the big crucifix against its exposed back.
Light flashed and sizzled and thick black smoke shot upward in oily swirls from
where cross met flesh. The thing arched its back and howled, writhing beneath
the cruciform brand, thrashing wildly as it tried to wriggle out from under the
fiery weight.
But Carole stayed with it, following its slithering crawl
on her knees, pressing the flashing cross deeper and deeper into its steaming,
boiling flesh, down to the spine, into the vertebrae. Its cries became almost
piteous as it weakened, and Carole gagged on the thick black smoke that fumed
around her, but her rage would not allow her to slack off. She kept up the
pressure, pushed the wooden crucifix deeper and deeper in the creature's back
until it penetrated the chest cavity and seared into its heart. Suddenly the
thing gagged and shuddered and then was still.
The flashes faded. The final wisps of smoke trailed away
on the breeze.
Carole abruptly released the shaft of the crucifix as if
it had shocked her. She ran back to Bernadette, dropped to her knees beside the
still form, and turned her over onto her back.
"Oh, no!" she screamed when she saw Bernadette's
torn throat, her wide, glazed, sightless eyes, and the blood, so much blood
smeared all over the front of her.
Oh no. Oh, dear God, please no! This can't be! This can't
be real!
A sob burst from her. "No, Bern! Nooooo!"
Somewhere nearby, a dog howled in answer.
Or was it a dog?
Carole realized she was defenseless now. She had to get
back to the convent. She leaped to her feet and looked around. Nothing moving.
A dozen feet away she saw the crucifix still buried in the dead thing.
She hurried over to retrieve it, but recoiled from
touching the creature. She could see now that it was a man—a naked man, or
something that very much resembled one. But not quite. Some indefinable quality
was missing.
Was it one of them}
This must be one of the undead Rosita had warned about.
But could this.. . this thing ... be a vampire? It had acted like little more
than a rabid dog in human form.
Whatever it was, it had mauled and murdered Bernadette.
Rage bloomed again within Carole like a virulent, rampant virus, spreading
through her bloodstream, invading her nervous system, threatening to take over.
She fought the urge to batter the corpse.
She choked back the bile rising in her throat and stared
at the inert form prone before her. This once had been a man, someone with a
family, perhaps. Surely he hadn't asked to become this vicious night thing.
"Whoever you were," Carole whispered,
"you're free now. Free to return to God."
She gripped the shaft of the crucifix to remove it but
found it fixed in the seared flesh like a steel rod set in concrete.
Something howled again. Closer.
She had to get back inside, but she couldn't leave Bern
out here.
Swiftly she returned to Bernadette's side, worked her
hands through the grass under her back and knees, and lifted her into her arms.
She staggered under the weight. Dear Lord, for such a thin woman she was heavy.
Carole carried Bernadette back to the convent as fast as
her rubbery legs would allow. Once inside, she bolted the door, then tried to
carry her up the steep stairway. She stopped on the third step. She'd intended
to take Bern's body back to her room, but who knew when the poor girl would be
buried?
Might be days. And the second floor got warm during the
day. Better to lay her out in the cellar where it was cooler.
With Bernadette in her arms she struggled down the narrow
stairwell to the cellar, almost falling twice along the way. She stretched her
out on an old couch. She straightened Bern's thin legs, crossed her hands over
her blood-splattered chest, and arranged her torn nightgown and raincoat around
her as best she could. She adjusted the wimple on her head. Then she ran up to
Bernadette's room and returned with her bedspread. She draped her from head to
toe, then knelt beside her.
Looking down at that still form under the quilt she had
helped Bernadette make, Carole sagged against the couch and began to cry. She
tried to say a requiem prayer but her grief-racked mind had lost the words. So
she sobbed aloud and asked God why? How could He let this happen to a dear,
sweet innocent who had wished only to spend her life serving Him? WHY?
But no answer came.
When Carole finally controlled her tears, she forced herself
to her weary feet and made her way back to the main floor. When she saw the
light on in the front foyer, she knew she should turn it off. She stepped over
the still form of Rosita under the blood-soaked blanket. Two violent deaths
here on the church grounds, a place devoted to God. How many more beyond these
grounds?
She knew she should carry Rosita to the basement as well,
but lacked the strength—of either will or body.
Tomorrow . .. first thing tomorrow morning, Rosita. I
promise.
She turned off the light and raced through the dark back
up to her own room where she huddled shivering in her bed.
CAROLE . . .
Carole awoke in a cold sweat. Good Friday again. How many
times must she relive that night?
She pushed herself up from the mattress and stumbled to
the bathroom. She poured an inch of water from the tap into a glass and drank
it down. Didn: t want to risk drinking too much without boiling it first.
At least the water was still running. Was that the
vampires' doing? Carole wouldn't be surprised. Water was one of the necessities
of life. It seemed to her the vampires wanted a certain number of the living to
survive, but not to communicate. Which would explain why the electricity and
the telephones went out that first weekend. Keep people isolated and insulated
from any message of hope.
She found her way back to the bed and buried her head
under the pillow. She needed sleep—dreamless sleep that would allow her to wake
up refreshed instead of exhausted. She didn't want to dream of Good Friday
again, or worse, the following day . . . the worst day of her life.
HOLY SATURDAY . . .
Carole awoke to the wail of sirens. She sat up in bed,
blinking in the morning light.
A dream . . . please, God, show me that last night was all
a dream.
But her throat tightened at the sight of Bernadette's
empty mattress on the floor beside her bed. No ... not a dream. A living
nightmare.
She'd stayed up till dawn, then she'd pulled the bedspread
from the window and fallen into exhausted sleep.
The sirens. . . closer now. She crept to the window and
peeked at the street below. Two police cars, red and blue lights flashing,
roared past the front of the convent and made squealing turns into the church
parking lot.
The police! They've come!
Carole rose and hurried across the hall to Bern's room in
time to see them slow to a stop before the church.
Thank you, God, she thought. All is not lost. The police
are still on the job.
Before pushing away from the window she searched the lawn
to the left of the church for the remains of the vampire she'd killed last
night. A bright, clear, unconscionably beautiful morning, with a high trail of
brown smoke drifting from the east. She couldn't find the vampire, but she
spotted Bernadette's wooden cross lying in a man-shaped puddle of brown ooze on
the grass. Could that be all that remained of—?
Can't worry about that now, she thought as she dashed back
into the hall and down the rear stairs. She had to get to the police, tell them
about Bernadette. They'd take her to a morgue or a funeral home where Carole
could arrange for a proper burial.
She reached the rear door and had just turned back the
deadbolt when she glanced through the glass. The sight of a lean, wolfish man,
all in denim, uncoiling from the front passenger seat of the first car froze
her heart. He settled a cowboy hat over his long brown hair and looked around,
smirking as if he owned the world. A tattooed blond woman in a leather vest got
out of the driver seat while two more men in rough clothes slithered from the
second car. The first wore his long black hair in a single braid down the
middle of his back; the second was sandy haired and balding, wearing a scraggly
beard to compensate for what he'd lost on his scalp. All four wore wraparound
sunglasses and had silvery earrings dangling from their right lobes.
Carole ducked away from the door and jammed her hands
against her mouth. She'd seen these people before, last night, leading the
caravan of trucks carrying the undead into town. It seemed so long ago, a
lifetime. But this could only mean that the police had lost. The undead and
their caretakers were in control now.
But what were they doing here at St. Anthony's?
She crept away from the door and down the hall toward the
kitchen. The windows over the sink looked out toward the church. She could
watch from there and see without being seen. She needed to know what they were
up to. She leaned over the big double sink and cranked the window open an inch
or two, just enough to hear what they were saying.
She sniffed the air that wafted through the opening.
Something burning somewhere. .. smelled like some sort of meat. She glanced at
the brown smoke trailing across the sky. Could that be—?
A car door slammed. She watched the one in the cowboy hat
heft a crowbar as he walked from his police car to the side door of the church.
Swinging it like a baseball bat he started bashing the hooked end against the
doorknob. The clang of metal on metal echoed like a church bell through the
eerie silence of the morning. Then he reversed his grip and rammed the tip of
the long end between the door and the frame. A few hard yanks and the door
popped open.
The woman and the two other men ran inside while the
cowboy returned to the police car. He leaned against the fender and lit a
cigarette; he carelessly bounced the crowbar against the hood, denting it with
every bounce.
A few minutes later the two other men emerged, dragging
Father Palmeri between them. The priest had a bloody nose and was blubbering in
fear, begging them to let him go.
The sandy-haired man laughed. "Found him hiding in
the basement! Lookit him! Peed his pants!"
Carole shook her head in dismay when she saw the darker
stain on Father
Palmeri's black cassock. God forgive her, she'd never
liked the man, and after last night when he could have saved Bernadette simply
by letting her into the church, well, she liked him even less. He was a man of
God. He was supposed to set an example.
Then the woman appeared. She'd draped herself in Father
Palmeri's long white chasuble and came out dancing and skipping behind the
whimpering priest.
Carole felt her anger begin to boil. How dare this . . .
this tramp sully holy vestments like that. It was sacrilege.
"You like basements, priest?" the cowboy said,
grinning. "Good. 'Cause you're gonna be seeing a lot of them from now
on."
Carole's stomach dropped. What did that mean? Were they
going to turn him into a vampire? Oh, no. They couldn't do that. Not to a
priest.
She had to help him, but what could she do? She was one
woman and there were four of them. She watched as they locked Father Palmeri in
the caged rear compartment of one of the cars. Then they started toward the
convent, the cowboy in the lead, the crowbar on his shoulder.
No! Not here! Not now! And she'd unlocked the door.
Hide! The basement? No. She had to pass the rear door to
reach it. They'd see her for sure. She could make it to the second floor but
couldn't think of anyplace to hide up there.
She did a quick turn and her gaze came to rest on the big
institutional-size oven to her left. She yanked down the door and looked
inside. Could she fit? Maybe, maybe not. But even if she did fit, the plate
glass window in the door would give her away. But no. A closer look showed that
it was fogged with baked-on grease. Bless old Sister Mary Margaret's bad eyes.
Last week was her turn to clean the oven. She never did a good job, for which
Carole was now grateful.
Moving as quickly as she could without causing a racket,
she slid out the two metal racks and slipped them between the oven and the
neighboring cabinet. She pulled a long-handled metal spatula from the wall rack
and bent the end into an acute angle. Then she sidled into the close space, her
flannel nightgown sticking to the grease-splattered surfaces, and tucked her
knees against her chest.
She fit. Barely. Now to get the door closed. She reached
out with the spatula, hooked its bent end around the upper edge of the oven door,
and pulled. It barely budged. These old oven doors were heavy. Straining her
muscles, she managed to pull it a quarter of the way closed when the spatula
slipped off. The door fell back with a clank.
She felt her heart kick into a higher gear as she tried
again. The cowboy and his gang would be walking in any—
She heard the back door slam open and a woman's voice say,
"Nice of them to leave the place unlocked."
"Probably means it's empty," said a voice she
recognized as the cowboy's. "Check it out anyway. See if we can put a nun
on Gregor's plate, too"
The woman snickered. "Yeah! A priest-and-nun combo
platter!"
"A three-way!" someone else said.
Lots of laughter at that. But for Carole, only terror
clawing at her gut. She had to close this door. Now.
She stretched out and again hooked the spatula end over
the edge. The handle slipped in her sweaty palm. She tightened her grip and
began to pull.
"I'll take this floor," said the cowboy's voice.
"Al, you and Kenny check out upstairs. Jackie, you take the
basement."
Carole heard feet moving, some away, some pounding up the
stairs, and one set moving closer, toward the kitchen. The oven door was a
third of the way up now. Her arm was aching. If only she could use both hands.
She set her teeth and gave the door a yank. To her shock it snapped toward her
once it passed the halfway mark and she had to release the spatula to keep it
from slamming shut. She eased it closed just as someone walked into the room.
Carole closed her eyes and shuddered with relief, but that
vanished when she opened them again and saw the spatula still hooked on the
door.
She stifled a bleat of terror. The business end was sticking
outside.
She looked through the grimy glass and saw a pair of
denim-clad legs enter the kitchen and stop directly before the oven. The
cowboy—had he spotted the spatula?
Sweet Jesus, don't let him see it!
Carole almost wept when the legs moved on.
"Let's see what we got here," she heard him say.
She heard cabinet doors swing open, heard their contents
hit the floor, heard drawers pulled from their slots and dropped. He couldn' t
be looking for a person—not in those spaces. What was he after?
"Ay, here we go."
More footsteps. Father Palmeri's white chasuble stopped in
front of the oven. The woman.
"Whatcha got there, Stan?"
"First, whatcha find in the basement?"
"Dead nun. Least I'm pretty sure she's a nun. She's
wearin a tore-up nightie and a raincoat, but she's got one of those veil hats
on her head. And she was bit."
"And she still got her head?"
"Yeah. Think she ran into that dead feral
outside?"
"Dunno, but someone sure kicked his ass, huh?"
"True that." The woman moved out of view of the
oven glass. "So whatcha got there?"
"Homemade chocolate chip cookies. Still fresh."
"Ooh, gimme!"
Carole bit back a sob. She and Bernadette had baked those
yesterday afternoon, and now these human slime were eating them.
"Yo, Stan," said a male voice. "Nobody
upstairs but we got a dead goth chick in the front hall."
"Was she bit?"
"Nah. Some kinda steel pipe stickin from her
gut."
"Whoa! What kinda weird shit went down here last
night? Sounds like my kinda party."
They laughed and then went silent. Stuffing their faces
with her cookies, Carole supposed.
Finally the cowboy said, "All right. The priest house
is next. We'll take these with us. Somebody remind me we gotta come back for
the bit one. We should toss her on the pile before sunset."
With that they shuffled out, leaving Carole alone and
cramped and sweating in the oven. She closed her eyes and pretended she was
sitting on a pew in the cool open spaces of St. Anthony's, savoring the
peaceful air as she waited for mass to begin.
* * *
Carole waited more than an hour before she dared to leave
the oven. After slowly straightening her cramped back, the first thing she did
was peek through the kitchen window. She sagged against the sink with relief
when she saw the police cars gone.
Next she ran up to her room and exchanged her grease-spotted
nightgown for a plaid blouse and khaki slacks. Usually she'd wear a skirt, but
not today.
She looked around. Now . . . what?
She couldn't stay here in the convent. She had to move
somewhere else. But where? And how could she leave Bernadette here to be hauled
off by those human animals so they could "toss her on the pile,"
whatever that meant?
Carole knew she had to do something. But what?
Since joining the convent a dozen years ago, straight out
of high school, all important decisions had been taken out of her hands. The
Sisters of Mercy had put her through college at Georgian Court where she'd
earned her teaching degree. All along she'd followed the instructions of Sister
Superior. A calm, contemplative existence of poverty, chastity, and obedience,
devoted to prayer and study and doing the Lord's work.
Now she had to decide. She wanted to hide Bernadette's
body, but couldn't think of a single safe place. She wanted to move Rosita's
body down to the basement but didn't dare: The cowboy would know someone was
here.
So she spent the day in a state of mental and emotional
paralysis. She prayed for guidance, she walked the halls, she sat on her bed
and stared out the window, watching for the cowboy and his gang, dreading the
moment they returned.
The only decision she made was to hide under her bed when
they did.
But they didn't return. The afternoon dragged into
evening, and then the sun was down. Carole allowed herself the faint hope that
they'd forgotten about Bernadette or had become involved in more pressing
matters.
She draped her window, lit a candle, and began to pray.
She didn't know what time the power went out. She had no
idea how long she'd been kneeling beside her bed when she glanced at the
digital alarm clock on her night table and saw that its face had gone dark.
Not that a power failure mattered. She noticed barely an
inch of the candle left. She held her watch face near the flame. Only 2 A.M.
Would this night ever end?
She was tempted to lift the bedspread draped over the
window and peek outside, but was afraid of what she might see.
How long until dawn? she wondered, rubbing her eyes. Last
night had seemed endless, but this—
Beyond her locked door, a faint creak came from somewhere
along the hall. It could have been anything—the wind in the attic, the old
building settling—but it had sounded like floorboards creaking.
And then she heard it again.
Carole froze, still on her knees, hands still folded in
prayer, elbows resting on the bed, and listened. More creaks, closer, and
something else ... a rhythmic shuffle ... in the hall. . . approaching her door
. . .
Footsteps.
With her heart punching frantically against the wall of
her chest, Carole leaped to her feet and stepped close to the door, listening
with her ear almost touching the wood. Yes. Footsteps. Slow. And soft, like
bare feet scuffing the floor. Coming this way. Closer. Right outside the door
now.
Carole felt a sudden chill, as if a wave of icy air had
penetrated the wood, but the footsteps didn't pause. They passed her door,
moving on.
And then they stopped.
Carole had her ear pressed against the wood now. She could
hear her pulse pounding through her head as she strained for the next sound.
And then it came, more shuffling outside in the hall, almost confused at first,
and then the footsteps began again.
Coming back.
This time they stopped directly outside Carole's door. The
cold was back again, a damp, penetrating chill that reached for her bones.
Carole backed away from it.
And then the nob turned. Slowly. The door creaked with the
weight of a body leaning against it from the other side, but Carole's bolt
held.
Then a voice. Hoarse. A single whispered word, barely
audible, but a shout could not have startled her more.
"Carole?"
Carole didn't reply—couldn't reply.
"Carole, it's me. Bern. Let me in."
Against her will, a low moan escaped Carole. No, no, no,
this couldn't be Bernadette. Bernadette was dead. Carole had left her cooling
body lying in the basement. This was some horrible joke . . .
Or was it? Maybe Bernadette had become one of them, one of
the very things that had killed her.
But the voice on the other side of the door was not that
of some ravenous beast . . .
"Please let me in, Carole. I'm frightened out here
alone."
Maybe Bern is alive, Carole thought, her mind racing,
ranging for an answer. I'm no doctor. I could have been wrong about her being
dead. Maybe she survived . . .
She stood trembling, torn between the desperate, aching
need to see her friend alive, and the wary terror of being tricked by whatever
creature Bernadette might have become.
"Carole?"
Carole wished for a peephole in the door, or at the very
least a chain lock, but she had neither, and she had to do something. She
couldn't stand here like this and listen to that plaintive voice any longer
without going mad. She had to know. Without giving herself any more time to
think, she snapped back the bolt and pulled the door open, ready to face
whatever awaited her in the hall.
She gasped. "Bernadette!"
Her friend stood just beyond the threshold, swaying, stark
naked.
Not completely naked. She still wore her wimple, although
it was askew on her head, and a strip of cloth had been layered around her neck
to dress her throat wound. In the wan, flickering candlelight that leaked from
Carole's room, she saw that the blood that had splattered her was gone. Carole
had never seen Bernadette unclothed before. She'd never realized how thin she
was. Her ribs rippled beneath the skin of her chest, disappearing only beneath
the scant padding of her small breasts with their erect nipples; the bones of
her hips and pelvis bulged around her flat belly. Her normally fair skin was
almost blue white. The only other colors were the dark pools of her eyes and
the orange splotches of hair on her head and her pubes.
"Carole," she said weakly. "Why did you
leave me?"
The sight of Bernadette standing before her, alive,
speaking, had drained most of Carole's strength; the added weight of guilt from
her words nearly drove her to her knees. She sagged against the door frame.
"Bern ..." Carole's voice failed her. She
swallowed and tried again. "I—I thought you were dead. And . . . what
happened to your clothes?"
Bernadette raised her hand to her throat. "I tore up
my nightgown for a bandage. Can I come in?"
Carole straightened and opened the door further. "Oh,
Lord, yes. Come in. Sit down. I'll get you a blanket."
Bernadette shuffled into the room, head down, eyes fixed
on the floor. She moved like someone on drugs. But then, after losing so much
blood, it was a wonder she could walk at all.
"Don't want a blanket," Bern said. "Too
hot. Aren't you hot?"
She backed herself stiffly onto Carole's bed, then lifted
her ankles and sat cross-legged, facing her. Mentally, Carole explained the
casual, blatant way she exposed herself by the fact that Bernadette was still
recovering from a horrific trauma, but that made it no less discomfiting.
Carole glanced at the crucifix on the wall over her bed,
above and behind Bernadette. For moment, as Bernadette had seated herself beneath
it, she thought she had seen it glow. It must have been reflected candlelight.
She turned away and retrieved a spare blanket from the closet. She unfolded it
and wrapped it around Bernadette's shoulders and over her spread knees,
covering her.
"I'm thirsty, Carole. Could you get me some
water?"
Her voice was strange. Lower pitched and hoarse, yes, as
might be expected after the throat wound she'd suffered. But something else had
changed in her voice, something Carole could not pin down.
"Of course. You'll need fluids. Lots of fluids."
The bathroom was only two doors down. She took her water
pitcher, lit a second candle, and left Bernadette on the bed, looking like an
Indian draped in a serape.
When she returned with the full pitcher, she was startled
to find the bed empty. She spied Bernadette by the window. She hadn't opened
it, but she'd pulled off the bedspread drape and raised the shade. She stood
there, staring out at the night. And she was naked again.
Carole looked around for the blanket and found it...
hanging on the wall over her bed . . .
Covering the crucifix.
Part of Carole screamed at her to run, to flee down the
hall and not look back. But another part of her insisted she stay. This was her
friend. Something terrible had happened to Bernadette and she needed Carole
now, probably more than she'd needed anyone in her entire life. And if someone
was going to help her, it was Carole. Only Carole.
She placed the pitcher on the nightstand.
"Bernadette," she said, her mouth as dry as the
timbers in these old walls, "the blanket . . ."
"I was hot," Bernadette said without turning.
"I brought you the water. I'll pour—"
"I'll drink it later. Come and watch the night."
"I don't want to see the night. It frightens
me."
Bernadette turned, a faint smile on her lips. "But
the darkness is so beautiful."
She stepped closer and stretched her arms toward Carole,
laying a hand on each shoulder and gently massaging the terror-tightened
muscles there. A sweet lethargy began to seep through Carole. Her eyelids began
to drift closed ... so tired ... so long since she'd had any sleep . . .
No!
She forced her eyes open and gripped Bernadette's cold
hands, pulling them from her shoulders. She pressed the palms together and
clasped them between her own.
"Let's pray, Bern. With me: Hail Mary, full of grace
..."
"No!"
"... the Lord is with thee. Blessed art thou
..."
Her friend's face twisted in rage. "I said, NO, damn
you!"
Carole struggled to keep a grip on Bernadette's hands but
she was too strong.
"... amongst women..."
And suddenly Bernadette's struggles ceased. Her face
relaxed, her eyes cleared, even her voiced changed, still hoarse, but higher in
pitch, lighter in tone as she took up the words of the prayer.
"And Blessed is the fruit of thy womb ..."
Bernadette struggled with the next word, unable to say it. Instead she gripped
Carole's hands with painful intensity and loosed a torrent of her own words.
"Carole, get out! Get out, oh, please, for the love of God, get out now!
There's not much of me left in here, and soon I'll be like the ones that killed
me and I'll be after killing you! So run, Carole! Hide! Lock yourself in the
chapel downstairs but get away from me now!"
Carole knew now what had been missing from Bernadette's
voice—her brogue. But now it was back. This was the real Bernadette speaking.
She was back! Her friend, her sister was back! Carole bit back a sob.
"Oh, Bern, I can help! I can—"
Bernadette pushed her toward the door. "No one can
help me, Carole!"
She ripped the makeshift bandage from her neck, exposing
the jagged, partially healed wound and the ragged ends of the torn blood
vessels within it. "It's too late for me, but not for you. They're a bad
lot and I'll be one of them again soon, so get out while you—"
Suddenly Bernadette stiffened and her features shifted. Carole
knew immediately that the brief respite her friend had stolen from the horror
that gripped her was over. Something else was back in command.
Carole turned and ran.
But the Bernadette-thing was astonishingly swift. Carole
had barely reached the threshold when a steel-fingered hand gripped her upper
arm and yanked her back, nearly dislocating her shoulder. She cried out in pain
and terror as she was spun about and flung across the room. Her hip struck hard
against the rickety old spindle chair by her desk, knocking it over as she
landed in a heap beside it.
Carole groaned with the pain. As she shook her head to
clear it, she saw Bernadette approaching, her movements swift, more assured
now, her teeth bared—so many teeth, and so much longer than the old
Bernadette's—her fingers curved, reaching for Carole's throat. With each
passing second there was less and less of Bernadette about her.
Carole tried to back away, her frantic hands and feet
slipping on the floor as she pressed her spine against the wall. She had
nowhere to go. She pulled the fallen chair atop her and held it as a shield
against the Bernadette-thing. The face that had once belonged to her dearest
friend grimaced with contempt as she swung her hand at the chair. It scythed
through the spindles, splintering them like matchsticks, sending the carved
headpiece flying. A second blow cracked the seat in two. A third and fourth
sent the remnants of the chair hurtling to opposite sides of the room.
Carole was helpless now. All she could do was pray.
"Our Father, who art—"
"Too late for that to help you now, Carole!" she
rasped, spitting her name.
"... hallowed be Thy Name ..." Carole said,
quaking in terror as frigid undead fingers closed on her throat.
And then the Bernadette-thing froze, listening. Carole
heard it too. An insistent tapping. On the window. The creature turned to look,
and Carole followed her gaze.
A face was peering through the glass.
Carole blinked but it didn't go away. This was the second
floor! How—?
And then a second face appeared, this one upside down,
looking in from the top of the window. And then a third, and a fourth, each
more bestial than the last. And as each appeared it began to tap its fingers
and knuckles on the window glass.
"NO!" the Bernadette-thing screamed at them.
"You can't come in! She's mine! No one touches her but me!"
She turned back to Carole and smiled, showing those teeth
that had never fit in Bernadette's mouth. "They can't cross a threshold
unless invited in by one who lives there. I live here—or at least I did. And
I'm not sharing you, Carole."
She turned again and raked a clawlike hand at the window.
"Go aWAY! She's MINE!"
Carole glanced to her left. The bed was only a few feet
away. And above it—the blanket-shrouded crucifix. If she could reach it...
She didn't hesitate. With the mad tapping tattoo from the
window echoing around her, Carole gathered her feet beneath her and sprang for
the bed. She scrambled across the sheets, one hand outstretched, reaching for
the blanket—
A manacle of icy flesh closed around her calf and roughly
dragged her back.
"Oh, no, bitch," said the hoarse, unaccented
voice of the Bernadette-thing. "Don't even think about it!"
It grabbed two fistfuls of fabric at the back of Carole's
blouse and hurled her across the room as if she weighed no more than a pillow.
The wind whooshed out of Carole as she slammed against the far wall. She heard
ribs crack. She fell among the splintered ruins of the chair, pain lancing
through her right flank. The room wavered and blurred. But through the roaring
in her ears she still heard that insistent tapping on the window.
As her vision cleared she saw the Bernadette-thing's naked
form gesturing again to the creatures at the window, now a mass of salivating
mouths and tapping fingers.
"Watch!" she hissed. "Watch me!"
With that, she loosed a long, howling scream and lunged,
arms curved before her, body arcing toward Carole in a flying leap. The scream,
the tapping, the faces at the window, the dear friend who now wanted only to
slaughter her—it all was suddenly too much for Carole. She wanted to roll away
but couldn't get her body to move. Her hand found the broken seat of the chair
by her hip. Instinctively she pulled it closer. She closed her eyes as she
raised it between herself and the horror hurtling toward her.
The impact drove the wood of the seat against Carole's
chest; she groaned as new stabs of pain shot through her ribs. But the
Bernadette-thing's triumphant feeding cry cut off abruptly and devolved into a
coughing gurgle.
Suddenly the weight was released from Carole's chest, and
the chair seat with it.
And the tapping at the window ceased.
Carole opened her eyes to see the naked Bernadette-thing
standing above her, straddling her, holding the chair seat before her, choking
and gagging as she struggled with it.
At first Carole didn't understand. She drew her legs back
and inched away along the wall. And then she saw what had happened.
Three splintered spindles had remained fixed in that half
of the broken seat, and those spindles were now firmly and deeply embedded in
the center of the Bernadette-thing's chest. She wrenched wildly at the chair
seat, trying to dislodge the oak daggers but succeeded only in breaking them
off at skin level. She dropped the remnant of the seat and swayed like a tree
in a storm, her mouth working spasmodically as her hands fluttered
ineffectually over the bloodless wounds between her ribs and the slim wooden
stakes out of reach within them.
Abruptly she dropped to her knees with a dull thud. Then,
only inches from Carole, she slumped into a splay-legged squat. The agony faded
from her face and she closed her eyes. She fell forward against Carole.
Carole threw her arms around her friend and gathered her
close.
"Oh Bern, oh Bern, oh Bern," she moaned.
"I'm so sorry. If only I'd got there sooner!"
Bernadette's eyes fluttered open and the darkness was
gone. Only her own spring-sky blue remained, clear, grateful. Her lips began to
curve upward but made it only halfway to a smile, then she was gone.
Carole hugged the limp cold body closer and moaned in
boundless grief and anguish to the unfeeling walls. She saw the leering faces
begin to crawl away from the window and she shouted at them though her tears.
"Go! That's it! Run away and hide! Soon it'll be
light and then I'll come looking for you! For all of you! And woe to any of you
that I find!"
She cried over Bernadette's body a long time. And then she
wrapped it in a sheet and held and rocked her dead friend in her arms until
sunrise on Easter Sunday.
CAROLE . . .
The voice yanked her from sleep, the voice that sounded
like Bernadette's but robbed of all her sweetness and compassion.
<That was when you turned your back on the Lord,
Carole. That was when you began your life of sin.>
After the horrors of Easter weekend had come loneliness.
Carole had begun talking to herself in her head—just for company of sorts—to
ease her through the long empty hours. But the voice had taken on a life of its
own, becoming Bernadette's. In a way, then, Bern was still alive.
"Yes," Carole said, sitting up on the side of
the bed and peering out the window at the lightening sky. "I suppose that
was when it began."
She'd walked out of the tomb of St. Anthony's convent on
Easter morning and left the old Sister Carole Hanarty behind. That gentle soul,
happy to spend her days and nights in the service of the Lord, praying,
fasting, teaching chemistry to reluctant adolescents, and holding to her vows
of poverty, chastity, and obedience, was dead.
In her place was a new Sister Carole, tempered in the
forge of that night and recast into someone relentlessly vengeful and fearless
to the point of recklessness.
And perhaps, she admitted with no shame or regret, more
than a little mad.
She'd departed St. Anthony's and begun her hunt. She'd
been hunting ever since.
Carole stretched and glanced around the room. The walls
had been decked with family pictures of weddings and children when she'd moved
herself in. She'd removed those and lain the ones on the bureau and dresser
face down. All those smiling children ... she couldn't bear their eyes watching
her.
She knew their names. The Bennetts—Kevin, Marie, and their
twin girls. She hadn't known them before, but Carole felt she knew them now.
She'd seen their family photos, seen the twins' bedroom.
She knew from the state of the empty house when she'd
found it that the owners hadn't moved out. They'd been driven out. She hoped
for the sake of their souls that they were dead now. Truly dead.
<It's not too late to be turning back. You can start
following the rules again. You can become a good person again and go back to
doing the Lord's work.>
"But the rules have changed," Carole whispered.
Being a good person meant something different than it had
then. And doing the Lord's work . . . well, it was an entirely different sort
of work now.
- 2 -
ZEV . . .
It had been almost a full minute since he'd slammed the
brass knocker against the heavy oak door. That should have been proof enough.
After all, wasn't the knocker in the shape of a cross? But no, they had to
squint through their peephole and peer through the sidelights that framed the
door.
Zev sighed and resigned himself to the scrutiny. He
couldn't blame people for being cautious, but this seemed overly so. The sun
was in the west and shining full on his back; he was all but silhouetted in it.
What more did they want?
I should maybe take off my clothes and dance naked?
He gave a mental shrug and savored the salt tang of the
sea air. The bulk of this huge Tudor mansion stood between him and the
Atlantic, but the ocean's briny scent and rhythmic rumble were everywhere. He'd
bicycled from Lakewood, which was only ten miles inland from here, but the warm
May day and the bright sun beating on his dark blue suit coat had sweated him
up. It had taken him longer than he'd planned to find this retreat house.
Spring Lake. The Irish Riviera. An Irish Catholic seaside
resort since before the turn of the century. He looked around at its carefully
restored Victorian houses, the huge mansions facing the beach, the smaller
homes set in neat rows running straight back from the ocean. Many of them were
still occupied. Not like Lakewood. Lakewood was an empty shell.
Oh, they'd been smart, those bloodsuckers. They knew their
easiest targets. Whenever they swooped into an area they went after officialdom
first — the civic leaders, the cops, the firemen, the clergy. But after that,
they attacked the non-Christian neighborhoods. And among Jews they picked the
Orthodox first of the first. Smart. Where else would they be less likely to run
up against a cross? It worked for them in Brooklyn and Queens, and so when they
came south into New Jersey, spreading like a plague, they headed straight for
the town with one of the largest collections of yeshivas in North America.
But after the Bensonhurst and Kew Gardens holocausts, the
people in the Lakewood communities should not have taken quite so long to
figure out what was going to happen. The Reformed and Conservative synagogues
started handing out crosses at Shabbes—too late for many but it saved a few.
Did the Orthodox congregations follow suit? No. They hid in their homes and
shuls and yeshivas and read and prayed.
And were liquidated.
A cross, a crucifix — they held power over the undead,
drove them away. Zev's fellow rabbis did not want to accept that simple fact
because they could not face its devastating ramifications. To hold up a cross
was to negate two thousand years of Jewish history, it was to say that the
Messiah had come and they had missed him.
Did it say that? Zev didn't know. For all he knew, the
undead predated Christianity, and their fear of crosses might be related to
something else. Argue about it later—people were dying. But the rabbis had to
argue it then and there. And as they argued, their people were slaughtered like
cattle.
How Zev had railed at them, how he'd pleaded with them!
Blind, stubborn fools! If a fire was consuming your house, would you refuse to
throw water on it just because you'd always been taught not to believe in
water? Zev had arrived at the rabbinical council wearing a cross and had been
thrown out—literally sent hurding through the front door. But at least he had
managed to save a few of his own people. Too few.
He remembered his fellow Orthodox rabbis, though. All the
ones who had refused to face the reality of the vampires' fear of crosses, who
had forbidden their students and their congregations to wear crosses, who had
watched those same students and congregations die en masse. And soon those very
same rabbis were roaming their own community, hunting the survivors, preying on
other yeshivas, other congregations, until the entire community was liquidated
and its leaders incorporated into the brotherhood of the undead.
This was the most brilliant aspect of the undead tactics:
turn all the community leaders into their own kind and set them loose among the
population. What could be more dismaying, more devastating than seeing the very
people who should have been leading the resistance become enthusiastic
participants in the slaughter?
The rabbis could have saved themselves, could have saved
their people, but they would not bend to the reality of what was happening
around them. Which, when Zev thought about it, was not at all out of character.
Hadn't they spent generations learning to turn away from the rest of the world?
But now their greatest fear had come to pass: they'd been
assimilated— with a vengeance.
Those early days of anarchic slaughter were over. Now that
the undead held the ruling hand, the bloodletting had become more organized.
But the damage to Zev's people had been done—and it was irreparable. Hitler
would have been proud. His Nazi "final solution" was an afternoon
picnic compared to the work of the undead. In a matter of months, in Israel and
Eastern Europe, the undead did what Hitler's Reich could not do in all the
years of the Second World War. Muslims and Hindus had fared just as poorly, but
that was not Zev's concern. His heart did not bleed for Islam and India.
There's only a few of us now. So few and so scattered. A
final Diaspora.
For a moment Zev was almost overwhelmed by grief, but he
pushed it down, locked it back into that place where he kept his sorrows, and
thought of how fortunate it was for his wife Chana that she died of natural
causes before the horror began. Her soul had been too gentle to weather what
had happened to their community.
Forcing himself back to the present, he looked around. Not
such a bad place for a retreat, he thought. He wondered how many houses like
this the Catholic Church owned.
A series of clicks and clacks drew his attention back to
the door as numerous bolts were pulled in rapid succession. The door swung
inward, revealing a nervous-looking young man in a long black cassock. As he
looked at Zev his mouth twisted and he rubbed the back of his wrist across it
to hide a smile.
"And what should be so funny?" Zev asked.
"I'm sorry. It's just—"
"I know," Zev said, waving off any explanation
as he glanced down at the wooden cross slung on a cord around his neck. "I
know."
A bearded Jew in a baggy serge suit wearing a yarmulke and
a cross. Hilarious, no?
Nu? This was what the times demanded, this was what it
came down to if he wanted to survive. And Zev did want to survive. Someone had
to live to carry on the traditions of the Talmud and the Torah, even if there
were hardly any Jews left alive in the world.
Zev stood on the sunny porch, waiting. The priest watched
him in silence.
Finally Zev said, "Well, may a wandering Jew come
in?"
"I won't stop you," the priest said, "but
surely you don't expect me to invite you."
Ah, yes. Another precaution. The undead couldn't cross the
threshold of a home unless invited, so don't invite. A good habit to cultivate,
he supposed.
He stepped inside and the priest immediately closed the
door behind him, relatching all the locks one by one. When he turned around Zev
held out his hand.
"Rabbi Zev Wolpin, Father. I thank you for allowing
me in."
"Brother Christopher, sir," he said, smiling and
shaking Zev's hand. His suspicions seemed to have been allayed. "I'm not a
priest yet. We can't offer you much here, but—"
"Oh, I won't be staying long. I just came to talk to
Father Joseph Cahill."
Brother Christopher frowned. "Father Cahill isn't
here at the moment."
"When will he be back?"
"I—I'm not sure. You see—"
"Father Cahill is on another bender," said a
stentorian voice behind Zev.
He turned to see an elderly priest facing him from the far
end of the foyer. White-haired, heavyset, also wearing a black cassock.
"I'm Rabbi Wolpin."
"Father Adams," the priest said, stepping
forward and extending his hand.
As they shook Zev said, "Did you say he was on
'another' bender? I never knew Father Cahill to be much of a drinker."
The priest's face turned stony. "Apparently there was
a lot we never knew about Father Cahill."
"If you're referring to that nastiness last
year," Zev said, feeling the old anger rise in him, "I for one never
believed it for a minute. I'm surprised anyone gave it the slightest
credence."
"The veracity of the accusation was irrelevant in the
final analysis. The damage to Father Cahill's reputation was a fait accompli.
The bishops' rules are clear. Father Palmeri was forced to request his removal
for the good of St. Anthony's parish."
Zev was sure that sort of attitude had something to do
with Father Joe being on "another bender."
"Where can I find Father Cahill?"
"He's in town somewhere, I suppose, making a
spectacle of himself. If there's any way you can talk some sense into him,
please do. Not only is he killing himself with drink but he's become a public
embarrassment to the priesthood and to the Church."
Zev wondered which bothered Father Adams more. And as for
embarrassing the priesthood, he was tempted to point out that too many others
had done a bang-up job of that already. But he held his tongue.
I'll try."
He waited for Brother Christopher to undo all the locks,
then stepped toward the sunlight.
"Try Morton's down on Seventy-one," the younger
man whispered as Zev passed.
* * *
Zev rode his bicycle south on route 71. So strange to see
people on the streets. Not many, but more than he'd ever see in Lakewood again.
Yet he knew that as the undead consolidated their grip on the rest of the
coast, they'd start arriving with their living minions in the Catholic
communities like Spring Lake, and then these streets would be as empty as
Lakewood's.
He thought he remembered passing a place named Morton's on
his way in. And then up ahead he saw it, by the railroad track crossing, a
white stucco one-story box of a building with "Morton's Liquors"
painted in big black letters along the side.
Father Adams' words echoed back to him ...on another
bender ...
Zev pushed his bicycle to the front door and tried the
knob. Locked up tight. A look inside showed a litter of trash, broken bottles,
and empty shelves. The windows were barred; the back door was steel and locked
as securely as the front. So where was Father Joe?
Then, by the overflowing trash Dumpster, he spotted the
basement window at ground level. It wasn't latched. Zev went down on his knees
and pushed it open.
Cool, damp, musty air wafted against his face as he peered
into the Stygian darkness. It occurred to him that he might be asking for
trouble by sticking his head inside, but he had to give it a try. If Father
Cahill wasn't here, Zev would begin the return trek to Lakewood and write off
this whole trip as wasted effort.
"Father Joe?" he called. "Father
Cahill?"
"That you again, Chris?" said a slightly slurred
voice. "Go home, will you? I'm all right. I'll be back later."
"It's me, Joe. Zev. From Lakewood."
He heard shoes scraping on the floor and then a familiar
face appeared in the shaft of light from the window.
"Well I'll be damned. It is you! Thought you were
Brother Chris come to drag me back to the retreat house. Gets scared I'm gonna
get stuck out after dark. So how ya doin', Reb? Glad to see you're still alive.
Come on in!"
Zev noted Father Cahill's glassy eyes and how he swayed
ever so slightly, like a skyscraper in the wind. His hair was uncombed, and his
faded jeans and worn Bruce Springsteen Tunnel of Love Tour sweatshirt made him
look more like a laborer than a priest.
Zev's heart twisted at the sight of his friend in such
condition. Such a mensch like Father Joe shouldn't be acting like a shikker.
Maybe it was a mistake coming here.
"I don't have that much time, Joe. I came to tell
you—"
"Get your bearded ass down here and have a drink or
I'll come up and drag you down."
"All right," Zev said. "I'll come in but I
won't have a drink."
He hid his bike behind the Dumpster, then squeezed through
the window. Joe helped him to the floor. They embraced, slapping each other on
the back. Father Joe was a bigger man, a giant from Zev's perspective. At
six-four he was ten inches taller, at thirty-five he was a quarter-century
younger; he had a muscular frame, thick brown hair, and—on better days—clear
blue eyes.
"You're grayer, Zev, and you've lost weight."
"Kosher food is not so easily come by these
days."
"All kinds of food are getting scarce." He
touched the cross slung from Zev's neck and smiled. "Nice touch. Goes well
with your zizith."
Zev fingered the fringe protruding from under his shirt.
Old habits didn't die easily.
"Actually, I've grown rather fond of it."
"So what can I pour you?" the priest said,
waving an arm at the crates of liquor stacked around him. "My own private
reserve. Name your poison."
"I don't want a drink."
"Come on, Reb. I've got some nice hundred-proof Stoli
here. You've got to have at least one drink—"
"Why? Because you think maybe you shouldn't drink
alone?"
Father Joe winced. "Ouch!"
"All right," Zev said. "Bisel. I'll have
one drink on the condition that you don't have one. Because I wish to talk to
you."
The priest considered that a moment, then reached for the
vodka bottle.
"Deal."
He poured a generous amount into a paper cup and handed it
over. Zev took a sip. He was not a drinker and when he did imbibe he preferred
his vodka ice cold from a freezer. But this was tasty. Father Cahill sat back
on a case of Jack Daniel's and folded his arms.
"Nu?" the priest said with a Jackie Mason shrug.
Zev had to laugh. "Joe, I still say that somewhere in
your family tree is Jewish blood."
For a moment he felt light, almost happy. When was the
last time he had laughed? Probably at their table near the back of Horovitz's
deli, shortly before the St. Anthony's nastiness began, well before the undead
came.
Zev thought of the day they'd met. He'd been standing at
the counter at Horovitz's waiting for Yussel to wrap up the stuffed derma he'd
ordered when this young giant walked in. He towered over the rabbis and yeshiva
students in the place, looking as Irish as Paddy's pig, and wearing a Roman collar.
He said he'd heard this was the only place on the whole Jersey Shore where you
could get a decent corned beef sandwich. He ordered one and cheerfully warned
that it better be good. Yussel asked him what could he know about good corned
beef and the priest replied that he'd grown up in Bensonhurst. Well, about half
the people in Horovitz's on that day—and on any other day, for that matter—had
grown up in Bensonhurst, and before you knew it they were all asking him if he
knew such-and-such a store and so-and-so's deli.
Zev then informed the priest—with all due respect to
Yussel Horovitz behind the counter—that the best corned beef sandwich in the
world was to be had at Shmuel Rosenberg's Jerusalem Deli in Bensonhurst. Father
Cahill said he'd been there and agreed one hundred percent.
Yussel served him his sandwich then. As the priest took a
huge bite out of the corned beef on rye, the normal tumel of a deli at
lunchtime died away until Horovitz's was as quiet as a shul on Sunday morning.
Everyone watched him chew, watched him swallow. Then they waited. Suddenly his
face broke into this big Irish grin.
"I'm afraid I'm going to have to change my
vote," he said. "Horovitz's of Lakewood makes the best corned beef
sandwich in the world."
Amid cheers and warm laughter, Zev led Father Cahill to
the rear table that would become theirs, and sat with this canny and charming
gentile who had so easily won over a roomful of strangers and provided such a
mechaieh for Yussel. He learned that the young priest was the new assistant to
Father Palmeri, the pastor at St. Anthony's Catholic Church at the northern end
of Lakewood. Father Palmeri had been there for years but Zev had never so much
as seen his face. He asked Father Cahill—who wanted to be called Joe—about life
in Brooklyn these days and they talked for an hour.
During the following months they would run into each other
so often at Horovitz's that they decided to meet regularly for lunch, on
Mondays and Thursdays. They did so for years, discussing religion—oy, the
religious discussions!—politics, economics, philosophy, life in general. During
those lunchtimes they solved most of the world's problems. Zev was sure they'd
have solved them all if the scandal at St. Anthony's hadn't resulted in Father
Joe's removal from the parish.
But that was in another time, another world. The world
before the undead took over.
Zev shook his head as he considered the current state of
Father Joe in the dusty basement of Morton's Liquors.
"It's about the vampires, Joe," he said, taking
another sip of the Stoli. "They've taken over St. Anthony's."
Father Joe snorted and shrugged.
"They're in the majority now, Zev, remember? They've
taken over the whole East Coast. Why should St. Anthony's be different from any
other parish?"
"I didn't mean the parish. I meant the church."
The priest's eyes widened slightly. "The church?
They've taken over the building itself?"
"Every night," Zev said. "Every night they
are there."
"That's a holy place. How do they manage that?"
"They've desecrated the altar, destroyed all the
crosses. St. Anthony's is no longer a holy place."
"Too bad," Father Joe said, looking down and
shaking his head sadly. "It was a fine old church." He looked up
again. "How do you know about what's going on at St. Anthony's? It's not
exactly in your neighborhood."
"A neighborhood I don't exactly have any more."
Father Joe reached over and gripped his shoulder with a
huge hand.
"I'm sorry, Zev. I heard your people got hit pretty
hard over there. Sitting ducks, huh? I'm really sorry."
Sitting ducks. An appropriate description.
"Not as sorry as I, Joe," Zev said. "But
since my neighborhood is gone, and since I have hardly any friends left, I use
the daylight hours to wander. So call me the Wandering Jew. And in my
wanderings I meet some of your old parishioners."
The priest's face hardened. His voice became acid.
"Do you, now. And how fare the remnants of my devoted
flock?"
"They've lost all hope, Joe. They wish you were
back."
He barked a bitter laugh. "Sure they do! Just like
they rallied behind me when my name and honor were being dragged through the
muck. Yeah, they want me back. I'll bet!"
"Such anger, Joe. It doesn't become you."
"Bullshit. That was the old Joe Cahill, the naive
turkey who believed all his faithful parishioners would back him up. But no. A
child points a finger and the bishop removes me. And how do the people I
dedicated my life to respond? They all stand by in silence as I'm railroaded
out of my parish."
"It's hard for the commonfolk to buck a bishop."
"Maybe. But I can't forget how they stood quietly by
while I was stripped of my position, my dignity, my integrity, of everything I
wanted to be . . ."
Zev thought Joe's voice was going to break. He was about
to reach out to him when the priest coughed and squared his shoulders.
"Meanwhile, I'm a pariah over here in the retreat
house, a goddamn leper. Some of them actually believe—" He broke off in a
growl. "Ah, what's the use? It's over and done. Most of the parish is dead
anyway, I suppose. And if I'd stayed there I'd probably be dead too. So maybe
it worked out for the best. And who gives a shit anyway?"
"Last night I met someone who does. She saved me from
one of the winged ones."
"You were out at night?"
"Yes. A long story. She was dressed rather
provocatively and knew me because she'd seen me with you."
Joe looked interested now. "What was her name?"
"She wouldn't say. But she begged me to find you and
bring you back."
"Really." His interest seemed to be fading.
"Yes. She said when you heard what they've done to
your church you'd come back and teach them a lesson they'll never forget."
"Sounds like you ran into an escaped mental
patient," Joe said as he reached for the bottle of Glenlivet next to him.
"No-no!" Zev said. "You promised!"
Father Joe drew his hand back and crossed his arms across
his chest.
"Talk on. I'm listening."
Joe had certainly changed for the worse. Morose, bitter,
apathetic, self-pitying.
"They've taken over your church, just as they've
taken over my temple. But the temple they use only for a dormitory. Your
church, they've desecrated it. Each night they further defile it with butchery
and blasphemy. Doesn't that mean anything to you?"
"It's Palmeri's parish. I've been benched. Let him
take care of it."
"Father Palmeri is their leader."
"He should be. He's their pastor."
"No. He leads the undead in the obscenities they
perform in the church."
Joe stiffened and the glassiness cleared from his eyes.
"Palmeri? He's one of them?"
Zev nodded. "More than that. He's one of the local
leaders. He orchestrates their rituals."
Zev saw rage flare in the priest's eyes, saw his hands
ball into fists, and for a moment he thought the old Father Joe was going to
burst through.
Come on, Joe. Show me that Cahill fire.
But then he slumped back.
"Is that all you came to tell me?"
Zev hid his disappointment and nodded. "Yes."
"Good." He grabbed the Scotch bottle.
"Because I need a drink."
Zev wanted to leave, yet he had to stay, had to probe
deeper and see how much of his old friend was left, and how much had been
replaced by this new, bitter, alien Joe Cahill. Maybe there was still hope. So
they talked on.
* * *
Zev looked up at the window and saw that it was dark.
"Gevalt! I didn't notice the time!"
Father Joe seemed surprised too. He stepped to the window
and peered out.
"Damn! Sun's down!" He turned to Zev.
"Lakewood's out of the question for you, Reb. Even the retreat house is
too far to risk now. Looks like we're stuck here for the night."
"We'll be safe?"
He shrugged. "Why not? As far as I can tell I'm the
only one who's been in here for weeks, and only in the daytime. Be pretty odd
if one of those leeches decided to wander in here tonight."
"We'd have to invite it in, right?"
He shook his head. "Doesn't seem to work that way
with stores. Only homes."
Zev's guderim twisted. "That's not good."
"Don't worry. We're okay if we don't attract
attention. I've got a flashlight if we need it, but we're better off sitting
here in the dark and shooting the breeze till sunrise." Father Joe smiled
and picked up a huge silver cross, at least a foot in length, from atop one of
the crates. "Besides, we're armed. And frankly, I can think of worse
places to spend the night."
He stepped over to the case of Glenlivet and opened a
fresh bottle. His capacity for alcohol was enormous.
Zev could think of worse places too. In fact he had spent
a number of nights in much worse places since the Lakewood holocaust. He
decided to put the time to good use.
"So, Joe. Maybe I should tell you some more about
what's happening in Lakewood."
COWBOYS . . .
King of the world.
Al Hulett leaned back in the passenger seat of the big
Cadillac convertible they'd just driven out of somebody's garage, burning
rubber all the way, and let the night air mess with his spiky black hair.
As usual, Stan was driving with Jackie riding shotgun. Al
and Kenny had the back seat with Heinekens in their fists, Slipknot's Iowa CD
in the slot, and "Skin Ticket" blasting through the speakers. Al
finished his Heinie and tossed the empty over his shoulder so it landed on the
trunk top. He heard a faint, frightened yelp from within, then a crash as the
bottle bounced off and shattered on the asphalt behind them.
He leaned back and pounded a fist on the trunk. "Ay,
shuddup up in there! You're messin with my meditation!"
This brought a howl of laughter from Kenny, which didn't
necessarily mean it was real funny, just that Kenny was always a good audience.
He and the Kenman had been together since grammar school.
How many years was that now? Ten? Twelve? Couldn't be more than a dozen. No way.
Whatever, the two of them had stuck together through it all, never breaking up,
even when Kenny pulled that short jolt in Yardville on a B&E. Even when the
whole world went to hell.
But they'd come through it all like gold. They'd hired out
to the winners. Joined the best hunting pack around.
Coulda turned out different. He and Kenny coulda had their
throats chewed out and their heads ripped off just like a bunch of guys they
knew, but they happened to be the right guys in the right place at the right
time.
The right place was a bar they'd broken into, and the
right time had been Easter morning—didn't know it was Easter then, only learned
that later.
Al and Kenny and some friends had started partying Friday
afternoon in this old shotgun shack back in the pines. By Sunday morning they'd
run out of booze, so they rode their Harleys out to Route 9. That was when they
learned about all the shit that had went down the past two nights. So they'd
broke into this bar-package store and were helping themselves to some liquid
refreshment when this dude in a cowboy hat walked in. Said his name was Stan.
Said he saw their Harleys outside and was wondering if they was the kinda guys
who might like to go to work for the winners.
Al and Kenny weren't too sure about that at first, so Stan
said the chai-slurpin, Chardonnay-sippin, Gap-wearin, hummus-dippin,
classic-rock-listenin world that had thought "loser" every time it
looked at them and had never given them a chance was on its knees now and did
they want to help bust a coupla caps in its fuckin head to put it down for
good?
That Stan, man, he had a way with words.
Still. . . workin for the vampires . . .
Then Stan had made them an offer they couldn't refuse.
So that was why Al was riding in a Caddy tonight 'stead of
on a Harley.
King of the fucking world.
Well, not king, really. But at least a prince ... when the
sun was up.
Night was a whole different story.
If you could get used to the creeps you were working for,
it wasn't too bad a set-up. Could have been worse, Al knew—a lot worse.
Like being cattle, for instance.
Pretty smart, those bloodsuckers. America thought it was
ready for them but it wasn't. They hit high, they hit low, and before you knew
it, they was in charge of the whole East Coast.
Well, almost in charge. They did whatever they damn well
pleased at night, but they'd never be in charge around the clock because they
couldn't be up and about in the daylight. They needed somebody to hold the fort
for them between sunrise and sunset.
That was where Al and Kenny and the other cowboys came in.
They'd all been made the same offer.
They could be cattle, or they could be cowboys and drive
the cattle.
Not much of a choice as far as Al could see.
You see, the bloodsuckers had two ways of killing folks.
They had the usual way of ripping into your neck and sucking out your blood. If
they got you that way, you became one of them come the next sundown. But once
they had the upper hand, they changed their feeding style. Smart, those
bloodsuckers. If they got too many of their kind wandering around, they'd soon
have nobody to feed on—a world full of chefs with nothing to cook. So after
they were in control, they got the blood a different way, one that didn't
involve sucking it out. You died unsucked, you stayed dead. Something they
called true death.
But they'd offered Al and Stan and the guys undeath. Be
their cowboys, herd the cattle and take care of business between sunrise and
sunset, be their muscle during the day, do a good job for ten years, and they'd
see to it that you got done in the old-fashioned way, the way that left you
like them. Undead. Immortal. One of the ruling class.
"Ay-yo, Al," Kenny shouted over the howl of
"Disasterpiece."
"What kinda vampire you gonna be?"
Not again, Al thought. They'd worked this over too many
times for Al's taste. It was getting real old. But Kenny never seemed to tire
of gnawing this particular bone.
Kenny had this pale cratered skin. Even though he was in
his twenties he still got pimples. Looked like the man in the moon now, but in
the old days he'd been a real pizza face. Once he almost killed a guy who'd
called him that. And he had this crazy red hair that used to stick out in all
directions when he didn't cut it, but even when he did it Mohican style, like
now, all shaved off on the sides and showing the ugly knobs on his skull, it
looked crazier than ever. Made Kenny look crazier than ever. And Kenny was
pretty crazy as it was.
"I can tell you what kind I ain't gonna be," Al
said, "and that's one of them ferals."
"Ay, I'm down wit that. I'm gonna be a pilot, man.
Get me some wings."
Jackie turned down the music and swiveled in the front
seat. She was thin and blonde, with a left nostril ring and a stud through her
right eyebrow, and she had this tat of a devil face sticking out a Gene
Simmons-class tongue on her left delt. She dangled an arm over the back near
Al's knees and sneered.
"Wings? You'll be lucky if you get a plate of Buffalo
wings."
Stan seemed to think this was real funny. Even Al had to
laugh a little.
Kenny made this sour face. "Funny. Real fuckin
funny."
"How many kinds of vampires are there, anyway?"
Al said.
He wasn't just trying to take the heat off Kenny, he
really wanted to know. In the weeks since he'd joined the posse he'd noticed
that some of the bloodsuckers could sprout wings and fly. Most just walked
around like everybody else—only at night, of course—and looked like everybody
else, although some had faces that seemed to turn uglier and uglier as time
went on.
Then there was the kind that were pretty much like
animals. These were scary. Al had only seen a couple of them from a distance
and that was plenty close enough. Hardly nothing human left in their faces or
the way they moved. Couldn't even talk. The other bloodsuckers called them
"ferals" and they were like vampire shock troops. These were the guys
they let loose when they first blew into a town. Al gathered they must be kinda
hard to control because the other vampires kept them locked up pretty much of
the time.
Good thing. Al had a feeling if he ran into a feral at
night the thing would be on him and chompin on his windpipe before it noticed
he was wearing a cowboy earring.
That special earring—a dangly silver crescent-moon
thing—said you were working for them. It gave you a free pass if you ran into
one of them at night.
Because the night was theirs.
Being a cowboy wasn't so bad, really. You could be
assigned to keep an eye on their nests, make sure no save-the-world types—Stan
liked to call them rustlers—got in there and started splashing holy water
around and driving stakes into their cold little hearts. Or you could be part
of a posse, which meant you spent the day riding around hunting strays. One
good way to earn brownie points with the bloodsuckers was to have a stray cow
or two ready for them after sundown.
They had a cow in the trunk right now. Some old bitch
who'd scratched and clawed at them when they rounded her up. Deserved what she
had comin to her. Plus she was good for brownie points.
Those points weren't nothing to sneer at. Earn enough of
them and you got to spend some stud time on one of their cattle ranches—where
all the cows were human. And young.
Neither Al or Kenny or any of their pack had been to one
of the farms yet, but they'd all heard it was like incredible. You came back
sore, man.
Al didn't particularly like working for the vampires. But
then he couldn't remember ever liking anybody he'd worked for. The bloodsuckers
gave him the creeps, but what was he supposed to do? If you can't beat 'em,
join 'em. Plenty of guys felt the same way.
Another thing that didn't set too well was being at the
bottom of the pecking order. Seemed he had to take orders from everybody except
Kenny. Stan said that would change. Told them how he'd started at the bottom
too. Learned the ropes and soon got to be leader of his own posse.
Stan and Jackie was some sorta team. A good one. Al looked
at Jackie. Not the greatest looking piece with that wild bottle-blond hair all
black at the roots, but considering the severe lack of poontang around these
parts lately, she was starting to look drop-dead gorgeous. Al could've really
used a piece of her, but he knew if he went for it he'd wind up on the wrong
end of that Bowie knife Stan kept strapped to his belt.
Jackie might cut him too. Just for fun. One tough broad,
that Jackie. But her real talent was smoking out the ladies. Like the old bitch
in the trunk. Jackie pulls out her piercings, gets dressed up in clothes that
hide her tats, then goes knocking door to door, pretending to be looking for
her little girl. Nobody figures a broad's gonna be working for the
bloodsuckers, so sooner or later one of them answers the door and then blammo,
the posse's there like coons on an open garbage can.
Al just wished the old bitch was younger. Then he coulda
had a little fun with her before—
"Hail, hail, the gang's all here," Jackie said
as they rounded a corner and pulled up before St. Anthony's. "And there's
Gregor." She grinned at Kenny. "Maybe you should go ask him what you
gotta do to earn your wings. I'm sure he'll be glad to sit down and chat about
it."
Kenny didn't say nothing.
The old church was like the unofficial meeting place for
Stan's posse and Gregor, the numero uno bloodsucker in charge of the Jersey Shore.
One mean son of an undead bitch, that Gregor. Even the other vampires seemed to
be like afraid of him. He was big, with these wide shoulders, long dark hair,
ice cold blue eyes, and square pale face. But then all the bloodsuckers had
pale faces. It was his smile that got to Al. Most times it looked painted on,
but with all those sharp teeth of his it managed to make him look both happy
and very, very hungry at the same time.
The posses had to meet with Gregor every night and tell
him how things had gone while he was cutting his Z's or whatever it was the
bloodsuckers did when the sun was up. It was part of the job. Al's least
favorite part of the job. He didn't know what it was that made his skin crawl
every time he got near one. Wasn't their looks, their dirty clothes, their
stink. Something else, something you couldn't see or smell. Something you felt.
Al spotted Gregor by the church steps with his guards. He
was dressed as usual in a dark suit, white shirt, no tie. Always the same, like
he was going to a business meeting or something. Which put him a cut above most
vampires, who never changed their clothes. Ever.
Hey, this was weird. Usually he had one or two undead
goons guarding him. Tonight he had four. What was up?
Al didn't get the bodyguard thing. Like who'd ever mess
with Gregor? But he didn't seem to go anywhere without them. They didn't look
like the typical pumped-up guard dog types, but all four carried Glocks and
razor-sharp machetes on their belts.
The local undead bigshots stood around Gregor: Mayor
Davis, Council-woman Ellis, Rabbi Goldstein, and the only black face in sight,
big fat Reverend Dalton.
Al had lived around Lakewood for years and never knew any
of these peopie's names—like he needed to know who was mayor, right?—but he
knew them now.
He looked around for the priest, Palmeri, who was usually
with Gregor, but didn't see him. Just as well. There was a bad dude. Almost as
creepy as Gregor.
As Stan eased the car into the curb, one of the bodyguards
came over. He wore black jeans, a black shirt crusted with old blood, and a
worried expression.
"No report tonight," he said in some sort of fag
British accent. "Do you 'ave something for Gregor?"
Here was another thing not to like about the vampires. All
the high-ups were one kind of foreigner or another. Gregor looked like John
Travolta but sounded like Bela Lugosi. His guard here sounded like Mick Jagger.
"Yeah," Stan said. "Got a cow in the trunk.
What's up?"
"Not your concern. I'll bring 'er to Gregor."
"Okay. Al, you and Kenny wanna get her out?"
They did that. The ride in the trunk seemed to have taken
most of the fight out of the old broad. She had to be sixty-five or seventy and
she didn't look so hot at first, but she came to life, screaming and yelling
when she saw the bloodsuckers.
The bodyguard made a face when he saw her. " 'Ere
now, what's this? She the best you could do?"
"We hit a dry neighborhood. We'll do better tomorrow."
"See that you do." He grabbed the old broad's
arm and she fainted. He barely seemed to notice. "Move on. Get to your
'omes and stay inside. We'll wake you at the usual time."
As Gregor's guard dragged the unconscious broad toward the
church, Stan peeled away from the curb.
"Somethin's up," Jackie said.
Stan nodded. "Wonder what's eatin them?"
"You don't think another one of us bought it, do
you?" Kenny said looking all nervous.
Al knew how he felt. Someone had been offing cowboys
lately. Nothing big scale, just one here, one there, but enough to make you
start looking over your shoulder.
"Nah," Stan said. "They'd tell us that.
This is somethin else."
As Stan cranked up Slipknot again, Al looked back at the
receding church.
The local undead were carrying the old broad up the church
steps. Gregor stayed on the sidewalk, his guards tight around them.
What could get vampires shook up enough that they didn't
want their own posses near them? It gave him a crawly feeling in his gut.
As they turned a corner Al thought he saw a female vampire
with her own set of bodyguards step out of the shadows and move toward Gregor.
GREGOR . . .
His get-guards tensed and turned at Olivia's approach but
Gregor did not acknowledge it. He'd been informed of her arrival from New York
an hour ago and had been aware of her presence in the shadows, watching him. He
waited till she spoke.
"Good evening, Gregor," she said with a light
French accent.
He whirled and smiled. "Why, Olivia. What a wonderful
surprise!"
It appeared she'd dressed for the occasion: a red
gown—plucked from the window of a Fifth Avenue designer shop, no doubt—and an
elaborate Marie Antoinette wig over her own hair which Gregor knew to be short
and mousy brown.
Their guards—she'd brought six with her—stood around and
between them.
She smiled. "I'm sure." She waved her hand.
"Step back, gentlemen. Gregor and I have private matters to discuss."
They did, albeit reluctantly.
Gregor shook his head as he watched the ten form a rough
circle around Olivia and him. Considering recent events, he should have taken
comfort in the number. That didn't make them any less of an inconvenience. One
or two get-guards at all times were a nuisance, but four—he felt strangled. And
Olivia with six tonight. How did she manage?
"You've come about Angelica, I suppose," he said
in a low voice.
She nodded. "You knew Franco would send
someone."
Yes, he had. Somehow, some way, someone had killed
Angelica last night. Gregor—over the objections of his get—had personally
tracked down her remains before dawn and had them removed to a place where they
could be burned. Secretly burned. It wouldn't do to let the cattle know that
one of the undead elite had been brought down while on the wing.
But Angelica's death was no secret among the undead.
Gregor had been expecting an emissary from New York tonight, but Olivia of all
people. Raw ambition from a rival get-line. This would not do.
"It could have been an accident, you know."
"I doubt that," Olivia said. "Angelica was
too experienced."
Angelica—Gregor had never liked her, and hated her now.
The old bitch had to go out and hunt alone. Not that any of her get-guards
could have accompanied her—none of them had wings. No reason for Angelica to
hunt. With her status she could have had cattle brought to her every night.
Gregor pressed his point. "It's not as if Angelica
was shot down with a crossbow or the like. She was pierced with a tree branch,
one that was snapped off a tree not a dozen feet from where we found her. It
was quite evident that she flew into the tree and—"
Olivia smiled, showing her fangs. "I certainly don't
believe that, Gregor. And neither, I dare say, do you. The situation around
here has been precarious for some time, what with some sort of vigilante group
running around killing your serfs. How many dead now—four?"
Gregor stiffened. "Where do you get your information?
"That's not important. Franco is concerned that the
situation is getting out of hand."
"Nothing of the sort." He was sure she was
overstating Franco's concern. "Everything is under control. As for these
so-called vigilantes—"
"Four serfs in four weeks, Gregor. Not just
killed—their throats are slit and then they're strung up for all to see. Bad
enough. But now these vigilantes have taken down Angelica."
"We don't know if it was the same group."
"That's the trouble. You don't know a thing about the
perpetrators, do you."
Too true. Whatever group was killing the serfs—an older
term; Gregor had become used to calling them cowboys—wasn't announcing itself.
No fliers, no graffiti, no name, no identity. Just a corpse twisting in the
wind. They did their dirty work and then faded away.
"Some of the killings could be by copycats,"
Gregor offered.
"Even worse! Our hold is fragile, Gregor. We need our
serfs. We can't have the night if they don't hold the day for us. The
carrot-and-the-stick approach is usually sufficient, but they're as loyal as
cockroaches, and if someone else comes along with a bigger stick, our carrot
may not be enough."
"Scum," Gregor growled.
"Of course they are. Who but scum would sell out
their own kind? But they're our scum. And we need them. Without them guarding
our daysleep, we're vulnerable. If we can't protect them, they won't protect
us."
"I hardly need a lecture on this, Olivia."
"Maybe you do." She pointed a long-nailed finger
at him. "Because if you don't straighten this out, I'll have to do it for
you."
Gregor glared at her. He knew what that meant: he'd be
sent back to New York where Franco would demote him to some sort of low-level
functionary.
He was a veteran of the battle of the Vatican, damn it. No
one could humiliate him like that.
His thoughts drifted back. What a week that had been.
Vatican City was immune to the ferals because of the plethora of
crosses—crosses everywhere, on the walls, the ceilings, even the floors. The
priests and the Swiss Guard had fought valiantly against the serfs. It was not
until turned military commanders and soldiers began shelling the buildings with
tanks and artillery that they made any progress. Vatican City eventually was
reduced to rubble. That was the good news. The bad news was that the Pope had
died in the shelling. It would have been such a coup to turn him and make him
an icon for the Catholic undead.
Gregor missed those good old days of head-on assault:
Prague, Berlin, Rome, Paris, London. They'd all fallen in days. But that
approach had run into unforeseen problems. Franco was trying a new tack. Gregor
agreed that it made more sense, but it lacked the heady rush of the blitzkrieg.
And it allowed upstarts like Olivia to rise.
If Olivia had her way and Gregor was called back to New
York, she would remove all his get—which now included the mayor, the
councilwoman, the priest, and the reverend among others—and install her own in
their place. Olivia's domain would expand while his would contract to near
zero.
Gregor would not allow that. These vigilantes would be
found and run to ground if he had to do it himself.
ZEV . . .
After a few hours their talk died of fatigue. Father Joe
gave Zev the flashlight to hold, then stretched out across a couple of crates
to sleep. Zev tried to get comfortable enough to doze but found sleep
impossible. So he listened to his friend snore in the dusty darkness of the
cellar.
Poor Joe. Such anger in the man. But more than that—hurt.
He felt betrayed, wronged. And with good reason. But with everything falling
apart as it was, the wrong done to him would never be righted. He should forget
about it already and go on with his life, but apparently he couldn't. Such a
shame. He needed something to pull him out of his funk. Zev had thought news of
what had happened to his old parish might rouse him, but it seemed only to make
him want to drink more. Father Joseph Cahill, he feared, was a hopeless case.
Zev closed his eyes and tried to rest. He found it hard to
get comfortable with the cross dangling in front of him so he took it off but
laid it within easy reach. He was drifting toward a doze when he heard a noise
outside. By the dumpster. Metal on metal.
My bicycle!
He slipped to the floor and tiptoed over to where Joe
slept. He shook his shoulder and whispered.
"Someone's found my bike!"
The priest snorted but remained sleeping. A louder clatter
outside made Zev turn, and as he moved his elbow struck a bottle. He grabbed
for it in the darkness but missed. The sound of smashing glass echoed through
the basement like a cannon shot. As the odor of Scotch whiskey replaced the
musty ambiance, Zev listened for further sounds from outside. None came.
Maybe it had been an animal. He remembered how raccoons
used to raid his garbage at home... when he'd had a home ... when he'd had
garbage ...
Zev stepped to the window and looked out. Probably an
animal.
A pale, snarling demonic face, baring its fangs and
hissing, suddenly filled the window. Zev fell back as the thing rammed its hand
through the glass, reaching for his throat, its curved fingers clawing at him,
missing. It pushed up the window, then launched itself the rest of the way
through, hurtling toward Zev.
He tried to dodge but was too slow. The impact knocked the
flashlight from his grasp and it rolled across the floor. Zev cried out as he
went down under the snarling thing. Its ferocity was overpowering,
irresistible. It straddled him and lashed at him, batting his fending arms
aside, its clawed fingers tearing at his collar to free his throat, stretching
his neck to expose the vulnerable flesh, its foul breath gagging him as it bent
its fangs toward him. Zev screamed out his helplessness.
JOE . . .
Father Joe Cahill awoke to cries of terror.
He shook his head to clear it and instantly regretted the
move. His head weighed at least two hundred pounds, and his mouth was stuffed
with foul-tasting cotton. Why did he keep doing this to himself? What was the
point in acting out the drunken Irish priest cliche? Not only did it leave him
feeling lousy, it gave him bad dreams. Like now.
Another terrified shout, only a few feet away.
He looked toward the sound. In the faint light from the
flashlight rolling across the floor he saw Zev on his back, fighting for his
life against—
Jesus! This was no dream!
He leaped over to where the creature was lowering its
fangs toward Zev's throat. He grabbed it by the back of the neck and lifted it
clear of the floor. It was surprisingly heavy but that didn't slow him. Joe
could feel the anger rising in him, surging into his muscles.
"Rotten piece of filth!"
He swung the vampire by its neck and let it fly against
the cinderblock wall. It impacted with what should have been bone-crushing
force, but bounced off, rolled on the floor, and regained its feet in one
motion, ready to attack again. Strong as he was, Joe knew he was no match for
this thing's power. He turned, grabbed his big silver crucifix, and charged the
creature.
"Hungry? Eat this!"
As the creature bared its fangs and hissed at him, Joe
shoved the long lower end of the cross's upright into the gaping maw.
Blue-white light flickered along the silver length of the crucifix, reflecting
in the creature's startled, agonized eyes as its flesh sizzled and crackled.
The vampire let out a strangled cry and tried to turn away but Joe wasn't
through with it yet. He was literally seeing red as rage poured out of a hidden
well and swirled through him. He rammed the cross farther down the thing's
gullet. Light flashed deep in its throat, illuminating the pale tissues from
within. It tried to grab the cross and pull it out but the flesh of its fingers
burned and smoked wherever it came in contact with it.
Finally Joe stepped back and let the thing squirm and
scrabble up the wall and out the window into the night. Then he turned to Zev.
If anything had happened—
"Hey, Reb!" he said, kneeling beside the older
man. "You all right?"
"Yes," Zev said, struggling to his feet.
"Thanks to you."
Joe slumped onto a crate, momentarily weak as his rage
dissipated. This is not what I'm about, he thought. But it had felt so damn
good to let loose on that vampire. Almost too good.
I'm falling apart. . . like everything else in the world.
"That was too close," Joe said, giving the older
man's shoulder a fond squeeze.
"For that vampire, too close for sure." Zev
replaced his yarmulke. "And would you please remind me, Father Joe, that
in the future if ever I should maybe get my blood sucked and become undead that
I should stay far away from you."
Joe laughed for the first time in too long. It felt good.
- 3 -
JOE . . .
They climbed out of Morton's basement shortly after dawn.
Joe carried an unopened bottle of Scotch—for later. He stretched his cramped
muscles and shielded his eyes from the rising sun. The bright light sent stabs
of pain through his brain.
"Oy," Zev said as he pulled his hidden bicycle
from behind the dumpster. "Look what he did."
Joe inspected the bike. The front wheel had been bent so
far out of shape that half the spokes were broken.
"Beyond fixing, Zev."
"Looks like I'll be walking back to Lakewood."
Joe looked around, searching the ground. "Where'd our
visitor go?"
He knew it couldn't have got far. He followed drag marks
in the sandy dirt around to the far side of the dumpster, and there it was—or
rather what was left of it: a rotting, twisted corpse, blackened to a crisp and
steaming in the morning sunlight. The silver crucifix still protruded from
between its teeth.
"Three ways we know to kill them," Zev said.
"A stake through the heart, decapitation, or exposing them to sunlight. I
believe Father Cahill has just found a fourth."
Joe approached and gingerly yanked his cross free of the
foul remains.
"Looks like you've sucked your last pint of
blood," he said and immediately felt foolish.
Who was he putting on the macho act for? Zev certainly
wasn't going to buy it. Too out of character. But then, what was his character
these days? He used to be a parish priest. Now he was a nothing. A less than
nothing.
He straightened and turned to Zev.
"Come on back to the retreat house, Reb. I'll buy you
breakfast."
But as Joe turned and began walking away, Zev stayed and
stared down at the corpse.
"They say most of them don't wander far from where
they spent their lives," Zev said. "Which means it's unlikely this
fellow was Jewish if he lived around here. Probably Catholic. Irish Catholic,
I'd imagine."
Joe stopped and turned. He stared at his long shadow. The
hazy rising sun at his back cast a huge hulking shape before him, with a dark
cross in one shadow hand and a smudge of amber light where it poured through
the bottle of Scotch in the other.
"What are you getting at?" he said.
"The Kaddish would probably not be so appropriate so
I'm just wondering if someone should maybe give him the last rites or whatever
it is you people do when one of you dies."
"He wasn't one of us," Joe said, feeling the
bitterness rise in him. "He wasn't even human."
"Ah, but he used to be before he was killed and
became one of them. So maybe now he could use a little help."
Joe didn't like the way this was going. He sensed he was
being maneuvered.
"He doesn't deserve it," he said and knew in
that instant he'd been trapped.
"I thought even the worst sinner deserved it,"
Zev said.
Joe knew when he was beaten. Zev was right. He shoved the
cross and bot-de into Zev's hands—a bit roughly, perhaps—then went and knelt by
the twisted cadaver. He administered a form of the final sacrament. When he was
through he returned to Zev and snatched back his belongings.
"You're a better man than I am, Gunga Din," he
said as he passed.
"You act as if they're responsible for what they do
after they become undead," Zev said hurrying along beside him, panting as
he matched Joe's pace.
"Aren't they?"
"No."
"You're sure of that?"
"Well, not exactly. But they certainly aren't human
anymore, so maybe we shouldn't hold them accountable on human terms."
Zev's reasoning tone flashed Joe back to the conversations
they used to have in Horovitz's deli.
"But Zev, we know there's some of the old personality
left. I mean, they stay in their home towns, usually in the basements of their
old houses. They go after people they knew when they were alive. They're not
just dumb predators, Zev. They've got the old consciousness they had when they
were alive. Why can't they rise above it? Why can't they ... resist?"
"I don't know. I've never had the opportunity to sit
down with one and discuss it. Maybe they can't resist. To tell the truth, the
question has never occurred to me. A fascinating concept: an undead refusing to
feed. Leave it to Father Joe to come up with something like that. We should
discuss this on the trip back to Lakewood."
Joe had to smile. So that was what this was all about.
"I'm not going back to Lakewood."
"Fine. Then we'll discuss this now. Maybe the urge to
feed is too strong to overcome."
"Maybe. And maybe they just don't try hard
enough."
"This is a hard line you're taking, my friend."
"Maybe I'm a hard-line kind of guy."
"You didn't used to be, but it seems you've become
one."
Joe felt a flash of unreasoning anger and gave him a sharp
look. "You don't know what I've become."
Zev shrugged. "Maybe true, maybe not. But did you see
the face of the one that attacked me? I'm sure he didn't look like that before
he was turned. They seem to change, at least some of them, on the outside.
Maybe on the inside they change too."
"If they acted like mindless beasts, I'd agree. But
they're intelligent, they can reason. That means they can choose."
"Do you truly think you'd be able to resist?"
"Damn straight."
Joe wasn't sure why he said it, didn't even know if he
meant it. Maybe he was mentally preparing himself for the day when he might
find himself in that situation.
After walking a block or so in silence, Joe said,
"What I don't get is how these undead get away with breaking all the
rules."
"Meaning what? Laws?"
"Not civil laws—the laws of physics and chemistry and
God knows what else. I've never had a problem reconciling science and belief.
God designed creation to run by certain rules; science is merely man's attempt
to use his God-given intelligence to understand those rules."
"So you don't take Genesis literally."
"Of course not. It's not natural science. It was
never meant to be. The Bible is the story of a people and their relationship
with their God."
"A God who seems very far away lately."
Joe sighed at the truth of that. He'd felt abandoned for
some time now. The air cooled as they neared the ocean, the briny on-shore
breeze carrying the eternal rumble of the breakers and the calls of the
seagulls as they wheeled over the jetties. Some things, at least, hadn't
changed.
"It seems the undead are exempt from the rules God
laid down for creation. The flying ones, for instance. You said you were
attacked by one the other night. I've seen one or two gliding around on a
moonlit night. How do you explain them? I'm no expert on aerodynamics, but
those wings shouldn't be able to support them, yet they do. And where do the
wings go when they're not using them?"
Zev shrugged. "These are questions I can't
answer."
"Here's another. I was around when a gang of locals
chased one down. He'd ripped up a woman's throat but he didn't get away fast
enough. They blinded him with holy water, held him down with crosses, and drove
a stake through his heart. Then they cut off his head."
"The traditional method, as opposed to the new Cahill
method. And of course he was dead then. Truly dead."
"Right. But he didn't bleed."
"So?"
"If he doesn't have blood to feed his muscles, how do
they move?"
"A mystery."
"It's as if the laws of our world have been suspended
where the undead are concerned."
"Suspended by whom? Or what?"
"There's a question I'd like answered."
"All very interesting," Zev said as they climbed
the front steps of the retreat house. "Well, I'd better be going. A long
walk I've got ahead of me. A long, lonely walk all the way back to Lakewood. A
long, lonely, possibly dangerous walk back for a poor old man who—"
"All right, Zev! All right!" Joe said, biting
back a laugh. "I get the point. You want me to go back to Lakewood. Why?
What's it going to prove?"
"I just want the company," Zev said with pure
innocence.
"No, really. What's going on in that Talmudic mind of
yours? What are you cooking?"
"Nothing, Father Joe. Nothing at all."
Joe stared at him. Damn it all, his interest was piqued.
What was Zev up to? And what the hell—why not go? He had nothing better to do.
"All right, Zev. You win. I'll come back to Lakewood
with you. But just for today. Just to keep you company. And I'm not going
anywhere near St. Anthony's, okay? Understood?"
"Understood, Joe. Perfectly understood."
"I'm not getting involved with my old parish again,
is that clear?"
"That such a thing should ever enter my mind.
Feh!"
"Good. Now wipe that smile off your face and we'll
get something to eat."
* * *
Later, under the climbing sun, they walked south along the
deserted beach, barefooting through the wet sand at the edge of the surf. Joe
had his sneakers slung over his shoulder, Zev carried a black shoe in each
hand, and acted like a little kid, laughing at the chill of the water as it
sloshed over his ankles.
"I can't believe you've never been to the
beach," Joe said. "Not even as a kid?"
"Never."
Joe shook his head in dismay and gestured at the acres of
sand. "This is Manasquan Beach. You should have seen this place on a
summer weekend. Wall-to-wall people. Probably never see that again. Probably be
as empty as this even on the Fourth of July."
"Your Independence Day. We never made much of secular
holidays. Too many religious ones to observe. What would people do here besides
swim?"
"Lie in the sun and work on their skin cancers."
"Really? I imagine that sunbathing is maybe not the
fad it used to be."
Joe laughed. "Ah, Zev. Still the master of the
understatement. I'll say one thing, though: The beach is cleaner than I've ever
seen it. No beer cans or hypodermics."
Zev pointed ahead. "But what's that?"
As they approached the spot, Joe saw a pair of naked
bodies stretched out on their backs on the sand, one male, one female, both
young and short-haired. Their skin was bronzed and glistened in the sun. The
man lifted his head and stared at them. A blue crucifix was tattooed in the
center of his forehead. He rolled over, reached into the backpack beside him,
and withdrew a huge, gleaming, nickel-plated revolver.
"Just keep walking," he said.
"Will do," Joe said. "Just out for a
stroll."
As they passed the couple, Joe noticed a similar tattoo on
the girl's forehead.
"A very popular tattoo," he said.
"Clever idea. That's one cross you can't drop or
lose. Probably won't help you in the dark, but if there's a light on it might
give you an edge."
He noticed the rest of the girl too. Small firm breasts
jutting straight up despite the fact that she was on her back, dark fuzz on her
pubes. He felt a stir within and looked away.
"How do you do that?" Zev said.
"What?"
"Look away from such a beautiful sight."
Are you watching me that closely? Joe wondered.
"Practice, practice, practice."
"How do you turn it off? Or does it just die?"
"Believe me, the sexual impulse doesn't die. I've
always had one. I remember having crushes as a kid. I remember one girl,
Eleanor Jepson, that I was infatuated with. I'd think about her night and day,
I'd write poems to her - which I'd immediately tear up for fear someone would
find them. I'd ride my bike past her house at least ten times a day hoping to
catch a glimpse of her; I learned her schedule at school and I'd run through
the halls so I could just happen to be passing her locker when she'd stop there
between classes.
"But as a priest I'd do just the opposite. As soon as
I felt an attraction starting I'd turn away from it. You learn to do that—to
not think about something. It's different from saying, 'Don't think about a
pink unicorn.' Instead you turn your mind away, you learn to not think about
what you don't want to think about. Trust me, it can be done. And instead of
looking for 'chance' meetings, you avoid contact except in the most public of
situations. No tete-a-tetes or in-depth, one-on-one meetings, no lingering
glances, no touches on the arm or shoulder. The key is to recognize the spark
and douse it before it can ignite."
"Such a way to live. Pardon me, but it's
unnatural."
"Tell me about it."
Celibacy hadn't been easy. How he'd ached for one
particular woman, but he'd put his calling above that longing. Besides, she'd
had her own vows. And nestled within him had been the hope that the new Pope
might lift the ban on marriage for priests. But no one had heard from the Pope
since last year.
Zev laughed. "The woman two nights ago, the one
dressed like a prostitute who saved this sorry hide, for an instant there I
thought, Father Joe and a prostitute ... ?"
"What did she look like?"
"Short dark hair, blue eyes, might have been prettier
if she hadn't looked so haggard. I sensed she knew you. In fact I'm sure she
did. The only way she knew me was because she'd seen me with you." He
touched his chin. "Oh, yes. And she had a little scar right here. A tiny
crescent."
Joe stopped walking. No. It couldn't be. "You could
almost be describing ..." He shook his head. "No. Not dressed like
that."
"Who were you thinking of?"
"One of the nuns. Sister Carole. She was.. .
special."
Oh, was she ever. His heart lightened at just the thought
of her.
"What? Someone was special to you and I know nothing?
I thought we discussed everything."
Almost everything, Joe thought. But not this. Not Carole.
"She wasn't special just to me, she was special to
everyone who knew her, or met however briefly. You would have taken to her, I
know it. She was one of those people who lights up a room simply by entering
it."
"Then your Sister Carole this was certainly not.
Darken a room, that's what this one would do. This woman was very grim,
frightening in a way; the only time she brightened was when she mentioned your
name."
"No. My Carole—" He caught himself. "St.
Anthony's Sister Carole, would have been out of town when the undead
struck—back with her family in Pennsylvania."
He'd thought about her countless times since Good Friday.
She's safe ... I pray she's safe. She's too delicate, too
sensitive for that kind of horror. She never would have survived.
"Since the mystery woman wasn't your paramour or your
Sister Carole," Zev said, "I assume we can get back to priestly
celibacy. I read once where priests had been allowed to marry until sometime
during the Middle Ages. Why was that changed?"
"For financial reasons. Priests were accumulating
wealthy estates and leaving them to their families instead of the Church. So
one of the Popes instituted the no-marriage rule. It came around and bit the
Church on its ass."
"Oy, did it ever."
"Yeah. The priesthood became attractive to too many
who were ambiguous about their sexuality or to those who saw the Church as a
sanctuary from their darker impulses; it wasn't. The impulses only became
stronger. Seems to me that early entrance to a seminary interferes with normal
maturation, and because of that you wind up with a percentage of priests with
arrested sexual development."
Joe thanked God that he'd yielded to his vocation later in
life. The love of God had always been strong in him, but he hadn't seen himself
as a priest until after his graduation from Brooklyn College. The idea took
hold and wouldn't let go. He'd entered the seminary at age twenty-three, but
not as a virgin.
"The arrested types," he said, "they're the
ones who became pedophiles, and their presence tainted the rest of us. We all
got smeared with the same brush. Look at me. I'm a prime example."
"No one who knows you," Zev said, "believed
a word of that."
"Didn't matter. As soon as something like that gets
out, you're ruined. Guilty or innocent, who you are and whatever good you've
done is canceled out." He ground his teeth. "The only feeling I've
ever experienced looking at a child was the desire to see him or her grow into
a God-loving adult."
Zev put a hand on his arm. "I know, Joe. I
know."
They walked on in silence.
ZEV . . .
Eventually they turned west and made their way inland,
finding Route 70 and following it into Ocean County via the Bridle Bridge.
"I remember nightmare traffic jams right here every
summer," Joe said as they trod the bridge's empty span. "Never
thought I'd miss traffic jams."
They cut over to Route 88 and followed it toward Lakewood.
Along the way they found a few people out and about in Bricktown, furtively
scurrying between houses. They walked a gauntlet of car dealerships, the stock
sitting dirty and idle in the lots beneath waving pennants, the broken showroom
windows carrying signs promising deals that would never be closed.
Zev noticed how Joe's steps seemed to grow heavier with
every mile. But he had to show him something that would make his steps—and his
heart— even heavier.
At the corner of New Hampshire Avenue, he turned them
south.
"But it's shorter this way," Joe said, pointing
down 88.
"I know. But we'll end up in the same spot, and along
the way there's something you must see."
They trod the undulating pavement until they came to a
baseball field, the former home of the Lakewood Blue Claws.
Joe smiled. "This brings back memories. Remember the
games we used to go to?"
"I do," Zev said. The Blue Claws, a class-A
minor league team, maybe, but those games had been fun. The stadium even served
Kosher food. "But what I want to show you here, baseball's got nothing to
do with."
"I don't think I like the sound of that." Joe
pointed to the unusual number of gulls and crows circling the field. "And
I know I don't like the look of that."
Zev knew as they climbed the grassy slope to the fence
that whatever uneasy premonitions Joe was feeling, even the worst he could
imagine would leave him unprepared for the sight that awaited him on the other
side.
He remembered his recent look onto the playing field. At
first he hadn't been sure what he was seeing: a huge pile of blackened debris
occupying most of the diamond and spreading into the outfield. Then he'd
started picking out limbs and torsos, and there, piled high where home plate
used to be . .. skulls. Innumerable skulls.
Joe stared at the charred, rotting mounds for maybe ten
seconds, then closed his eyes and swallowed.
"What in the name of God .. . ?"
"Hardly in the name of God," Zev said. "On
those first few nights of the invasion they committed wholesale slaughter. They
loosed a horde of bestial creatures—undead, yes, but only vaguely human—who
beheaded their prey after drinking their blood. A way to keep down the undead
population, I assume. It makes sense that they wouldn't want too many of their
kind concentrated in one area. Like too many carnivores in one forest—when the
herds of prey are wiped out, the predators starve. And just to make sure none
of those early victims would be rising from the grave, they brought their
bodies and their heads here, soaked them with kerosene, and struck a
match."
"Jesus".
"Him I doubt had much to do with it either. They fed
the fire for days, the smoke dirtied the sky. And when the wind blew the wrong
way—oy. Even now ..." He sniffed the air. "Luckily we're
upwind."
"But they were also killing off their future food
supply."
"Enough of us they left to hunt down and feed on, but
far too few to offer resistance of any consequence."
They walked the rest of the way into Lakewood in silence.
When they entered the town . . .
"A real ghost town," the priest said as they
walked Forest Avenue's deserted length.
"Ghosts," Zev said, nodding sadly. It had been a
long walk and he was tired. "Yes. Full of ghosts."
In his mind's eye he saw the shades of his fallen brother
rabbis and all the yeshiva students, beards, black suits, black hats,
crisscrossing back and forth at a determined pace on weekdays, strolling with
their wives on Shabbes, their children trailing behind like ducklings.
Gone. All gone. Victims of the undead. Undead themselves
now, some of them. It made him sick at heart to think of those good, gentle
men, women, and children curled up in their basements now to avoid the light of
day, venturing out in the dark to feed on others, spreading the disease ...
He fingered the cross slung from his neck. If only they
had listened!
And then he heard the grating sound of a heavily distorted
guitar. He grabbed Joe's arm.
"Quick. Into the bushes!"
They ducked behind a thick stand of rhododendrons along
the foundation of the nearest house and watched a convertible glide by. Zev
counted four in the car, three men and a blond woman, all scruffy and unwashed,
lean and wolfish, in cut-off sweatshirts or denim jackets, the driver wearing a
big Texas hat, someone in the back with a red Mohican, all guzzling beer. The
thumping blast of their music dopplered in and out. Thank God they liked to
play it at ear-damaging levels. It acted as an early warning system.
"Chazzers," Zev muttered.
When they'd passed, Joe stepped out of the bushes and
stared after them.
"Who the hell were they?"
"Scum of the earth. They like to call themselves
cowboys. I call them Vichy."
"Vichy? Like the Vichy French?"
"Yes. Very good. I'm glad to see that you're not as
culturally illiterate as the rest of your generation. Vichy humans—that's what
I call the collaborators. They should all die of pox." He looked around.
"We should get off the street. I know a place near St. Anthony's where we
can hide."
"You've traveled enough today, Reb. And I told you, I
don't care about St. Anthony's. I'll get you situated, then head back."
"You can't leave yet, Joe," Zev said, gripping
the young priest's arm. He'd coaxed him this far; he couldn't let him get away
now. "Stay the night. See what Father Palmeri's done."
"If he's one of them he's not a priest anymore. Don't
call him Father."
"They still call him Father."
"Who?"
"The undead."
Zev watched Father Joe's jaw muscles bunch.
Joe said, "Maybe I'll just take a quick trip over to
St. Anthony's myself—"
"No. It's different here. The area is thick with
Vichy and undead. They'll get you if your timing isn't just right. I'll take
you."
"You need rest, pal."
Father Joe's expression showed genuine concern. Zev was
detecting increasingly softer emotions in the man since their reunion last
night. A good sign perhaps?
"Rest I'll get when we reach where I'm taking
you."
CAROLE . . .
<And what are you doing, Carole? What are you DOING?
You'll be after killing yourself! You'll be blowing yourself to pieces and then
you'll be going straight to hell. HELL, Carole!>
"But I won't be going alone," Carole muttered.
She had to turn her head away from the kitchen sink now.
The fumes stung her nose and made her eyes water, but she kept on stirring the
pool chlorina-tor into the hot water until it was completely dissolved. She
wasn't through yet. She took the beaker of No Salt she'd measured out before
starting the process and added it to the mix in the big Pyrex bowl. Then she
stirred some more. Finally, when she was satisfied that she was not going to
see any further dissolution at this temperature, she put the bowl on the stove
and turned up the flame.
A propane stove. She'd seen the big white tank out back
last week when she was looking for a new home; that was why she'd chosen this
old house. With New Jersey Natural Gas in ruins, and GPU no longer sending
electricity through the wires, propane and wood stoves were the only ways left
to cook.
I really shouldn't call it cooking, she thought as she
fled the acrid fumes and headed for the living room. Nothing more than a simple
dissociation reaction—heating a mixture of calcium hypochlorate with potassium
chloride. Simple, basic chemistry. The very subject she'd taught bored juniors
and seniors for years at St. Anthony's School.
"And you all thought chemistry was such a useless
subject!" she shouted to the walls.
She clapped a hand over her mouth. There she was, talking
out loud again. She had to be careful. Not so much because someone might hear,
but because she worried she might be losing her mind.
Maybe she'd already lost it. Maybe all this was merely a
delusion. Maybe the undead hadn't taken over the entire civilized world. Maybe
they hadn't defiled her church and convent, slaughtered her best friend. Maybe
it was all in her mind.
<Sure and you'd he wishing it was all in your mind,
Carole. Of course you would. Then you wouldn't he sinning!>
Yes, she truly did wish she were imagining all this. At
least then she'd be the only one suffering, and all the rest would still be
alive and well, just as they'd been before she went off the deep end.
But if this was a delusion it was certainly an elaborate,
consistent one. Every time she woke up—she never allowed herself to sleep too
many hours at once, only catnaps—it was the same: quiet skies, vacant houses,
empty streets, furtive, scurrying survivors who trusted no one, and—
What's that?
Sister Carole froze as her ears picked up a sound outside.
Music. She hurried in a crouch to the front door and peered through the
sidelight. A car. A convertible. Someone was out driving in—
She ducked when she saw who was in it. She recognized that
cowboy hat. She didn't have to see their earrings to know who—what—they were.
They were headed east. Good. They'd find a little surprise
waiting for them down the road.
As it did every so often, the horror of what her life had
become caught up to Carole then, and she slumped to the floor of the Bennett
house and began to sob.
Why? Why had God allowed this to happen to her, to His
Church, to His world?
Better question: Why had she allowed these awful events to
change her so? She had been a Sister of Mercy.
<Mercy! Do you hear that, Carole? A Sister of
MERCY!>
She had taken vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience,
had vowed to devote her life to teaching and doing the Lord's work. But now
there was no money, no one worth losing her virginity to, no Mother Superior or
Church to be obedient to, and no students left to teach.
All she had left was the Lord's work.
<Believe me you, Carole, I'd hardly be calling the
making of plastic explosive and the other horrible things you've been doing the
Lord's work. It's killing! It's a SIN!>
Maybe Bernadette's voice was right. Maybe she would go to
hell for what she was doing. But somebody had to make those rotten cowboys pay.
COWBOYS . . .
"Shit! Goddam shit!"
Stan's raging voice and the sudden braking of the car
yanked Al from the edge of a doze. A few beers, nice warm sunlight... he'd been
on his way to catching a Z or two. He opened his eyes.
To, what the fu—"
Then he saw him. Or, rather, it. Dead ahead. Dead ahead. A
body, hanging by its feet from a utility pole.
"Oh, shit," Kenny said from beside him.
"Another one."
Jackie turned off the music. The sudden silence was
creepy.
Al squinted at the body. "Who is it?"
"I dunno," Stan said. Then he looked back at Al
from under the wide brim of his cowboy hat. "Whyn't you go see."
Al swallowed. He'd turned out to be the best climber, so
he'd wound up the second-story man of the team. But he didn't want to make this
climb.
"What's the use?" Al said. "Whoever he is,
he's dead."
"See if he's one of us," Stan said.
"Ain't it always one of us?"
"Then see which one of us it is, okay?"
Stan had been pissing Al off today with his hot-shit
'tude. He was posse leader, yeah, but give it a rest now and then, okay? But
this time he was right: somebody had to go see who'd got unlucky last night.
Al hopped over the door and headed for the pole. What a
pain in the ass. The rope around the dead guy's feet was looped over the first
climbing spike. He shimmied up to it and got creosote all over himself in the
process. The stuff was a bitch to get off. And besides, it made his skin itch.
On the way up he'd kept the pole between himself and the body. Now it was time
to look. He swallowed. He'd seen one of these strung-up guys up close before
and—
He spotted the earring, a blood-splattered silvery
crescent moon dangling on a fine chain from the brown-crusted earlobe, an exact
replica of the one dangling from Al's left ear, only this one was dangling the
wrong way.
"Yep," he said, loud so's the car could hear it.
"It's one of us."
"Damn!" Stan's voice. "Anyone we
know?"
Stan and the rest jumped out of the car and stared up at
him.
Al squinted at the face but with the gag stuck in its
mouth, and the head so encrusted with clotted blood and crawling with buzzing,
feeding flies darting in and out of the gaping wound in the throat, he couldn't
make out no features.
"Can't tell."
"Well, cut him down then."
This was the part Al hated most of all. It seemed almost
like a sin. Not that he'd ever been religious or nothing, but someday, if he
didn't watch his ass, this could be him.
He pulled his K-Bar from its scabbard and sawed at the
rope above the knot on the climbing spike. It frayed, jerked a couple of times,
then parted. He closed his eyes as the body tumbled downward. He hummed
Metallica's "Sandman" to blot out the sound it made when it hit the
pavement. He especially hated the sick, wet plop of the head if it landed
first. Which this one did.
"Looks like Benny Gonzales," Jackie said.
Kenny was nodding. "Yep. No doubt about it. That's
Benny. Shit."
They dragged his body over to the curb and drove on, but
the party mood was gone.
"I'd love to catch the bastards who're doin this
shit," Stan said as he drove. "They've gotta be close by around here
somewhere."
"They could be anywhere," Al said. "They
found Benny back there, killed him there—you saw that puddle of blood under
him—and left him. Then they cut out."
"They're huntin us like we're huntin them,"
Jackie said.
"But I wanna be the one to catch 'em," Kenny
said.
Jackie sneered. "Yeah? And what would you do if you
did?"
Kenny said nothing, and Al knew that was the answer.
Nothing. He'd bring them in and turn them over. The bloodsuckers didn't like
you screwing with their cattle.
But something had to be done. Lots of the cattle they
roped in called Al and company traitors and collaborators and worse. Lately it
looked like some of them had gone beyond name-calling and graduated to
throat-slitting.
Benny Gonzales was the fifth one in a month.
Seemed the guys behind this wanted to make it look like
the vampires themselves was doing the killings, but it didn't wash. Too messy.
These bodies had blood all over them, and a puddle beneath them. When the
bloodsuckers slit somebody's throat, they didn't let a drop of it go to waste.
They licked the platter clean, so to speak.
"We gotta start being real careful," Stan was
saying. "Gotta keep our eyes open."
"And look for what?" Kenny said.
"For a bunch of guys who hang out together—a bunch of
guys who ain't cowboys."
Jackie started singing that Willie Nelson song "Mama,
Don't Let Your Babies Grow up to be Cowboys," and it set Stan off.
"Knock it off, goddamn it! This ain't funny! One of
us could be next! Now keep your fucking eyes open!"
Al studied the houses drifting by as they cruised into
Point Pleasant Beach. Cars sat quietly along the curbs of the empty streets and
the houses appeared deserted, their empty, blind windows staring back at him.
But every so often they'd pass a yard that looked cared for, and those houses
would be defiantly studded with crosses and festooned with garlands of garlic.
And every so often you could swear you saw somebody peeking out from behind a
window or through a screen door.
"You know, Stan," Al said. "I'll bet those
cowboy killers are hiding in one of them houses with all the garlic and
crosses."
"Maybe, Stan said. "But I kinda doubt it. Those
folks tend to stay in after sundown. Whoever's behind this is working at
night."
That made sense to Al. The folks in those houses hardly
ever came out. They were loners. Dangerous loners. Armed loners. The vampires
couldn't get in because of all the garlic and crosses, and the cowboys who'd
tried to get in, or even take off some of the crosses, usually got shot up. The
vampires had said to leave them be for now. Sooner or later they'd run out of
food and have to come out. Then they'd get them.
Smart, those bloodsuckers. Al guessed they figured they
had plenty of time to out wait the loners. All the time in the world.
They was cruising Ocean Avenue by the boardwalk area now,
barely a block from the Atlantic. What a difference. Last year, on a nice
spring day like this, you'd see all sorts of people, locals and day-trippers,
hanging out. Now it was deserted. The sun was high and warm but it was like
winter had never ended.
They was gliding past the empty, frozen rides when Al
caught a flash of color moving between a couple of the boardwalk stands.
"Pull over," he said, tapping Stan's shoulder.
"I think I just saw something."
The tires screeched as Stan made a sharp turn into
Jenkinson's parking lot.
"What kinda something?"
"Something blond. With tits, I think."
Kenny let out a cowboy whoop and tossed his Heineken empty
high. It smashed on the asphalt in a glittery green explosion.
"Shut the fuck up!" Stan said. "You tryin
to queer this little round-up or what?"
"Hey, no, man," Kenny said. "I was
just—"
"Just keep quiet and listen. You and Jackie head down
two blocks and work your way back up on the boards."
"I don't wanna go with him," Jackie said,
jutting her chin at Kenny.
"He needs someone with more experience along. Me and
AM go up here and work our way down. Get goin and don't blow this. I don't
wanna be bringin Gregor no old lady again tonight."
Jackie didn't look happy but she went. As she and Kenny
trotted back to the Risden's Beach bath houses, Stan squared his ten-gallon hat
on his head and pointed toward the miniature golf course at the other end of
the parking lot. Al took the lead and Stan followed.
Arnold Avenue ended here in a turretlike police station,
still boarded up from the winter, but its big warning sign was still up,
informing anyone who passed that alcoholic beverages and dogs and motorbikes
and various other goodies were prohibited in the beach and boardwalk area by
order of the mayor and city council of Point Pleasant Beach.
Al smiled. The beach and the boardwalk and the sign were
still here, but the mayor and the city council were long gone.
Pretty damn depressing up on the boards. The big glass
windows of Jenkinson's arcade was smashed and it was all dark inside. The
lifeless video games stared back with dead eyes. All the concession stands was
boarded up, the paralyzed rides just rusting and peeling, and it was quiet. No
barkers shouting, no kids laughing, no squealing babes in bikinis running in
and out of the surf. Just the monotonous pounding of the waves against the deserted
beach.
And the birds. The seagulls was doing what they'd always
done. Probably the only thing they missed was the garbage the crowds used to
leave behind.
Al and Stan headed south, checking all the nooks and
crannies as they moved. The only other humans they saw was Kenny and Jackie
coming up the other way from the South Beach Arcade.
"Any luck?" Stan called.
"Nada," Jackie said.
"Ay-yo, Al!" Kenny said. "How many Heinies
you have anyway? You seein things now? What was it—a blond seagull?"
But Al knew he'd seen something moving up here, and it
hadn't been no goddamn seagull. But where . . .
"Jackie," Stan said. "Take Kenny under the
boards and see if anyone's hidin down there."
Kenny put on this big shit-eating grin. " Aaaaay,
under the boardwalk with Jackieeee. Cooool."
Stan ignored him and spoke to Jackie. "If it's a girl
like Al thinks he saw, see if you can talk her out. I ain't up for no foot
race, know what I'm sayin?"
Jackie nodded. "Gotcha." She turned to Kenny and
snapped her fingers, like she was talking to a dog. "C'mon, boy. We're
goin for a walk."
"Ooooh. Under the boardwalk with—"
"Don't"—she jabbed a finger within an inch of
his nose—"even think about it!"
Kenny, his tongue hanging out like a dog, followed her
down the wooden steps to the sand. That Kenny. What a pisser.
"Let's go back to Jenk's," Stan said. "She
might be hidin inside."
They'd turned and were heading back up the boards when Al
took one last look back .. . and saw something moving. Something small and red,
rolling across the boards toward the beach from between one of the concession
stands.
A ball.
He tapped Stan on the shoulder, put a finger to his lips,
and pointed. Stan's eyes widened. He glanced toward the beach, probably looking
to signal Jackie and Kenny, but they were out of sight. So the two of them
crept toward the spot where the ball had rolled from.
As they got closer, Al realized why they'd missed this
spot on the first pass. It was really two concession stands—a frozen yogurt
place and a saltwater taffy shop—with boards nailed up over the space between
to make them look like a single building.
Stan tapped Al on the shoulder and pointed to the roof of
the nearer concession stand. Al nodded. He knew what he wanted: the
second-story man had to do his thing again.
Al got to the top of the chain link fence behind the
concession stands and from there it was easy to haul himself up to the roof.
His sneakers made barely a sound as he crept across the tar of the canted roof
to the far side.
The girl must have heard him coming, because she was
already looking up when he peeked over the edge. She had one of them cross
tattoos on her forehead.
That ain't gonna help you against me, honey.
Al felt a surge of satisfaction when he saw her blond
ponytail and long thick bangs. Nice.
He felt something else when he saw the tears streaming
down her cheeks from her pleading eyes, and her hands raised, palms together,
as if praying to him. She wanted him to see nothin—she was begging Al to see
nothing.
For an instant he was tempted. The fear in those
frightened blue eyes reached deep inside and touched something there, disturbed
a part of him so long unused he'd forgotten it belonged to him.
And then he saw she had a little boy with her, maybe seven
years old, dark haired but with eyes as blue as hers, with a tattoo on his
forehead. She was pleading for the kid as much as herself. Maybe more than
herself. And with good reason. The vampires loved little kids. Al didn't get
it. Kids were smaller, had less blood than adults. Maybe their blood was purer,
sweeter. Someday, when he was undead himself, he'd know.
But even with the kid there, Al might have done something
stupid, might have called down to Stan that there was nothing here but some old
torn cat who'd probably taken a swat at that ball and rolled it out. But when
he saw that she was knocked up—very knocked up, as in start-boiling-the-water
knocked up—he knew he had to turn her in.
As much as the bloodsuckers loved kids, they went crazy
for babies. Infants were like the primo delicacy among the vampires. Al once
had seen a couple of them fighting over a newborn.
That had been a sight.
He sighed and said, "Too bad, honey, but you're
packin too many points." He turned and called down toward the boardwalk.
"Bingo, Stan. We struck it rich."
She screamed and the little boy began to cry.
Al shook his head as he watched her cower and hold the kid
tight against her. Sorry babe. It ain't always a pleasant job, but a cowboy's
gotta do what a cowboy's gotta do.
And besides, all these brownie points were gonna bring him
that much closer to some stud time at the nearest cattle farm.
LACEY . . .
Lacey Flannery heard them coming before she saw them.
Coming her way. They weren't talking, which was a bad sign. Could mean they
were on the hunt. She had a faint hope that maybe they were wanderers like her,
but she wasn't about to lay any money on it.
She'd motorboated down from the Sandy Hook area last
night. The water tended to be pretty safe, even at night. The suckers stayed
off it. She'd abandoned the boat at first light on the inlet jetty and sacked
out here under the boardwalk. She'd been awake for about half an hour now.
She'd packed up her stuff and had been ready to move out when she heard
footsteps on the boards above. A bunch of feet—could have been four, six, maybe
eight people. So she'd stayed put, figuring they'd move on.
But instead they were coming to her.
Lacy squatted with her back against a double piling and
wondered what to do. Her sleeping bag and duffel were stacked before her on the
sand. Better play it safe. She dipped into her bag of tricks, briefly
considered her .38, but decided against it. She didn't have many bullets and
didn't know what kind of trouble the noise of a shot would bring down on her.
She chose her nunchucks instead. Two twelve-inch steel rods connected by a
three-inch chain.
Yeah. That'll do.
She slipped out of her black leather jacket and her bare
arms goose-bumped in the breeze off the water. The tight black tank top she
wore beneath wasn't much for warmth but at least it wouldn't get in her way.
She looked down and noticed her nipples poking at the thin fabric. She hadn't
worn a bra in three years and didn't miss it now. She rubbed her nipples to
make them stick out even more. Hey, girl—use all your weapons. Then she stuck
the nunchucks inside the waistband of her jeans at the small of her back. The
chain was cold between her cheeks. Thong panties didn't cover much.
Her mouth felt a little dry, her palms a little moist.
Let's hope they're friendly, she thought. If not, then let's hope there's no
more than two of them.
She rose and peeked around the piling.
Shit. One was a woman. She was going to be harder to
distract. And worse, they were wearing cowboy earrings. The good news was there
were only two of them.
Lacey stepped out and faced them. "How's it
going?"
The stopped dead, staring.
"Ooooh, Jackie," said the dumb-looking guy with
the bad skin and the red Mohican as his eyes fixed on Lacey's chest. "This
ain't Al's blonde, but she'll do. Oh, baby, will she do."
"Shut up, Kenny."
The skinny, pierced-up, white-trash blonde gave her an up
and down; she seemed more interested in checking to see if Lacey's hands were
empty. She looked thirty-five but was probably thirty. Not at all Lacey's type.
She fixed Lacey with her squinty brown eyes. "What're
you doin down here?"
"Catching some Z's," Lacey said. "How about
you two?"
"Lookin for loooove," Kenny said, grinning.
"In all the wrong places." He stepped closer. "Hey, ain't you
somethin. Look at those muscles, Jackie. And she got tats too."
Lacey looked down at her upper arms and the black Celtic
knots that encircled each just between the sleek, well-cut bulges of her biceps
and deltoids. She'd spent a lot of time on those muscles.
"Want to see them wiggle like snakes?"
She began contracting and relaxing the muscles, making
them dance under the Celtic knots which in turn undulated like, well, snakes.
"Tits and tats and ripped to boot," he said,
easing another step closer. "I think I'm in love. Think we can have her
join the posse, Jacks?"
"No way. Besides, that ain't for us to decide."
"They look so hard," he said. "You mind if
I give one a little squeeze?"
Lacey smiled. "You're talking about my muscles but
you're staring at my nips."
He laughed. "Oh, I do like this one, Jackie." He
looked at her. "We gotta—"
That was when Lacey kicked him. She knew how to kick, had
taken classes in it, and she lashed out her foot as hard as she could, putting
a lot of her lower body behind it. She landed a good one, right square in his
balls. He made a breathy noise, something like "Hommf!" as he went
knock-kneed and dropped to the sand. Jackie stared at him stupidly, as if
trying to figure out what had just happened, while Lacey grabbed for her
nunchucks. She had a grip on one end and was snapping the other in a sidearm
arc when Jackie looked back at her. Her mouth was opening, starting to shout,
when the steel bar caught her across the left side of her head. She tumbled to
her right and hit the sand, still conscious but just barely, holding her head
and groaning. Blood seeped between her fingers.
Lacey turned back to Kenny. He was down on his knees with
his hands jammed between his thighs, clutching his jewels, his face gray, his
mouth working.
"You fucking bitch!" he managed. "You're
gonna wish—"
Lacey kicked him again, in the stomach this time, high, a
bull's eye into his solar plexus. He doubled over. Kenny wouldn't be
threatening Lacey or anybody else for a while.
Five seconds later she was back in her jacket and booking
south with her duffel and her sleeping bag. Behind and above her she thought
she heard a woman's voice cry out. The blond the two creeps had mentioned?
Lacey stopped and listened. She heard another cry and looked up at a seagull
coasting overhead on the breeze. It squawked again. Had that been what she'd
heard?
She dropped her load and grabbed the edge of the
boardwalk. The ends of the weathered boards rasped against her palms as she
pulled herself up for a look—all those chin-ups at the gym were finally paying
off. She held her eyes at board level. No one in sight.
She dropped back to the sand, grabbed her things, and
started walking again.
No time to waste. She'd come to find her uncle.
CAROLE . . .
Sister Carole checked the Pyrex bowl on the stove. A
chalky layer of potassium chloride had formed in the bottom. She turned off the
heat and immediately decanted the boiling upper fluid, pouring it through a Mr.
Coffee filter into a Pyrex brownie pan. She threw out the scum in the filter
and put the pan of filtrate on the windowsill to cool.
She heard the sound of a car again and rushed to a window.
It was the same car, the convertible, with the same occupants—
No, wait. There had been only four before. Now there were
three squeezed into the rear. The woman who had been in the front earlier was
in the back; she looked as if she might be sick; the man with the red Mohican
seemed to be struggling with a newcomer, a young woman with long blond hair.
She looked—
Jesus, Mary, and Joseph, the poor thing was pregnant!
Sister Carole suddenly felt as if something were tearing
apart within her chest. Was there no justice, was there no mercy anywhere?
She dropped to her knees and began to pray for her, but in
the back of her mind she wondered why she bothered. None of her prayers had
been answered so far.
<Sacrilege, Carole! That's SACRILEGE! Now tell me why
you'd be thinking the Lord would answer the prayers of such a SINNER? I know
you were taught that he does, but believe me you, he doesn't!>
Maybe not, Carole thought. But if He'd answered somebody's
prayers somewhere along the line, maybe she wouldn't have been forced to turn
the Bennett's kitchen into an anarchist's laboratory.
The Lord helped those who helped themselves, didn't He?
Especially when they were doing the Lord's work.
COWBOYS . . .
"Please leave me alone," the blonde whimpered,
pushing Kenny's hand away as he tried to unbutton her top. She'd been nothing
but a blubbering basket case since Al had put her kid in the trunk. "I
want my little boy. Please let him out. Please!"
Al was sitting shotgun while Stan drove. Her whining was
getting on Al's nerves. And so was Kenny. He turned around and checked out the
back seat. Jackie was slumped on the driver side, holding an old sweatshirt
against the side of her head. The bleeding had stopped but she looked pale and
sick. The pregnant cow had the middle seat, and Kenny was nuzzling up against
her from the other side.
Al said, "I still can't believe you got kayo'd by a
girl."
Kenny kept his eyes on the cow. "I told you, man, she
suckered me. I was slippin up on her, real casual like, gettin ready to make my
move, and she's lookin like she's fallin for it when she punts me."
Kenny had been in sad shape for about ten or fifteen
minutes, but he'd snapped back. He walked a little funny but the kick hadn't
seemed to take the steam out of his usual horniness.
Jackie was another story. She'd puked once on the
boardwalk, and another time in the parking lot. Al hoped she didn't puke up the
car. You just didn't find a Cadillac convertible every day.
The cow started wailing about her kid again. "Please
let my little boy out of the trunk! He'll suffocate!"
"Look!" Stan shouted, speaking for the first
time since they'd left Point— he'd been real pissed at Kenny and Jackie for
losing a girl. "I'll get your brat outta the trunk, all right. I'll tie a
rope around his feet and drag him back to Lakewood if you don't shut up!"
She sobbed but didn't say anything more.
Al remembered the little kid lookin up at him as he shoved
him into the trunk. "Don't let them hurt my mommy," he'd said. Kinda
reminded Al of his little brother when they were kids. Never could stand his
little brother.
Kenny started toyin with the cow again. "C'mon. Show
ol' Kenny those pretty pregnant titties."
"Ease up, Kenny."
Kenny didn't look at him. "Mind your own fucking
business, Al."
Stan looked at Al and jerked his head toward the back
seat. "Straighten out your friend, will ya?"
Al grabbed Kenny's arm. "Lay off her, man."
Kenny slammed his hand away. "Yeah? What for? To save
her for you? Bullshit!"
Kenny could be a real asshole at times.
"We're not saving her for me," Al said.
"For Gregor. You remember Gre-gor, don't you, Kenny?"
Some of Kenny's tough-guy act faded.
"Course I do," he said. "But I don't wanna
suck her blood, man." He jammed his hand down between the cow's legs.
"I got other things in mind. It's been a long time, man—a long time—and I
gotta—"
"What if you screw up the baby?" Al said.
"What if she starts having the baby and it's born dead? All because of
you? What're you gonna tell Gregor then, Kenny? How you gonna explain that to
him?"
"Who says he has to know?"
"You think he won't find out?" Al said. "I
tell you what, Kenny. You wanna to get your jollies with this broad, fine. Go
ahead. But if that's what you're gonna do, we're droppin you and her here—right
here—and drivin away. Am I right, Stan?"
Stan nodded. "Fuckin ay."
"And then you can explain any problems to Gregor
yourself tonight when we meet. Okay?"
"Gregor-Gregor-Gregor! Let up, huh? You just about
piss your pants every time we get near him. He ain't so tough. Gimme a stake
and a hammer and show me where he snoozes and I'll show you how tough he is.
Fuckin leech is what he is. Stake him through his heart, cut off his head, and
then we won't have to worry bout no more fuckin shit from Gregor. Do it to alia
them. Show'em all."
"Yeah?" Stan said, smilin but lookin straight
ahead. "Then what?
"Then we'll be fuckin heroes, man."
"Heroes to who? These Saab-drivin, gel-haired,
sprout-chewin faggots hiding behind their crosses and garlic? You wanna be
heroes to them, go ahead. But what happens when word of what you done gets out
to the other bloodsuckers and they come a-knockin? What then? You know how many
of them there is out there, man? Zillions. They'll come back with a truckload
of those ferals and rip us all to shreds. That what you want, asshole?"
Sounded to Al like Stan had already given Kenny's idea
some thought and had shit-canned it.
Kenny said, "Hey, no, but—"
"Then shut the fuck up. And leave the cow
alone."
Kenny pulled his hand away from the blonde and sat on it.
"Jesus, guys. It's been a long time. I need
some."
"Hey, I need some too," Al told him. "But I
ain't ready yet to get killed for a little pregnant poontang, know what I
mean?"
Stan said, "Look at it this way. We gotta take some
shit now and then, but you know anybody else got it better? We hold the fort,
man. We hold the fort for them till we get to join up." He grinned.
"Then we'll have assholes holding the fort for us."
Stan seemed to think that was real funny. He laughed about
the rest of the way into Lakewood.
CAROLE . . .
Sister Carole finished her prayers at sundown and went to
check on the cooled filtrate. The bottom of the pan was layered with potassium
chlorate crystals. Potent stuff. The Germans had used it in their grenades and
land mines during World War One.
She got a clean Mr. Coffee filter and poured the contents
of the pan through it, but this time she saved the residue in the filter and
let the liquid go down the drain.
<Lookit after what you're doing now, Carole! You're a
sick woman! SICK! You've got to be stopping this and praying to God for
guidance! Pray, Carole! PRAY!>
Sister Carole ignored the voice and spread out the
crystals in the now-empty pan. She set the oven on LOW and placed the pan on
the middle rack. She had to get all the moisture out of the potassium chlorate
before it would be of any use to her.
So much trouble, and so dangerous. If only her searches
had yielded some dynamite, even a few sticks, everything would have been so
much easier. She'd searched everywhere—hunting shops, gun stores, construction
sites. She'd found lots of other useful items, but no dynamite. Only some
blasting caps. She no choice but to improvise.
This was her third batch. She'd been lucky so far. She
hoped she survived long enough to get a chance to use it.
GREGOR . . .
"You've outdone yourselves this time, boys."
Gregor stared at the three cowboys. Ordinarily he found it
doubly difficult to be near them. Not simply because the crimson thirst made a
perpetual test of proximity to a living font of hot, pulsing sustenance when
he'd yet to feed, urging him to let loose and tear into their throats; but also
because these four were so common, such low-lifes.
Gregor couldn't wait until he was moved up and would no
longer be forced to deal directly with flotsam such as these. Living
collaborators were a necessary evil, but that didn't mean he had to like them.
Tonight, however, he could almost say that he enjoyed
their presence. He'd been unhappy about the news of a fifth slain cowboy, but
was ecstatic with the prizes they had brought with them.
He had shown up shortly after sundown at the customary
meeting place outside St. Anthony's church. Of course, it didn't look much like
a church now, what with all the crosses broken off. He'd found the scurvy trio
waiting for him as usual, but they had with them a small boy and—dare he
believe his eyes—a pregnant woman. His knees had gone weak at the double throb
of life within her.
"Where's your companion?" he asked. "The
woman?"
"Jackie's not feeling so hot so we left her
home," said the one in the cowboy hat.
What was his name? So many of these roaches to keep track
of. This one was called Stan. Yes, that was it.
"Well, I'm extremely proud of all of you."
"We thought you'd appreciate it," Stan said.
Gregor felt his grin grow even wider.
"Oh, I do. Not just for the succulence of the prizes
you've delivered, but because you've vindicated my faith in you. I knew the
minute I saw you that you'd make a good posse leader."
An outright lie. But it cost him nothing to heap the
praise on Stan, and perhaps it would spur him to do as well next time. Maybe
better. Although what could be better than this?
"Anything for the cause," the redheaded one
said.
The one with the spiked dark hair—Al, Gregor
remembered—gave his partner a poisonous look, as if he wanted to kick him for
being such a boot-lick.
"And your timing could not be better," Gregor
told them. "We have a special guest visiting from New York." He
didn't mention that she was here because someone was exterminating their fellow
slugs. "I will present this gravid cow to her as a gift. She will be
enormously pleased."
At least Gregor hoped so. He was relying on the gift to
take the edge off her reaction when she learned that another cowboy was dead.
"Is that the lady I saw you with last night?"
Al's words startled Gregor. Had this cowboy been spying on
him? He felt his lips pulling back, baring his fangs.
"When was this?"
Al took half a step back. "When we was driving away
after droppin off that old lady. I saw her like come up behind you."
Gregor relaxed. "Yes, that was her. These gifts will
be good for me. And trust me, what is good for me will eventually prove to be
good for you. I won't forget your efforts."
Pardy true. The little boy would go to the local nest
leader who'd been pastor of St. Anthony's during his life and had a taste for
young boys. The priest had become the de facto leader of Gregor's local get.
Over the decades Gregor had noted that the newly turned took to the undead
existence with varying degrees of aptitude. Father Palmeri seemed a natural.
He'd adapted to his new circumstances with amazing gusto. Perhaps zeal was a
better term. Some people, one might say, were born to be undead.
He'd save the boy for tomorrow since the priest already
had a bloodsource lined up for tonight. The pregnant female would indeed go to
Olivia. But the rest was a laugh. As soon as Gregor was moved out of here, he'd
never give these walking heaps of human garbage another thought.
But he smiled as he turned away.
"As always, may your night be bountiful."
CAROLE . . .
A little after sundown, Sister Carole removed the
potassium chlorate crystals from the oven. She poured then into a bowl and then
gently, carefully, began to grind them down to a fine power. This was the
touchiest part of the process. A little too much friction, a sudden shock, and
the bowl would blow up in her face.
<You'd like that, wouldn't you, Carole. Sure, and
you'll be thinking that would solve all your problems. Well, it won't, Carole.
It will merely start your REAL problems! It will send you straight to HELL!>
Sister Carole made no reply as she continued the grinding.
When the powder was sifted through a four-hundred-mesh screen, she spread it
onto the bottom of the pan again and placed it back in the oven to remove the
last trace of moisture. While that was heating she began melting equal parts
wax and Vaseline, mixing them in a small Pyrex bowl.
When the mix had reached a uniform consistency she
dissolved it in some camp stove gasoline. She removed the potassium chlorate
powder from the oven and stirred in three percent aluminum powder to enhance
the flash effect. Then she poured the Vaseline-wax-gasoline solution over the
powder. She slipped on rubber gloves and began stirring and kneading everything
together until she had a uniform, gooey mess. This went on the windowsill to
cool and to speed the evaporation of the gasoline.
Then she went to the bedroom. Soon it would be time to go
out and she had to dress appropriately. She stripped to her white cotton
underpants and laid out the tight black skirt and red blouse she'd lifted from
the shattered show window of that deserted shop down on Clifton Avenue. She
slipped her small breasts into a heavily padded bra, then began squeezing into
a fresh pair of black pantyhose.
<You're getting into THOSE clothes again, are you? You
look cheap, Carole! You look like a WHORE!>
I know, she thought. That's the whole idea.
JOE . . .
Father Joe Cahill watched the moon rise over the back end
of his old church and wondered about the wisdom of coming back. The casual
decision made in the full light of day now seemed reckless and foolhardy in the
dark.
But no turning back now. He'd followed Zev to the second
floor of this three-story office building across the street from the rear of
St. Anthony's, and here they'd waited for dark. It must have been a law office
once. The place had been vandalized, the windows broken, the furniture trashed,
but an old Temple University Law School degree hung askew on the wall, and the
couch was still in one piece. So while Zev caught some Z's, Joe sat, sipped a
little of his Scotch, and did some heavy thinking.
Mostly he thought about his drinking. He'd done too much
of that lately, he knew; so much so that he was afraid to stop cold. So he was
allowing himself just a touch now, barely enough to take the edge off. He'd
finish the rest later, after he came back from that church over there.
He'd been staring at St. Anthony's since they'd arrived.
It too had been extensively vandalized. Once it had been a beautiful little
stone church, a miniature cathedral, really, very Gothic with all its pointed
arches, steep roofs, crocketed spires, and multifoil stained glass windows. Now
the windows were smashed, the crosses that had topped the steeple and each
gable were gone, and anything resembling a cross on its granite exterior had
been defaced beyond recognition.
As he'd known it would, the sight of St. Anthony's brought
back memories of Gloria Sullivan, the young, pretty church volunteer whose
husband worked for United Chemical International in New York; he commuted to
the city every day, trekked overseas a little too often. Joe and Gloria had
seen a lot of each other around the church offices and had become good friends.
But Gloria had somehow got the idea that what they had went beyond friendship,
so she showed up at the rectory one night when Joe was there alone. He tried to
explain that as attractive as she was, she was not for him. He had taken
certain vows and meant to stick by them. He did his best to let her down easy
but she'd been hurt. And angry.
That might have been that, but then her five-year-old son
Kevin had come home from altar boy practice with a story about a priest making
him pull down his pants and touching him. Kevin was never clear on who the
priest had been, but Gloria Sullivan was. Obviously it had been Father
Cahill—any man who could turn down the heartfelt offer of her love and her body
had to be either a queer or worse. And a child molester was worse.
She took it to the police and to the papers.
Joe groaned softly at the memory of how swiftly his life
had become hell. But he had been determined to weather the storm, sure that the
real culprit eventually would be revealed. He had no proof—still didn't—but if
one of the priests at St. Anthony's was a pederast, he knew it wasn't him. That
left Father Alberto Palmeri, St. Anthony's fifty-five-year-old pastor.
Before Joe could get to the truth, however, the bishop had
stepped in and removed Joe from the parish. Joe left under a cloud that had
followed him to the retreat house in the next county and hovered over him till
this day. The only place he'd found even brief respite from the impotent anger
and bitterness that roiled under his skin and soured his gut every minute of
every day was in the bottle—and that was sure as hell a dead end.
So why had he agreed to come back here? To torture
himself? Or to get a look at Palmeri and see how low he had sunk?
Maybe that was it. Maybe seeing Palmeri wallowing in his
true element would give Joe the impetus to put the whole St. Anthony's incident
behind him and rejoin what was left of the human race—which needed all the help
it could get.
And maybe it wouldn't.
Getting back on track was a nice thought, but over the
past few months Joe had found it increasingly difficult to give much of a damn
about anyone or anything.
Except maybe Zev. The old rabbi had stuck by him through
the worst of it, defending him to anyone who would listen. But an endorsement
from an Orthodox rabbi hadn't meant diddly in St. Anthony's.
Yesterday Zev had biked all the way to Spring Lake to see him.
Old Zev was all right.
And he'd been right about the number of undead here too.
Lakewood was crawling with the things. Fascinated and repelled, Joe had watched
the streets fill with them shortly after sundown.
But what had disturbed him more were the creatures he'd
seen before sundown.
The humans. Live ones.
The collaborators. The ones Zev called Vichy.
If there was anything lower, anything that deserved true
death more than the undead themselves, it was the still-living humans who
worked for them.
A hand touched his shoulder and he jumped. Zev. He was
holding something out to him. Joe took it and held it up in the moonlight: a
tiny crescent moon dangling from a chain on a ring.
"What's this?"
"An earring. The local Vichy wear them. The earrings
identify them to the local nest of undead. They are spared."
"Where'd you get it?"
Zev's face was hidden in the shadows. "The previous
owner ... no longer needs it.
"What's that supposed to mean?"
Zev sighed. He sounded embarrassed. "Some group has
been killing the local Vichy. I don't know how many they've eliminated, but I
came across one in my wanderings. Not such a pleasant task, but I forced myself
to relieve the body of its earring. Just in case."
Joe found it hard to imagine the old pre-occupation Zev
performing such a grisly task, but these were different times.
"Just in case what?"
"In case I needed to pretend to be one of them."
Joe had to laugh. "I can't see that fooling them for
a second."
"Maybe a second is all I'd need. But it will look
better on you. Put it on."
"My ear's not pierced."
A gnarled hand moved into the moonlight. Joe saw a long
needle clasped between the thumb and index finger. "That I can fix,"
Zev said.
* * *
"On second thought," Zev whispered as they
crouched in the deep shadows on St. Anthony's western flank, "maybe you
shouldn't see this."
Puzzled, Joe squinted at him in the darkness.
"You lay a guilt trip on me to get me here, you make
a hole in my ear, and now you're having second thoughts?"
"It is horrible like I can't tell you."
Joe thought about that. Certainly there was enough horror
in the world outside St. Anthony's. What purpose did it serve to see what was
going inside?
Because it used to be my church.
Even though he'd been an associate pastor, never fully in
charge, and even though he'd been unceremoniously yanked from the post, St.
Anthony's had been his first parish. He was back. He might as well know what
they were doing inside.
"Show me."
Zev led him to a pile of rubble under a smashed stained
glass window. He pointed up to where faint light flickered from inside.
"Look in there."
"You're not coming?"
"Once was enough, thank you."
Joe climbed as carefully, as quietly as he could, all the
while becoming increasingly aware of a growing stench like putrid, rotting
meat. It was coming from inside, wafting through the broken window. Steeling
himself, he straightened and peered over the sill.
For a moment he felt disoriented, like someone peering out
the window of a Brooklyn apartment and seeing the rolling hills of a Kansas
farm. This could not be the interior of St. Anthony's.
In the flickering light of dozens of sacramental candles
he saw that the walls were bare, stripped of all their ornaments, including the
plaques for the Stations of the Cross; the dark wood was scarred and gouged
wherever there had been anything remotely resembling a cross. The floor too was
mostly bare, the pews ripped from their neat rows and hacked to pieces, their
splintered remains piled high at the rear under the choir balcony.
And the giant crucifix that had dominated the space behind
the altar— only a portion remained. The cross pieces on each side had been
sawed off so that an armless, life-size Christ now hung upside down against the
rear wall of the sanctuary.
Joe took in all that in a flash; then his attention
gravitated to the unholy congregation that peopled St. Anthony's this night.
The collaborators—the Vichy humans—made up the periphery of the group. Some
looked like bikers and trailer-park white trash, but others looked like normal,
everyday people. What bonded them was the crescent-moon earring dangling from
every right earlobe.
But the rest, the group gathered in the sanctuary—Joe felt
his hackles rise at the sight of them. They surrounded the altar in a tight knot.
He recognized some of them: Mayor Davis, Reverend Dalton, and others, their
pale, bestial faces, bereft of the slightest trace of human warmth, compassion,
or decency, turned upward. His gorge rose when he saw the object of their rapt
attention.
A naked teenage boy—his hands tied behind his back, was
suspended over the altar by his ankles. He was sobbing and choking, his eyes
wide and vacant with shock, his mind all but gone. The skin had been flayed
from his forehead—apparently the Vichy had found an expedient solution to the
cross tattoo—and blood ran in a slow stream across his abdomen and chest from
his freshly truncated genitals. And beside him, standing atop the altar, a
bloody-mouthed creature dressed in a long cassock. Joe recognized the thin
shoulders, the graying hair trailing from the balding crown, but was shocked at
the crimson vulpine grin he flashed to the things clustered below him.
"Now," said the creature in a lightly accented
voice Joe had heard a thousand times from St. Anthony's pulpit.
Father Alberto Palmeri.
From the group a hand reached up with a straight razor and
drew it across the boy's throat. As the blood sprang from the vessels and
flowed down over his face, those below squeezed and struggled forward like
hatchling vultures to catch the falling drops and scarlet trickles in their
open mouths.
Joe fell away from the window and vomited. He felt Zev
grab his arm and lead him away. He was vaguely aware of crossing the street and
heading back toward the ruined legal office.
ZEV . . .
"Why in God's name did you want me to see that?"
Zev looked across the office toward the source of the
words. He could make out a vague outline where Father Joe sat on the floor, his
back against the wall, the open bottle of Scotch in his hand. The priest had
taken one drink since their return, no more.
"I thought you should know what they were doing to
your church." He felt bad about the immediate effect on Joe, but he was
hoping the long-term consequences would benefit him and others.
"So you've said. But what's the reason behind that
one?"
Zev shrugged in the darkness. "I'd gathered you
weren't doing well, that even before everything else began falling apart, you
had already fallen apart. So when this woman who saved me urged me to find you,
I took up the quest and came to see you. Just as I expected, I found a man who
was angry at everything and letting it eat up his guderim. I thought maybe it
would be good to give that man something very specific to be angry at."
"You bastard!" Father Joe whispered. "Who
gave you the right?"
"Friendship gave me the right, Joe. I should know
that you are rotting away and do nothing? I have no congregation of my own
anymore so I turned my attention on you. Always I was a somewhat meddlesome
rabbi."
"Still are. Out to save my soul, ay?"
"We rabbis don't save souls. Guide them maybe,
hopefully give them direction. But only you can save your soul, Joe."
Silence hung in the air for a while. Suddenly the
crescent-moon earring Zev had given Father Joe landed in the puddle of
moonlight on the floor between them. He noticed a speck of crimson on the post.
"Why do they do it?" the priest said. "The
Vichy—why do they collaborate?"
"The first ones are quite unwilling, believe me. They
cooperate because their wives and children are held hostage by the undead. But
before too long the dregs of humanity begin to slither out from under their
rocks and offer their services in exchange for the immortality of
vampirism."
"Why bother working for them? Why not just bare your
throat to the nearest bloodsucker?"
"That's what I thought at first," Zev said.
"But as I witnessed the Lakewood holocaust I detected their pattern. After
the immediate onslaught—and the burning of the bodies of their first
victims—they change tactics. They can choose who joins their ranks, so after
they've fully infiltrated a population, they start to employ a different style
of killing. For only when the undead draws the life's blood from the throat
with its fangs does the victim become one of them. Anyone drained as in the manner
of that boy in the church tonight dies a true death. He's as dead now as
someone run over by a truck. He will not rise tomorrow night."
"So the Vichy work for them for the opportunity of
getting their blood sucked the old-fashioned way."
"And joining the undead ranks."
Zev heard no humor in the soft laugh that echoed across
the room from Father Joe.
"Great. Just great. I never cease to be amazed at our
fellow human beings. Their capacity for good is exceeded only by their ability
to debase themselves."
"Hopelessness does strange things, Joe. The undead
know that. So they rob us of hope. That's how they beat us. They transform our
friends and neighbors and leaders into their own, leaving us feeling alone,
completely cut off. Some can't take the despair and kill themselves."
"Hopelessness," Joe said. "A potent
weapon."
After a long silence, Zev said, "So what are you
going to do now, Father Joe?"
Another bitter laugh from across the room.
"I suppose this is the place where I declare that
I've found new purpose in life and will now go forth into the world as a
fearless vampire killer."
"Such a thing would be nice."
"Well screw that. I'm only going as far as across the
street."
"To St. Anthony's?"
Zev saw Father Joe take a swig from the Scotch bottle and
then screw the cap on tight.
"Yeah. To see if there's anything I can do over
there."
"Father Palmeri and his nest might not like
that."
"I told you, don't call him Father. And screw him.
Nobody can do what he's done and get away with it. I'm taking my church
back."
In the dark, behind his beard, Zev smiled.
COWBOYS . . .
Al had the car out on his own. He wasn't supposed to, gas
being hard to come by and all, but he needed to be alone, or at least away from
Kenny. Yeah, sure, they'd been friends forever but they'd never been together
24-7. Usually the four of them played cards and did some drinking before
turning in. But Jackie was out of commission and Stan was still pissed and
wasn't playing cards with nobody, so that left Al with just Kenny.
They all lived together in one of the big mansions off
Hope Road. Stan liked to brag that one of the Mets used to live there. Big
deal. The place had all the comforts of home: electricity from a generator,
videotapes and DVDs—with a good selection of porn—and a fridge full of beer.
But sometimes Kenny could wear you out, man. Big time. Like tonight.
Al was feeling better already, banging his head in time to
Insane Clown Posse's "Cemetery Girl" as he cruised the dark streets.
He looked up. Clouds hid the moon. He wished it was out
and full. Amazing how dark a residential street could be when there was no
traffic, no street lights. At least he had his headlights and—
Whoa. He hit the brakes. He'd just passed someone on the
sidewalk. Someone female looking. And not too old.
He quick took off his earring and flipped the Caddy into
reverse. He kept the earring palmed, ready to flash it if the lady turned out
to be one of the bloodsuckers, but otherwise keeping it out of sight just in
case this was somebody looking for a new cowboy to kill.
He did a slow backup while he searched the shadows and
moonlit patches. Nothing. Shit. Either he was seeing things or he'd spooked
her.
He was just about to slam back into DRIVE when he heard a
voice. A woman's voice.
"Hey, mister."
Al grabbed his flashlight from the passenger seat and
beamed it toward the voice.
A woman half hiding behind a tree in the bushes. Not
undead. Maybe thirty, skinny but not bad looking. He played the light up and
down her. Short dark hair, lots of eye makeup, a red sweater tight over
decent-size boobs, a short black skirt very tight over black stockings.
Despite the alarm bells going off in his brain, Al ignored
them as he felt his groin start to swell. He left the car in the middle of the
street—like he had to worry about getting a ticket, right?—and walked over to
her.
"Who're you?"
She smiled. No, not bad looking at all.
"My name's Carole," she said. "You got any
food?"
"Some." Yeah, she looked like she could use a
few good meals. "But not a whole helluva lot."
Actually, he had a lot of food, but saw no reason to let
her know that.
"Can you spare any?"
"I might be able to help you out some. Depends on how
many mouths we're talking about."
"Just me and my kid."
The words jumped out of his mouth before he could stop
them: "You got a kid?"
She waved her hands in quick, nervous moves. "Don't
worry. She's only four. She don't eat much."
A four-year-old. Two kids in one day. Almost too good to
be true.
His brain kicked into overdrive. How to play this? For a
while now he'd had this little scheme of keeping a piece on the side, with
neither the bloodsuckers or the posse knowing nothing about her. He'd get her a
house, keep her fed, keep her protected. But it sounded like this Carole
already had herself a house. Even better. She could stay where she was and he'd
visit her whenever he could get away. She treated him right, they could play
house for a while. She gave him any trouble, like holding out on him, she and her
brat became gifts to Gregor. That was where they were going to wind up anyway,
but no reason Al couldn't get some use out of her before she became some
bloodsucker's meal or wound up on a cattle farm.
And maybe he'd get real lucky. Maybe she'd get pregnant
before he turned her in.
"Well... all right," he said, trying to sound
reluctant. "Bring her out where I can see her."
"She's home asleep."
"Alone?" Al was like immediately pissed. He
already considered that kid his property. He didn't want no bloodsucker
sneaking in and robbing him of what was rightfully his. "What if—?"
"Don't worry. I've got her surrounded by
crosses."
"Still, you never know." He paused, thinking.
"Here's the deal. I got food but I got this tiny little rundown place that
ain't fit for the cockroaches that live there. Maybe I could like spend some
time at your place. That way I could guard you and your kid from those cowboys.
They'd love nothing better'n hauling a little kid into the bloodsuckers."
Did that sound concerned enough?
A hand flew to her mouth. "Oh dear!" Her voice
softened. "You must be a good man."
"Oh, I'm the best," he said.
And I've got this friend behind my fly who's just dying to
meet you.
"I'll show you my place," she said. "It's
not much but there's room for you."
Yeah, babe. Right on top of you.
She got in the car and directed him to the corner and
around to the middle of the next block to an old two-story colonial set back
among some tall oaks on an overgrown lot. He nodded with growing excitement
when he saw a child's red wagon parked against the front steps.
"You live here? Hell, I musta passed this place a
couple of times already today."
"Really?" she said. "We usually stay hidden
in the basement."
"Good thinkin."
He followed her up the steps and through the front door.
Inside there was a couple of candles burning but the heavy drapes hid them from
outside.
"Lynn's sleeping upstairs," she said. "I'll
just run up and check on her."
Al watched her black-stockinged legs hungrily as she
bounded up the bare wooden stairway, taking the steps two at a time. He
adjusted his jeans for a little more comfort. Man, he was hard as a rock.
Couldn't wait to get her out of that miniskirt and himself into—
And then it hit him: Why wait till she came back down?
What was he doing standing around down here when he could be upstairs getting
himself a preview of what was to come?
"Yoo-hoo," he said softly as he put his foot on
the first step. "Here comes Daddy."
But the first step wasn't wood. Wasn't even a step. His
foot went right through it, like it was made of cardboard or something. As Al
looked down in shock he saw that it was made of cardboard—painted cardboard.
His brain was just forming the question Why? when a sudden blast of pain like
he'd never known in his whole life shot up his leg from just above the ankle.
He screamed, lunged back, away from the false step, but
the movement tripled his agony. He clung to the newel post like a drunk,
weeping and moaning for God knew how long, until the pain eased for a second.
Then slowly, gingerly, accompanied by the metallic clanking of uncoiling chain
links, he lifted his leg out of the false tread.
Al let loose a stream of curses through his pain-clenched
teeth when he saw the bear trap attached to his leg. Its sharp, massive steel
teeth had sunk themselves deep into the flesh of his lower leg.
But fear began to worm through the all-enveloping haze of
his agony.
The bitch set me up!
Kenny had wanted to find the guys who were killing the
cowboys. But now Al had done just that, and it scared him shitless. What a
dumbass he was. Baited by a broad—the oldest trick in the book.
Gotta get outta here!
He lunged for the door but the chain caught and brought him
up short with a blinding blaze of agony so intense his scream damn near
shredded his vocal cords. He toppled to the floor and lay there whimpering like
a kicked dog until the pain became bearable again.
Where were they? Where were the rest of the cowboy
killers? Upstairs, laughing as they listened to him howl? Waiting until he wore
himself out so he'd be easy pickings?
He'd show them.
Al pulled himself to a sitting position and reached for
the trap. He tried to spread its jaws but they were locked tight on his leg. He
wrapped his hand around the chain and tried to yank it free from where it was
fastened below but it wouldn't budge.
Panic began to grip him now. Its icy fingers were
tightening on his throat when he heard a sound on the stairs. He looked up and
saw her.
A nun.
He blinked and looked again.
Still a nun. He squinted and saw that it was the broad
who'd led him in here. She was wearing a bulky sweater and loose slacks, and
all the makeup had been scrubbed off her face, but he knew she was a nun by the
thing she wore on her head: a white band up front with a black veil trailing
behind.
And suddenly, amid the pain and panic, Al was back in
grammar school, back in St. Mary's before he got expelled, and Sister Margaret
was coming at him with her ruler, only this nun was a lot younger than Sister
Margaret, and that was no ruler she was carrying, that was a baseball bat—an
aluminum baseball bat.
He looked around. Nobody else, just him and the nun.
"Where's the rest of you?"
"Rest?" she said.
"Yeah. The others in your gang. Where are they?"
"There's only me."
She was lying. Had to be. One crazy nun killing all those
cowboys? No way! But still he had to get out of here. He tried to crawl across
the floor but the fucking chain wouldn't let him.
"You're makin a mistake!" he cried. "I
ain't one a them!"
"Oh, but you are," she said, coming down the
stairs.
"No. Really. See?" He touched his right ear
lobe. "No earring."
"Maybe not now, but you had one earlier." She
stepped over the gaping opening of the phony tread and circled to his left.
"When? When?"
"When you drove by earlier today. You told me so
yourself."
"I lied!"
"No, you didn't. But I lied. I wasn't in the
basement. I was watching through the window. I saw you and your three friends
in that car." Her voice suddenly became cold and brittle and sharp as a
straight razor. "And I saw that poor woman you had with you. Where is she
now? What did you do with her?"
She was talking through her teeth now, and the look in her
eyes, the strained pallor of her face had Al ready to pee his pants. He wrapped
his arms around his head as she stepped closer with the bat.
"Please!" he wailed.
"What did you do with them?"
"Nothin!"
"Lie!"
She swung the bat, but not at his head. Instead she
slammed it with a heavy metallic clank against the jaws of the trap. As he
screamed with the renewed agony and his hands automatically reached for his
injured leg, Al realized that she must have done this sort of thing before.
Because now his head was completely unprotected and she was already into a
second swing. And this one was aimed much higher.
CAROLE . . .
<You've done it again, Carole! AGAIN! I know they're a
bad lot, but look what you've DONE!>
Sister Carole looked down at the unconscious man with the
bleeding head and trapped, lacerated leg. She sobbed.
"I know," she said aloud.
She was so tired. She'd have liked nothing better now than
to go upstairs and cry herself to sleep. But she couldn't spare the time. Every
moment counted now.
She tucked her feelings—her mercy, her compassion—into the
deepest, darkest pocket of her being, where she couldn't see or hear them, and
got to work.
The first thing she did was tie the cowboy's hands good
and tight behind his back. Then she got a washcloth from the downstairs
bathroom, stuffed it in his mouth, and secured it with a tie of rope around his
head. That done, she grabbed the crowbar and the short length of two-by-four
from where she kept them on the floor of the hall closet; she used the bar to
pry open the jaws of the bear trap and wedged the two-by-four between them to
keep them open. Then she worked the cowboy's leg free. He groaned a couple of
times during the process but he never came to.
She bound his legs tightly together, then grabbed the
throw rug he lay upon and dragged him and the rug out to the front porch and
down the steps to the red wagon she'd left there. She rolled him off the bottom
step into the wagon bed and tied him in place. Then she slipped her arms
through the straps of her heavily loaded backpack and she was ready to go. She
grabbed the wagon's handle and pulled it down the walk, down the driveway
apron, and onto the asphalt. From there on it was smooth rolling.
Sister Carole knew just where she was going. She had the
spot all picked out.
She was going to try something a little different tonight.
COWBOYS . . .
Al screamed and sobbed against the gag. If he could just
talk to her he knew he could change her mind. But he couldn't get a word past
the cloth jammed against his tongue.
And he didn't have long. She had him upside down, strung
up by his feet, swaying in the breeze from one of the climbing spikes on a
utility pole, and he knew what was coming next. So he pleaded with his eyes,
with his soul. He tried mental telepathy.
Sister, Sister, Sister, don't do this! I'm a Catholic! My
mother prayed for me every day and it didn't help, hut I'll change now, I
promise! I swear on a stack of fuckin bibles I'll be a good boy from now on if
you'll just let me go this time!
Then he saw her face in the moonlight and realized with a
final icy shock that he was truly a goner. Even if he could make her hear him,
nothing he could say was going to change this lady's mind. The eyes were empty.
No one was home. The bitch was on autopilot.
When he saw the glimmer of the straight razor as it glided
above his throat, there was nothing left to do but wet himself.
CAROLE . . .
When Sister Carole finished vomiting, she sat on the curb
and allowed herself a brief cry.
<Go ahead, Carole. Cry your crocodile tears. A fat lot
of good it'll do you come Judgment Day. No good at all. What'll you say then,
Carole? How will you explain THIS?>
She dragged herself to her feet. She had two more things
to do. One of them involved touching the fresh corpse. The second was simpler:
starting a fire to attract other cowboys and their masters.
GREGOR . . .
Gregor stood amid his get-guards and watched as cowboy
Kenny ran in circles around his dead friend's swaying, upended corpse.
"It's Al! The bastards got Al! I'll kill 'em all!
I'll tear 'em to pieces!"
How Gregor wished somebody would do just that. He'd heard
about these deaths but this was the first he'd seen—an obscene parody of the
bloodletting rituals he and his nightbrothers performed on the cattle. This was
acutely embarrassing, especially with Olivia newly arrived from New York.
"Come out here!" Kenny screamed into the
darkness. "Come out and fight like men!"
Stan, the head of this posse, was stamping out the brush
fire at the base of the utility pole.
"We should be getting back, Gregor," one of his
guards whispered. "It's too open out here. Not safe."
All four of them had their pistols drawn and were eyeing
the night, their heads rotating back and forth like radar dishes.
Gregor ignored him and called out, "Someone cut him
down."
Stan pointed to Kenny. "Climb up there." Hey,
no—
"He was your bud," Stan said. "You do
it."
Kenny reluctantly climbed the pole.
"I want to let him down easy!" he yelled when
he'd reached the rope.
"Just cut the rope," Stan said.
"Dammit, Stan. Al was one of us! I'll cut it slow and
you ease him down."
"Oh, fuck, all right," Stan said. "C'mere,
Jackie, and help me."
The woman stood back by one of the cars that had brought
them all here. Not the fancy convertible the posse had been using recently—Al
had apparently taken that for a drive and never come back. She had a bandage
around her head over a blackened left eye. Gregor wondered what had happened to
her. Beaten by one of her own posse perhaps?
He looked at Jackie and remembered lusting after women for
their bodies; now he cared only for the red wine running through them. Sexual
lust was a dim memory. He hadn't had an erection since he was turned, seventy
years ago.
Blood . . . always blood. Gregor was glad he had supped
before accompanying these cowboys to their dead friend.
This made six dead. Two in the past three days. The pace
was accelerating. Olivia would be on the warpath.
Jackie shook her head. "No way," she said, her
voice faint. "I can't."
"Get your skinny ass over here!"
"He's comin down!" Kenny shouted.
"Damn fuck!" Stan shouted as the body slumped
earthward. He reached up to grab it and—
The flash was noonday bright, the blast deafening as the
shock wave knocked Gregor to the ground. His first instinct was to leap to his
feet again, but he realized he couldn't see. The bright flash had fogged his
night vision with a purple, amebic afterimage. He lay quiet until he could see
again, then rose to his feet.
He heard wailing sounds. The woman crouched beside the
car, screaming hysterically; the cowboy who had climbed the pole lay somewhere
in the bushes, crying out about his back, how badly it hurt and how he couldn't
move his legs. But the other two—Stan and the murdered Al—were nowhere to be
seen.
His get-guards were struggling to their feet, enclosing him
in a tight, four-man circle. "Are you all right, Gregor?" one said.
"Of course I'm all right," he snapped. "You
wouldn't be asking that question if I weren't."
Gregor shook his head. He tried to choose carefully for
his get, emphasizing intelligence. Sometimes they fell short.
Gregor began to brush off his clothes as he looked around,
then froze. He was wet, covered with blood and torn flesh. The entire street
glistened, littered with bits of bone, muscle, skin, and fingernail-size pieces
of internal organs, leaving no way of telling what had belonged to whom.
Gregor shuddered at the prospect of explaining this to
Olivia.
His fury exploded. The first killing tonight had been
embarrassing enough by itself. But now another cowboy had been taken out, and
still another crippled to the point where he'd have to be put down—all right in
front of him. This had passed beyond embarrassment into humiliation.
When he caught these vigilantes he'd deal with them
personally. And see that it took them days to die.
CAROLE . . .
Sister Carole saw the flash and heard the explosion
through the window over the sink in the darkened kitchen of the Bennett house.
No joy, no elation. This wasn't fun. But she did find a certain grim
satisfaction in learning that her potassium chlorate plastique had worked.
The gasoline had evaporated from the latest batch and she
was working with that now. The moon provided sufficient illumination for the
final stage. Once she had the right amount measured out, she didn't need much
light to pack the plastique into soup cans. All she had to do was make sure she
maintained the proper loading density.
That done, she stuck a number-three blasting cap in the
end of each cylinder and dipped it into the pot of melted wax she had on the
stove. And that did it. She now had waterproof block charges with a detonation
velocity comparable to forty-percent-ammonia dynamite.
"All right," she said aloud to the night through
her kitchen window.
"You've made my life a living hell. Now it's your
time to be afraid."
GREGOR . . .
"Three in one night!"
Olivia's eyes seemed to glow with red fire in the gloom of
the Post Office basement. She'd taken up temporary residence in the old granite
building.
"They booby-trapped the body." Gregor knew it
sounded lame but it was the truth.
Olivia's voice was barely a whisper as she pierced him
with her stare. "You've disappointed me, Gregor."
"It is a temporary situation, I assure you."
"So you keep saying, but it has lasted far too long
already. The dead serfs total seven now. Seven! Wait till Franco hears!"
Gregor quailed at the thought. "He doesn't have to
hear. Not yet."
"You're losing control, Gregor. You don't seem to
realize that besides our strength and our special powers, we have two weapons:
fear and hopelessness. We cannot control the cattle by love and loyalty, so if
we are to maintain our rule, it must be through the terror we inspire in them
and the seeming impossibility of ever defeating us. What have the cattle
witnessed in your territory, Gregor?"
Gregor knew where this was headed. "Olivia, please,
I—"
"I'll tell you what they've witnessed," she
said, her voice rising. "They've witnessed your inability to protect the
serfs we've induced to herd the cattle and guard the daylight hours for us. And
trust me, Gregor, the success of one vigilante group will give rise to a
second, and then a third, and before long it will be open season on our serfs.
And then you'll have no control. Because the cattle herders are cowardly swine,
Gregor. The lowest of the low. They work for us only because they see us as the
victors and they want to be on the winning side at any cost. But if we can't
protect them, if they get a sense that we might be vulnerable and that our
continued dominance might not be guaranteed, they'll turn on us in a
flash."
"I know that, and I'm—"
"Fix it, Gregor." Her voice sank to a whisper
again. "I will give you till dawn Friday to remedy this. If not, you'll
awaken Friday night to find yourself heading back to New York to face Franco.
Is that clear?"
Dawn Friday? Gregor could scarcely believe what he was
hearing. Here it was Thursday morning with only a few hours until dawn—too late
to take any action now. That left him one night to catch these marauding swine.
And to think he'd just made her a gift of the pregnant cow's baby. The
ungrateful—
He swallowed his anger.
"Very clear."
"Good. I expect you to have a plan by sundown."
"I will."
"Leave me now."
As Gregor turned and hurried up the steps he heard a
newborn begin to cry in the darkness. The sound made him hungry.
- 4 -
JOE . . .
Joe yawned and stretched his limbs in the morning light.
He'd stayed up most of the night and let Zev sleep. The old guy needed his
rest. Sleep would have been impossible for Joe anyway. He was too wired. So
he'd sat up, staring at the back of St. Anthony's.
The undead had left before first light, dark shapes
drifting out the doors and across the grass like parishioners leaving a predawn
service. Joe had felt his teeth grind as he scanned the group for Palmeri, but
he couldn't make him out in the dimness. He might have gone out the front. By
the time the sun had begun to peek over the rooftops and through the trees to
the east, the streets outside were deserted.
He woke Zev and together they walked around to the front
of the church.
The heavy oak and iron doors, each forming half of a
pointed arch, were closed. Joe pulled them open and fastened the hooks to hold
them back. Then, taking a breath, he walked through the vestibule and into the
nave.
Even though he was ready for it, the stench backed him up
a few steps. When his stomach settled, he forced himself ahead, treading a path
between the two piles of shattered and splintered pews. Zev walked beside him,
a handkerchief pressed over his mouth.
Last night he had thought the place a shambles. He saw now
that it was worse. The light of day poked into all the corners, revealing
everything that had been hidden by the warm glow of the candles. Half a dozen
rotting corpses hung from the ceiling—he hadn't noticed them last night—and
others were sprawled on the floor against the walls. Some of the bodies lay in
pieces. Behind the chancel rail a headless female torso was draped over the
front of the pulpit. To the left stood the statue of Mary. Someone had fitted
her with foam rubber breasts and a huge dildo. And at the rear of the sanctuary
was the armless Christ hanging head down on the upright of his cross.
"My church," he whispered as he moved along the
path that had once been the center aisle, the aisle once walked by daily
communicants and brides with their proud fathers. "Look what they've done
to my church!"
Joe approached the huge block of the altar. When he'd
first arrived at St. Anthony's it had been backed against the far wall of the
sanctuary, but he'd had it moved to the front so that he could celebrate Mass
facing his parishioners. Solid Carrara marble, but you'd never know it now. So
caked with dried blood, semen, and feces it could have been made of styrofoam.
His revulsion was fading, melting away in the growing heat
of his rage, drawing the nausea with it. He had intended to clean up the place
but there was too much to be done, too much for two men. It was hopeless.
"Fadda Joe?"
He spun at the sound of the strange voice. A thin figure
stood uncertainly in the open doorway. A timid-looking man of about fifty edged
forward.
"Fadda Joe, that you?"
Joe recognized him now. Carl Edwards. A twitchy little man
who used to help pass the collection basket at 10:30 Mass on Sundays. A
transplantee from Jersey City—hardly anyone around here was originally from
around here. His face was sunken, his eyes feverish as he stared at Joe.
"Yes, Carl. It's me."
"Oh, thank God!" He ran forward and dropped to
his knees before Joe. He began to sob. "You come back! Thank God, you come
back!"
Joe pulled him to his feet.
"Come on now, Carl. Get a grip."
"You come back to save us, ain'tcha? God sent you
here to punish him, didn't He?"
"Punish whom?"
"Fadda Palmeri! He's one a them! He's the worst of
alia them! He—"
"I know," Joe said. "I know."
"Oh, it's so good to have ya back, Fadda Joe! We
ain't knowed what to do since the suckers took over. We been prayin for someone
like you and now ya here. It's a freakin miracle!"
Joe wanted to ask Carl where he and all these people who
seemed to think they needed him now had been when he was being railroaded out
of the parish. But that was ancient history.
"Not a miracle, Carl," Joe said, glancing at
Zev. "Rabbi Wolpin brought me back." As Carl and Zev shook hands, Joe
said, "And I'm just passing through."
"Passing through? No. Don't say that! Ya gotta
stay!"
Joe saw the light of hope fading in the little man's eyes
and something twisted within, tugging at him.
"What can I do here, Carl? I'm just one man."
"I'll help! I'll do whatever ya want! Just tell
me!"
"Will you help me clean up?"
Carl looked around and seemed to see the cadavers for the
first time. He cringed and turned a few shades paler.
"Yeah ... sure. Anything."
Joe looked at Zev. "Well? What do you think?"
Zev shrugged. "I should tell you what to do? My
parish it's not."
"Not mine either."
Zev jutted his beard at Carl. "I think maybe he'd
tell you differendy."
Joe did a slow turn. The vaulted nave was utterly silent
except for the buzzing of the flies around the cadavers. A massive cleanup job.
But if they worked all day they could make a decent dent in it. And then—
And then what?
Joe didn't know. He was playing this by ear. He'd wait and
see what the night brought.
"Can you get us some food, Carl? I'd sell my soul for
a cup of coffee."
Carl gave him a strange look.
"Just a figure of speech, Carl. We'll need some food
if we're going to keep working."
The man's eyes lit again.
"That means ya staying?"
"For a while."
"I'll getcha some food," he said excitedly as he
ran for the door. "And coffee. I know someone who's still got coffee.
She'll part with some of it for Fadda Joe." He stopped at the door and
turned. "Ay, and Fadda, I never believed any of them things was said
aboutcha. Never."
Joe tried but he couldn't hold it back.
"It would have meant a lot to have heard that from
you then, Carl."
The man lowered his eyes. "Yeah. I guess it woulda.
But I'll make it up to ya, Fadda. I will. You can take that to the bank."
Then he was out the door and gone. Joe turned to Zev and
saw the old man rolling up his sleeves.
"Nu?" Zev said. "The bodies. Before we do
anything else, I think maybe we should move the bodies."
ZEV . . .
By early afternoon, Zev was exhausted. The heat and the
heavy work had taken their toll. He had to stop and rest. He sat on the chancel
rail and looked around. Nearly eight hours work and they'd barely scratched the
surface. But the place did look and smell better.
Removing the flyblown corpses and scattered body parts had
been the worst of it. A foul, gut-roiling task that had taken most of the
morning. They'd carried the corpses out to the small graveyard behind the
church and left them there. Those people deserved a decent burial but there was
no time for it today.
Once the corpses were gone, Father Joe had torn the
defilements from the statue of Mary and then they'd turned their attention to
the huge crucifix. It took a while but they finally found Christ's plaster arms
in the pile of ruined pews. Both still were nailed to the sawed-off crosspieces
of the crucifix. While Zev and Joe worked at jury-rigging a series of braces to
reattach the arms,
Carl found a mop and bucket and began the long, slow process
of washing the fouled floor of the nave.
Now the crucifix was intact again—the life-size plaster
Jesus had his arms reattached and was once again nailed to his refurbished
cross. Joe and Carl had restored him to his former position of dominance. The
poor Nazarene was upright again, hanging over the center of the sanctuary in
all his tortured splendor.
A grisly sight. Zev never could understand the Catholic
attachment to these gruesome statues. But if the undead loathed them, then Zev
was for them all the way.
His stomach rumbled with hunger. At least they'd had a
good breakfast. Carl had returned from his food run this morning with
fresh-baked bread, peanut butter, and two thermoses of hot coffee. He wished
now they'd saved some. Maybe there was a crust of bread left in the sack.
He headed back to the vestibule to check and found an
aluminum pot and a paper bag sitting by the door. The pot was hot and full of
beef stew, the sack contained three cans of Pepsi.
He poked his head out the doors but saw no one on the
street outside. It had been that way all day—he'd spy a figure or two peeking
in the front doors; they'd hover there for a moment as if to confirm that what
they had heard was true, then they'd scurry away.
He looked down at the meal that had been left. A group of
the locals must have donated from their hoard of canned stew and precious soft
drinks to fix this. Zev was touched.
He was about to call out to Joe and Carl when a shadow
fell across the floor. He looked up and saw a young woman in a leather jacket
standing in the doorway. The first thing he did was check for her right ear for
one of those cursed crescents. Easy enough to see with her close-cropped,
almost boyish brown hair. She didn't. Such a relief.
"Yes?" He straightened and faced her. "Can
I help you?"
"Isn't this St. Anthony's church?" she said,
making a face as she looked around at the destruction.
"It was. We're trying to make it so again."
Her gaze had come to rest on his yarmulke. "But
you're a—"
"A rabbi, yes. Rabbi Zev Wolpin, at your
service." He gestured around him at the church. "Such a long story,
you wouldn't believe."
She smiled. A pretty smile. "I'll bet. I'm looking
for my uncle. He was a priest here but he left. I need to find him."
Zev felt a lightness in his chest. "His name wouldn't
happen to be Cahill, would it?"
Her smile broadened. "Yeah. Father Joe Cahill. You
know where he might be?"
"I believe I do." He turned and called into the
nave. "Father Joe! You have company!"
LACEY . . .
Lacey totally lost it when she recognized the tall,
broad-shouldered man striding toward her through the rubble of the church. He
needed a shave, he needed a haircut, and his faded jeans and flannel shirt were
anything but priestly, but she knew those blue eyes and the smile that lit his
face when he saw her.
"Uncle Joe!"
She found herself running forward and flinging herself at
him, sobbing unashamedly and uncontrollably as she clung to him like a drowning
sailor to a rock.
"Lacey, Lacey," he cooed, holding her tight
against him. "It's all right. It's all right."
Finally she got hold of herself and eased her deathgrip on
him. She wiped her eyes.
"Sorry about that. It's just..."
"I know," he said, taking her hands in his.
Lacey looked up at her uncle. Did he? Did he realize what
she'd been through to get here? She'd thought she was tough, but the trip from
Manhattan had taken her longer than she could have imagined, and put to shame
every nightmare she'd ever had.
"How are your mom and dad?" he asked.
She saw the forlorn hope in his eyes—her mother was his
older sister—but had to shake her head.
"I don't know. I tried to contact them when the shit
hit the—I mean, when everything went to hell, but the lines were down and
everything was chaos. I got to wondering if they'd even bothered trying to get
in touch with me."
"I'm sure they did," Uncle Joe said. "Of
course they did."
"How can you be so sure? They've refused to speak to
me for years."
"But they love you."
"Funny way of showing it."
"They're not rejecting you, Lacey, just your
lifestyle."
"One's pretty much wrapped up in the other, don't you
think. At least you kept talking to me."
She'd been moved as a kid from Brooklyn to New Jersey when
her father landed a job with a big pharmaceutical company in Florham Park, but
New York had remained in her blood. When it came time for college her first and
last choice had been NYU, for reasons beyond what it offered academically. Its
location in Greenwich Village had been equally important.
Because somewhere along her years in high school Lacey
Flannery had realized she wasn't like the other girls. She needed an accepting
atmosphere, a place where anything goes, to stretch her boundaries and find out
about herself, learn who she really was.
In her second year at NYU she moved into an off-campus
apartment with a senior named Janey Birnbaum. At the time her folks thought
they were just roommates. Three years ago, right after her graduation with a BA
in English, she came out.
And that was when her folks stopped speaking to her. She'd
tried to visit them, tried to explain, but they hadn't wanted to see or speak
to her.
The one person in the family she'd found she could talk to
was, of all people, her uncle the Catholic priest. Uncle Joe hadn't approved
but he didn't turn her away. He'd tried to act as go-between but her folks
stood firm: either get counseling and get cured—like she was mentally ill or
something!—or stay away.
She had a feeling her father was behind the hard line, but
she couldn't be sure. Now she might never know.
The rabbi said, "So may I ask, what is it, this
lifestyle, that your parents reject but a priest doesn't?"
"I'm a dyke."
The rabbi blinked. Probably the first time anyone had ever
put it to him that bluntly. She also noticed her uncle's grimace. Obviously he
didn't like the word. Lacey hadn't liked it either at first, but Janey and her
more radical friends encouraged her to use to it because they were taking it
back.
That was all fine back then, but now . . . take it back
from whom?
"Doesn't that mean a lesbian?" the rabbi said.
"Through and through."
"Oh. I see."
"Not just a garden-variety lesbian," Uncle Joe
said. His wry smile looked forced. "A radical lesbian feminist, and an
outspoken one at that."
"You forgot to mention atheist."
His smile faded a little. "I try to forget that
part."
It had taken Lacey awhile to come out, but when she did
she decided not to be out partway. She wasn't ashamed of who she was or how she
felt and was ready to get in the face of anyone who tried to give her grief
about it.
She'd started writing articles and reviews for the underground
press—the radical, the gay, even the entertainment freebies—with the hope of
eventually moving above ground. Her role model was Norah Vincent, who'd been
writing a regular column for the Village Voice—back when there'd been a Village
Voice. Lacey didn't always agree with her views but she envied her pulpit.
She'd vowed that someday she'd have a column like that.
But that dream was gone now, along with so many others ...
"Anyway," she said, "I hadn't been able to
contact Mom and Dad, so I decided to check up on them."
She'd been all alone then. Janey had gone out one day,
scrounging for food, and never come back. After spending a week looking for
her, Lacey had to face the unthinkable: Janey was either dead or had been
turned into an undead. Crushed, grieving, and with New York becoming more
dangerous every day, she'd decided to go home. She fought her way through the
Holland Tunnel—the living collaborators hadn't closed it off yet—and made it to
her folks' place in Union, New Jersey.
"When I got to their house, I found the front door
smashed in and blood on the living-room rug." She felt herself puddling
up, her throat tightening like a noose. "I don't think they made it."
She hoped they were alive or dead, anything but in
between. They'd rejected her, they'd caused her untold pain—though she'd
probably given as good as she got on that score—but they were still her parents
and the thought of her mother and father prowling the night, sucking blood . .
.
She'd nurtured the hope that with time they'd have come to
accept her as she was—she'd never expected approval, but maybe just enough
acceptance to invite her back for dinner some night. It didn't look like that
was ever going to happen now.
Uncle Joe wrapped an arm around her shoulders.
"I..." His voice choked off and the two of them stood still and
silent.
"This was your brother, Joe?" the rabbi said.
"My big sister. Cathy."
"I'm so sorry."
"Yeah," Uncle Joe said. "So am I." He
cleared his throat. "But we can hope for the best, can't we? And in the
meantime, lunch is getting cold. Are you hungry, Lacey?"
She was famished.
ZEV . . .
"Tastes like Dinty Moore," Joe said around a
mouthful of the stew.
"It is," Lacey said. "I ate a lot of this
before I turned vegan. I recognize the little potatoes."
Zev found the stew palatable but much too salty. He wasn't
about to complain, though.
They were feasting in the sacristy, the small room off the
sanctuary where the priests had kept their vestments—a clerical Green Room, so
to speak. Joe and Lacey sat side by side. Carl and Zev sat apart.
"What's vegan?" he asked.
"Someone who eats only veggies," Lacey said.
"But—"
"I know. Being a vegan was a luxury. Now I eat
whatever I can find."
Carl laughed. "Fadda, the ladies of the parish must
be real excited about you coming back to break into their canned goods like
this."
Zev said, "I don't believe I've ever had anything
like this before."
"I'd be surprised if you had," said Joe. "I
doubt very much that something that calls itself Dinty Moore is kosher."
Zev smiled but inside he was suddenly filled with a great
sadness. Kosher . . . how meaningless now seemed all the observances that he
had allowed to rule and circumscribe his life. Such a fierce proponent of
strict dietary laws he'd been in the days before the Lakewood holocaust. But
those days were gone, just as the Lakewood community was gone.
And Zev was a changed man. If he hadn't changed, if he
were still observing, he couldn't sit here and sup with these two men and this
young woman.
He'd have to be elsewhere, eating special classes of
ritually prepared foods off separate sets of dishes. But really, hadn't
division been the main thrust of holding to the dietary laws in modern times?
They served a purpose beyond mere observance of tradition. They placed another
wall between observant Jews and outsiders, keeping them separate even from
fellow Jews who didn't observe.
Zev took another big bite of the stew. Time to break down
all the walls between people . . . while there was still enough time and people
left alive to make it matter.
"You okay, Zev?" Joe asked.
Zev nodded silently, afraid to speak for fear of sobbing.
Despite all its anachronisms, he missed his life in the good old days of a few
months ago. Gone. It was all gone. The rich traditions, the culture, the
friends, the prayers. He felt adrift—in time and in space. Nowhere was home.
And then there was the matter of the cross ... the power
of the cross over the undead . . .
He'd sneaked a copy of Dracula to read when he was a boy,
and he'd caught snatches of vampire movies on TV. The undead were always
portrayed as afraid of crosses. But that had been fiction. Vampires weren't
real—or so he'd thought—and so he'd never examined the broader implications of
that fear of the cross. Now...
"You sure?" Joe seemed genuinely concerned.
"Yes, I'm okay. As okay as you could expect me to
feel after spending the better part of the day repairing a crucifix and eating
non-kosher food. And let me tell you, that's not so okay."
He put his bowl aside and straightened from his chair.
"Come on, already. Let's get back to work. There's
much yet to do."
JOE . . .
"Almost sunset," Carl said.
Joe straightened from scrubbing the marble altar and
stared west through one of the smashed windows. The sun was out of sight behind
the houses there.
"You can go now, Carl," he said to the little
man. "Thanks for your help." "Where you gonna go, Fadda?"
"I'll be staying right here."
Carl's prominent Adam's apple bobbed convulsively as he
swallowed.
"Yeah? Well then, I'm staying too. I told you I'd
make it up to ya, didn't I? An' besides, I don't think the suckers'U like the
new, improved St. Ant'ny's too much when they come back tonight. I don't think
they'll even get through the doors."
Joe smiled at the man, then looked around. Luckily it was
May and the days were growing longer. They'd had time to make a difference
here. The floors were clean, the crucifix was restored and back in its proper
position, as were most of the Stations of the Cross plaques. Zev had found them
under the pews and had taken the ones not shattered beyond recognition and
rehung them on the walls. Lots of new crosses littered those walls. Carl had
found a hammer and nails and had made dozens of them from the remains of the
pews.
"You're right. I don't think they'll like the new
decor one bit. But there's something you can get us if you can, Carl. Guns.
Pistols, rifles, shotguns, anything that shoots."
Carl nodded slowly. "I know a few guys who can help
in that department."
"And some wine. A little red wine if anybody's saved
some."
"You got it."
He hurried off.
"You're planning Custer's last stand, maybe?"
Zev said from where he was tacking the last of Carl's crude crosses to the east
wall.
"More like the Alamo."
"Same result," Zev said with one of his shrugs.
"I've got a gun," Lacey said.
Joe stared at her. She'd been helping him scrub the altar.
"You do? Why didn't you say something?"
"It's only got two bullets left."
"Where are the rest?"
She met his gaze evenly. "I had to leave them behind
in a couple of people who tried to stop me. It was a tough trip getting
here."
"Are you okay with that?"
She nodded. "Better than I thought I'd be. You do
what you have to do."
What an amazing young woman, he thought. Who'd have
thought Cathy's little girl could turn out so tough and resilient.
He remembered Lacey as a teen. She'd always been a little
different from her peers. On the surface she seemed like a typical high-school
kid—she dated, though she had no serious crushes, played soccer and field
hockey with abandon—but on holidays and family gatherings, she'd stay in the
background. Joe would make a point of sitting down with her; he'd draw her out,
and then another Lacey would emerge.
The other Lacey was a thinker, a questioner. She had
doubts about religion, about government. She burned with an iconoclastic fire
that urged her to question traditions and break with them whenever possible.
She was fascinated by the old anarchists and dug up all their works. He
remembered her favorite was No Treason by someone named Lysander Spooner.
Instead of hanging posters of the latest teenage heartthrob boy band in her
room, Lacey had pictures of Emma Goldman and Madelyn Murray O'Hare.
Joe's sister and her husband tolerated her views with a
mixture of humor and apprehension. If this was the shape and scope of Lacey's
teenage rebellion, they'd live with it. It was just a phase, they'd say. She'll
grow out of it. Better than drunk driving or drugs or getting pregnant.
But it wasn't a phase. It was Lacey. And later, when she
came out as a lesbian, they turned their backs on her. Joe had tried to talk
them out of slamming the family door, but this was more than they could take.
"Who taught you to shoot?" he asked.
"A friend." She smiled. "A guy friend,
believe it or not. It was a self-defense thing. He took me out to the range
until I got comfortable with pulling the trigger. I'm not a great shot, but if
you're within ten feet of me and you're looking for trouble, you're gone."
Joe had to smile. "Never let it be said you're not
full of surprises, Lacey."
She laughed softly. "No one's ever said that."
They turned back to scrubbing the altar. They'd been at it
for over an hour now. Joe was drenched with sweat and figured he smelled like a
bear, but he couldn't stop until it was clean.
But it wouldn't come clean.
"What did they do to this altar?" Lacey asked.
"I don't know. This crud ... it seems part of the
marble now."
The undead must have done something to the blood and
foulness to make the mixture seep into the surface as it had.
"Let's take a break."
He turned sat on the floor with his back against the altar
and rested. He didn't like resting because it gave him time to think. And when
he started to think he realized that the odds were pretty high against his
seeing tomorrow morning.
At least he'd die well fed. Their secret supplier had left
them a dinner of fresh fried chicken by the front doors. Even the memory of it
made his mouth water. Apparently someone was really glad he was back.
Lacey settled next to him. She'd shed her leather jacket
hours ago. Her bare arms were sheened with perspiration.
"That talk about Custer's last stand and the
Alamo," she said. "You're not planning to die here, are you?"
To tell the truth, as miserable as he'd been, he wasn't
ready to die. Not tonight, not any night.
"Not if I can help it."
"Good. Because as much as I can appreciate
self-immolating gestures, I don't think I'm ready to take part in a Jersey
Shore version of the Alamo or Little Big Horn."
"Well, the cry of 'Remember the Alamo!' did spur a
lot of people to action, but I agree. Going down fighting here will not solve
anything."
"Then what's the plan? We should have some sort of
plan."
Good question. Did he have a plan?
"All I want to do is hold off the undead till dawn.
Keep them out of St. Anthony's for one night. That's all. That will be a
statement—my statement. Our statement if you want to stay on."
And if he found an opportunity to ram a stake through
Palmeri's rotten heart, so much the better. But he wasn't counting on that.
"That's it?" Lacey said. "One night?"
"One night. Just to let them know they can't have
their way everywhere with everybody whenever they feel like it. We've got
surprise on our side tonight, so maybe it will work." One night. Then he'd
be on his way. "You shouldn't feel you have to stay just because you're my
niece."
"I don't. But if I—"
"What the fuck have you done?"
Joe looked up at the shout. A burly, long-haired man in
jeans and a cutaway denim jacket stood in the vestibule staring at the
partially restored nave. As he approached, Joe noticed his crescent moon
earring.
A Vichy.
Joe balled his fists but didn't move.
"Hey, I'm talking to you, asshole. Are you
responsible for this?"
When all he got from Joe was a cold stare, he turned to
Zev and fixed on his yarmulke.
"Hey, you! Jew! What the hell you think you're doing
here?" He started toward Zev. "You get those fucking crosses
off—"
"Touch him and I'll break you in half," Joe said
in a low voice.
The Vichy skidded to a halt and stared at him.
"Are you crazy? Do you know what Father Palmeri will
do to you when he gets here?"
"Father Palmeri? Why do you still call him
that?"
"It's what he wants to be called. And he's going to
call you dog meat when he gets through with you!"
Joe pulled himself to his feet and looked down at the
Vichy. Suddenly the man didn't seem so sure of himself.
"Tell him I'll be waiting." Joe gave him a hard,
two-handed shove against his chest that sent him stumbling back. Damn, that
felt good. "Tell him Father Cahill is back."
"You're a priest? You don't look like one."
Joe slapped him across the face. Hard. It snapped the
creep's chin toward his shoulder. That felt even better.
"Shut up and listen. Tell him Father Joe Cahill is
back—and he's pissed. Tell him that." Another chest shove. "Now get
out of here while you still can."
Rubbing his cheek, the man backpedaled and hurried out
into the growing darkness. Joe turned to Zev and found him grinning through his
beard.
" 'Father Joe Cahill is back—and he's pissed.' I like
that."
"It'll make a great bumper sticker," Lacey said,
her eyes wide with admiration. "You were great! I never knew my uncle the
priest was such a tough dude. Maybe we've got more than a prayer tonight."
Joe didn't know about that. He hoped so.
"I think I'll close the front doors," he said.
"The criminal element is starting to wander in. While I'm doing that, see
if we can find some more candles. It's getting dark in here."
On the front steps he unhooked the left door and closed
it. He was unhooking the right when he heard a woman's voice behind him.
"Father Cahill? Is that you?"
He turned and in the dying light saw a lone figure
standing by a children's red wagon at the bottom of the steps.
"Yes. Do I know you?"
He heard her sob. "Oh, it is you! You've come
back!"
Joe hurried down to the sobbing woman. "Are you all
right?"
"I've been praying for your return but I'm such a
sinner I thought God had turned his back on us all. But you're back! Thank
God!"
Something familiar about her voice . .. but she kept her
head down. Joe reached out, and tilted her chin so he could see her.
He gasped when he saw her tear-stained face. He barely
recognized her. Her skin was pale, her cheeks sunken, but he knew her.
"Sister Carole!"
Impulsively he threw his arms around her and pulled her
against him in a hug. He wanted to laugh but feared if he opened his mouth he'd
burst out crying. Sweet emotions roiled through him, making him weak. She was
here, she was alive. He wanted to tell her how he'd missed her—missed knowing
she was in the neighboring building, missed seeing her walk back and forth to
the school, missed the smile she would flash him whenever they crossed paths.
"It's so good to see you, Carole!" He pushed her
back and looked at her, hoping to see that smile. But her eyes were different,
haunted. "Dear God, what's happened to you?" Immediately he thought:
Stupid question. The same thing that's happened to us all. "Why are you
here? I thought you'd gone to Pennsylvania for Easter."
She shook her head. "I had to stay behind ... with
Sister Bernadette ... they ... I had to . . ." She loosed a single,
agonized sob. "How could I stay in the convent after that?"
Joe wasn't following. Her speech was so disjointed. This
wasn't like Carole. He'd always known her as a woman of quiet intelligence,
with a sharp, organized mind. Everyone left alive had suffered, but what had
she experienced to leave her so shattered?
"Where have you been staying?"
She looked away. "Here and there."
"Well, you're staying here now." He took her
arm. "Come inside. We've got-"
She pulled away. "I can't. I've too many sins."
"We're all sinners, Carole."
"But these are terrible sins. Mortal sins. So many
mortal sins."
"This is where sins are forgiven. I'm going to try to
say mass later."
"Mass?" Her lip quivered. "Oh, that would
be wonderful. But I can't. Even though it's a Holy Day, I—"
"What Holy—?" And then he remembered. With all
that had been going on, it had slipped his mind. "Oh, God, it's Ascension
Thursday, isn't it."
Sister Carole nodded. "But I'll just have to add
missing Mass on a Holy Day of Obligation to my list of sins."
"Come inside, Carole. Please. I'll hear your
confession."
"No." She paused, as if she were listening for
something. "To receive absolution I must be sorry for my sins and promise
to sin no more." She shook her head and something flashed in her eyes,
something hard and dangerous. "I'm not. And I won't."
Joe stared at her, trying to fathom . . .
"I don't follow you, Carole."
"Please don't, Father. It's not a path you want to
tread." She bent and grabbed the handle of her little red wagon, then
turned and started away. "God bless you, Father Cahill."
Joe hurried after her. He couldn't let her go. It was too
dangerous, but more than that, he wanted her near, where he could talk to her,
be with her. He grabbed her arm.
"I can't let you go."
She snatched her arm free and kept moving. "You can't
make me stay. Don't try. I won't. I can't." The last word was couched in a
sob that damn near broke his heart.
"Carole, please!"
But she hurried on into the shadows without looking back.
Joe started after her again, then stopped. Short of picking her up and carrying
her back to the church—and he couldn't see himself doing that—what could he do?
Suddenly weary, he turned and climbed the steps. As he
finished closing the front doors, he took one last longing look at the night.
Carole . .. what's happened to you? Please be safe.
He closed the door and wished the lock hadn't been
smashed. He turned and found Lacey and Zev standing in the vestibule.
"We were getting worried about you," Lacey said.
"I ran into one of the nuns who used to teach in St.
Anthony's school."
Zev's eyebrows arched. "And you didn't let her
in?"
"Wouldn't come in. But she reminded me that this is a
Holy Day: Ascension Thursday."
Zev shrugged. "Which means?"
"Supposedly," Lacey said, "forty days after
Easter, Jesus ascended into Heaven to sit at the right hand of God." She
smiled. "An ingenious way to dodge all those inconvenient questions about
the state and whereabouts of the remains of the 'Son of God.' "
Joe looked at her. "Lacey, you can't still be an
atheist."
She shrugged. "I never really was. I call myself that
because it's such an in-your-face term. Like dyke. But atheism implies that you
consider the question of a provident god important enough to take seriously. I
don't. At heart I'm simply a devout agnostic."
Joe was glad Carl wasn't here to hear this. He wouldn't
understand or appreciate Lacey's outspokenness. But that was Lacey. No excuses,
no sugar coating: Here I am, here's what I think, take it or leave it. Through
the years she'd made him angry at times, but then she'd smile and he'd see his
sister Cathy in her face and his anger would fade away.
He pointed to the gold crucifix hanging from her neck.
"But you wear a cross. Didn't you once tell me you'd die before wearing
anything like that?"
"I damn near did die because I wasn't wearing one. So
now I wear one for perfectly pragmatic reasons. I've never been one for fashion
accessories, but if it chases vampires, I want one."
"But you've got to take the next step, Lacey. You've
got to ask why the undead fear it, why it sears their flesh. There's something
there. When you face that reality, you won't be an atheist or agnostic
anymore."
Lacey smiled. "Did I mention I'm a devout empiricist
too?"
"Like a worm, she wiggles," Zev said. "Too
many philosophy courses."
Lacey turned to him. "That's not exactly a mezuzah
hanging from your neck, rabbi."
"I know," Zev said, fingering his cross.
"Like you, I wear it because it works. That is undeniable. Where its power
comes from, I don't know. Maybe from God, maybe from somewhere else. The how
and the why I'll figure out later. I've been too busy trying to stay alive to
give it my full attention." He held up his hands. "Talk of
intangibles we should save for the daylight. Now we should ready ourselves. I
believe we'll soon have uninvited and unsavory company. We should be
prepared."
Looking unhappy, Zev wandered away. But Joe didn't want to
let this drop. He sensed a chance to break through his niece's wall of
disbelief. By doing so he might save her soul.
He lowered his voice. "If the power of the cross is
not from God, Lacy, then who?"
"Might not be a who," she said with a shrug.
"Might be a what. I don't know. I'm just going with it for now."
" 'There are none so blind as those who will not see,'
" Joe said.
"It's not blindness to not see something that won't
show itself. Where's your god now?" She jutted her chin at Zev's
retreating figure. "His god and yours—where's he been? This is Ascension
Thursday, right? Think about that. Maybe Jesus ascended and kept on going.
Turned his back on this planet and forgot about it. After the way he was
treated here, who could blame him?"
Joe shook his head, feeling a growing anger mixed with
dismay. He hated to hear his niece talk like this. "Are you still an
anarchist too?"
"Damn betcha."
"Well now, it looks like you've got what you wanted—a
world without religion, without government, without law—what do you
think?"
Joe could tell by the set of her jaw and the flash of fire
in her eyes that he'd struck a nerve.
"This is not at all what I was talking about! This
undead empire is more repressive than any regime in human history. It makes
Nazi Germany and Stalinist Russia look like Sunday school!"
"And they're here to stay," Joe said, wondering
if all today's plans and preparations weren't an exercise in futility.
He wondered where Palmeri was and how long before he got
here.
PALMERI . . .
He wore the night like a tuxedo.
Dressed in a fresh cassock, Father Alberto Palmeri turned
off County Line Road and strolled toward St. Anthony's. He loved the night,
felt at one with it, attuned to its harmonies and its discords. The darkness
made him feel so alive. Strange to have to lose your life before you could
really feel alive. But this was it. He'd found his niche, his me'tier.
Such a shame it had taken him so long. All those years
trying to deny his appetites, trying to be a member of the other side, cursing
himself when he allowed his appetites to win, as he had with increasing
frequency toward the end of his mortal life. He should have given in to them
long ago.
It had taken undeath to free him.
And to think he had been afraid of undeath, had cowered in
fear that night in the cellar of the church, surrounded by crosses. But he had
not been as safe as he'd thought. A posse of Serfs had torn him from his hiding
place and brought him to kneel before Gregor. He'd cried out and begged with
this undead master to spare his life. Fortunately Gregor had ignored his pleas.
All he had lost by that encounter was his blood.
And in trade, he'd gained a world.
For now it was his world, at least this little corner of
it, one in which he was completely free to indulge himself in any way he
wished. Except for the blood. He had no choice about the blood. That was a new
appetite, stronger than all the rest, one that would not be denied. But he did
not mind the new appetite in the least. He'd found interesting ways to sate it.
Up ahead he spotted dear, defiled St. Anthony's. He
wondered what the serfs had prepared for tonight. They were quite imaginative.
They'd yet to bore him.
But as he drew nearer the church, Palmeri slowed. His skin
prickled. The building had changed. Something was very wrong there, wrong
inside. Something amiss with the light that beamed from the windows. This
wasn't the old familiar candlelight, this was something else, something more.
Something that made his insides tremble.
Figures raced up the street toward him. Live ones. His
night vision picked out the earrings and familiar faces of some of the serfs.
As they neared he sensed the warmth of the blood coursing just beneath their
skins. The hunger rose in him and he fought the urge to rip into their throats.
He couldn't allow himself that pleasure. Gregor had told him how to keep the
servants dangling, keep them working for him and the nest. They all needed the
services of the indentured living to remove whatever obstacles the cattle might
put in their way.
Someday, when he was allowed to have get of his own, he
would turn some of these, and then they'd be bound to him in a different way.
"Father! Father!" they cried.
He loved it when they called him Father, loved being one
of the undead and dressing like one of the enemy.
"Yes, my children. What sort of victim do you have
for us tonight?"
"No victim, father—trouble!"
The edges of Palmeri's vision darkened with rage as he
heard of the young priest and the Jew and the others who had dared to try to
turn St. Anthony's into a holy place again. When he heard the name of the
priest, he nearly exploded.
"Cahill? Joseph Cahill is back in my church?"
"He was cleaning the altar!" one of the servants
said.
Palmeri strode toward the church with the serfs trailing
behind. He knew that neither Cahill nor the Pope himself could clean that
altar. Palmeri had desecrated it himself; he had learned how to do that when he
became leader of Gregor's local get. But what else had the young pup dared to
do?
Whatever it was, it would be undone. Now!
Palmeri strode up the steps and pulled the right door
open—
—and screamed in agony.
The light! The light! The LIGHT! White agony lanced
through Palmeri's eyes and seared his brain like two hot pokers. He retched and
threw his arms across his face as he staggered back into the cool, comforting
darkness.
It took a few minutes for the pain to drain off, for the
nausea to pass, for vision to return.
He'd never understand it. He'd spent his entire life in
the presence of crosses and crucifixes, surrounded by them. And yet as soon as
he'd become undead he was unable to bear the sight of one. In fact, since he'd
become undead he'd never even seen one. A cross was no longer an object. It was
a light, a light so excruciatingly bright, so blazingly white that looking at
it was sheer agony. As a child in Naples he'd been told by his mother not to
look at the sun, but when there'd been talk of an eclipse, he'd stared directly
into its eye. The pain of looking at a cross was a hundred, no, a thousand
times worse than that. And the bigger the cross or crucifix, the worse the pain.
He'd experienced monumental pain upon looking into St.
Anthony's tonight. That could only mean that Joseph, that young bastard, had
refurbished the giant crucifix. It was the only possible explanation.
He swung on his servants.
"Get in there! Get that crucifix down!"
"They've got guns!"
"Then get help. But get it down!"
"We'll get guns too! We can—"
"No! I want him! I want that priest alive! I want him
for myself! Anyone who kills him will suffer a very painful, very long and
lingering true death! Is that clear? "
It was clear. They scurried away without answering.
Palmeri went to gather the other members of the nest.
JOE . . .
Dressed in a cassock and a surplice, Joe came out of the
sacristy and approached the altar. He noticed Zev keeping watch at one of the
windows. He didn't tell him how ridiculous he looked carrying the shotgun Carl
had brought back. He held it so gingerly, as if it was full of nitroglycerin
and would explode if he jiggled it.
Zev turned and smiled when he saw him.
"Now you look like the old Father Joe we all used to
know,"
Joe gave him a little bow and proceeded toward the altar.
Lacey waved with her revolver from the other side of the nave where she stood
guard by the side door. She'd put on her black leather jacket and looked ready
for anything.
All right: He had everything he needed. He had the Missal
they'd found in among the pew debris earlier today. He had the wine—Carl had
brought back about four ounces of sour red babarone. He'd found the smudged
surplice and dusty cassock on the floor of one of the closets in the sacristy,
and he wore them now. No hosts, though. A crust of bread left over from
breakfast would have to do. No chalice, either. If he'd known he was going to
be saying Mass he'd have come prepared. As a last resort he'd used the can
opener in the rectory to remove the top of one of the Pepsi cans from lunch.
Quite a stretch from the gold chalice he'd used since his ordination, but
probably more in line with what Jesus had used at that first Mass—the Last
Supper.
He was uncomfortable with the idea of weapons in St.
Anthony's but saw no alternative. He and Zev knew nothing about guns, and Carl
knew little more; they'd probably do more damage to themselves than to the
Vichy if they tried to use them. Only Lacey seemed at ease with her pistol. Joe
hoped that just the sight of the weaponry might make the Vichy hesitate, slow
them down. All he needed was a little time here, enough to get to the
consecration.
This is going to be the most unusual Mass in history, he
thought.
But he was going to get through it if it killed him. And
that was a real possibility. This might well be his last Mass. But he wasn't
afraid. He was too excited to be afraid. He'd had a slug of the Scotch—just
enough to ward off the shakes—but it had done nothing to quell the buzz of the adrenaline
humming along every nerve in his body.
He spread everything out on the white tablecloth he'd
taken from the rectory and used to cover the filthy altar. He looked at Carl.
"Ready?"
Carl nodded and stuck the automatic pistol he'd been
examining into his belt.
"Been awhile, Fadda. We did it in Latin when I was a
kid, but I think I can swing it."
"Just do your best and don't worry about any
mistakes."
Some Mass. A defiled altar, a crust for a host, a Pepsi
can for a chalice, a sixty-year-old, pistol-packing altar boy, and a
congregation consisting of a lesbian atheist and a rabbi.
Joe looked heavenward.
You do understand, don't you, Lord, that all this was
arranged on short notice?
Time to begin.
He read the Gospel but dispensed with the homily. He tried
to remember the Mass as it used to be said, to fit in better with Carl's
outdated responses.
As he was starting the Offertory the front doors flew open
and a group of men entered—ten of them, all with crescent moons dangling from
their ears. Out of the corner of his eye he saw Zev move away from the window
toward the altar, pointing his shotgun at them.
As soon as they entered the nave and got past the broken
pews, the Vichy fanned out toward the sides. They began pulling down the
Stations of the Cross, ripping Carl's makeshift crosses from the walls and
tearing them apart.
Carl looked up at Joe from where he knelt, his eyes
questioning, his hand reaching for the pistol in his belt. Lacey didn't look at
him at all. She acted on her own.
"Stop right there!"
She held her pistol straight out before her, arms rigid.
Joe saw the barrel wobble. She might be tough, he thought, but she's only twenty-five.
And she's only got two rounds.
But the Vichy didn't know that. They stopped their forward
progress and tried to stare her down.
"You can't get all of us," one said.
Zev worked the pump on the shotgun. The sound echoed
through the church. "That's right. She can't."
He sounded a lot tougher than Joe knew he was. He hoped
the Vichy were fooled.
Maybe they were. They looked at each other but didn't back
off. A stand-off was good enough for now. Joe nodded and kept up with the
Offertory.
Then he caught a flash of movement out of the corner of
his eye. One of the Vichy had ducked through the side door behind Lacey. He
carried a raised two-by-four.
"Lacey!" Zev cried. "Behind—!"
She whirled, ducking, pistol raised, but the Vichy had the
jump on her. The two-by-four glanced off the side of her head and slammed into
her forearm. She dropped the gun and went down. But not before landing a
vicious kick on the inside of his knee. He staggered back, howling with pain
while Lacey, cradling her injured arm, jumped up and scrambled toward the
altar.
The Vichy cheered and went on with their work. They
split—one group continuing to pull down Carl's crosses, the other swarming
around and behind the altar.
Joe chanced a quick glance over his shoulder and saw them
begin their attack on the newly repaired crucifix.
"Zev!" Carl said in a low voice, cocking his
head toward the Vichy. "Stop em!"
"I'm warning you," Zev said and pointed the
shotgun.
Joe heard the activity behind him come to a sudden halt.
He braced himself for the blast. . .
But it never came.
He looked at Zev. The old man met his gaze and sadly shook
his head. He couldn't do it. To the accompaniment of the sound of renewed
activity and derisive laughter behind him, Joe gave Zev a tiny nod of
reassurance and understanding, then hurried the Mass toward the Consecration.
As he held the crust of bread aloft, he started at the
sound of the life-size crucifix crashing to the floor, cringed as he heard the
freshly buttressed arms and crosspiece being torn away again.
As he held the wine aloft in the Pepsi can, the
swaggering, grinning Vichy surrounded the altar and brazenly tore the cross
from around his neck. Zev, Lacey, and Carl put up struggles to keep theirs but
were overpowered. The Vichy wound up with Carl's gun too.
And then Joe's skin began to crawl as a new group entered
the nave. They numbered about twenty, all undead. He faced them from behind the
altar as they approached. His gut roiled at the familiar faces he spotted among
the throng.
But the one who caught and held his attention was the one
leading them.
Alberto Palmeri.
PALMERI . . .
Palmeri hid his hesitancy as he approached the altar. The
crucifix and its intolerable whiteness were gone, yet something was not right.
Something repellent here, something that urged him to flee. What?
Perhaps it was just the residual effect of the crucifix
and all the crosses they had used to line the walls. That had to be it. The
unsettling aftertaste would fade as the night wore on. Oh, yes. His
nightbrothers and sisters from the nest would see to that.
He focused his attention on the man behind the altar and
laughed when he realized what he held in his hands.
"Pepsi, Joseph? You're trying to consecrate
Pepsi?" He turned to his nest siblings. "Do you see this, my brothers
and sisters? Is this the man we are to fear? And look who he has with him! An
old Jew, a young woman, and a parish hanger-on!"
He reveled in their hissing laughter as they fanned out
around him, sweeping toward the altar in a wide phalanx. The young woman, the
Jew, and Carl—he recognized Carl and wondered how he'd avoided capture for so
long—retreated to the other side of the altar where they flanked Joseph. And
Joseph . .. Joseph's handsome Irish face so pale and drawn, his mouth stretched
into such a tight, grim line. He looked scared to death. As well he should be.
Palmeri put down his rage at Joseph's audacity. He was
glad he had returned. He'd always hated the young priest for his easy manner
with people, for the way the parishioners had flocked to him with their
problems despite the fact that he had nowhere near the experience of their
older and wiser pastor. But that was over now. That world was gone, replaced by
a nightworld—Palmeri's world. And no one would be flocking to Father Joe for
anything when Palmeri was through with him.
Father Joe . . . how he'd hated it when the
parishioners had started calling him that. Well, their Father Joe would provide
superior entertainment tonight. This was going to be fun.
"Joseph, Joseph, Joseph," he said as he stopped
and smiled at the young priest across the altar. "This futile gesture is
so typical of your arrogance."
But Joseph only stared back at him, his expression a
mixture of defiance and repugnance. And that only fueled Palmeri's rage.
"Do I repel you, Joseph? Does my new form offend your
precious shanty-Irish sensibilities? Does my undeath disgust you?"
"You managed to do all that while you were still
alive, Alberto."
Palmeri allowed himself to smile. Joseph probably thought
he was putting on a brave front, but the tremor in his voice betrayed his fear.
"Always good with the quick retort, weren't you,
Joseph. Always thinking you were better than me, always putting yourself above
me."
"Not much of a climb where a child molester is
concerned."
Palmeri's anger mounted.
"So superior. So self-righteous. What about your
appetites, Joseph? The secret ones? What are they? Do you always hold them in
check?" He pointed to the girl in the leather jacket. "Is she your
weakness, Joseph? Young, attractive in a hard sort of way. Is that your style?
Do you like it rough? Are you fucking her, Joseph?"
"Leave her out of this. She just showed up
today."
"Well, if not her, then who? Are you so far above the
rest of us that you've never given in to an improper impulse, never assuaged a
secret hunger? You'll have a new hunger soon, Joseph. By dawn you'll be
drained—we'll each take a turn at you—and before the sun rises we'll hide your
corpse from its light. You'll stay dead all day, but when the night comes
you'll be one of us."
He stepped closer, almost touching the altar.
"And then all the rules will be off. The night will
be yours. You'll be free to do anything and everything you've ever wanted. But
blood will be your prime hunger, and you'll do anything to get it. You won't be
sipping your god's thin, cold blood, as you've done so often, but hot human
blood. You'll thirst for it, Joseph. And I want to be there when you take your
first drink. I want to be there to laugh in your self-righteous face as you
suck up the crimson nectar, and keep on laughing every night as the red hunger
carries you into infinity."
And it would happen. Palmeri knew it as sure as he felt
his own thirst. He hungered for the moment when he could rub dear Joseph's face
in the reality of his own bloodlust.
"I was just saying Mass," Joseph said coolly.
"Do you mind if I finish?"
Palmeri couldn't help laughing this time.
"Did you really think this charade would work? Did
you really think you could celebrate Mass on this?"
He reached out and snatched the tablecloth from the altar,
sending the Missal and the piece of bread to the floor and exposing the fouled
surface of the marble.
"Did you really think you could effect a
transubstantiation here? Do you really believe any of that garbage? That the
bread and wine actually take on the substance of"—he tried to say the name
but it wouldn't form—"the Son's body and blood?"
One of his nest sisters, Eva, a former councilwoman,
stepped forward and leaned over the altar, smiling.
"Transubstantiation?" she said in her most
unctuous voice, pulling the Pepsi can from Joseph's hands. "I was never a
Catholic, so tell me ... does that mean that this is the blood of the
Son?"
A whisper of warning slithered through Palmeri's mind.
Something about the can, something about the way he found it difficult to bring
its outline into focus...
"Eva, perhaps you should—"
Eva's grin broadened. "I've always wanted to sup on
the blood of a deity."
The nest members hissed their laughter as Eva raised the
can and drank.
Palmeri watched, unaccountably fearful as the liquid
poured into her mouth. And then—
LIGHT!
An explosion of intolerable brightness burst from Eva's
mouth and drove him back, jolted, cringing.
The inside of her skull glowed beneath her scalp and
shafts of pure white light shot from her ears, nose, eyes—every orifice in her
head. The glow spread as it flowed down through her throat and chest and into
her abdominal cavity, silhouetting her ribs before melting through her skin.
Eva was liquefying where she stood, her flesh steaming, softening, running like
glowing molten lava.
No! This couldn't be happening! Not now when he had Joseph
in his grasp!
Then the can fell from Eva's dissolving fingers and landed
on the altar top. Its contents splashed across the fouled surface, releasing
another detonation of brilliance, this one more devastating than the first. The
glare spread rapidly, extending over the upper surface and running down the
sides, moving like a living thing, engulfing the entire altar, making it glow
like a corpuscle of fire torn from the heart of the sun itself.
And with the light came blast-furnace heat that drove
Palmeri back, back, back until he had to turn and follow the rest of his nest
in a mad, headlong rush from St. Anthony's into the cool, welcoming safety of
the outer darkness.
ZEV . . .
As the undead fled into the night, their Vichy toadies
behind them, Zev stared in horrid fascination at the puddle of putrescence that
was all that remained of the undead woman Palmeri had called Eva. He glanced at
Carl and Lacey and caught the look of dazed wonderment on their faces. Zev
touched the top of the altar—clean, shiny, every whorl of the marble surface
clearly visible.
He'd witnessed fearsome power here. Incalculable power.
But instead of elating him, the realization only depressed him. How long had
this been going on? Did it happen at every Mass? Why had he spent his entire
life ignorant of this?
He turned to Joe. "What happened?"
"I—I don't know."
"A miracle!" Carl said, running his palm over
the altar top.
"A miracle and a meltdown," Lacey added from
behind Zev. He felt her hand on her shoulder. "Rabbi, are you feeling what
I'm feeling?"
He turned to her. "Feeling how?"
She lowered her voice. "That this shouldn't be
happening? That there's got to be another explanation?"
Zev wondered if the lost look in her eyes mirrored his
own.
"Explanations I'm running short on."
"Me too. I'm getting pushed into a place where I'm
going to have to revise . . . everything. A place where I'm going to have to
accept the unacceptable and believe in the unbelievable. I don't want to go
there but..."
Lacey winced as she moved her right arm. She eased it out
of her jacket and looked at it.
"Good thing I was wearing leather."
Zev inspected the large purple swelling below her
shoulder. "Do you think it's broken?"
She shook her head. "I don't think so. My hand and
forearm are all tingly and kind of numb, but I'll be okay."
"You're sure?" Joe said.
She grimaced. "Of my arm? Yeah. But I think that's
about the only thing I'm sure of anymore." She nodded to the Pepsi can
lying on its side atop the altar. "What was in there?"
Joe picked up the empty can and looked into it. "You
know, you go through the seminary, through your ordination, through countless
Masses believing in the Transubtantiation. But after all these years... to
actually know ..."
Zev saw him rub his finger along the inside of the can and
taste it. He grimaced.
"What's wrong?" Zev asked.
"Still tastes like sour barbarone . . . with a hint
of Pepsi."
"Doesn't matter what it tastes like," Carl said.
"As far as those bloodsuckers are concerned, it's the real thing."
"No," said the priest with a small smile.
"If I remember correctly, that was Coke."
And then they started laughing. Zev only vaguely
remembered the old commercials, but found himself roaring along with the other
three. It was more a release of tension than anything else. His sides hurt. He
had to lean against the altar to support himself.
"It wasn't that funny," Joe said.
Lacey smiled. "No argument there."
"C'mon," Carl said, heading for the sanctuary.
"Let's see if we can get this crucifix back together."
Zev helped Lacey slip her arm back into her jacket.
"You rest that arm," he told her.
She winced again and cradled it with her left. "I
don't think I have much choice."
Zev jumped at the sound of the church doors banging open.
He turned and saw the Vichy charging back in, two of them carrying a heavy fire
blanket.
This time Father Joe did not stand by passively as they
invaded his church. Zev watched as he stepped around the altar and met them
head on.
He was great and terrible as he confronted them. His giant
stature and raised fists cowed them for a few heartbeats. But then they must
have remembered that they outnumbered him twelve to one and charged. He swung a
massive fist and caught the lead Vichy square on the jaw. The blow lifted him
off his feet and he landed against another. Both went down.
Zev dropped to one knee and reached for the shotgun. He
would use it this time, he would shoot these vermin, he swore it!
But then someone landed on his back and drove him to the
floor. As he tried to get up he saw Carl pulling Lacey away toward the side
door, and he saw Father Joe, surrounded, swinging his fists, laying the Vichy
out every time he connected. But there were too many. As the priest went down
under the press of them, a heavy boot thudded against the side of Zev's head.
He sank into darkness.
JOE . . .
... a throbbing in his head, stinging pain in his cheek,
and a voice, sibilant yet harsh . . .
"... now, Joseph. Come on. Wake up. I don't want you
to miss this!"
Palmeri's sallow features swam into view, hovering over
him, grinning like a skull. Joe tried to move but found his wrists and arms
tied. His right hand throbbed, felt twice its normal size; he must have broken
it on a Vichy jaw. He lifted his head and saw that he was tied spread-eagle on
the altar, and that the altar had been covered with the fire blanket.
"Melodramatic, I admit," Palmeri said, "but
fitting, don't you think? I mean, you and I used to sacrifice our god
symbolically here every weekday and multiple times on Sundays, so why shouldn't
this serve as your sacrificial altar?"
Joe shut his eyes against a wave of nausea. This couldn't
be happening.
"Thought you'd won, didn't you?"
Joe refused to answer him, but that didn't shut him up.
"And even if you'd chased me out of here for good,
what would you have accomplished? Most of the world is already ours, Joseph,
and the rest soon will be. Feeders and cattle—that is the hierarchy. We are the
feeders. And tonight you'll join us. But he won't. Voila'!"
Palmeri stepped aside and made a flourish toward the
balcony.
Joe searched the dim, candlelit space of the nave, not
sure what he was supposed to see. Then he picked out Zev's form and groaned.
The old man's feet were lashed to the balcony rail; he hung upside down, his
reddened face and frightened eyes turned his way. Joe fell back and strained at
the ropes but they wouldn't budge.
"Let him go!"
"What? And let all that good rich Jewish blood go to
waste? Why, these people are the Chosen of God! They're a delicacy!"
"Bastard!"
If he could just get his hands on Palmeri, just for a
minute.
"Tut-tut, Joseph. Not in the house of the Lord. The
Jew should have been smart and run away like Carl and your girlfriend."
Carl got away? With Lacey? Thank God.
We're even, Carl.
"But don't worry about your rabbi. None of us will
lay a fang on him. He hasn't earned the right to join us. We'll use the razor
to bleed him. And when he's dead, he'll be dead for keeps. But not you, Joseph.
Oh no, not you." His smile broadened. "You're mine."
Joe wanted to spit in Palmeri's face—not so much as an act
of defiance as to hide the waves of terror surging through him—but there was no
saliva to be had in his parched mouth. The thought of being undead made him
weak. To spend eternity like... he looked at the rapt faces of Palmeri's fellow
undead as they clustered under Zev's suspended form . . . like them.
He wouldn't be like them! He wouldn't allow it!
But what if there was no choice? What if becoming undead
toppled a lifetime's worth of moral constraints, cut all the tethers on his
human hungers, negated all his mortal concepts of how a life should be lived?
Honor, justice, integrity, truth, decency, fairness, love—what if they became
meaningless words instead of the footings for his life?
A thought struck him.
"A deal, Alberto," he said.
"You're hardly in a bargaining position."
"I'm not? Answer me this: Do the undead ever kill
each other? I mean, has one of them ever driven a stake through another's
heart?"
"No. Of course not."
"Are you sure? You'd better be sure before you go
through with your plans tonight. Because if I'm forced to become one of you,
I'll be crossing over with just one thought in mind: to find you. And when I do
I won't stake your heart, I'll stake your arms and legs to the pilings of the
Point Pleasant boardwalk where you can watch the sun rise and feel it slowly
crisp your skin to charcoal."
Palmeri's smile wavered. "Impossible. You'll be
different. You'll want to thank me. You'll wonder why you ever resisted."
"Better be sure of that, Alberto ... for your sake.
Because I'll have all eternity to track you down. And I'll find you, Alberto. I
swear it on my own grave. Think on that."
"Do you think an empty threat is going to cow
me?"
"We'll find out how empty it is, won't we? But here's
the deal: let Zev go and I'll let you be."
"You care that much for an old Jew?"
"He's something you never knew in life, and never
will know: he's a friend."
And he gave me back my soul.
Palmeri leaned closer. His foul, nauseating breath wafted
against Joe's face.
"A friend? How can you be friends with a dead
man?" With that he straightened and turned toward the balcony. "Do
him! Now!"
As Joe shouted out frantic pleas and protests, one of the
undead climbed up the rubble toward Zev. Zev did not struggle. Joe saw him
close his eyes, waiting. As the vampire reached out with the straight razor,
Joe bit back a sob of grief and rage and helplessness. He was about to squeeze
his own eyes shut when he saw a flame arc through the air from one of the
windows. It struck the floor with a crash of glass and a wooomp! of exploding
flame.
Joe had only heard of such things, but he immediately
realized that he had just seen his first Molotov cocktail in action. The
splattering gasoline splashed a nearby vampire who began running in circles,
screaming as it beat at its flaming clothes. But its cries were drowned by the
roar of other voices, a hundred or more. Joe looked around and saw people—men,
women, teenagers— climbing in the windows, charging through the front doors.
The women held crosses on high while the men wielded long wooden pikes—broom,
rake, and shovel handles whittled to sharp points. Joe recognized most of the
faces from the Sunday Masses he had said here for years.
St. Anthony's parishioners were back to reclaim their
church.
"Yes!" he shouted, not sure of v/hether to laugh
or cry. But when he saw the rage in Palmeri's face, he laughed. "Too bad,
Alberto!"
Palmeri made a lunge at his throat but cringed away as a
woman with an upheld crucifix and a man with a pike charged the altar—Lacey and
Carl.
"Are you all right, Uncle Joe?" Lacey said, her
eyes wide and angry. "Did they—?"
"You got here just in time."
She pulled out a butterfly knife, flipped it open with one
hand, and began sawing at the rope around Joe's right wrist. She was using her
left only; her right arm didn't seem to be of much use.
"Told ya I wouldn't let ya down, didn't I,
Fadda?" Carl said, grinning. "Didn't I?"
"That you did, Carl. I don't think I've ever been so
glad to see anyone in my entire life. But how—?"
"We told 'em. We run through the parish, Lacey and
me, goin house to house. We told 'em Fadda Joe was in trouble at the church and
we let him down before but we shouldn't let him down again. He come back for
us, now we gotta go back for him. Simple as that. And then they started runnin
house to house, and afore ya knowed it, we had ourselfs a little army. We come
to kick ass, Fadda, if you'll excuse the expression."
"Kick all the ass you can, Carl."
Joe glanced around and spotted a sixtyish black woman he
recognized as Lilly Green. He saw her terror-glazed eyes as she swiveled
around, looking this way and that; he saw how the crucifix trembled in her
hand. She wasn't going to kick too much ass in her state, but she was here, God
bless her, she was here for him and for St. Anthony's despite the terror that
so obviously filled her. His heart swelled with love for these people and pride
in their courage.
As soon as his arms were free, Joe sat up and took the
knife from Lacey. He sawed at his leg ropes, looking around the church.
The oldest and youngest members of the parishioner army
were stationed at the windows and doors where they held crosses aloft, cutting
off the vampires' escape, while all across the nave—chaos. Screams, cries, and
an occasional shot echoed through St. Anthony's. The undead and their Vichy
were outnumbered three to one. The undead seemed blinded and confused by all
the crosses around them. Despite their superhuman strength, it appeared that
some were indeed getting their asses kicked. A number were already writhing on
the floor, impaled on pikes. As Joe watched, he saw the middle-aged Gonzales
sisters, Maria and Immaculata, crucifixes held before them, backing a vampire
into a corner. As it cowered there with its arms across its face,
Maria's husband Hector charged in with a sharpened rake
handle held like a lance and ran it through.
But a number of parishioners lay in inert, bloody heaps on
the floor, proof that the undead and the Vichy were claiming their share of
victims too.
Joe freed his feet and hopped off the altar. He looked
around for Palmeri— he wanted Palmeri—but the undead priest had lost himself in
the melee. Joe glanced up at the balcony and saw that Zev was still hanging
there, struggling to free himself. He started across the nave to help him.
ZEV . . .
Zev hated that he should be hung up here like a chicken in
a deli window. He tried again to pull his upper body up far enough to reach his
leg ropes but he couldn't get close. He had never been one for exercise; doing
a sit-up flat on the floor would have been difficult, so what made him think he
could do the equivalent maneuver hanging upside down by his feet? He dropped
back, exhausted, and felt the blood rush to his head again. His vision swam,
his ears pounded, he felt as if the skin of his face might burst open. Much
more of this and he'd have a stroke or worse maybe.
He watched the upside-down battle below and was glad to
see the undead getting the worst of it. These people—seeing Carl among them, Zev
assumed they were part of St. Anthony's parish—were ferocious, almost savage in
their attacks on the undead. All their pent-up rage and fear was being released
upon their tormentors in a single burst. It was almost frightening.
Suddenly he felt a hand on his foot. Someone was untying
his knots. Thank you, Lord. Soon he would be on his feet again. As the cords
came loose he decided he should at least attempt to participate in his own
rescue.
Once more, Zev thought. Once more I'll try.
With a grunt he levered himself up, straining, stretching
to grasp something, anything. A hand came out of the darkness and he reached
for it. But Zev's relief turned to horror when he felt the cold clamminess of
the thing that clutched him, that pulled him up and over the balcony rail with
inhuman strength. His bowels threatened to evacuate when Palmeri's grinning
face loomed not six inches from his own.
"It's not over yet, Jew," he said softly, his
foul breath clogging Zev's nose and throat. "Not by a long shot!"
He felt Palmeri's free hand ram into his belly and grip
his belt at the buckle, then the other hand grab a handful of his shirt at the
neck. Before he could struggle or cry out, he was lifted free of the floor and
hoisted over the balcony rail.
And the dybbuk's voice was in his ear.
"Joseph called you a friend, Jew. Let's see if he
really meant it."
JOE . . .
Joe was halfway across the floor of the nave when he heard
Palmeri's voice echo above the madness.
"Stop them, Joseph! Stop them now or I drop your
friend!"
Joe looked up and froze. Palmeri stood at the balcony
rail, leaning over it, his eyes averted from the nave and all its newly arrived
crosses. At the end of his outstretched arms was Zev, suspended in mid-air over
the splintered remains of the pews, over a particularly large and ragged spire
of wood that pointed directly at the middle of Zev's back. Zev's frightened
eyes were flashing between Joe and the giant spike below.
Around him Joe heard the sounds of the melee drop a notch,
then drop another as all eyes were drawn to the tableau on the balcony.
"A human can die impaled on a wooden stake just as
well as a vampire!" Palmeri cried. "And just as quickly if it goes
through his heart. But it can take hours of agony if it rips through his
gut."
St. Anthony's grew silent as the fighting stopped and each
faction backed away to a different side of the church, leaving Joe alone in the
middle.
"What do you want, Alberto?"
"First I want all those crosses put away so that I
can see!"
Joe looked to his right where his parishioners stood.
"Put them away," he told them. When a murmur of
dissent arose, he added, "Don't put them down, just out of sight.
Please."
Slowly, one by one at first, then in groups, the crosses
and crucifixes were placed behind backs or tucked out of sight within coats.
To his left, the undead hissed their relief and the Vichy
cheered. The sound was like hot needles being forced under Joe's fingernails.
Above, Palmeri turned his face to Joe and smiled.
"That's better."
"What do you want?" Joe asked, knowing with a
sick crawling in his gut exactly what the answer would be.
"A trade," Palmeri said.
"Me for him, I suppose?" Joe said.
Palmeri's smile broadened. "Of course."
"No, Joe! "Zev cried.
Palmeri shook the old man roughly. Joe heard him say,
"Quiet, Jew, or I'll snap your spine!" Then he looked down at Joe
again. "The other thing is to tell your rabble to let my people go."
He laughed and shook Zev again. "Hear that, Jew? A Biblical reference—Old
Testament, no less!"
"All right," Joe said without hesitation.
The parishioners on his right gasped as one and cries of
"No!" and "You can't!" filled St. Anthony's. A particularly
loud voice nearby shouted, "He's only a lousy kike!"
Joe wheeled on the man and recognized Gene Harrington, a
carpenter. He jerked a thumb back over his shoulder at the undead and their
servants.
"You sound like you'd be more at home with them,
Gene."
Harrington backed up a step and looked at his feet.
"Sorry, Father," he said in a voice that hovered
on the verge of a sob. "But we just got you back!"
I'll be all right," Joe said softly.
And he meant it. Deep inside he had a feeling that he would
come through this, that if he could trade himself for Zev and face Palmeri
one-on-one, he could come out the victor, or at least battle him to a draw. Now
that he was no longer tied up like some sacrificial lamb, now that he was free,
with full use of his arms and legs again, he could not imagine dying at the
hands of the likes of Palmeri.
Besides, one of the parishioners had given him a tiny
crucifix. He had it closed in the palm of his hand.
But he had to get Zev out of danger first. That above all else.
He looked up at Palmeri.
"All right, Alberto. I'm on my way up."
"Wait!" Palmeri said. "Someone search
him."
Joe gritted his teeth as one of the Vichy, a blubbery,
unwashed slob, came forward and searched his pockets. Joe thought he might get
away with the crucifix but at the last moment he was made to open his hands.
The Vichy grinned in Joe's face as he snatched the tiny cross from his palm and
shoved it into his pocket.
"He's clean now!" the slob said and gave Joe a
shove toward the vestibule.
Joe hesitated. He was walking into the snake pit unarmed.
A glance at his parishioners told him he couldn't very well turn back now.
He continued on his way, clenching and unclenching his
tense, sweaty fists as he walked. He still had a chance of coming out of this
alive. He was too angry to die. He prayed that when he got within reach of the
ex-priest the smoldering rage at how he had framed him when he'd been pastor,
at what he'd done to St. Anthony's since then, would explode and give him the strength
to tear Palmeri to pieces.
"No!" Zev shouted from above. "Forget about
me! You've started something here and you've got to see it through!"
Joe ignored his friend.
"Coming, Alberto."
Father Joe's coming, Alberto. And he's pissed. Royally
pissed.
ZEV . . .
Zev craned his neck, watching Joe disappear beneath the
balcony.
"Joe! Comeback!"
Palmeri shook him again.
"Give it up, old Jew. Joseph never listened to anyone
and he's not listening to you. He still believes in faith and virtue and
honesty, in the power of goodness and truth over what he perceives as evil.
He'll come up here ready to sacrifice himself for you, yet sure in his heart
that he's going to win in the end. But he's wrong."
"No!" Zev said.
But in his heart he knew that Palmeri was right. How could
Joe stand up against a creature with Palmeri's strength, who could hold Zev in
the air like this for so long? Didn't his arms ever tire?
"Yes!" Palmeri hissed. "He's going to lose
and we're going to win. We'll win for the same reason we always win. We don't
let anything as silly and transient as sentiment stand in our way. If we'd been
winning below and situations were reversed—if Joseph were holding one of my
nest brothers over that wooden spike below—do you think I'd pause for a moment?
For a second? Never! That's why this whole exercise by Joseph and these people
is futile."
Futile. . . Zev thought. Like much of his life, it seemed.
Like all of his future. Joe would die tonight and Zev might live on ... as
what? A cross-wearing Jew, with the traditions of his past sacked and in
flames, and nothing in his future but a vast, empty, limitless plain to wander
alone.
Footfalls sounded on the balcony stairs and Palmeri turned
his head.
"Ah,Joseph," he said.
Zev couldn't see the priest but he shouted anyway.
"Go back, Joe! Don't let him trick you!"
"Speaking of tricks," Palmeri said, leaning
further over the balcony rail as an extra warning to Joe, "I hope you're
not going to try anything foolish."
"No," said Joe's tired voice from somewhere
behind Palmeri. "No tricks. Pull him in and let him go."
Zev could not let this happen. And suddenly he knew what
he had to do. He twisted his body and grabbed the front of Palmeri's cassock
while bringing his legs up and bracing his feet against one of the uprights of
the brass balcony rail. As Palmeri turned his startled face toward him, Zev put
all his strength into his legs for one convulsive backward push against the
railing, pulling Palmeri with him. The undead priest was overbalanced. Even his
enormous strength could not help him once his feet came free of the floor. Zev
saw his undead eyes widen with terror when his lower body slipped over the
railing. As they fell free, Zev wrapped his arms around Palmeri and clutched
his cold and surprisingly thin body tight against him.
"What goes through this old Jew goes through
you!" he shouted into the vampire's ear.
For an instant he saw Joe's horrified face appear over the
balcony's receding edge, heard his faraway shout of "No!" mingle with
Palmeri's nearer, lengthier scream of the same word, then came a spine-cracking
jar and in his chest a tearing, wrenching pain beyond all comprehension. In an
eyeblink he felt the sharp spire of wood rip through him and into Palmeri.
And then he felt no more.
As roaring blackness closed in he wondered if he'd done
it, if this last desperate, foolish act had succeeded. He didn't want to die
without finding out. He wanted to know—
But then he knew no more.
JOE . . .
Joe shouted incoherently as he hung over the rail and
watched Zev's fall, gagged as he saw the bloody point of the pew remnant burst
through the back of Palmeri's cassock directly below him. He saw Palmeri squirm
and flop around like a beached fish, then go limp atop Zev's already inert
form.
As cheers mixed with cries of horror and the sounds of
renewed battle rose from the nave, Joe turned away from the balcony rail and
dropped to his knees.
"Zev!" he cried aloud. "Good God,
Zev!"
Forcing himself to his feet, he stumbled down the back
stairs, through the vestibule, and into the nave. The undead and the Vichy were
on the run, as cowed and demoralized by their leader's death as the
parishioners were buoyed by it. Slowly, steadily, they were falling before the
relentless onslaught.
But Joe paid them scant attention. He fought his way to
where Zev lay impaled beneath Palmeri's already decomposing corpse. He looked
for a sign of life in his old friend's glazing eyes, a hint of a pulse in his
throat under his beard, but found nothing.
"Zev, Zev, Zev, you shouldn't have. You shouldn't
have."
He stiffened as he felt a pair of arms go around him, then
saw it was Lacey. Tears streamed down her cheeks as she leaned against him and
sobbed. She reached out and touched Zev's forehead.
"Oh, Uncle Joe... Uncle Joe..."
Suddenly they were surrounded by a cheering throng of St.
Anthony's parishioners.
"We did it, Fadda Joe!" Carl cried, his face and
hands splattered with blood. "We killed 'em all! We got our church
back!"
"Thanks to this man here," Joe said, pointing to
Zev.
"No!" someone shouted. "Thanks to
you!"
Amid the cheers, Joe shook his head and said nothing. Let
them celebrate. They deserved it. They'd reclaimed a tiny piece of the world as
their own, a toehold and nothing more. A small victory of minimal significance
in the war, but a victory nonetheless. They had their church back, at least for
tonight. And they intended to keep it.
Good. But there would be one change. If they wanted their
Father Joe to stick around they were going to have to agree to rename the
church.
St. Zev's.
Joe liked the sound of that.
GREGOR . . .
"I was wrong, wasn't I!" Olivia raged, waving
her arms and she stormed back and forth across the main floor of the Post
office. Her get-guards flanked her, watching the windows, trying to cover her
as she moved. Gregor's guards clustered near him, warily watching the others.
"Yesterday, when I heard that more than one of your serfs had been killed
in a single night, I thought it couldn't get any worse. But now this!
This!"
Gregor, still too numb with shock, said nothing.
He and his guards had been on the other side of town,
roaming the streets, hunting the vigilantes, when he'd heard the news. He'd
rushed back to the church, not believing it could be true. But it was. He'd
found St. Anthony's aflame with searing light, too bright to look at. Crosses
blazed from every window and door, the corpses of his cowboys and his get lay
in a tangled pile on the front steps, and from within ... the voices of the
cattle raised in hymns.
Olivia stopped her pacing and glared at him. "You
allowed this to happen, didn't you, Gregor. You're trying to humiliate me,
aren't you."
That did it.
"You bitch!" Gregor shouted.
He raised his fist and took a step toward her. Her guards
reacted by reaching for their machetes, and Gregor's guards followed suit. As
much as he wanted his hands around her throat, crushing it, twisting until her
head ripped free, this was not the time or place for a pointless melee. Gregor
opened his fist and stabbed a finger at Olivia.
"You conniving, self-centered bitch! Humiliate you?
I'm the one whose local get has been virtually wiped out! If anyone's pride has
been damaged tonight it is mine!"
"And you've nobody to blame but yourself," she
snarled. "Your serfs and your get failed you, failed all of us. They
deserved what they got. I see only one solution. I will have to bring in my own
serfs and get to clean up your mess."
"This is what you've wanted all along, isn't it. For
all I know you engineered this yourself!"
"Don't talk like a fool! I—" She stopped, held
up a hand, and closed her eyes. "Wait. Wait." She opened her eyes and
stared at him. "Do you see what is happening? A few of the cattle make a
move against us and what do we do? We turn on each other. This is not the
way."
Realizing she was right, Gregor stepped back. But he said
nothing. The sting of her words remained. His get had not deserved to die.
"We have a situation," Olivia said. "One
that must be kept quiet and crushed immediately. If word of what happened here
tonight gets around, insurrections like this could spread like wildfire."
Gregor watched her. He didn't trust this suddenly
reasonable Olivia.
"The thing to do is retake the church," he said.
"Immediately."
"But we can't, Gregor. The slow attrition of your
serfs to these vigilantes over the past weeks plus their wholesale slaughter
tonight leaves us short of manpower. Of the ones we have left, half are ready
to bolt. We'd better hope these vigilantes are so happy to have their church back
that they'll stay there tomorrow, because we now have barely enough serfs to
guard us during the sunlit hours. If these vigilantes should decide to put
together a hunting party..."
Gregor suppressed a shudder. "They won't. They're not
the vigilantes."
"You so dearly wish. Then the blame would not be on
you for allowing them to roam free for so long. In fact, as I remember, you
were supposed to solve the vigilante problem before this coming sunrise."
Did she have to bring that up? He'd been searching since
sundown.
"It seems we've had a slight, unanticipated
distraction."
She waved her hand, brushing him off. "Unlike you, I
am not going to sit on my hands. I've already contacted Franco."
The word bitch rose to Gregor's lips again but he bit it back.
Pointless to call names now.
"I'm sure you gave him a scrupulously evenhanded
account of the night's events."
She offered him a tight smile. "Certainly. I
requested a detachment of ferals and a group of tough, seasoned serfs. The plan
is simple: tomorrow night they will firebomb the church and let the
parishioners run out into the arms of the ferals."
Gregor had to admit it was a good plan: simple, direct. It
would work.
"And what did Franco say?"
Her smile faltered. "He said he'd take it under
consideration."
Gregor's mind reeled in shock. Franco is hanging me out to
dry! Is this what I get for my loyalty, my efforts?
"Is he telling us to clean up our own mess?"
Olivia's eyebrows shot up. "Our mess?"
"Yes, Olivia. You were here when it happened. No
matter how you spin it to Franco, he's still going to see it as our mess."
Gregor didn't know if that was true, but it didn't hurt to
make Olivia squirm, get her working with him instead of against him.
"The vigilantes were your problem long before I
arrived."
"And I'm telling you these are not the same
people."
"A very self-serving theory."
"Their methods are different. I've been gathering
information since it happened. One of my cowboys—serfs—walked in on them in the
church earlier today. They didn't kill him, just pushed him around and sent him
on his way. If it had been the vigilantes they would have slit his throat and
hung him from a pole just like all the others."
"Maybe they've changed tactics."
Gregor shook his head. "The church problem was
started by a priest and a rabbi."
"Working together? Maybe this is more of a problem
than I thought."
"It is. But these two are not the vigilantes. They're
worse. They're visible, and they've provided a base of operations, a rallying
point for the cattle. They're doing everything the vigilantes did not do."
"This will not get you off the hook, Gregor."
"Will you listen to me? I'm trying to tell you there
are two groups to deal with now, separate and distinct. And if they should band
together we will be in even bigger danger."
"As I said, Gregor: theory. A theory needs proof. If
you're so convinced the vigilantes are not in that church, then prove it by
finding them and bringing them in. I hope you succeed."
"I find that hard to believe."
"I'm quite serious. Your serfs are becoming afraid to
move about in the day. They sense a foundering ship and, like the rats they
are, they're ready to jump. We can't have that. We need them to hold the day.
If these people take back the day, then we might lose the night as well."
That will never happen, Gregor thought. I will not allow
it.
"I will bring in these vigilantes as promised. And
when I do, I'll bleed them—just enough to weaken them. Then I'll give them to
the cowboys to finish. I'll let them take as long as they like to exact their
revenge. And then they'll see that we take care of our helpers. And the rest of
the cattle will see that resistance is futile."
He had to succeed, had to prove that the vigilantes were
not connected with the church rebels, otherwise the blame for the fall of the
church would rest on his shoulders. His whole future depended on finding those
damn vigilantes.
"Let's hope so," Olivia said. "Meanwhile, I
won't be idle while waiting to hear from Franco. I'm going to have that church
watched closely in case this priest or rabbi or anyone else from inside steps
out." Her eyes blazed. "I want one of them."
"For what?" Gregor asked.
"For answers. For leverage. For.. . fun." Olivia
smiled. "I can be very inventive."
- 5 -
JOE . . .
Father Joe gave the dirt on Zev's grave a final pat with
his shovel, then turned away. He didn't know any of the Jewish prayers for the
dead, so he'd made up a prayer of his own to send his old friend on his way.
Lacey walked beside him, a shovel across her shoulder.
"You were really close to him, weren't you."
"Like a brother. Closer than a brother. Brothers drag
all sorts of baggage into their relationship as adults. We had none of that. We
didn't even share the same culture."
"He seemed like a good man."
"He was. He had a kind, generous, gentle soul. I will
miss him terribly."
Joe's throat clenched. He still couldn't believe Zev was
gone. He'd feared him dead after the vampires invaded, but hadn't really
believed it. Now he had no choice.
He looked around. Rifle- and shotgun-toting men stood at
the corners of the little church graveyard. Joe had found spots in the crowded
soil for Zev and the four parishioners who'd died during last night's fight,
and this morning a crew of volunteers—Lacey among them—had started digging.
He glanced at his niece, noting the sheen of perspiration
on her bare arms, the nasty-looking bruise below her shoulder. It didn't seem
to be bothering her much this morning. She was in good shape and surprisingly
strong. She'd held her own with that shovel.
The midday sun hung high and hot as they followed the walk
around to the front of the church where half a dozen women were busy scrubbing
the steps. Two more armed men patrolled the sidewalk behind them.
"Good job, ladies," Joe said.
The women smiled and waved.
"Sure looks better than it did this morning,"
Lacey said.
Joe nodded. They'd hurled the bodies of the vampires and
the dead Vichy out the front door last night. In hindsight, that had been an
error, because the morning sunlight created a terrible mess, reducing some of
the undead cadavers to a foul, brown goo that stained the steps and coated the
Vichy bodies.
Carl had found a front-end loader and the men used that to
haul the stinking mess to a vacant lot where it was buried in a mass grave.
Lacey stared at the stains. "Lots of death last
night." She turned to Joe, her eyes troubled. "Why don't I feel
bad?"
"Maybe because this is war. A war like never before.
In past wars the enemy gets propagandized into monsters, subhuman creatures. In
this war we don't have to do that. They are subhuman monsters."
"And the Vichy?"
"They're just subhuman."
She continued to stare at him. "This is not the Uncle
Joe I knew."
How right she was. He sensed that memories of last night's
carnage and bloodshed would keep him awake for months, maybe years. But he
couldn't allow himself to dwell on it. He had to move on.
"Thank God I'm not. The old Father Joe would have
tried to reason with them. But I worry that many more scenes like last night
will change us, make us more like them."
"So? Maybe we need to become more like them if we're
to survive. In a war you have to submerge a lot of the decent impulses and
empathy that made you a good partner or spouse or parent or neighbor.
Especially in this war, because we're dealing with an enemy that has lost all
decent impulses. You offer an olive branch and they'll shove it down your
throat. Will we be changed by this? Look around you, Unk: we already are."
He nodded. "We'll all be either dead or permanently
scarred when this is over. And so, in the unlikely event that we win, we'll
still lose." He managed a smile for her. "How's that for
optimism?"
She shrugged. "One thing's for sure. The Uncle Joe
who used to say, 'Just have faith and everything will turn out fine' is
gone."
Yes, he is, Joe thought with a deep pang of regret. Gone
forever.
"Do you miss him, Lacey?"
"Yes and no. He was a great, easygoing guy, but he's
not what we need now. And speaking of now, here comes the big question: what
next?"
Good question. Joe had been thinking about that. He closed
his eyes, lifted his face to the sun, and watched the glowing red inner surface
of his lids.
The sun ... their greatest ally. As long as it was out, he
and the parishioners had a fighting chance. The Vichy, what remained of them,
seemed cowed. A few had shown their faces in the vicinity but were quickly
chased off without offering even token resistance. Every so often Joe would
spot one skulking in the shadows a few blocks away, watching the church, but
none ventured close.
But once the sun set, the balance would shift to the
undead and their collaborators.
"I think we should start a compound," he said.
"You mean, like a fort?"
"Not so much a fort as a consolidation. Gather
everyone close for mutual protection and pooling of resources."
Lacey nodded. "The Ben Franklin approach."
"Ben Franklin?"
"Yeah. What he said at the signing of the Declaration
of Independence: 'We must all hang together, or assuredly we shall all hang
separately.' "
"Declaration of Independence ... I guess we did that
last night."
"Damn right. But with deeds instead of words on
paper."
"But as for hanging together, that's the plan—and I
don't mean by our necks. The living are scattered all over town now. That
leaves us vulnerable to being picked off one by one. But if we use the church
as a hub and bring everybody toward the center—"
"Circle the wagons, in other words."
"Exactly. As of now we've got the rectory, the
convent, and the church itself. That'll house some people, but it's not enough.
We need to expand."
"You got that right."
By word of mouth and who knew how else, the news that
someone was fighting back had spread. A steady stream of newcomers, anxious to
join the fight, had been flowing to the church all morning. Many of them were
not even Catholic. Jews, Protestants, even Muslims were showing up, wanting to
know how they could be part of what was happening. Joe had passed the word to
welcome everyone. This was not a time for divisions. The arbitrary walls that
had separated people in the past had to be knocked down. There could be only
one belief system now: the living versus the undead and those who sided with
them.
"There's an empty office building across the street
from the back of the church," Joe said, remembering the night he and Zev
had spent there. Had it been only two nights since then? "That should hold
a lot of folks. We'll start there."
"I passed a couple of furniture stores on the way
here," Lacey said. She pointed south. "If I remember, they're just a
few blocks that way."
"You're right," Joe said. "I know the
places."
"We can raid them for bedding."
"Great idea. Once we set that up, we'll take over the
surrounding houses— assuming they're unoccupied."
"Pretty safe assumption," Lacey said. "If
the owners somehow survived, I can't see them hanging around for long,
considering what's been going down in the church."
"But first I want to start blocking off the
surrounding streets—get old cars, line them up in the intersections. That'll
fend off or at least slow down any blitzkrieg-style counterattacks."
He felt Lacey's hand on his arm and turned to find her
staring at him.
"You've given this a lot of thought, haven't
you."
"That's just it. I haven't. I'm making it up as I go
along. As I told you last night, my original intent was to hold the place for
one night, say Mass, then move on."
Lacey smiled. "I was wondering what happened to that
idea."
"It got lost in the crowd."
Joe hadn't counted on drawing a crowd. Now that he had,
what did he do with them? He couldn't perform the loaves-and-fishes miracle.
How was he going to feed them? But seeing the desperate hope gleaming in their
eyes this morning, he couldn't simply walk out on them.
"So ..." Lacey said slowly. "Beyond a
compound .. . what?"
"I wish I knew."
"You realize, don't you, that we can't win."
"I don't realize any such thing."
"Hey, Unk," she said, her grip tightening on his
arm. "We're only a hundred people and there are millions of them. They've
got Europe, the Middle East, India, and most of Asia."
"But they haven't got the U.S. They hold the East
Coast but the rest of the country is still alive."
"How can you be sure?"
"I was talking to one of the newcomers this morning.
His name's Gerald Vance and he's got a battery-powered shortwave radio. He told
me he's been talking to people all over the country. Philadelphia's gone but
Harrisburg and Pittsburgh have only seen an occasional vampire. Same with
Rochester. Atlanta fell but Alabama's fine. The Midwest and the West Coast are
still in the hands of the living. So you see, it's not over."
Lacey looked away. "After seeing what's happened to
the rest of the world, you could argue that it's just a matter of time."
Joe lowered his voice. "I'd appreciate it if you
wouldn't talk like that. Last night was the first good thing that's happened to
these people in a long time, so if you don't mind ..."
Lacey held up a hand. "Okay. 'Never is heard a
discouraging word.' But if that's true about the rest of the country, then
instead of staying here maybe we should be thinking about throwing a convoy
together and heading west."
Joe shook his head. He'd already thought of that.
"We're being watched. We start to assemble dozens of
cars, they'll know what we're planning. They'll be waiting for us. We'll be
sitting ducks on the road."
He'd seen it play out in his mind's eye. He'd envisioned a
line of cars racing down Route 70 at dawn. But he'd also envisioned a Vichy
roadblock, gunfire, bloodshed, disabled cars, the convoy stalled, blocked fore
and aft, the sun going down, and then . . . massacre.
"We've got a better chance here. I told Vance to get
on his radio and spread the word of what we're doing here. Maybe it will spur
others to do the same. Right now we've set a fire. If we remain the only
bonfire, I agree: we're doomed. But if we can start a trend, inspire a hundred,
a thousand fires along the coast, we'll no longer be the center of attention.
We might have a chance."
Lacey was nodding. "And if the rest of the country
gets the message that there is hope, that resistance is not futile ..."
She grinned and raised her fist. "I always wanted to be a
revolutionary."
"Well, you're going to get your wish." Joe
yawned. When was the last time he'd slept? "My wish is for forty
winks."
"Why don't you bed down for a while in the rectory?
You catch your forty while I take some people over to that office building and
check it out. We'll see how we can divide it up for living arrangements."
Joe stared at her. Where did she get her energy?
"Aren't you tired?"
She shrugged. "I've never needed much sleep. Besides,
I had a nap."
"When?"
She smiled. "While you were saying Mass."
Joe sighed. "When are you going to face facts and
admit—?"
"Hush." She put a finger to her lips. "I'm
still not on board, but we'll argue about this some other time. Right now,
there's too much work to do."
Joe watched her stride off, thinking that whoever said
there are no atheists in foxholes obviously hadn't met Lacey.
LACEY . . .
Lacey gazed out the window at the lengthening shadows and
rubbed her burning eyes.
Tired. She hadn't found time for another nap yet. All she
needed was twenty minutes and she'd be good for hours more of activity.
Her uncle and the rest were in the process of working out
a sleep schedule, assigning shifts. Some of them were going to have to live
undead style, sleeping in the day, up all night, while others would keep a more
normal schedule.
Lacey figured she'd volunteer for the undead shift since
she tended to be a night person anyway.
She turned away from the window and checked out the room
behind her. The desks had been pushed into a corner and a mattress and box
spring placed in the center of the floor. Not fancy but functional, and a
helluva lot more comfortable than trying to sleep on the church's stone floor.
She stretched her aching muscles. A good workout today,
driving pickup trucks to the furniture stores, hauling bedding back, and
lugging it up the steps to the upper floors. Toward the end of the afternoon
she would have given anything for a generator to power up the elevator.
Back to the window for another look at the grand old
Victorian next door. Janey had been so into Victorians, dragging Lacey around
the city, pointing out this Second Empire and that Italianate until she'd
caught the bug too. They'd planned someday to come down to Asbury Park, buy a
place like the three-story affair next door and renovate it, dress it up like
those fabulous painted ladies they'd salivated over on their trip to San
Francisco last year.
Lacey felt a lump grow in her throat. Janey . . . they'd
had such good times together ... the best years of her life. She missed her.
Losing her had left an cavity where she'd once had a heart.
Where are you, Janey? What did they do to you?
Lacey knew in that instant which building she wanted added
next to Uncle Joe's "compound."
Why not suggest it to him now?
She ducked into the hall and started down the stairwell,
only to have to back up to allow a couple of the parish men to pass with a
queen-size mattress.
"I'm heading over to the church to see Father
Joe," she told them.
"Give us a minute and I'll escort you back,"
said a red-faced, heavyset man in a plaid shirt.
Lacey waved him off. "Don't be silly. It's a hundred
feet away. And the street's blocked."
Probably just wants a break from all the lifting and
hauling, she thought as she stepped outside.
She checked up and down the street. Nothing moving. No one
in sight.
As she started across the street she glanced again at the
old house and figured, why not check it out first? If it wasn't habitable—say,
a big hole in the roof or something like that—why waste her time?
But she wasn't going in there alone. No way. She'd seen
enough horror movies to know you don't go into empty houses alone when there
are bad guys about.
She looked around, saw a short, muscular guy in a
sleeveless T-shirt crossing the street, heading from the church toward the
office building. What was his name? Enrico. Yeah, that was it.
"Hey, Enrico. Want to help me check out this place
next door? See if we can move people in there?"
"Sure," he said, grinning. "Let's go."
She waited for him to catch up, then together they headed
for the front steps and climbed onto the porch. She tried the door, hoping it
was unlocked—she hated the thought of breaking one of those old windows to get
in—and smiled as the latch yielded to the pressure of her thumb. All right!
Enrico hung in the living room while Lacey hurried through
the cool, dark, silent interior. The decor was not authentically
Victorian—nowhere near cramped and cluttered enough—but the place hadn't been
vandalized. The two upper floors held five small bedrooms and one larger master
bedroom, all furnished with beds and dressers. The couch in the first-floor sun
room could sleep another, once all the dead house plants were removed.
Perfect, she thought, feeling the best she had all day.
This is a definite keeper. And I've got first dibs on the master bedroom.
She came down the main staircase—the house had a rear
servants' stairway as well, running to and from the kitchen—and found the
living room empty.
"Enrico?"
Maybe he'd done a little exploring on his own. She headed
for the kitchen and stopped cold when she saw a pair of feet jutting toes-up
from behind a counter. She wanted to run but knew she had to check. She hurried
forward, took a look at the kitchen carving knife jutting from Enrico's bloody
chest, at his dead, glazed eyes staring at the ceiling, then spun and ran.
She didn't head for the front door. Instead she sprang for
the French doors and leaped onto the verandah. There she ran into three waiting
Vichy and had no time to react before something cracked against her skull,
sending lightning bolts through her suddenly darkening vision. She lashed out
with her booted foot but struck only air, and then another blow to her head
sent her down.
She had flashes of faces, one clean-shaven, one bearded,
one with braided hair, snatches of voices . . .
"Got one!" . . . "Hey, she's fine! She's
really fine!"
A feeling of being carried, then an impact as she was
tossed into the rear of a van, the van starting to move, then more voices...
"We get major points for this—major!" . . .
"Man, she's so fine! Shame to hafta give her to the bloodsuckers." .
. . "Ay, yo, they only said they wanted a live one. Didn't say nothin
'bout havin to be a virgin, know'm sayin?"
Laughter.
"Right! Fuckin-ay right!"
And then the feeling of her clothes being torn from her
body . . .
CAROLE . . .
Sister Carole watched a beat-up old van race along the
street. She couldn't see who was driving but it was coming from the direction
of St. Anthony's.
St. Anthony's . . . how she'd wanted to step inside when
she'd passed by this morning. She'd heard the voices drifting through the open
front doors, responding to Father Joe during Mass, and they'd tugged her up the
steps to participate and ... to see Father Joe's face once more. But she
couldn't allow it. She was unworthy . . . too unworthy.
She'd seen the stains on the steps—blood and fouler
substances—and had asked one of the armed men guarding the front about them.
He'd told her about what had happened during the night, how Father Palmeri and
other undead had been routed and killed along with their living helpers, how
the church was now a holy place again.
Carole had walked on with her heart singing. Maybe what
she'd been doing was not all for naught. Maybe there was a Divine Plan and she
was part of it.
Then again, maybe not.
Most likely not.
The song in her heart had gasped and died.
And so she'd spent most of the rest of the day working
around the house. She figured it was only a matter of time before she was
caught and wanted to be ready when the undead or their cowboys came for her.
<I wish they'd come for you NOW, Carole. Then this
shame, this monstrous sinfulness would he over and you'd get what you
DESERVE!>
"That makes two of us," Sister Carole said.
She didn't want to go out again tonight but knew she had
to.
Her only solace was the certainty that sooner or later it
going to end—for her.
She set a few more wires, ran a few more strings, then
headed up to the bedroom to change into her padded bra, her red blouse, her
black leather skirt.
<Not again! When is it going to END, Carole? When is
this going to STOP?>
"When they're all dead and gone," Sister Carole
said aloud to the stranger in the bedroom mirror. "Or when I am. Whichever
comes first."
GREGOR...
Gregor frowned as he smeared makeup on his face to hide
his pallor. He hoped it looked all right. Since he couldn't use a mirror he had
to go by feel. It would have made more sense to have one of his get apply it,
but he wanted to keep his plan to himself.
He sprayed himself with Obsession cologne. The living said
the undead carried an unmistakable odor. He couldn't detect it himself, but
this should mask it. He rose and looked down at himself. A long-sleeved work
shirt, scruffy jeans, a crescent-on-a-chain earring, and now, a passably—he
hoped—ruddy complexion.
"Hey there," he said in the drawl he'd been
practicing since sundown, hoping to disguise his own accent with another.
"Ahm new in these here parts."
He slipped a cowboy hat onto his head to complete the
picture.
A good enough picture, he hoped, to decoy these vigilantes
into picking on him as their next cowboy victim.
Gregor smiled, baring his teeth. Then they'd be in for a
surprise.
He could have sent someone else, could have sent out a
number of decoys, but he wanted this hunt for himself. After all, Franco had
his eye on the situation, and that mandated bold and extraordinary measures.
Gregor needed to prove without a doubt that the vigilantes were separate from
the insurgents in the church.
He stepped over the drained, beheaded corpse of the old
man who'd been brought to him earlier—what had happened to all the young
catde?—and checked the map one last time. He'd marked all six places where the
dead cowboys had been found. The X's formed a rough circle. Gregor's plan was
to wander the streets within that circle. Alone.
An hour ago he'd sent his get-guards upstairs to the main
floor of the synagogue, telling them he wanted to sup alone and be left
undisturbed here in the basement while he planned the night's sortie. Now he
crept up the steps and let himself out a side door and into the dark.
Gregor took a deep, shuddering breath of the night air.
Too long since he'd done this. Not since he'd migrated out of Eastern Europe
with the others. It felt wonderful to be on the hunt again.
JOE . . .
Joe realized with a start that he hadn't seen Lacey since
this morning.
"Has anybody seen my niece?" he said to a group
of men standing guard on the front steps.
"Niece?" one of them said, a big black man with
gray stubble on his cheeks. "I didn't know you had one. What's she look
like, Father?"
"Dark hair, tattoo on her arm about here, and
she's—"
"Sure," said another fellow. He jerked a thumb
over his shoulder. "She was with us back there across the street in the
office building most of the day. Some kinda worker, that girl."
"That she is," Joe said, trying not to sound too
obviously proud. "But when did you last see her? "
"Late afternoon," said a big, red-faced man.
"Said she was coming back here to see you about something."
A jolt of alarm lanced though Joe. "I haven't seen
her. She never got to me!"
He tore back into the church, scanning expectant faces as
he hurried through the nave—expectant because he was supposed to start saying
evening Mass just about now. He ducked through the sanctuary and into the
sacristy where he found Carl, getting ready for his altar boy duties.
"Carl! Have you seen Lacey?"
He shook his head. "No, Fadda. Something wrong?"
"She's missing. Gone." Joe's gut crawled.
"Get your gun and a couple of the men. We've got to find her."
"But what about Mass?"
"Forget about that. Lacey comes first."
"Y'gotta say Mass, Fadda. Everyone's out there
waiting for you." He stepped to the door and looked out into the nave.
"Let's do this: I'll tell some of the non-Catholic guys to look for her
during Mass. They can look just as good as us. They'll find her. Chances are
she's probably conked out in the convent or rectory catching up on her
sleep."
Joe prayed that was true. It seemed logical. Lacey could
take care of herself, probably better than most of the men. She'd made it all
the way down here from New York on her own, hadn't she?
Still. . . not knowing where she was gnawed at him.
GREGOR . . .
Where are you? Gregor wanted to shout. I'm right here in
your kill zone. Come and get me!
He had been walking these empty streets for what seemed
like hours. It hadn't been nearly that long, but his gnawing impatience made it
feel that way. He'd seen no one, living or undead. He fought the discouragement
he sensed creeping up on him, preparing to pounce on his back. He would not
give up. He refused to return empty handed again.
He was wondering if perhaps he should set himself up as
bait in another area when he heard a woman's voice call from the shadows.
"Hey, mister. Got any food?"
He jumped, not having to fake his surprise. How had she
sneaked up on him like that? She was downwind, he realized, and had been hiding
behind a thick tree trunk. Still, he should have sensed her presence.
His senses were on full alert now. Were the prey taking
the bait? Was this woman bait herself, placed here to lure an unsuspecting
cowboy into a trap?
He saw her clearly—a young woman in provocative clothes.
Not that it provoked him. Only one thing could do that, and it wasn't made of
cloth. It was red and warm and flowed and spurted.
Gregor made a show of squinting into the darkness. No
sense in giving his night vision away and scaring off her backup—if indeed she
had backup. He sensed no other living human nearby.
"Come on out where ah can see you, honey," he
said, remembering to add the drawl.
The cow stepped out of the shadows into the moonlight.
"My, my, you sure are a purty one. What you doin out
here alone?"
"L-looking for some food. You got any you can
spare?"
"I might. What's in it for me?" Didn't want to
sound too anxious.
"What do you think?" the woman said.
Gregor nodded. "I guess that's fair. Where do we make
the trade?"
He felt his excitement fading. This was sounding more and
more like some tawdry little sex-for-food deal. Not at all what he was looking
for. Where were those vigilantes? Damn them!
"Anywhere you want," the cow said. "I just
have to check on my little girl first."
Little girl? That renewed Gregor's interest. If it were
true, well, he hadn't had really young blood in too long. And if it was a lie
to entice some hapless cowboy looking to earn some bonus points, that was fine
too. That was why he was here.
"I'll follow you home, then we'll go to my
place."
Her house was only a block and a half away. Gregor felt
his tension mount as she led him up the front steps to the door. He wouldn't be
able to cross the threshold uninvited. If he hesitated too long, she'd guess
the truth.
He waited until she'd opened the door. As soon as she
stepped inside he said, "This ain't some kinda trap, is it?"
She turned and faced him. "What do you mean?"
"Well, guys like me been dyin left and right lately.
I don't wanna step through that door and get jumped."
"Stop being silly and come in."
Gregor stifled a laugh as he stepped forward. Stupid cow.
She was already heading for the stairs when he crossed the
threshold.
"Let me just take a quick peek," she said as she
bounded up the steps, "and then we can get going."
Gregor watched her go, then closed his eyes, trying to
sense other living presences. He found none. His disappointment mounted. This
cow wasn't connected to the vigilantes. She was here alone.
Wait. Alone? What about the daughter she'd mentioned? Why
didn't he sense her?
Curious, Gregor moved toward the stairs.
OLIVIA . . .
Olivia stared at the woman captured near the church and
wanted to scream. If they weren't so short of serfs she would have bled out the
three who'd brought her here.
Look at her. Crumbled in the corner like a discarded
mannequin. Naked, battered, bleeding from the mouth, nose, vagina, and rectum.
And worst of all, unconscious. How could she get any information from this cow
if she couldn't speak? Had they beaten her into a coma? What if she never woke
up? Olivia would then have to wait until they picked up another. And that would
be much harder now because the church fold would be watching for it.
This is what you get when you have to depend on scum.
And what do you get when you depend on an egomaniac like
Franco? Just as much. Maybe less.
Wasn't anything going to go right down here in this wasted
little section of the coast?
Word had come from New York that Franco was refusing her
request for a contingent of ferals and more experienced serfs. Franco was going
to handle this matter himself, in his own way, whatever that meant.
What it meant was a slap in the face not just to Gregor,
but her as well. Damn him. Damn them all. If just once she could—
One of her get-guards returned then with the bucket of
water she'd ordered. Olivia pointed to the cow on the floor.
"Pour it on her. See if that wakes her."
The guard did as he was bid. The cow stirred and shivered
but didn't open her eyes.
"Damn! Get more!"
Just then one of the serfs, a tawdry blond woman, tried to
step through the Post Office door. Olivia's guards restrained her.
"That's her!" the woman screamed. A deep purple
bruise ringed her left eye. "That's the one who suckered me! Let me at
her! Just five minutes!"
"Get her out of here," Olivia said.
"No!" the woman shrilled as she was shoved back
into the night. "I got a score to settle with her. She owes me!"
"Out!" Olivia screamed.
With help like that, she thought, who needs enemies? How
we came this far I'll never know.
Another commotion at the door.
"If it's that serf cow again, slit her throat!"
"It's Gregor's get," one of her guards said.
"All his guards."
"What does he want now? He's supposed to be hunting
his beloved vigilantes."
Her guard looked puzzled. "He's not with them."
Olivia stiffened with shock. Gregor's get without Gregor?
What on—?
And then she smiled. Had Gregor gone off and done something
foolish? Something reckless? Oh, she hoped so. It would look all the worse for
him when he showed up empty handed again.
"By all means, send them in. But keep close watch on
them."
CAROLE . . .
As Sister Carole changed out of her slutty clothes she had
a feeling something was wrong. She couldn't put her finger on it, but she
sensed something strange about this one. He wore the earring, he'd reacted just
the way all the others had, but he'd been stand-offish, keeping his distance,
as if afraid to get too close. That bothered her. Could there be such a thing
as a shy collaborator? The ones she'd met so far had been anything but.
God willing, she thought, in a few moments it would be
over.
She'd followed her usual routine, dashing upstairs, being
sure to take the steps two at a time so it wouldn't look strange hopping over
the first.
Now she began rubbing off her makeup, all the while
listening for the clank of the bear trap when it was tripped.
Finally it came and she winced as she always did,
anticipating the shrill, awful cries of pain. But none came. She rushed to the
landing and looked down. There she saw the cowboy ripping the restraining chain
free from its nail, then reaching down and opening the jaws of the trap with
his bare hands.
With her heart pounding a sudden mad tattoo in her chest,
Sister Carole realized then that she'd made a terrible mistake. She'd expected
to be caught some day, but not like this. She wasn't prepared for one of them.
<Now you've done it, Carole! Now you've really DONE
IT!>
Shaking, panting with fear, Sister Carole dashed back to
the bedroom and followed the emergency route she'd prepared.
GREGOR . . .
Gregor inspected the dried blood on the teeth of the trap.
Obviously it had been used before.
So this was how they did it. Clever. And nasty.
He rubbed the already healing wound on his lower leg. The
trap had hurt, startled him more than anything else, but no real harm done. He
straightened, kicked the trap into the opening beneath the faux step, and
looked around.
Where were the rest of the petty revolutionaries? There
had to be more than this lone woman. Or perhaps not. The empty feel of the
house persisted.
One woman doing all this damage? Gregor could not believe
it. And neither would Olivia. There had to be more to this.
He headed upstairs, gliding this time, barely touching the
steps. Another trap would slow him. He spotted the rope ladder dangling over
the win-dowsill as soon as he entered the bedroom. He darted to the window and
leaped through the opening. He landed lightly on the overgrown lawn and sniffed
the air. She wasn't far—
He heard running footsteps, a sudden loud rustle, and saw
a leafy branch flashing toward him. Gregor felt something hit his chest, pierce
it, and knock him back. He grunted with the pain, staggered a few steps, then
looked down. Three metal tines protruded from his sternum.
The cow had tied back a sapling, fixed the end of a
pitchfork to it, and cut it free when he'd descended from the window. Crude but
deadly—if he'd been human. He yanked the tines free and tossed them aside.
Around the rear of the house he heard a door slam.
She'd gone back inside. Obviously she wanted him to
follow. But Gregor decided to enter his own way. He backed away a few steps,
then ran and hurled himself through the dining room window.
The shattered glass settled. Dark. Quiet. She was here
inside. He sensed her but couldn't pinpoint her location. Not yet. Only a
matter of time—a very short time—before he found her. He was making his move
toward the rear rooms of the house when a bell shattered the silence, startling
him.
He stared incredulously at the source of the noise. The
telephone? But how? The first things his nightbrothers had destroyed were the
communication networks. Without thinking, he reached out to it—a reflex from
days gone by.
The phone exploded as soon as he lifted the receiver.
The blast knocked him against the far wall, smashing him
into the beveled glass of the china cabinet. Again, just as with last night's
explosion, he was blinded by the flash. But this time he was hurt as well. His
hand . . . agony he couldn't remember ever feeling pain like this. Blind and
helpless ... if she had accomplices, he was at their mercy now.
But no one attacked him, and soon he could see again.
"My hand!" he groaned when he saw the ragged
stump of his right wrist. The pain was fading, but his hand was gone. It would
regenerate in time but—
He had to get out of here and find help before she did
something else to him. He didn't care if it made him look like a fool, this
woman was dangerous!
Gregor staggered to his feet and started for the door.
Once he was outside in the night air he'd feel better, he'd regain some of his
strength.
CAROLE . . .
In the basement Sister Carole huddled under the mattress
and stretched her arm upward. Her fingers found a string that ran the length of
the basement to a hole in one of the floorboards above, ran through that hole
and into the pantry in the main hall where it was tied to the handle of an
empty teacup that sat on the edge of the bottom shelf. She tugged on the string
and the teacup fell. Sister Carole heard it shatter and snuggled deeper under
her mattress.
GREGOR . . .
What?
Gregor spun at the noise. There. Behind that door. She was
hiding in that closet. She'd knocked something off a shelf in there. He'd heard
her. He had her now.
Gregor knew he was hurt—maimed—but even with one hand he
could easily handle a dozen cattle like her. He didn't want to wait, didn't
want to go back to Olivia without something to show for the night. And the cow
was so close now. Bight behind that door.
He reached out with his good hand and yanked it open.
Gregor saw everything with crystal clarity then, and understood
everything as it happened.
He saw the string attached to the inside of the door, saw
it tighten and pull the little wedge of wood from between the jaws of the
clothespin that was tacked to the third shelf. He saw the two wires—one wrapped
around the upper jaw and leading back to a dry cell battery, the other wrapped
around the lower and leading to a row of wax-coated cylinders standing on that
third shelf like a collection of lumpy, squat candles with firecracker-thick
wicks. As the wired jaws of the clothespin snapped closed, he saw a tiny spark
leap the narrowing gap.
Gregor's universe exploded.
LACEY . . .
Lacey had been conscious for a while but kept her eyes
closed, daring every so often to split her lids for a peek. It had taken all
her reserve to keep from screaming when that bloodsucker had splashed a bucket
of water on her.
At least they'd kept that Vichy broad, the one from under
the boardwalk, from getting to her. Lacey didn't think she could handle any
more pain.
She hurt. .. oh, how she hurt. Everywhere. In places and
in ways she'd never imagined she could hurt. She didn't remember the details,
but she knew those three Vichy must have worked her over good. Raped her every
possible way.
Lacey ground her teeth. Goddamn human animals ... male
human animals, using their dicks as weapons.
Then she remembered Enrico. They'd used a knife on him.
Maybe he was the lucky one. He'd gone quickly. She'd been brought here to be
someone's meal. After she was drained they'd rip off her head and toss her body
on a pile somewhere to rot. But that was better than becoming one of them.
But why were they trying to wake her? They didn't need her
conscious to drain her blood. Did they have another use for her in mind? Like
using her to find out what was going on inside the church?
A shiver ran through her. She was freezing here on this
puddled marble floor and couldn't keep her limbs from quaking. Had anybody
seen? She split her lids and took a peek.
Not much light. Only a few candles sputtering but it was
enough to make out faces. The female vampire with the big hair had been ranting
in French before, but now she stood silent with her six armed attendants.
Guards? Lacey had heard that some of the higher-up undead traveled around with
what looked like bodyguards, but this was the first time she'd seen it. Why did
the undead think they needed guards, especially when everyone else around was
undead?
Four new undead males wearing machetes and pistols
entered. They addressed the female as Olivia and spoke in English.
" 'Ave you seen Gregor, Olivia?" said a
dark-haired guard with a British accent. He looked dirty, all in black, his
shirtfront crusted with old blood.
Olivia replied in English. "Not since before
sunrise." A small smile played about her lips. "Don't tell me you've
misplaced him."
"Bloody bastard gave us the slip. We found makeup and
cologne in his quarters. 'E's gone out on 'is own to find those
vigilantes."
Vigilantes? Lacey thought. This was interesting. She hadn't
heard anything about vigilantes. But then, she'd only arrived in town
yesterday. Who was this Gregor and why was he hunting them?
"That seems rather reckless, don't you think?"
Olivia said.
The Brit snarled at her. "I'm sure 'e'd never be out
there if you 'adn't driven 'im to it. We were 'oping 'e'd come to see you first
and we could intercept 'im 'ere, but I see we're in the wrong place."
"You certainly are."
"Look, Olivia," the Brit said, his tone becoming
conciliatory. "If you've any idea where 'e might be, please tell us. We've
got to find 'im. 'E could be in grave danger."
Lacey was struck by the concern in the Brit's voice. The
undead supposedly cared about only one thing: blood. But the Brit seemed
genuinely worried about this Gregor. Lots more than Olivia.
"Well, if he is, it's his own doing."
The Brit snarled again. "If anything happens to
Gregor ..."
"You'll be the first to know." She laughed,
showing her sharp teeth.
"Bitch!" the Brit said and reached for the
handle of his machete.
Olivia's guards closed around her, reaching for their own.
And then a thunderous boom rattled the windows and shook the floor beneath
Lacey.
As the sound of the blast faded, the Brit and the three
other undead who'd arrived with him cried out and clutched their chests. One by
one they dropped to their knees.
Olivia's smile had vanished, replaced by a look of horror.
Her voice rose in pitch, somewhere between a shout and a wail, as she rattled
off a barrage of French too rapid for Lacey to follow. Lacey recognized the
name "Gregor" but that was it.
Her guards looked as terrified as she as they encircled
her, facing outward, machetes and pistols drawn. They were speaking French too,
and again Gregor was mentioned.
What were they saying? Lacey wished now she'd taken French
instead of Spanish.
The Brit's friends lay writhing, kicking, and gasping on
their backs and bellies, but he was still on his knees, glaring at Olivia.
"You!" His voice was faint, and sounded as if
someone were strangling him. "You did this! You're responsible!" He
began a faltering crawl toward her.
"Keep him away!" Olivia said.
The Brit pulled his machete from his belt and tried to use
it as a crutch to regain his feet. "I'll see you—"
One of Olivia's guards stepped forward then and, holding
his machete like a baseball bat, took a two-handed swing. The blade sliced
through the Brit's neck with an indescribable tearing sound, sending the head
flying. But no gout of blood sprayed the room as the body flopped forward onto
its chest and lay still next to the other three fallen undead, now equally
still.
And the head ... the head rolled toward Lacey's face. She
shut her eyes, bracing herself if it rolled against her. She couldn't allow
herself to move, couldn't give herself away, no matter what.
What was happening here? Undead dropping dead, fighting
and killing each other. What the hell was going on? It had something to do with
someone named Gregor, but what?
Lacey opened her eyes again and stifled a gasp as she
found herself almost nose to nose with the Brit. His eyelids blinked and his
lips were moving, as if he was trying to tell her something.
Bile rose in Lacey's throat and she squeezed her eyes shut
again.
GREGOR . . .
I'm awake! Gregor thought. I survived!
He didn't know how long it had been since the blast. A few
minutes? A few hours? It couldn't have been too long—it was still night. He
could see the moonlight through the huge hole that had been ripped in the wall.
He tried to move but could not. In fact, he couldn't feel
anything. Anything. But he could hear. And he heard someone picking through the
rubble toward him. He tried to turn his head but could not. Who was there? One
of his own kind—please let it be one of his own kind.
When he saw the flashlight beam he knew it was one of the
living. He began to despair. He was utterly helpless here. What had that
explosion done to him?
As the light came closer, he saw that it was the woman,
the she-devil. She appeared to be unscathed .. .
And she wore the headpiece of a nun.
She shone the beam in his face and he blinked.
"Dear sweet Jesus!" she said, her voice hushed
with awe. "You're not dead yet? Even in this condition?"
He tried to tell her how she would pay for this, how she
would suffer the tortures of the damned and beg for death, but his jaw wasn't
working right, and he had no voice.
"So what are we going to do with you, Mister
Vampire?" she said. "Your friends might show up and find a way to fix
you up. Not that I can see how that'd be possible, but I wouldn't put anything
past you vipers."
What was she saying? What did she mean? What had happened
to him?
"If I had a good supply of holy water I could pour it
over you, but I want to conserve what I've got."
She was quiet a moment, then turned and walked off. Had
she decided to leave him here? He hoped so. At least that way he had a chance.
But if she wanted to kill him, why hadn't she said
anything about driving a stake through his heart?
He tried to move but his body wouldn't respond. Somehow
the blast had paralyzed him. He noticed his vision growing dim, his sense of
hearing fading. What was happening? He felt as if he might be drifting toward
true death ...
No! That that couldn't be. He was only paralyzed.
Through his misting vision Gregor saw her coming back. Her
hands were bright yellow. How? Why?
"The only thing I can think of doing is to set you on
the east end of the porch and let the sun finish you."
No! Please! Not that.
The woman rested the flashlight on a broken timber and
reached for his face. He saw now that she wore yellow rubber gloves. He tried
to cringe away, but again—no response from his body. She grabbed him by his
hair and . . . lifted him. How could she be so strong? Vertigo spun him around
as she looked him in the face.
"You can still see, can't you? Maybe you'd better
take a look at yourself."
Vertigo again as she twisted his head around, and then he
saw the hallway, or what was left of it. Mass destruction . . . shattered
timbers, the stairs blown away, and . . .
Pieces of his body—his arms and legs torn and scattered,
his torso twisted and eviscerated, his intestines stretched and ripped,
internal organs reduced to large, unrecognizable smears.
As his vision faded to black in the final fall toward true
death, Gregor wished his lungs were still attached. So he could scream. Just
once.
LACEY . . .
A stink filled Lacey's nostrils as she noticed that
Olivia's rapid-fire French seemed to be fading away. She dared another look.
The Brit's face was slack now and the flesh was starting to decompose. She
lifted her head to look beyond him and saw Olivia and her crew backing into a
stairwell, heading down to what Lacey assumed was the basement.
As soon as the door closed behind them, Lacey raised her
head further and looked around. Except for the bodies of the four dead
vampires, she was alone. She'd been forgotten. But for how long?
She struggled to rise, groaning with the pain in her
joints and muscles, but especially in her pelvis. She slipped on the wet floor
and banged her elbow as she went down. She tried again, clinging to the wall,
using it to steady herself as the room spun about her. Clenching her teeth
against a wave of nausea, she rose to her feet and hugged the wall.
When the room steadied, she looked down at her bloody,
naked body and wanted to retch. What did they do to her?
She'd deal with that later. Right now she had to get out
of here and back to the church. But where was here} She knew from the signs on
the wall that she was in a Post Office. But how did she find the church once
she got out?
First things first, she told herself. Get out of this
undead nest, then worry about finding your way back.
Still holding the wall, she edged toward the doors. She
looked longingly at the clothes on the corpses of the dead vampires, but their
rot was already seeping through the fabric. She'd rather be naked.
She spotted a clock on the wall. It read 3:12. It couldn't
be that late. Then she noticed the second hand was frozen at the half-minute
mark. An electric clock, and the power had been off for a long, long time.
Lacey pushed through the doors and the cool night air hit
her, sending a cold tremor through her body. She kept moving, padding across
the moonlit concrete to the surrounding shadows. She needed some clothes, and
not just for warmth; couldn't turn up in front of the people in the church,
especially her Uncle Joe, looking like this. She had to find a house, go
through one of the closets—
"It's you!" cried a voice behind her. "How
did you get away?"
Lacey turned and stared at the figure advancing toward her
from the other side of the street. The bottle blonde from the boardwalk,
dressed in lowrider jeans and a cutaway denim jacket. Her boots thudded on the
pavement. Lacey saw a flash in her right hand, heard a clink, and realized
she'd just flipped open a knife. The stainless steel blade gleamed in the
moonlight.
Lacey said nothing. Her brain seemed sluggish. All she
could think was, Not now ... I can't handle this now.
"Guess it doesn't matter how," the Vichy woman
said with a throaty laugh as she reached the grass and kept coming. "I'm
just glad you did. Because we got a score to settle, you and me."
Lacey tried to remember some of the defense moves she'd
learned in her martial arts classes and couldn't come up with one. So she
started backing away.
"You can run but you can't hide," the blonde
sing-songed. "I don't care how much they want you alive, you ain't walkin
away this time."
She was closing in. Lacey held up her hands. "No,
wait..."
"No waiting. Looks like a few of my friends had a
party with you, now it's my turn. I'm gonna cut you, girl... cut you
good!"
With that the blonde lunged forward with a vicious,
face-high slash, and Lacey found her limbs responding on their own. She didn't
need to remember the moves. Hour upon hour of practice had programmed them into
her nervous system. Her right leg shot back and stiffened, her left knee bent,
her hands darted forward, grabbing the blonde's knife arm at the wrist and
elbow, pushing it aside, twisting it, using the woman's own weight and momentum
against her to bring her down.
Her Vichy earring flashed near Lacey's face and sudden visions
of similar earrings dangling over her while her three captors—
Rage detonated in Lacey. Gritting her teeth she gave an
extra twist to the falling woman's arm and was rewarded by a scream of pain as
bones ground together, ligaments and tendons stretched, snapped. The woman
screamed again, louder. She'd be drawing a crowd soon. Lacey's hand flashed
forward, landing a two-knuckle punch on her larynx. With a crunch of cartilage
the screaming cut off, replaced by strangled noises as the blonde began to kick
and writhe, clutching at her throat with her still-functioning left hand.
Lacey picked up the knife from the grass and stepped back,
looking around. Was anyone else coming after her? She and the blonde were alone
in the shadows. She watched her struggles, waiting for them to run their
course.
"So," Lacey said. "You were gonna cut me,
huh? Cut me good. I don't think so."
She checked the knife blade: tanto shaped with the front
half of the cutting edge beveled and the rear half saw-toothed. Wicked. If Ms.
Vichy had had her way, this blade would be jutting from Lacey's chest about
now.
The choking sounds faded, the kicking and writhing ebbed
to twisting and twitching. With a final spasm the hand clutching at her throat
fell away and she lay limp and still.
Lacey waited another minute, then dropped to her knees
beside the dead woman. Mastering her revulsion, she began unbuttoning her
cutaway top . . .
CAROLE . . .
Sister Carole trudged through the inky blackness along the
street, hugging the curb, hurrying through the moonlit sections between the
shadows of the trees, towing her red wagon behind her. She'd loaded it with her
Bible, her rosary, her holy water, the blasting caps, her few remaining bombs,
and other essentials.
<You're looking for ANOTHER place? And I suppose you'll
be starting up this same awful sinfulness again, won't you?>
"I suppose I will," Sister Carole said aloud to
the night.
"Hello?" said a woman's voice from the darkness
ahead. "Is someone there?"
Carole froze, her hand darting into the pants pocket of
her warm-up, finding the electric switch, flipping the cover, placing her thumb
on the button. Wires ran from the button through a hole in the pocket to the
battery and the cylindrical charge taped to her upper abdomen.
God forgive her, but she would not be taken alive.
She held her silence, barely breathing, waiting. She
sensed movement in the shadows ahead, and then a young woman stepped into a
moonlight-dappled section of the sidewalk. She held an automatic pistol in each
hand.
"I don't want trouble," the woman said. "I
just want to know how to get back to St. Anthony's Church."
Carole looked around, wary. Were others lurking in the
shadows?
"I think you already know the way," Carole said.
"No, really, I don't."
Carole eyed her spiky hair. "Don't try to fool me.
You work for them."
"I don't, I swear."
A plaintive note in the woman's voice struck Carole.
"You dress like one"—although this one's clothes
did not fit her well— "and you're armed."
"The clothes are stolen. So are the guns. I've
already been attacked twice today. It's not going to happen again."
Again, the ring of truth. Carole squinted through the
shadows. This woman did look battered.
"Look," the woman said. "I don't want to
hurt you and you don't seem to want to hurt me, so can you just point me toward
the church and we'll go our separate ways."
Carole decided to trust her instincts. "I'm headed
that way. You can come with me."
"Really? I don't remember seeing you there last
night."
"I wasn't." Carole noticed that the woman was
barefoot and limping. "You said you were attacked. Did they . .. hurt
you?"
The young woman nodded, then sobbed. "They hurt me
bad. Real bad."
And then she was leaning against Carole and crying softly
on her shoulder. Carole put her free arm around her and tried to soothe her,
but kept her thumb on the button in her pocket. You never knew ... never knew
...
After a few minutes the sobs stopped and the young woman
stepped back. She wiped her eyes with her bare arms.
"Sorry. It's just... it's been a long night."
She pushed\one of the pistols into her waistband and stuck out a hand.
"Lacey. With an 'e.'"
"Carole," she said, shaking the hand and
smiling, just a little. Something likable about her. "With an 'e.' "
"Were you a member of St. Anthony's parish?"
Lacey said as they started walking again.
"I was a nun in the convent."
"Get out! Then you must know my Uncle Joe. He's been
a priest there for years."
Carole stopped walking and stared. Could this
tough-looking tattooed young woman be related to Father Joe?
"You're Father Cahill's niece?" She couldn't
hide her disbelief.
"It's true, and I need to get back to him. He's got
to have noticed I'm missing by now and he'll be worried sick."
The genuine concern in Lacey's voice made Carole a
believer, but sudden fear stabbed her.
"Hurry," Carole said. She flipped the safety
cover closed on the button in her pocket and broke into a fast walk.
"We've got to get you back before he goes out searching for you. Once he's
away from the church he's in danger."
JOE . . .
They'd started the search with the church grounds—the
convent, the rectory, the graveyard—and then crossed the street to the office
building. Finding that empty, Joe and the five other men in the search party,
all armed to the teeth, had moved through the surrounding houses and buildings.
The discovery of a man named Enrico stabbed to death in a neighboring Victorian
had shaken them all, especially Joe. He'd opened every door to every room in
the old house with the expectation that he'd find Lacey in the same condition.
But no. No sign that she'd ever been in the house. Lacey
seemed to have vanished without a trace.
Finally, at Joe's insistence, they'd returned to the
office building because that was the last place Lacey had been seen.
Joe stood now at the head of the stairs in the dark
third-floor hallway. He turned off his flashlight—to heighten his hearing as
much as to save the batteries—and called her name.
"Lacey! Lacey, can you hear me?"
He stood statue still and listened, but all he heard were
the voices of the other members of the search party on the floors below.
He felt numb, heartsick. Lacey... how had he let this
happen? She'd made it all the way down here from Manhattan on her own, and now
she was gone, snatched from under his protective wing. He could see how it had
happened. She'd felt safe here with other living around, armed with crosses and
guns, ready for anything. She'd let her guard down, got careless . . .
"Lacey! Please!"
And then he heard it. A sound . . . scratching ... so soft
it was barely audible. He opened his eyes, then squeezed them shut again,
trying to locate the sound. It seemed to come from everywhere at first, echoing
off the walls of the hallway, but as he concentrated he felt sure it was coming
from somewhere ahead and to his left. He opened his eyes and flicked on his
flashlight.
There. An open doorway with a red plaque saying something
about AUTHORIZED PERSONNEL ONLY—ALARM WILL SOUND. No, it won't. It needed
electricity for that. And besides, the door was already open.
Joe played his beam along the concrete steps within. They
ran one way: up. To the roof. The scratching sound was louder here. Definitely
coming from the top of the empty stairwell. Someone was scratching on the other
side of the roof door.
"Lacey?" he called as he took the steps two at a
time. "Lacey, is that you?"
He hesitated at the door, hand on the knob, afraid to turn
it, afraid to see what was on the other side, afraid it might be Lacey,
horribly injured. And afraid it might not be Lacey. Might be one of them, lying
in wait for a victim.
He'd hung his big silver cross around his neck before
leaving tonight. He unslung it and held it ready, to wield as either club or
firebrand. But still he hesitated. This was foolish. He should call for the
others, go out there as a group.
He turned and was about to call them when he heard the
voice, a faint, agonized rasp.
"Help me . . . please. . . help''
"Lacey!"
Joe shoved the door open and stepped up onto the moonlit
roof. Something heavy struck him at the base of his neck, sending shockwaves of
pain down his arms and driving him to his knees. He lost his grip on the cross.
Then a thick quilted blanket was thrown over him. Before he could react he was
knocked flat, rolled, and trussed up like an Oriental rug. Panicked, he kicked
and twisted, but he was helpless. He shouted for the others but knew his cries
were too muffled by the fabric to be heard.
Joe felt himself lifted by his feet, dragged along the
roof, and then he was falling. They'd thrown him off the roof!
No. The cold, steely grip never released his ankles. And
now he was rising instead of falling, being carried through the air.
But to where?
- PART TWO -
TWILIGHT
MAN
- 6 -
JOE . . .
Joe had lost all track of time during the seemingly
endless flight. But he knew when it ended: the cold fingers released their grip
on his ankles and he fell. Before he could cry out his terror, he hit hard,
head first. Only the multi-layered padding of his blanket cocoon kept him from
cracking his skull.
"This is the priest," said a harsh voice.
"Search him and take him upstairs. Franco is waiting for him."
Joe was then rolled over—kicked over was more like it. As
he felt the ropes binding him loosen, he tightened his fists and prepared to
fight. But when the blanket was pulled away from his face he found himself
blinded by light.
Fluorescent light. Somebody had electricity.
As he blinked in the brightness he was kicked again, in
the ribs this time. He struggled to a sitting position and felt something cold
and hard as steel slam against the side of his head.
"Easy, god-boy," said a new voice to his left,
and someone on his right brayed a harsh laugh.
Joe groaned with the pain and clutched his stinging scalp.
He blinked again, and finally he could see.
He sat on a sidewalk in a pool of light outside the brass
and glass revolving doors of a massive granite building. The rest of the world
around him lay dark and quiet. A red canopy blocked out much of his view above.
He did notice the number 350 above the revolving doors. Surrounding him were
half a dozen men wearing earrings he knew too well. The nearest held a huge
revolver; most likely its long barrel was what had slammed against his head.
Vichy.
The one next to the gun-toter was playing with a knife
with a nasty reverse-curve blade, twirling it on a fingertip as he said,
"This supposed to be one of them vigilantes from down the shore, huh? The
guy that killed Gregor?" He kicked Joe's thigh. "Don't look so tough.
Hey, Barrett. What say we soften him up before passin him on to Franco?"
Vigilante? Joe thought. Zev had mentioned something about
a group that was killing off the local Vichy. Was that why he'd been brought
here— wherever it was?
"Not on my watch," said the one with the gun.
Barrett. The same voice that had called him god-boy. He was dressed in a tan
silk Armani suit with a white shirt open at the collar. It looked tailor-made
for him. "He won't want damaged goods. When the damage gets done, Franco
will want to do it."
Joe looked around. "Where am I?"
"In big trouble," said Barrett.
The one with the knife, bearded and denimed, brayed again.
"Yeah. Big trouble! Wouldn't wanna be you no-how."
"Drag him up to the office," said Barrett.
"We'll search him there."
A pair of the Vichy grabbed him under the arms and roughly
hauled him through a glass door set beside the revolving door. They entered a
vaulted lobby of polished gray-beige marble. At the opposite end, floor to
ceiling in chrome and marble, was a bas relief image of a building known the
world over.
The Empire State Building. I'm in New York.
They'd kidnapped him and flown him to Manhattan. For what
purpose?
And then he remembered . . . Franco is waiting. . .
The old Saturday Night Live running gag about General
Franco still being alive flashed through his brain, then fled in terror.
When the damage gets done, Franco will want to do it. . .
A two-way radio squawked. Joe saw Barrett unclip it from
his belt. He turned away and spoke into it. Joe looked around for an escape
route, but even if he could break away from the pair who held him, the lobby
area was acrawl with Vichy.
After Barrett finished his call, they led him past the
remnants of metal detectors that had been kicked down and smashed, past a
newsstand with outdated papers and magazines, a ruined souvenir shop, a
deserted Au Bon Pain, then to a bank of elevators with black and chrome doors.
Only two cars seemed to be working. The others stood open, dark, and empty.
After a short ride with the suit, the beard, and two others to the third floor,
Joe was propelled down a hallway to a large, desk-filled room lined with computers
and monitors. A few scurvy Vichy lounged around, but three other men, older,
more conventionally dressed, worked the equipment. They appeared to be under
guard.
"Search him," Barrett said. "And I don't
mean just pat him down. Search him. Confiscate any contraband here and dispose
of it."
He was hiding nothing, of course. He'd been armed with his
silver cross back in Lakewood but that had been stripped from him and left
behind.
Barrett's words filtered through to his muddled brain.
Confiscate? Contraband? Barrett didn't fit the typical Vichy mold. He dressed
like a Wall Street broker and spoke like an educated man. What was he doing
here?
BARRETT . . .
James Barrett watched Neal search the priest, making sure
he didn't miss anything. Neal was not the brightest bulb in the box.
But he did a good job this time, turning all the priest's
pockets inside out, removing his socks and shoes.
"He's clean," Neal said.
"You'd better be sure."
"I'm sure."
They hustled him back down to the first floor for a swift,
ear-popping ride toward the top of the building. The red numbers on the readout
counted the passing floors by leaps of ten. Barrett had always liked that. It
was the way he'd planned his career at Bear Stearns to go: to the top by leaps
and bounds. But being a hotshot investment banker these days was like being a
poster boy for obsolescence.
He heard Neal chuckle. He was grinning through his beard
at the priest and shaking his head. "I'm glad I ain't you. Holy shit, am I
glad I ain't you. I don't know what Franco's got planned but it ain't gonna be
pretty, I can tell you that."
Barrett watched the priest clench his fists. He was
scared. Doing a decent job of hiding it, but not perfect. He looked like he
wanted to ask who Franco was but said nothing. Probably afraid his voice would
crack or waver and betray his terror.
When the elevator stopped on the eightieth floor, Neal
shoved him out.
"Come on, god-boy," Barrett said. "Still
one more leg to go."
They guided him around a corner to the other bank. This
ride was short— only six floors. At the eighty-sixth they pushed him out into
the green marble atrium.
"Hold it right there!" said a voice.
The atrium held half a dozen undead. One of them stepped
toward them.
"Ah, shit," Neal muttered. "Fuckin
Artemis."
"Who's this?" said the vampire, tall and lean
with a ruined left eye that was little more than a lump of scar tissue.
Artemis was head honcho of Franco's security and no one—at
least no one living—knew what had happened to that eye. Whatever it was,
Barrett hoped it had hurt. Artemis was a grandstanding prick.
"It's the one Franco's been waiting for,"
Barrett told him.
Artemis's face contorted in fury. "The vigilante
priest?" he shouted. "And you bring him here like this?"
"He's been searched, and Franco—"
"I don't give a damn if he's been searched! You don't
bring a terrorist up here and leave him a single place to hide anything! Here's
how you bring a terrorist to Franco!"
And with that he began tearing at the priest's clothing,
ripping it off him. The priest tried to fend him off but Artemis was too
strong. Less than a minute later he stood naked in the atrium.
Barrett admired the priest's musculature. Especially his
low back. Lots of good meat there. Big filets.
Artemis tossed the shredded clothing at Barrett.
"Now he can see Franco! I'll take it from here. You
two get back to your posts."
"We want him when Franco's through with him,"
Neal said.
Artemis laughed. "Oh, I doubt that. Not in the
condition he'll be in."
"Shit," said Neal as the doors pincered closed.
"I hate that fuck."
Barrett said nothing. Who knew if the elevator camera was
on and this little scene was being taped. Say or do the wrong thing now and you
could face repercussions later.
Neal banged his fist against the side wall of the elevator
car. "And I hate takin his shit."
So did Barrett. But sometimes that was what you had to put
up with to get where you wanted to go. And Barrett knew where he wanted to go:
to the top. He'd been on the fast track for advancement at Bear Stearns and he
was looking for a way to fast-track himself with the undead. He needed a lever
to convince Franco to turn him now instead of later.
He glanced at Neal. Just like the rest of the cowboys.
Never a thought past his next meal and his next trip out to one of the cattle
farms where he could screw anything in sight. Maybe he occasionally thought of
someday, ten years from now, being turned and joining the ranks of the undead.
But ten years was too long for Barrett. He wanted an
express route to undeadland. Once he was one of them he knew he could rocket
through the ranks. They were all lazy sons of bitches. He'd show them how to
get things done. If he could get himself turned, he'd have Franco's job within
a year. He knew it.
"Treats us like fuckin dogs," Neal said.
No argument there. But that didn't mean you had to live in
a kennel and eat dog food.
Most of the cowboys had moved mattresses into the offices
and stayed right here in the Empire State Building. It was convenient, had
light and power, and was safer than living outside where you could be
bushwhacked by some angry living or one of the more feral undead who wouldn't
be deterred by your earring.
James Barrett deserved better. He had an elegant Murray
Hill brownstone all to himself. He'd hooked up a generator to power lights, a
refrigerator, and an electric stove. The stove was important. It allowed him to
indulge in his new passion: cooking.
Barrett had recognized long ago that there were two ways
of living your life: as predator or as prey. He'd decided early on that he'd be
a predator. And predators ate meat. One problem, though, was the lack of meat
since the undead had taken over. Or so he'd thought until he realized that
there was plenty of fresh meat to be had. Every night he and the cowboys were
called upon to dispose of a new round of bloodless corpses. It had occurred to
him what a shame it was to waste all that good red meat.
Long pork, as human flesh was known in certain parts of
the world, was really quite tasty. He'd learned to butcher the meatier corpses
and now had a good supply of steaks in his freezer.
But meaty corpses were harder and harder to come by these
days. That was why it was such a shame to let someone like that priest go to
waste.
But who knew? Maybe there'd be something salvageable left
after Franco got through with him.
Somehow, though, he doubted it.
JOE . . .
Joe's knees felt soft and he almost stumbled as the
scar-faced vampire pushed him up a short flight of steps. What were they
planning for him? He wanted to shout that he wasn't a vigilante and didn't know
who they were, but that would simply give them a good laugh.
He stepped into a glassed-in space that had once been a
souvenir-snack bar area—nothing but blackness beyond that glass—then was shoved
through a door onto the Observation Deck. Cool night air, propelled by a gusty
wind, raised gooseflesh on his bare skin, but the sight of dozens of pairs of
undead eyes watching him weakened his knees again.
He was a goner. He could see that now. As good as dead. Or
worse. Fear crowded his throat, but he swallowed it. He straightened his
shoulders. At least he could go out with dignity ... as much as he could muster
without a stitch of clothing.
The crowd of undead, all armed with pistols and machetes,
grinned and pointed to him. The scarred one grabbed one of his arms and hauled
him before another of their kind standing by the Observation Deck wall, staring
out into the night. He turned at their approach, and smiled when his cold gaze
came to rest on Joe.
"So . .. this is the man who has chosen to vex me."
He was almost as tall as Joe, with broad shoulders, a
blond leonine mane and mustache. A jutting nose and aggressive chin dominated
his face.
His excellent English did not completely hide an Italian
accent. Joe noted that he was the only undead on the deck who wasn't armed.
"A big one, this vigilante priest"—he glanced at
Joe's genitals—"but not exactly built like a stallion, is he."
This brought a laugh from his guards or retainers or
whatever they were.
Joe stared past him, focusing on the impenetrable darkness
over Franco's right shoulder, and said nothing.
The vampire clucked his tongue in mock concern.
"Chilly? Under different circumstances I might relish your discomfiture,
but not tonight." He turned to one of the undead holding Joe. "Find
him a blanket or something to wrap about him."
The one-eyed guard said, "But Franco—"
"Do it." His dead eyes lit briefly with an inner
fire.
The underling stood firm. "Just hours ago he killed
Gregor."
The other undead milling around nodded and murmured, as if
this were a telling fact.
That name again ... Gregor. The second time he'd heard it
tonight. Joe stood there wondering who Gregor was. The only thing he knew was
that he hadn't killed him—at least not knowingly. "Just hours ago"
he'd been searching for Lacey. Had the same thing happened to her? Whisked away
into the night. No. Lacey had disappeared during the daylight hours. Where was
she then? He prayed her circumstances were better than his.
"I don't care!" Franco said. "It will be
our blanket, you dolt! It won't conceal a cross, so you'll have nothing to
worry about! Move! I've already wasted too much time waiting for his
arrival."
A few moments later some sort of fabric was roughly thrown
over Joe's shoulders. Apparently they couldn't find a blanket; this was like a
window drape. He pulled it close around him, grateful for the shelter it
provided from the wind.
"Thank you," he said, deciding to play this as
cool as he could.
"Oh, don't think I did it for your sake. I did it for
mine. I want your complete attention." He motioned Joe to the wall.
"Come. Let me show you my domain."
Something had been nagging at Joe since he'd stepped out
on the deck ... something wrong . . . something missing . . . and now he
realized what it was.
He'd been up here once in his life, in his teens, when his
father had brought him. The reason for the trip had been a French exchange
student staying with them for the summer. They'd gone to the Statue of Liberty
that summer too. Strange. He'd grown up only a short distance from these
American landmarks but probably never would have visited them if not for the
presence of a foreigner.
He remembered that on his one and only visit here there'd
been high safety fencing all around the Observation Deck, with tall, pointed
steel tines curving inward like fishhooks. Now most of that was gone, torn
away. It made sense, though: The undead weren't worried about one of their own
becoming a suicide jumper, and the fence would only hinder the fliers.
Joe approached the wall, eyeing its upper edge. It ran
about mid-chest high. Eternity—and perhaps salvation—waited on the other side.
As he came up beside Franco, the vampire waved his arm at
the darkness. "There it is: mine, as far as I can see."
Joe's heart broke as he took in the vista, not for what he
could see—moonlight glinting off the crown of the Chrysler Building off to the
left—but for what he couldn't.
Darkness. The city was dark. Any light he saw was
reflected from the moon or this building. Everything else was dead and dark.
This wasn't the New York he'd known. This was its corpse.
"The first thing we did was kill the power,"
Franco said. "It has a numbing psychological effect, especially in a place
like Manhattan. People here were so used to light everywhere, all the time, and
then it was gone. It serves another purpose. It makes the few who are left
light fires to cook, to stay warm on the cooler nights. We home in on those
fires. They're like beacons to us. Manhattan is pretty well cleaned out now,
but the other boroughs still teem with survivors. We hunt them judiciously,
preserving them like a natural resource."
He jerked a thumb over his shoulder.
"But I keep this building alight. More psychological
warfare. The tallest building in this fabled city, its most recognizable
landmark, and we have it. I live here with some of my get, just one floor down.
Why should I hide in a basement when I can seal off windows in this magnificent
building that affords me such a unique view of my domain. I wish those Islamic
thugs had left the Trade Towers alone. They were even taller. How I'd love to
be standing atop one of them now."
So full of himself, Joe thought, wondering how he could
turn that to his advantage.
Franco shrugged resignedly. "But I suppose the Empire
State will do. Its generators power everything in the building." He
pointed to the cameras ringing the deck. "It has an excellent security
system to help our serfs protect us during the day. No one moves in this
building without being watched and taped. I like to review the tapes now and
again, and punish any slackers I catch. As an extra security measure, we've cut
the power to all but two of the elevators."
He held his hand over the edge of the wall. A red glow lit
his palm from below.
"But my favorite accessory is the filters they have
for the spotlights that bathe the upper floors. Red, white, and blue for July
Fourth, red and green for Christmas. We use only red now. It's our color. The
color of blood. More psychological warfare." He turned to Joe and smiled.
"You're pretty adept at psychological warfare yourself."
"What's that supposed to mean?" Joe said,
tearing himself away from the dark vista.
Franco stared at him. "I can't tell whether you're
being obtuse or coy. I'm talking about your campaign against the serfs in your
area."
"Serfs?"
"Oh, I forget. They like to call themselves cowboys,
you people like to call them collaborators—"
"Vichy," he said, thinking with a pang of Zev.
"Some of us call them Vichy."
"Vichy." Franco nodded. "I like that. It
shows a sense of history, though it gives them more cachet than they
deserve." He waved his hand as if shooing a fly. "But my point is,
you and your minions have caused more trouble than anyone I can remember."
Again the temptation to tell this beast that Joe had no
idea what he was talking about, but he suppressed it. He was good at
suppressing temptation.
"It was the terrorist aspects of your campaign that
worked. The serfs are such disloyal scum, and so very susceptible to fear. You
had the local contingent quaking in their boots. But you made a grave tactical
error when you revealed yourself and took back your church. That gave you a
face, and you weren't so terrifying anymore. Or so I thought. But when you sent
Gregor into true death I decided I wanted to meet you."
Joe had to ask—because he wanted to know and because he
sensed that the question might unsettle Franco—"Who the hell is
Gregor?"
Franco stared at him a moment. "I suppose it's
possible you didn't know his name. Same with Angelica, I imagine. But you and
yours have sent two important subordinates to true death in a matter of a few
days. No one has ever done that."
Angelica . . . could that be the flying undead that Zev
told him about?
"Those winged ones," Joe said, taking a stab in
the dark. "They always give me the creeps."
"Of course they do. They're supposed to.
Psychological warfare again. Strike terror into the hearts of the cattle."
He sighed. "I never cared for either of them. Angelica was too impetuous
and Gregor too grasping, but the fallout from their deaths has been, well,
vexing. But only temporarily."
He turned back to the night with another grandiose wave of
his arm.
"My kingdom. We're facing east, you know. Long Island
is out that way. We're well established there."
Joe stretched up on tiptoe, leaned over the top of the
parapet, and looked down instead of out. Red light from the banks of spotlights
bathed his face. Beyond them, far below and out of sight, empty pavements
beckoned.
Not yet, he thought. The guards were too close. They'd
stop him before he got over. He eased back and watched his host.
"We've already started the cattle ranches,"
Franco was saying. "We fenced off large sections of Levittown and
populated them with females fifteen to thirty years old. As a reward to the
serfs, we set them loose in there to impregnate the cows. Soon we'll have crops
of calves to raise." He swiveled his head and smiled. "More
psychological warfare."
"More like rape and brutality," Joe said,
reflexively raising a fist. How he wished—
His arm was grabbed and twisted backward. A glance showed
the scar-eyed one behind him. All around he heard pistols being cocked and
machetes drawing from belts.
"Will you stop!" Franco snapped at his guards.
"He is a lone, naked, unarmed man! What can he possibly do to me? Now get
back, all of you and give us some room!"
"But Franco—"
"Now, Artemis! I won't say it again!"
With obvious reluctance, one-eyed Artemis and the other
guards moved off. Not too far, but far enough to give Joe a chance to do what
he needed to do ... if he had the nerve. All he needed was a way to distract
Franco.
The vampire turned his gaze eastward again. "We made
so many mistakes in the Old World. We failed to control the undead population.
We just rolled through, letting our numbers spread geometrically. The Middle
East was the easiest. Hardly a cross to be found. Same with India and China. We
did what no president or shuttling diplomat ever could. We brought peace to
every place we've touched. Indian undead now sup with Pakistanis, Greeks with
Cypriots, North Koreans with South, and most amazing of all, Israeli and
Palestinian undead hunting together." He smiled. " 'Blessed be the
peacemakers.' Isn't that how it goes. I think I should be sainted. What's the
term the Church uses? Canonized. Yes, I should be canonized, don't you
think?"
Joe ignored the question. "You can't survive without
the living, and there'll never be peace between the living and the
undead."
"Oh, but there will. We'll control our population
here in the Americas and we'll control yours, and eventually Pax Nosferatu will
embrace the whole world. Here in the New World we will do things right, right
from the beginning. The Old World and the Third World are now full of starving
and dying undead." He glanced at Joe. "Yes, dying. We need very
little blood to survive, but we need it every night. Go two nights without it
and you are weak; go two more nights and your are prostrate, virtually
helpless. Unless someone comes on the fifth or sixth night and feeds you
blood—a very unlikely event—you will enter true death and never awaken."
"May it be ever so," Joe said, "unto the
last generation."
Franco frowned. "Don't push me, priest."
"Or what?" Joe said, finding courage in the
realization that he had nothing to lose. "You'll show me no mercy? I'm not
expecting any."
"You don't want to plead, offer me a deal?"
Joe shook his head. He knew there'd be no deals for him.
He wouldn't deal with these things.
"Then kindly stop interrupting my story. I'm getting
to the good part—my part. The task of taking the New World fell to me. I
decided to learn from recent history and not repeat it. As I'm sure you know,
we struck on December twenty-first, the longest night of the year. I started
with Washington, loosing the ferals on Camp David and the Pentagon and Langley
first, then the senate and congressional office buildings next."
"Ferals?" Joe said. "What are they?"
Franco smiled, broadly, cruelly. "In time, dear
priest. In a very short time you shall learn more than you wish to know about
ferals."
The prospect sent a shudder through Joe. He eyed the top
of the parapet again.
"I wanted to strike at the heart of the country's
defenses—drive a stake through it, as I like to say—but more than anything I
wanted the president. We found him. I turned him, personally, and a few days
later we had him on
TV, live, via satellite, putting on a show for his nation.
Did you happen to catch it?"
Joe shook his head. He'd been banished to the retreat
house by then. He'd seen the beginning of the broadcast but had left the room,
sickened. He hadn't seen, but he'd heard . . .
"Such a shame. You missed a psychological knockout punch.
The president of the United States on his knees before a menstruating White
House intern, lapping her blood. Clever, don't you think? Too bad Clinton
wasn't still in office—turn around being fair play and all—but apparently he's
holed up on the West Coast. Your current president did a good job, though.
Really got into the part, if you know what I mean. And much more effective
because he is—or rather, was—a bit more dignified than Clinton."
Joe glared at him. "You sicken me. All of you."
"But that's the whole point, priest. Physical,
spiritual, and civic malaise. It's a pattern I've perfected: Go for the
political and religious leaders first. See to it that they are turned early in
the infiltration. It does terrible things to the morale of the citizenry when
word gets around that the local mayor and congressman, along with the
ministers, priests, and rabbis, are out hunting them every night. They stop
trusting anyone, and when there's no trust, there's no organized
resistance." He looked at Joe. "Somehow we missed you when your area
was invaded. Lucky you."
"Funny," Joe said, hoping he sounded brave.
"I don't feel lucky."
"But you should. You've been very lucky, and you've
proven yourself quite adept at turning my game back on me. I try to hammer home
that resistance is futile, then you come along and show that it can work,
however briefly."
"More than briefly," Joe said. "You're
going to see a lot more of it, especially if you try moving west."
"Am I? Somehow, I don't think so. Not after I'm through
with you. And as for moving west, I'm in no hurry. I'm going to consolidate the
East Coast, get the cattle farms established"—he wagged his
finger—"all the while keeping the undead population interspersed among the
living to prevent any bombing attacks. Then I may skip the Midwest altogether
and take California next. I haven't decided. That's not to say I haven't been
active. I regularly send trucks into the hinterlands, dropping off a few ferals
here and there as they go, to wreak sporadic havoc. I don't want anyone out
there feeling safe. I want them looking over their shoulders, suspicious of
their neighbors, jumping at the slightest noise. As I said, I'm in no hurry,
and I have all the time in the world." He shook his head. "But when I
do make a move, you'll be part of it."
Joe went cold inside. "If you think ..." He
paused, choosing his words. Let Franco think he'd given into the inevitability
of becoming one of his kind. "If you think I'm going to help you, even
after you turn me into one of you, think again."
"I sense an arrogance in you, priest. And I will see
it brought down. You are mere cattle to me, yet you look at me as vermin. I
won't tolerate that."
"Who do you think you're kidding?" he said,
wondering if he could provoke Franco into lashing out and killing him.
"You and your kind are ticks on the ass of humanity, and you know
it."
But Franco appeared unruffled. "Perhaps we were, but
the anatomy has changed now: we're the ass and rebellious cattle like you are
the biters." He leaned closer, staring into Joe's eyes. His breath stank
of old blood. "I'll bet you think that even after we make you one of us
you'll be able to resist the blood hunger."
Joe couldn't help blinking, stiffening—he'd said as much
to Zev just the other day—and that let Franco know he'd struck a nerve.
"You do, don't you? You really think you could
resist!" He tilted his head back and laughed. "Your naivete is almost
charming. You have no idea what you face. You change when you turn, priest.
Everything turns inward. You awake from death and there's only one being in the
world that matters: you. All your memories will be intact but devoid of
feeling. The people you loved and hated will run together and redivide into two
critical categories: those who can supply you with blood and those who can't.
You'll have to sate that thirst. You'll have no choice. That hunger above all.
The world exists for you. All the other undead around are inconveniences you
must endure in order to secure a steady supply of blood. For the red thirst is
insatiable. As I told you, we need very little blood to survive but would spend
our waking hours immersed in it if we could. We're lazy, we're petty, and we don't
want anyone to have more blood than we do."
Please, God, Joe prayed, if You're listening, don't let me
end up like that. I beg You. He peeled his tongue away from the roof of his dry
mouth and managed to speak.
"Sounds like you've got a lock on the seven deadly
sins."
"Perhaps. I never thought of that. What are they?
Envy, anger, greed, lust, pride, avarice, and sloth, right. I think you might
be right. Except that sex becomes meaningless. How we used to laugh at those
Anne Rice novels. The undead as tortured Byronic aesthetes. Ha! We'd read them
aloud to each other and howl. Her fictional undead are so much more interesting
than the real thing. We're boring. We care nothing for art or music or fashion
or surroundings. We bore each other and we bore ourselves. The only thing we
care about, the only lust left to us, is blood."
"What about power?"
"You're thinking of me when you say that, yes? I can
assure you that power is lusted after only insofar as it can assure one of more
blood."
Joe glanced back at Franco's guards. "These fellows
seem pretty devoted to you."
"Not out of selflessness or personal regard for me, I
assure you. It's self-preservation. You see, there's a secret, a momentous
secret we keep only to ourselves."
"And what's that?"
"You'll know tomorrow night. You'll be one of us
then. So treasure these moments, priest. This is your last night with your own
blood in your veins."
Now, Joe thought, realizing he might not get another
chance. It has to be now.
"Huh?" he said and stared past Franco's shoulder
at the empty darkness. "Who was that?"
"What do you mean?"
Joe raised himself on tiptoe again and leaned over the
parapet, pointing into the darkness. "There! I just saw him again. One of
your undead flyers. A pal of yours?"
Franco whirled to follow Joe's point. "A flyer? Up
here? I should think not."
The instant Franco's back was turned, Joe dropped the
drape, levered himself up onto the parapet, and rolled over it. He heard shouts
from behind as his bare feet landed on the narrow outside ledge. Knowing that
if he hesitated even for an instant he'd either lose his nerve or be caught, he
let out a cry of terror and triumph and launched himself into the air. He
spread his arms in a swan dive, hoping it would carry him beyond the setbacks.
He wanted to fall all the way to the street, to splatter himself on the pavement,
leaving nothing but a mocking red stain for Franco to find.
The air that had felt like cold silk against his naked
body when he began his fall was now a knife-edged wind tearing at his skin and
roaring in his ears. He straightened his arms ahead of him, diving headfirst
into eternity.
"Forgive me, Lord," he said aloud. "I know
it means damnation to throw away the gift of life, but what I was facing—"
He broke off with a cry of shock as cold fingers wrapped
around his ankle and Franco's voice shouted, "Your prayers are premature,
priest!"
Joe looked over his shoulder as his descent slowed and
angled to the left. A grinning Franco gripped him with one hand. Large
membranous wings arched from his back, spreading like a cape behind him.
Joe kicked at him with his free foot but this only allowed
Franco to grab that ankle as well. Joe hung helpless in his grip as they glided
through the air. Franco made a full circuit of the building, landing before the
same entrance where Joe had been dropped earlier.
Barrett was outside, watching when Joe landed on the
pavement.
"Well, well, well. Look who's back."
Joe wanted to cry.
Franco's wings slithered and folded and disappeared into
his back as he grabbed Joe by the back of his neck and hauled him to his feet.
"Clear the way," he said. "I'm taking him
to Devlin myself."
Sick with fear and disappointment and frustration, Joe
allowed himself to be marched through the doors and back to the elevator banks.
Franco shoved him into the car and stepped in after him.
"Just the two of us," he said as a couple of
Vichy tried to crowd in behind him.
Joe didn't see any of Franco's retainers. Apparently they
hadn't made it down from the Observation Deck yet. Joe stared at Franco's back,
noting the ripped fabric where the wings had torn through, but no sign of the
wings themselves. Where did they go?
Franco stabbed a button, the doors closed and the car
began to move. Down.
He was smiling when he turned to Joe. "You almost got
away with that. I didn't think you had it in you." He shook his head.
"If you'd succeeded we never would have learned the details of your little
vigilante operation."
"What if I don't know any details?"
Franco's smile broadened. "Come now, you don't expect
me to buy that."
"But—"
"Don't waste your breath. You'll tell us everything
you know."
Joe swallowed. "Torture?"
Franco laughed. "How quaint! Why waste time torturing
you when you'll volunteer the information after you've been turned."
The sick, lost feeling gave way to anger and Joe lunged at
him. But Franco shoved him back with one hand and grabbed his throat with the
other. Joe struggled for air as he was lifted off his feet and tossed against
the rear wall of the elevator car.
"Don't make me laugh," Franco said.
"Do your damnedest." Joe slumped in the corner,
gasping and rubbing his throat. "I'll never be like you."
"Quite right, priest. You won't be anything like
me."
The car stopped and the doors opened. Franco pointed to
the right. "That way."
Joe didn't move. Why cooperate in his own death march—or
in this case, undeath march?
Franco said, "You can walk or I can drag you by one
of your feet."
Joe walked, looking for a way out, an escape route, but
the hallway was lined with doors that seemed to lead to offices or utility
rooms. Franco stopped as they came to a mirror set in the wall.
"Take a look."
Joe glanced at the reflection of his bruised, naked body,
his sunken eyes. Not a pretty sight.
"Enjoy it," Franco said. "This is the last
time you'll ever see yourself in a mirror."
Joe noticed with a start that the reflection showed him
standing alone in the hallway.
"So it's true," he murmured. "The undead
cast no reflection."
"Odd, isn't it. I used to be interested in physics.
You look at me and see me because light reflects off me onto your retinas. But
that same reflected light is not caught by a mirror. How is that possible? They
used to say it was because we have no souls but neither does the rug you're
standing on, and that reflects perfectly. I tried to sit down and figure it out
once but found I didn't care enough to try. As I told you, once you're turned
you care about only one thing."
He grabbed Joe's shoulder and pushed him down the hall.
"Enough philosophizing. "
As they moved on, Franco said, "I want to explain something
to you, and I want you to listen. I want you to understand this. By now you've
probably noticed that there are different kinds of undead, different strains or
breeds."
Joe had, but he said nothing.
"There's a hierarchy among us. No one can explain
it—it's as inexplicable as our lack of reflection or where my wings come from
when I want to fly— but it's there. It's as if the strain gets tainted or
attenuated the further it moves from its source. My immediate get—the ones I
turn—retain almost all of their intelligence; but their get retain a little
less, and the get of those retain even less. And so on down the line through
the generations of get until. . . until we are begetting idiots. But
intelligence isn't all that is lost along the way. Human characteristics leach
away as well. The distant generations of get become more and more bestial until
they're like two-legged rabid dogs. We call them ferals."
Ferals ... Franco had mentioned them in connection with
the assault on Washington.
"Why are you telling me this?" Joe said.
"Why should I care?"
"You should care very much. After all, we're
discussing your future." He stopped before a door. "We're here."
Joe saw an AUTHORIZED PERSONNEL ONLY sign set below a
small window.
"Take a look. Tell me what you see."
Joe stepped up to the glass and peered through. He saw a
dimly lit space filled with pipes and large oval tanks.
"Looks like a boiler room."
"Keep looking. See anything else. Something moving,
perhaps?"
The note of glee in Franco's tone made Joe's skin crawl.
He searched the shadow but didn't see—
Wait. To the right. Something there, moving from the
deeper shadows into the wan light of an overhead bulb. It looked like a man yet
it moved like an animal, on its toes, hunched forward, fingers bent like claws.
As it came under the bulb Joe saw that it was a man, or had been. Naked,
filthy, face twisted into a perpetual snarl, eyes mad and . . . feral.
"Dear God!"
"God has nothing to do with Devlin there—Jason
Devlin, a young, handsome software developer on his way up until a few months
ago when he was run down in the basement of the Flatiron Building and killed by
a feral. The feral neglected to behead him, and so Mr. Devlin awoke the
following sunset as one of us—as an undead. For a few days he looked like his
old self, but then he began to devolve. Remember what I told you about the
bloodline weakening, attenuating. He was turned by a feral, and so he became a
feral, only more so. He's one of my line, my most distant get, so I suppose I
must claim him as related to me."
"How do you know?"
"Oh, I know. We always recognize our get. I keep him
around for entertainment. And as an extra stick to keep the serfs in line. I
threaten to feed them to Devlin if they slack off on their duties. That's about
all Devlin is good for now. He didn't retain enough intelligence to distinguish
between friend and foe, which means he'd be attacking serfs as well as
legitimate prey, so I can't even use him as a guard dog."
Franco tapped on the window and the creature burst into
motion, leaping at the door with blinding speed, screaming and clawing at the
glass. Joe almost tripped backpedaling away.
"Look at me, priest," Franco said. "Look at
me and listen. Remember when you said you'd never be like me? Didn't you wonder
why I agreed? It's because when you look at Devlin you are seeing your future.
I'm going to let Devlin turn you."
Joe couldn't speak, could only shake his head and back
away, thinking, no ... no ... this can't be true ... this can't happen ... to
be like that thing, that creature, that monster .. . forever .. . no .. .
"Ah!" Franco said with a grin. "That's what
I've been waiting for. That look of doomed horror, the realization that your
darkest nightmare is about to come true. Where is your arrogance now,
priest?"
"No," Joe whispered as he found his voice.
"God, no, please!"
"That's right. Pray to your god. Beg him like so many
before you. But He's not going to help you. In less than two weeks you'll be
just like Devlin, only a little less intelligent, a little more bestial. Won't
that be an inspiration to your parishioners? But before you're too far gone,
you'll have a talk with the charming undead woman I've placed in charge of your
area. You'll fill Olivia in on all the details of your little vigilante
operation, and then you'll be sent back to prey upon your parishioners." I
won t!
"Oh, but you will. And you'll take the most trusting,
the most devoted first, because they'll be the easiest. Isn't this a coup?
Isn't this so much better than killing you? If you simply died, you'd be a
martyr, a rallying point. But this way, you're still around, and you've turned
against them. You are feeding on them! Imagine how they'll feel. If you're
lucky you won't survive long. I'm suspecting they'll gather together and stake
you—for your own good. And theirs, of course. And then where will that leave
them besides sick at heart and demoralized? Where will they be after killing
their beloved Father Joe? Why, they'll go back to where they were before you
came. Hiding, waiting for the inevitable."
"No! What's been started is bigger than one man! They
know now they can fight you, and they'll keep on fighting you!"
Franco put his hand on the door handle. "Well, we'll
just have to see about that, won't we."
He pushed the lever down and shoved the door inward.
"Bon appetit, Devlin."
Joe turned and ran, sprinting down the hall, looking for
an unlocked door. He heard a howl behind him as he tried the first one he came
to—locked. Without looking back he leaped across the hall to the next. The knob
turned, the door swung inward—a chance!—and then he was struck from behind with
unimaginable force. It drove him through the doorway and into the room where he
went down under a growling fury made flesh. He tried to fight back but the
savagery of the claws and fangs tearing at his flesh, ripping at his throat
overcame him. He felt his skin tear, felt hot fluid gush over his chin and
chest, heard an awful guzzling, lapping noise as something fed off him. He
tried to rise, to throw it off but he had no strength. He felt his mind growing
cold, the world growing distant, life becoming a dream, a receding memory. Joe
saw one last flash of light, intolerably bright and then all was darkness and
nothingness . . .
- 7 -
CAROLE . . .
Unable to sleep, Carole sat at the window, watching the
night, waiting for the dawn that was still hours away. Returning to the
convent, to this room, her room, the room where she'd had to kill Bernadette .
.. sleep was unthinkable. Even if it weren't, her bed was occupied.
Lacey, poor thing, had collapsed when she'd heard that
Father Joe was missing. A couple of the male parishioners had helped carry her
here—Carole had emptied her wagon and carried her duffel and her personal items
herself, afraid to let anyone else near them.
They'd placed her on Carole's bed. What an ordeal Lacey
had suffered tonight. Carole had gleaned a few details from her jumbled jabber
on the way to the church and had shut her ears to the rest. And then to learn
that her uncle had disappeared while searching for her. It was more than anyone
should have to bear.
When was it going to end?
She waited, expecting to hear Bernadette's voice shout an
answer, but the voice was silent. Carole hadn't heard from it since she'd
reentered the convent.
She looked at Lacey, curled into a fetal position under
the blanket. Father Joe's niece. She hadn't quite believed her, but the way
she'd been greeted by the parishioners had left little doubt. Some of them had
even recognized Carole. She'd been uncomfortable with their joy at knowing she
was still alive, especially uncomfortable with their earnest questions about
how she had managed to survive and how she'd been spending her time. She
couldn't tell them, couldn't tell anyone.
A little while ago Carole had left Lacey and made a quick
trip back to the church to see if Father Joe had been found. He hadn't. But one
of the parties searching for him had returned with his large silver cross. He'd
had it with him when he'd gone out earlier this evening. They'd found it on the
roof of a nearby office building.
Carole had asked if she might take the cross back to Lacey
and let her keep it until her uncle returned. Because Father Joe would return.
He was too good, too strong, too faithful a man of God to fall victim to the
undead. He— only a small part of her believed that. She'd seen too much . . .
too much. . . . Yet she forced herself to hope. She placed the cross on the
windowsill, as a guardian, as a beacon, calling him home.
She closed her eyes and listened. Silence. The convent was
virtually empty. The rooms were available to the parishioners but most of them
felt safer in the church—in its basement, in the choir loft, anywhere so long
as they were within those walls. Carole could understand that from their
perspective, but for her the convent was home. Though she felt orphaned now, it
would always be home.
She turned back to the window and gripped the upright of
his cross, thinking, Come back, Father Joe. We need you. I need you. We—
What was that? By the rectory. .. something taking to the
air from the roof. . . something large . . . man-size . . .
Terror gripped Carole's heart in an icy, mailed fist. A
vampire, one of the winged kind, flying away from the rectory ...
Somehow she knew in that instant that they'd done
something terrible to Father Joe.
"Oh, no!" she whispered. "No! Not
him!"
She grabbed the silver cross, pulled a flashlight from her
duffel, and ran for the hall. She hurried down the stairs and out into the
night. Holding the cross before her as a shield, she ran across the little
graveyard, trampling the fresh-turned earth of graves that hadn't been there
before, and arrived at the rectory.
A small building, holding only three bedrooms and two
offices, it stood dark and empty. This was priest territory and would be the
last place the parishioners would think to occupy.
Carole turned the knob and the door swung open. She
flicked on her flash and directed the beam up and down and around before
stepping inside.
"Father Joe?" she called, knowing that if her
worst fears were true he wouldn't be able to answer. "Father Joe, are you
here?"
No response. No sound except for the crickets cheeping in
the lawn behind her. She moved through the rectory, checking the two downstairs
offices first, then the upstairs bedrooms. Empty, just as she'd expected.
Only one place left: the basement.
Knowing what she was almost certain to find, Carole feared
to go there. But she had to. Too much depended on this.
She opened the door. Light in one hand, cross in the
other, she started down. No blood on the steps. That was good. Maybe it had just
been a flyer looking over the church complex, doing reconnaissance for the
undead or hunting for stragglers. Carole prayed that was so, but expected that
prayer to go unanswered like all her others.
She reached the floor and flashed her light around. She
allowed her hopes to rise when she saw nothing on her first pass. But then as
she moved to the rear of the space, where old suitcases and cracked mirrors and
warped bureaus were sent to die, she spotted something protruding from beneath
an old mattress. A step closer and she realized what it was: a bare foot, its
toes pointing ceilingward. Too big for a woman's... a man's foot.
"Please, God," she said again, whispering this
time. "Please, oh, please. Let it not be him."
She pressed the cross against the foot. No flash of light,
no sizzle of flesh. Whoever it was hadn't turned yet. She leaned the cross
against the wall, gripped the edge of the mattress. . . and hesitated. Her
mouth felt full of sand, her heart pounded in her chest like a trapped animal.
She didn't want to do this. Why her? Why did it always seem to fall to her?
Taking a breath and clenching her teeth, Carole tilted the
mattress back and aimed her light at the shape beneath it. She found herself
staring into the glazed dead eyes of Father Joseph Cahill.
Images leaped at her like a frantic slide show— —his
slack, blood-spattered face—
—the wild ruin of his throat—
—his blood-matted chest—
With a cry torn from some deep lost corner of her soul,
Carole dropped to her knees beside him. Her arms took on a life of their own
and, for some reason her numbed brain couldn't fathom, began pounding her fists
on his chest. She heard a voice screaming incoherently. Her own.
After a while, she didn't know how long, she stilled her
hands and slumped forward, letting her forehead rest on his bare shoulder,
moaning, "God, dear God, why must this be?"
And for a fleeting moment, even as she spoke, she wondered
how she could still believe in God, or stay true to a god who could allow this
to happen to the finest man she'd ever known. This was it, this was the end of
everything. Where could she go from here? She'd only hung on this long in the
hope that he'd return. He had, but only for a few days before this—this!
She straightened and looked at Father Joe again, averting
her eyes from his genitals. To kill him was bad enough, but to leave him like
this: naked, torn, bloodied, with not a shred of dignity . . .
Well, what did she expect from vermin?
And yet, look at his face—ignore the severed arterial
stumps protruding from his throat and focus on the face. It seemed at peace,
and still held a quiet dignity no one could steal.
Carole lost more time sobbing. Then, from somewhere, she
found the strength to rise. She wanted to stay by his side, never leave him,
never let anyone else near him, but she knew that couldn't be. She couldn't
stay here and neither could he. She knew what had to be done. She had work to
do. The Lord's work.
She wandered the basement until she found a dusty old
sheet draped over a chair. She pulled it off and, with infinite care, wrapped
it around Father Joe . .. her Father Joe. She tried to lift him but he was too
heavy. She needed help ...
OLIVIA . . .
"Someone is here. From Franco."
Olivia lifted her mouth from the bloody throat of the
spindly old man strapped to the table in the feeding room.
"Who is it?"
Jules, the unofficial leader of her get-guards, shrugged.
"I've never seen him before. All I know is that he says his name is
Artemis and his eye—"
"I know about his eye."
Artemis . . . one of Franco's closest get. This must be
important if he'd sent Artemis. It had to be about Gregor. Damn that fool.
She looked down at the quivering old man, still alive but
in shock and not too much longer for this world. His blood was as thin as his
scrawny body. She remembered India. She had been with the first wave through
the Middle East, through Riyadh and Baghdad and Cairo and Jerusalem. Lots of
blood there, but then they'd moved on to India, lovely, overcrowded India . . .
she had quite literally bathed in blood in Bombay.
But here, good cattle were hard to come by of late. She
wasn't sure whether that was a result of a thinning of the herd or a thinning
of the number of serfs at her disposal. Franco was either going to have to send
her more serfs or widen her territory.
Olivia would have much preferred another territory
altogether, a peaceful one with no foment. But, thanks to Gregor's demise,
she'd inherited this one and was stuck with it, at least until it was tamed.
She pointed to the old man as she rose. "You can
finish him after you bring Artemis to the sleeping room. I wish to meet with
him alone."
Jules frowned. "Do you think that's wise? Everything
is so unsettled."
"We have nothing to fear from Artemis."
Jules turned and headed back upstairs.
Olivia paced the feeding room. She was going stir crazy
down here. She hadn't left the Post Office once throughout this long, long
night. She'd been about to go out earlier but Gregor's death changed that.
She'd been sequestered in the basement ever since. Only half a night, but she
felt humiliated. She was supposed to be the predator, the fox, the wolf, but
here she was, cowering like a frightened hare in its burrow.
Yes, she was here at the insistence of her get, but she
hadn't put up much of a fight. Gregor was foolish but he'd been tough. If the
vigilantes had managed to kill him, they could kill her, and she might well be
their next target.
She'd sent serfs and one of her get out to find the source
of the explosion, to see if that was what had done in Gregor. They'd returned
with a tale of a blasted house with Gregor's head spiked on a piece of
splintered wood in the front yard and his body in pieces within.
These vigilantes had taken to making bombs. That was the
real reason she was down here in the basement. The Post Office had thick
granite walls. Even if they somehow managed to toss a bomb through the front
doors—closed, locked, and guarded now—it would have no effect down here.
Jules returned and closed the door behind him. "He's
next door, waiting."
Olivia nodded, took a breath, then made her entrance. She
found Artemis, his back to her, standing among the beds and cots that her get
had moved into what had been a storage space. This was where she spent the
daylight hours.
"Bonsoir, Artemis."
Artemis turned. He grinned and stared at her with his one
good eye.
"English, Olivia. My French is about as good as your
Greek."
Olivia tried not to stare at his ruined eye. With his
curly black hair and olive skin, he'd probably been handsome once. Too handsome,
perhaps. But that eye—she had bathed in blood and had cut off heads, she'd
ripped still-beating hearts from chests, but she found that dead eye repulsive.
Olivia had lost her left little finger once—an accident with a sliding glass
door—but it had grown back. She, like other undead, could regenerate most lost
body parts, except of course a head or a heart. But certain types of injury did
not heal.
Artemis had been a real up and comer in Franco's get until
he allowed a child he'd been about to sup on to jab a crucifix into his eye. He
might have lived it down if the eye had regenerated, but wounds from holy
objects never healed. His puckered scar and sunken socket were eternal
reminders of his blunder, and he'd sunk to the rank of one of Franco's get-guards
and errand boys.
"Very well, Artemis," she said, switching to
English. "But I just want you to know that I had no control over Gregor.
Whatever he did, he did on his own. I am in no way responsible for what
happened to him. You can tell Franco that."
Artemis laughed. "Franco did not send me here about
Gregor. He wanted to let you know that he has personally broken the back of the
insurrection."
"How, pray, did he do that?"
"By capturing the priest himself, the one who took
over your little church here."
"Not my church. It was Gregor's responsibility."
"But it happened while you were here on your
inspection tour. Don't worry. That is of no import to Franco."
Olivia seated herself on the bed where she spent her hours
of daysleep.
"Broken their backs, has he? What did Franco think of
Gregor's idea that the insurgents in the church and the vigilantes were two
separate groups?"
"He gave it the amount of consideration it deserved,
which is none at all. The priest didn't even bother to deny that he was part of
the vigilantes."
Olivia took some small satisfaction in being right, but
she wondered . . .
"How is merely capturing the priest going to break
the back of this situation?"
Artemis smiled. "Franco has turned the priest—not by
himself, but by one of his pet ferals. He was delivered back to his own rectory
less than an hour ago. He's been hidden in the basement. Come sundown he'll be
one of us and will start to prey on his own followers. And as days go by he'll
become increasingly depraved looking, increasingly vicious and feral. Isn't it
simply delicious?"
"Perhaps. But it's complicated. I prefer simpler,
direct solutions. Why doesn't he just burn them out and capture them?"
"You know Franco. He'd deem a frontal assault unworthy
of his intellect. He saw too many Dr. Mabuse films while he was living in
Germany, I think. Sees himself as the Grand Manipulator, the Demonic Maestro,
the Great Orchestrator of life and death and undeath. He must work his coups
with style, with elan."
"Elan is all fine and good, but I'd much prefer to
see this over and done with."
"But you're not in charge, are you?"
Olivia didn't dignify that remark with an answer. "So
what are we to do then? Sit around and hope this undead priest follows Franco's
script?"
"We'll be providing direction. We'll watch after
sundown and give him a little help if he needs it. Sometime during the next
night or two—before he starts losing his mind—we'll question him about the
vigilantes. Just in case there are cells outside the church. After that, he's
on his own."
"I'm not so sure I like the idea of a feral running
loose."
"Good point. He may become uncontrollable. If his
followers don't get him first, we may have to put him down ourselves."
Olivia had to smile. "Not much of a future for this
priest. What's his name, by the way?"
Artemis shrugged. "You know, I never thought to
ask."
"Well, whoever he is, he deserves everything that's
coming to him."
LACEY . . .
Startled out of sleep by a hand shaking her shoulder and a
strange voice whispering in her ear, Lacey came up swinging.
"Easy, Lacey," said a woman's voice. "Easy.
You're safe. No one's going to hurt you."
Lacey blinked. A small room, a single candle, and some
stranger bending over her. No . . . not a stranger . . . she recognized her
now. The one who'd led her back to the church, who'd said she was a nun. Lacey
groaned. Her head throbbed, she hurt all over, especially between her legs.
"Where—?"
"You're in the convent. Listen to me. Something
terrible has happened and—" Her voice broke. She blinked, swallowed, then
said. "I need your help."
Lacey glanced at the window. Still dark out there.
"Can't it wait till morning?"
The nun—what was her name? Carrie? No, Carole with an
e—shook her head. "Morning will be too late. We have to act now before
anyone finds out."
"About what?"
"Your uncle."
Lacey listened in a daze, struggling to understand
Carole's story, but the words seemed to congeal in the air, clumping together
into indecipherable masses. Something about her Uncle Joe ... something about
him being—
"Dead? No, no! No! You can't be serious! He can't be!
He can't!"
"He is," Carol said. A tear ran down her cheek.
"Believe me, Lacey, he is."
"No!" She wanted to smash this crazy woman's
face for lying to her. Her Uncle Joe couldn't be dead!
"But he won't stay dead. By tomorrow night he'll be
one of them."
"Not Unk! He'd never!"
"He'll have no choice."
Lacey tried to stand but crumbled back onto the bed. Her
legs didn't want to support her. "But if they can turn him ... make him
one of them, then what's the use?"
"That's exactly how they want you to feel. And that's
exactly why we must move him away from here and save him from that hell."
"We?" Lacey's stomach twisted and bile rose in
her throat. "You mean ... ?"
Carole was nodding. "There's no other way."
"No! I can't!"
"I can't move him alone, Lacey. The parishioners must
never know, must never find him. They must think he died fighting for them. If
they learn he's become the enemy, that he's preying on them ..."
"But put a stake through his heart? I can't!"
"You can't not, Lacey. Not if you have the slightest
bit of regard for who he was and what he stood for and how he'd want to be
remembered."
In that instant Lacey knew Carole was right. Her Uncle Joe
had lived his life by a certain set of rules, not simply avoiding evil but
actively trying to do good. She couldn't let these undead vermin make a lie and
a mockery of his entire life. Stopping that would not be something she did to
him, it would be for him.
Somehow, somewhere, she found the strength to rise from
the bed. Let's go.
"Can you get a car?"
Lacey nodded. "We brought in a bunch of them to block
the streets. There's extras. I'm sure I can get one."
"Good. Keep the lights out and drive it around to the
side door of the rectory, then come inside. I'll be waiting in the
basement."
The next ten or fifteen minutes would forever be a blur in
Lacey's memory. Finding the keys to an old Lincoln Town Car and sneaking it
around the block remained clear, but after that. . . creeping down into that
dank cellar .. . seeing her uncle's lifeless, bloodless face when Carole
unwrapped the top of the sheet—it was him, really, really him—and then
struggling his dead weight up the stairs . . . placing him in the trunk of the
car . . . hearing the clank of the tools Carole had found in the caretaker's
shed as she carefully placed them on the back seat. . . slumping in the
passenger seat as Carole drove them away toward the brightening horizon . . .
And thinking about her Uncle Joe . ..
The earliest memory was riding on his back, he barely a
teenager and she barely in kindergarten. A flash of watching from a front row
pew as he took his Holy Orders and officially became a priest. And then later,
much clearer memories of long conversations about faith and God and the meaning
of life with her doing most of the talking because no one would listen to her,
only him, and Uncle Joe not agreeing but giving her his ear, letting her finish
without cutting her off and dissing her dissidence.
And now he was gone. Her sounding board, her last
anchor... gone, erased. She felt adrift.
The car stopped. Returning to the present, Lacey wiped her
eyes and looked around. They were at the beach. A boardwalk lay straight ahead.
She'd been here a few days ago.
They'd arrived at the edge of the continent... to do the
unthinkable . . . in order to prevent the unspeakable.
"I don't know if I can go through with this,"
Lacey said.
Carole was already out of the car. "Stop thinking of
yourself and help me carry him."
Thinking of yourself. . . That angered Lacey. "I'm
thinking about him, and what he's meant to me, what he'll always mean to
me."
"Do you hear yourself? Me-me-me. This isn't about you
or me. It's about Father Joe's legacy. And if we're going to preserve that, we
have to do what has to be done."
She was right. Damn her, this weird nun was right. Lacey
got out of the car as Carole popped the trunk.
"Where are we taking him?"
"Up to the beach."
"Why the beach?"
"Because we can dig a deep hole quickly, and because
very few people come here anymore."
"How do you know?"
"Because I watch. I watch everything. No one will
find him. Now help me lift him."
Lacey glanced around. The area looked deserted but who
knew what was hiding in the shadows. Her guns ... after taking the dead Vichy
woman's clothes, she'd crept back into the Post Office and lifted the pistols
off a couple of the undead corpses. She wished she'd thought to bring them, but
her mind had been numbed with loss.
Carole opened the trunk to reveal the sheet-wrapped form.
Steeling herself, Lacey took the shoulders, Carole the feet, and they carried
Joe's body up a ramp, across the boardwalk, then down the steps to the sand.
Carole directed them toward a spot under the boards with about five feet of
headroom, maybe a little less.
Lacey stayed with the body while Carole ran back to the
car. She returned moments later with a pair of shovels and a beat-up purple
vinyl book bag. The sky had grown light enough for Lacey to see ST. ANTHONY'S
SCHOOL emblazoned along the side in yellow.
"What's in there?" Lacey asked, although she had
a good idea what the answer would be.
Carole said nothing. She responded by pulling out a heavy,
iron-headed maul and a wickedly sharpened length of one-inch doweling. She drew
the sheet back from Uncle Joe's head and upper torso.
Lacey's stomach heaved as she caught sight of his
torn-open throat. She'd seen only his face back in the rectory. Good thing she
hadn't eaten since yesterday, otherwise she'd be spewing across the sand.
"Look what they did to him!" she screeched.
"Look what they did!"
Carole didn't respond. Her face seemed set in stone as she
raised the stake and placed the point over the left side of his chest.
"Can't it wait?" Lacey cried.
"Till when?" Carole's expression had became
fierce, her voice tight, thin, stretched to the breaking point. "Tell me a
good time for this and I'll gladly wait. When, Lacey? When will be a good
time?"
Lacey had no answer. When she saw Carole place the point
of the stake over her uncle's heart, she turned away.
"I can't watch this."
"Then I guess I'm on my own."
Sobbing openly, Lacey resisted the urge to run screaming
down the beach. She kept her back to Carole and jammed her fingers into her
ears while she began a tuneless hum to block out the sounds—of iron striking
wood, of wood crunching through bone and cartilage. She knew she should be
helping, but after what she'd already been through in the last dozen hours,
pounding a stake into her uncle's chest was more than she could handle right
now. She couldn't. She. Just. Couldn't.
So she stared through her tears at the ocean, at the pink
glow growing on the horizon.
Finally she pulled her fingers from her ears and tried to
turn, but her brain refused to send the necessary signals to make her body
move. The mere thought of seeing her uncle lying there with a shaft of wood
protruding from his chest. . .
She heard a noise ... sobbing .. . Carole.
"Is... is it over?"
Carole moaned. "Nooooo! I couldn't do it!"
Lacey whirled, took one look at the nun's tear-stained
face, and she knew.
"You loved him, didn't you."
Another bubbling sob from Carole as she nodded. "In
my fashion, yes. We all did. A good, goo d man ..."
"I don't mean loving him like that, like a brother. I
mean as a man."
Carole said nothing, just stared down at the sheet-wrapped
body before her.
"It's okay, Carole. It's not just idle interest. He
was my uncle. I'd like to know how you felt about him, especially now that he's
. . . gone. Did you love him as a man?"
"Yes." It sounded like a gasp of relief, as if a
long pent-up pressure had been released. "Not that we ever did
anything," she added quickly. "Not that he ever even knew."
"But you" ... she needed the right word here . .
. "longed for him?"
"God forgive me, yes. Not lust, nothing carnal. I
just wanted to be near him. Can you understand that?"
Lacey shrugged, unsure of what she could understand. This
was so unreal.
"I'm not sure how to say this," Carole said,
"because I've never expressed it, even to myself."
"Why not?"
"Because it wasn't right. I took vows. He took vows.
I shouldn't have been thinking of a man like that, especially a priest. God was
supposed to be enough. But sometimes..."
"Sometimes God just isn't enough."
"It must be a sin to say so, but no, sometimes He
isn't. Father Joe had something about him that made me ... made me want, long
to be near him. His very presence just seemed to make the world seem right. I'd
see him touch some of the other sisters, the older ones—nothing but a hand on
the arm or, rarely, an arm across the shoulders as they'd laugh about
something. But never me. And I never knew why. Not that I wanted more, not that
I'd ever lead him astray, but a simple touch, just to let me know he knew I
existed, that would have made me so happy."
Lacey felt as if she were talking to some lonely preteen,
and sexually, maybe that was where Carole was. She'd probably joined the
convent right out of high school—maybe during high school—and she'd never
progressed past that stage in her relationships with the opposite sex.
"Do you think my uncle was avoiding you?"
"Sometimes it seemed like it."
"Well, I can think of only one reason for that."
Carole looked up. "What?"
"Maybe he felt the same about you."
"Oh, no." Carole shook her head vehemently,
almost violently. "He didn't. He couldn't have."
"I'm sure of it."
She wasn't sure at all, but the sweet light flaring in
Carole's eyes now touched Lacey more deeply than she could have imagined a few
moments ago when this seemingly icebound woman had crouched there with a stake
poised over Uncle Joe's heart.
"Carole, you should have seen his face the other
night after you stopped by the church. He was worried about you, wished you'd
come into the church with us, but he was beaming too ..."
Wait a sec. That was no exaggeration. Joe had been
beaming. Maybe there'd been more going on between those two than anyone knew,
least of all themselves.
"Beaming?" Carole said.
Lacey knew a prompt when she heard one. "Yeah.
Beaming. He seemed really, really happy to see you and know you were still
alive. He kept talking about you."
How sad, Lacey thought. The two of them could have made
each other's lives so much brighter, but they'd been kept apart.
Carole sobbed again. "Now he's gone!"
"Not quite," Lacey said. "Not yet. And
that's where we come in, I guess."
"How can I do this?" She wiped her eyes and
sniffed. "I could do it, I know I could if he were one of them, if I could
see that cold evil hunger in his eyes, I could save him from that. But look at
him. Except for his throat he looks so normal, so . .. peaceful. I can't."
"But we have to," Lacey said. She realized with
a start that their roles had been reversed. "Why don't we dig the hole—the
grave—first, and then ... and then we'll do it together."
Carole stared at her. "You'll help me?"
"Yes." Lacey nodded, hoping she was making a
promise she could keep. "For him. For Uncle Joe."
They began to dig, together at first, then taking turns as
the grave deepened.
Lacey was waist deep in the hole as the sun began to
emerge from the sea. She pointed to the loose sand sliding down the walls
around her.
"If that keeps up we'll never make six feet."
Carole sat to the side, taking her turn to rest.
"We'll do the best we can. We need it deep enough to discourage any wild
dogs from trying to dig him up."
The exertions of digging plus her earlier concussion had
started blinding bolts of pain shooting through her head. That, the beating
she'd endured, and the lack of food made the work agony, but she'd keep on
digging till nightfall and beyond if it meant putting off what they had to do
once Joe's grave was ready.
"All right," Lacey said. "We'll go down
another foot, then—" She stopped as she caught a sharp, pungent odor.
"What's that? Something burning?" A puff of white smoke wafted past
her. "What the hell? It almost smells like—"
"Oh, dear God!" Carole cried, scrambling to her
hands and knees. "Father Joe!"
Lacey looked and saw her uncle lying in the full light of
the rising sun. His exposed skin was smoking and bubbling.
"Shit!"
She scrambled out of the grave and grabbed his arm, then
released it in a spasm of revulsion. The flesh felt like hot wax. She looked
for a place to hide him from the sun. With the light shining at this low angle,
the only shady spots here were the narrow bands behind the pilings, nowhere
near enough to shelter him.
"Quick!" Carole said. "The grave!"
She grabbed Joe's sheet-wrapped feet and started dragging
him toward it. Lacey helped. Seconds later they tumbled him into the opening.
He landed on his back, out of the sun, and immediately his skin stopped
boiling. But the odor of burning flesh still rolled off of him.
"Look at him," Lacey whispered. "Look what
it did to him."
They crouched and stared at him. The still-smoking skin of
Joe's face and chest and upper arms was dead white and rippled and pitted like
a bad stucco job.
Finally Carole said, "Why did we do that?"
"Do what?"
"Protect him from the sun."
Lacey saw what she meant. "You mean if we'd left him
there, the sun might have done the job for us?"
Carole shook her head. "I don't know, but that's what
seemed to be happening."
"Are you saying we should drag him out on the beach
and just let him . . . what. . . boil away?"
That struck Lacey as a greater defilement than driving a
stake through him. Almost like setting him on fire.
"I don't know," Carole said. "I used to be
so very sure about some things, especially this sort of thing. Now ... I don't
know."
Lacey glanced again at her uncle's body, appalled by his
ruined skin, and noticed something. She squinted into the shadows of the grave,
still not sure.
"What is it?" Carole said.
"Look at his throat. Wasn't it all torn open a few
minutes ago?"
Carole slapped a hand over her mouth. "Oh, no! It's
happening already!"
"What?"
"The change! He's turning!"
"How do you know?"
"Because Bernadette. .. because I've seen it before.
As they turn, the death wound heals up as if it never was."
Lacey grabbed Carole's flashlight and fixed the beam on
Joe's throat. The area where it had been torn open was thickened and puckered,
a different kind of scarring than the rest of his ruined skin. "That
doesn't look healed up to me. Looks more like its been fused or ..." What
was the word? "... cauterized."
"He's turned, I tell you." Carole looked around,
then picked up Joe's big silver cross from the sand. "Watch."
As Carole leaned into the grave and pressed the cross
against Joe's chest, Lacey winced, expecting a puff of smoke and who knew what
else. But nothing happened.
"That's strange," Carole said. "It should
have burned him."
"Which means he hasn't turned."
"Yet," Carole's eyes took on a haunted look.
"This doesn't let us off the hook, I'm afraid."
Lacey glanced over to where the stake and the maul rested
on the sand.
"What if.. ." Her thoughts were scattering like
a startled flock of birds. "What if the sun burned it out of him?"
"Burned what out of him?"
"Whatever makes you turn undead. Look, it cauterized
his wound."
"And all his exposed skin as well. He would have . .
. dissolved out there if we hadn't pushed him into this hole!"
She had a point. Joe had looked like he was melting, but
Lacey wasn't giving in. She had this feeling ...
"Okay, but what if he was out there in the sun long
enough to kill him—I mean, to burn off whatever was going to make him undead
and leave him really dead? It's possible, isn't it?"
Carole sighed. "Possible, I suppose. But I've never
heard of anything like that."
"There must be tons we don't know about these
creatures. If you agree it's possible, then why can't we leave him as he is and
just fill in his grave?"
Carole shook her head. "We need to be sure. We owe
him that."
"All right then ..." Her mind ranged over the
options, anything but jumping into that hole and driving a stake through that
limp body. "How about we come back here at sunset? If he's not dead, we'll
be waiting when he starts to dig his way out, and we'll. .. stop him."
"You want to risk that?" Carole said, eyeing
her. "It will be harder, but we can stop him as he's crawling out. Just
remember, it will be much worse to have to stake him while he's moving."
Lacey wrung her hands. "I know, I know. But I've got
this feeling we won't have to."
"This is nothing but wishful thinking, Lacey."
"It's more than that. Please. Do it my way, just this
once."
Carole sat silent for a long moment, then, "All
right. I just hope we don't regret this."
Her tone was wary, but Lacey thought she detected a hint
of relief.
"We won't. I've got—"
"A feeling. So you said." Carole grabbed a
shovel. "But swear to me you'll be back here with me before sunset, and
that we'll watch over him all night until dawn." "I swear."
Carole nodded and started shoveling sand back into the
grave.
"Wait," Lacey said. "Let me cover his
face."
She slid into the hole, careful not to step on him, and
tugged up the sheet so that it covered her uncle's face.
As soon as Lacey crawled out, Carole started shoveling
again. She couldn't seem to wait to cover him.
"Shouldn't we say a few words over him first?"
Lacey didn't want a prayer, but she thought they could at
least say something about the man he was and the life he'd led.
Carole looked at her. "Not yet. Not till we're sure
he's at rest. Truly at rest. Then we'll give our eulogies."
- 8 -
He awakens in crushing darkness, a damp, dusty sheet
pressed hard against his face, pushing at his eyes, an anvil resting on his
chest.
Air! He needs air!
Then he realizes that he doesn't. He feels no urge to
breathe, no need. Why not?
Where is he? More important—who is he? The answer is
there, just beyond his grasp. Reaching for it, he tries to claw at the
entrapping sheet but his arms are pinned to his sides by its enormous weight.
He worms one hand up across his chest to where he can grip the sheet. He pulls
it down—
Sand! Cascading into his eyes, filling his mouth and nose.
He's buried in sand!
He's got to get out!
His struggles become frantic. He tears through the sheet
and fights the incalculable weight, working his hands and then his arms through
the granules. He's strong, and soon his hands are snaking up through the sand,
slowly making their way to the surface. . .
CAROLE . . .
The setting sun's blood-red eye stared at Carole from the
car's rearview mirror. She flipped the dimmer toggle to cut its brightness and
steered the Lincoln along Route 88. She was thinking about napalm.
Lacey fidgeted in the passenger seat and toyed with the
revolver in her lap. The cowboys—or Vichy, as Lacey called them—had been
conspicuous by their absence today. Maybe the undead were alarmed by the loss
of the one Carole had killed last night—dear God, had it been less than
twenty-four hours?—and were keeping them close by during the light hours. Even
so, she and Lacey might have the bad luck of running into a party of them
before reaching the beach.
Carole glanced at the barrel of the shotgun on the armrest
between them. Nothing was going to keep them from Father Joe's graveside
tonight.
Carole and Lacey had caught up on their sleep during the
day, awakening this afternoon to find the parishioners nervous and edgy. Father
Joe was still missing and they were giving up hope that he'd be found alive.
Carole had told them that even if he'd been killed, he'd want them to fight on.
They'd wanted to know how, and that was when Carole had
begun thinking of napalm.
It was easy to make. She'd need soap flakes. Soap wasn't
edible so there'd be no shortage of flakes in the looted grocery stores. If she
could get her hands on some kerosene, she'd be in business. Napalm stuck to
whatever it splashed against and burned so hot it turned human flesh into fuel
to feed its flames. Would the same happen with undead flesh?
Only one way to find out...
She heard a sob and looked at Lacey. Tears glistened on
her cheeks.
"What's wrong?"
"I hope we did the right thing."
Carole knew exactly how she felt. Apprehension had been
clawing at her gut all day.
"You're having second thoughts?"
"Oh, yes. Ohhhhhh, yes. I don't want to watch him
digging his way out of the ground, I don't want to see his undead eyes or hear
his undead voice. I don't want that to be my last memory of him." She
stared at Carole. "If I believed in God I'd be praying to him right
now."
Strange, Carole thought. I do believe in Him and I've
stopped praying. He doesn't seem to be listening.
"Are you all right, Lacey? I mean, after what
happened yesterday?"
"Do you mean after finding my dearest and closest
living relative dead and helping dig his grave? Or do you mean after getting
gang raped?"
Carole winced at her tone and at the images "gang
raped" conjured. "Nevermind. Sorry."
Lacey reached over and squeezed her arm. "Hey, no.
I'm sorry." She sighed. "I guess I'm doing about as well as can be
expected. I'm still sore as hell, but I'm healing."
"I didn't mean physically. I meant the hurt within.
Emotionally. It's such an awful, awful thing ..." Carole ran out of words.
Lacey shrugged. "Same answer, I suppose. I know I'd
feel different if it had happened—the rape, I mean—say, a year ago, back in the
old civilized world. I would have been thinking, 'How could this happen?' and
'Why me?' I would have felt like some sort of pariah or loser, that the world
and society had let me down, that some throwbacks had smashed through all the
rules and targeted me. And I would have felt somehow to blame. Yeah, can you
believe that? I bet I would've. I know I'd have wanted to dig myself a hole and
pull the ground over me."
Carole tried to imagine how she'd feel if places were
reversed, but her imagination wasn't up to it. She nodded to keep Lacey
talking. She'd heard it was bad to keep something like this bottled up.
"Are you saying you don't feel that way now?"
Lacey shook her head. "Yeah ... I don't know. It's a
different world now, a world without any rules, except maybe those of the
jungle. There's no law, no order, and because of that, I don't seem to have
that pariah-loser-victim feeling. And I don't feel ashamed. I feel disgusted
and sickened and violated, but I don't feel ashamed. I feel hate and I want
revenge, but I don't feel a need to hide. A year ago I'd have felt scarred for
life. Now I feel... as if I've been splattered with mud—rotten, nasty mud—but
nothing I can't wash off and then move on. Does that make sense?"
Carole nodded. She knew as well as anyone how the rules
had changed, and she with them.
"You're strong, though. I don't know if I could
bounce back from something like that."
"I wouldn't exactly call it 'bouncing.' But don't
shortchange yourself, Carole. You're tougher than you let on. I think you could
handle anything. Let's just hope you never have to find out."
"Amen," Carole said.
Thinking of men who could do such heinous things drew
Carole's thoughts back to napalm, but she pushed them aside as the boardwalk
buildings hove into view. She parked and gave herself half a moment to inhale
the briny air. Then she double-checked the old book bag—crosses, stakes,
garlic, hammer, flashlight. All there.
Let's just pray we don't have to use them, she thought.
What they most likely would use were the two peanut butter
sandwiches on home-baked bread they'd brought along. Somewhere old Mrs.
Delmonico had found whole wheat flour and a propane stove.
They left the shotgun in the car, but Lacey carried her
pistol at the ready as they hurried across the deserted boardwalk and down to
the beach. Lacey stayed in the lead when they ducked under the boards where
they'd buried Father Joe, but stopped dead in her tracks with a cry of alarm.
Carole bumped into her from behind. "What—?"
"Oh, no!" Lacey cried. "It can't be!"
Carole pushed her aside and saw what she was looking at.
The grave had been disturbed.
"He's already out!" Lacey wailed.
"No. He can't be. The sun hasn't set yet."
She pointed to areas of darker sand atop the light.
"But some of the sand's still damp. That means it came from deeper down.
And not too long ago."
"Then someone's dug him up. It's the only explanation."
Lacey's eyes were wild. "But who? We were the only
ones who knew. And why?"
She glanced around and noticed linear tracks leading out
to the beach. "Look. We didn't leave those. Someone's dragged him
out."
"They can't have gone too far." Carole heard
Lacey cock her pistol as she started back toward the beach. "The sons of
bitches..."
Carole followed her out and they stood together, looking
up and down the beach and along the gently rolling dunes that eased toward the
water. She blinked ... was that someone ... ? Yes, it looked like a man,
standing at the water line with a towel draped over his shoulders, staring out
to sea.
"Look, Lacey," Carole said, pointing. "Do
you see him?"
Lacey nodded and started forward. "You think he did
it?"
"Perhaps." Carole fell into step beside her.
"If not, he might have seen who did."
But as they approached, the white towel began to look more
like a sheet, and the back of the man's head, the color of his hair began to
look more and more familiar ...
They were twenty feet away when Carole stopped and grabbed
Lacey's arm. "Oh, dear God," she whispered. "It looks like
..."
Lacey was nodding. "I know." Her voice had
shrunken to a high-pitched squeak. "But it can't be."
He looked wet, as if he'd gone for a swim. Carole stepped
forward, closed to within half a dozen feet of him. Trembling inside and out,
she wet her lips. Her tongue felt as dry as old leather.
"Father Joe?"
The man turned. The dying light of the sun ruddied the
pitted, ruined dead-white skin of his face.
"Carole," he said in Father Joe's voice.
"What's happened to me?"
Shock was a hand against her chest, shoving her back. She
dropped the bookbag and stumbled a few steps, then tripped. Lacey caught her
before she fell.
"Oh, shit," Lacey whimpered. "Oh,
shit!"
"Lacey?" The man, the thing that had once been
Father Joe, took a faltering step toward them. "What did they do to
me?"
"Wh-who?" Lacey said.
"The undead. They took me to New York. He was going
to make me one of them . . . turn me into a feral, he said. I remember dying,
being killed ... at least I think I do, but—"
Heart pounding, mind racing. Carole watched him closely,
looking for a misstep, listening for a false note.
She found her voice again. "You did die. We found you
and you were dead. We buried you back there, under the boardwalk."
"But I'm not dead. And I'm not one of them. I can't
be because ..." He pointed west. "Because that's the sun and it
should be killing me, but it's not." He raised a scarred fist.
"Somehow, some way, I've beaten them."
"But you were dead, Uncle Joe," Lacey told him.
Her voice trembled like a wounded thing. "And now you're not."
"But I'm not undead. Standing here in the sunlight is
proof enough of that. And I'm looking at you two and I'm not seeing prey. I'm
seeing two people I care about very much."
Carole suspected that under different circumstances—any
circumstances but these—those words would have made her dizzy. But now ...
She shook her head, trying to clear it, trying to step
back from her roiling emotions and think clearly. He sounded like her Father
Joe, he acted like Father Joe, he had Father Joe's mannerisms, but something
was different, something wasn't quite right. Something terrible had been done
to him, and one way or another, she had to find a way to undo it.
She bent forward and snatched the book bag from where
she'd dropped it on the sand.
"Carole?" said Lacey from behind her. "Just
a minute."
She opened it and reached inside.
"Carole, you're not really going to—"
''A minute, I said!"
Carole's fingers wrapped around the upright of Father
Joe's big silver cross. "We've been saving this for you." She yanked
it from the bag and held it out to him. "Here."
Father Joe cried out and turned his head, holding up a
hand to shield his eyes from the sight of the very cross he used to carry with
him wherever he went.
Carole felt something die within her as she watched him
and realized what she had to do.
She handed the cross to Lacey who stood dumbstruck,
staring at her uncle with wide, uncomprehending eyes. Lacey gripped the cross
but never took her eyes from her uncle.
As Carole pulled open the book bag again, she slammed the
doors, closed the windows, and drew the curtains on everything she had ever
felt for the man this creature had once been. Her hand was reaching into the
bag for the hammer and stake when Lacey's voice, a hint of panic in her tone,
stopped her.
"Carole ... Carole, something's happening here.
Please tell me what's going on."
Carole looked up and froze. The Father Joe thing was
edging toward Lacey, his face averted, his hand stretched out toward the cross.
"What's happening, Carole?" Lacey wailed.
"I'm not sure, but don't move. Stay right where you
are."
Carole watched with a wrenching mixture of horror and
fascination as the Father Joe thing's fingers neared the cross. She noticed
that his eyes were slit-ted and only partially averted, as if he were looking
at the cross from the corner of his eye.
The undead couldn't stand to be anywhere near a cross, yet
the Father Joe thing was reaching for this one.
Finally his scarred fingers reached it, touched the metal,
and jerked back as if they'd been burned. But no flash, no sizzle of seared
flesh. The fingers came forward again, and this time, like a striking snake, they
snatched the cross from Lacey's hand.
"It's hot!" he said, looking up into the
darkening sky as he switched it back and forth between his hands like a hot
potato. "Oh, God, it's hot!"
But it wasn't searing his flesh, only reddening it.
Then with the cry of a damned soul he dropped it and fell
to his knees on the sand.
"What have they done to me?" he sobbed as he
looked at Carole with frightened, haunted eyes. "What am I?"
Carole closed the book bag.
She'd never seen the undead cry. This wasn't a vampire.
But he wasn't the Father Joe she had known either. He was something in between.
Was this an accident, or some sort of trick, some undead plot to further
confuse and confound the living? She'd have to reserve judgment for now.
But she'd be watching his every move.
JOE . . .
Carole took his arm and tugged him toward the boardwalk,
saying, "We need to find a place where we're not so exposed."
Joe went along with her, his mind numb, unable to string
two coherent thoughts together.
The afterimage of the cross—his cross—still stained his
vision, bouncing in the air before him. The blast of light had been intolerably
bright, an explosion of brilliance, as if Carole had lifted a white hot star
from her book bag. The light had caused him pain, but only in his eyes. It
hadn't struck him like a physical blow the way it seemed to affect the undead,
staggering them back as if they were being pummeled with a baseball bat. He
could look at it as one might the sun, squinting from the corner of his eye.
He could touch the cross but couldn't hold it. He looked
down at his palms. The skin was reddened there, but at least it was normal
looking. Not like the ruined, thickened flesh on the back of his hands and on
his arms and chest. He touched his face and found thickened and pitted skin
there as well.
Joe felt as if his world were crumbling around him, then
realized that it already had. The life he'd known was gone, ended. What lay
ahead?
He pulled the damp sheet closer around him as Carole led
him up the steps to the boardwalk. Had this been his shroud? As she turned him
right, Joe heard Lacey's voice from behind.
"Aren't we going to the car?"
"Let's see if we can get into one of these
houses," Carole said.
She led them past the dead arcades and along the boardwalk
leading to the inlet. No one spoke. Lacey looked as dazed as Joe felt. They
walked past the beachfront houses, some large with sun decks and huge seaward
windows, others tiny, little more than plywood boxes, all nuzzling against the
boardwalk. Most of the bigger ones had been vandalized.
Carole stopped before an old, minuscule bungalow that
appeared intact. Despite the low light, Joe had no problem making out the faded
blue-gray of its clapboard siding. Someone had painted the word SEAVIEW in
black on the door and surrounded it with sun-bleached clamshells.
Carole tried the door. When it wouldn't open, she slammed
her shoulder against it. When that didn't work, she opened her book bag and
began to rummage through it.
Joe turned to the door and slammed his palm against it.
The molding cracked like a gunshot and the door swung inward. He stared at his
hand. He hadn't put a lot of effort into the blow, but it had broken the
molding.
"How did I do that?" he muttered.
No one answered.
In a courteous reflex, he stood aside to let Carole and
Lacey enter first. Only after they were inside did he realize that he should
have gone ahead of them. No telling what might have been lying in wait there.
As he stepped across the threshold, he felt a curious
resistance, as if the air inside had congealed to try to hold him back. He
pressed forward and pushed through. The resistance evaporated once he was
inside.
As he closed the door behind him, he sniffed the musty air
and looked around. Typical beach house decor: rattan furniture with
beachy-patterned cushions, driftwood and shells on the mantle, fishnets and
starfish tacked to the tongue-and-groove knotty pine walls of the wide open
living room/dining room/kitchen combo that ran the length of the house; photos
of smiling people sitting on the beach or holding fishing rods. Joe wondered if
any of them were still alive.
Carole pulled out her flashlight. "Let's see if we
can find any candles."
"There's three in that little brass candelabra back
there," he told her.
"Where?" She flashed her light around.
He pointed. "On the dining room table."
Carole shot him a strange look and moved toward the rear
of the house where she retrieved a brass candelabra from the tiny dining room.
She lit one of its three candles and set it on the small cocktail table
situated before the picture window overlooking the beach and the ocean. Lacey
pulled the curtains.
"Let's sit," Carole said.
"I can't sit," Joe told her. "I need to
know what happened to me."
"We're about to tell you all we know," Carole
said.
So he sat. Carole did most of the talking, with Lacey
adding a comment or two. They told him how they'd found him, how his skin had
started boiling in the morning sun, and how they'd buried him.
Joe rose and started pacing. He'd held himself still as
he'd listened to them, not wanting to believe their tale, yet unable to deny
it, and now he had to move. He felt too big for the room. Or was it getting
smaller, the walls closing in on him? He didn't know what to do with
himself—stand, sit, move about—or where to put his hands ... his body felt
different, not quite his own. He'd sensed this since pulling himself out of the
sand. He'd washed himself off in the ocean, hoping it would make a difference,
but it hadn't. He still felt like a visitor in his own skin.
"So what am I then?" he said to no one on particular,
perhaps to God Himself. "Some new sort of creature, some freakish
hybrid?" He sure as hell felt like a freak.
"That is what we need to find out," Carole said.
He stared at her and she stared back, her eyes flat,
unreadable. This was not the Carole he'd known, not the woman he'd been drawn
to. He'd sensed a terrible change in her when he'd run into her outside the
church, but now she seemed even further removed from her old self. Cold .. .
and she'd been anything but cold in her other life. Had all the sweetness and
warmth in her been burned away, or had she merely walled them off?
Unable to hold her gaze any longer, he looked down at
himself. He was still wrapped in the damp, sandy sheet. He wasn't cold but he
didn't like looking like something that had washed up from the sea.
"I'm going to see if I can find some clothes."
Anything to escape Carole's imprisoning stare. She made
him feel like a specimen in a dissection tray.
He turned into the short hallway that was little more than
an alcove that divided the bungalow's two bedrooms. A pang shot through his
abdomen and he realized he was hungry. Clothes first, then food.
He entered the bedroom on the left and pulled open a
dresser drawer. No good. Women's underwear. A thought struck him: What if two
old spinsters kept this as a summer place? Under no circumstances was he
putting on a house dress. He'd rather keep the sheet.
He tried the other bureau and found an assortment of
shirts and Bermudas. He tried a pair of green plaid shorts first and, though a
little loose in the waist, they fit. The top shirt on the pile was a
yellow-flowered Hawaiian.
After he pulled it on he looked down at himself. Not a big
improvement over that old sheet. He must look like the bennie from hell. He
stepped to the mirror over the dresser to catch a full view. The mirror was
blurred.
This place was in dire need of some spring cleaning.
He leaned forward to wipe away the dust but his hand
rubbed across clean glass. He leaned closer and noticed that the room behind
him reflected clear and sharp, yet he remained a blur.
"Oh, God!"
"Unk?" he heard Lacey say from the front room.
Seconds later she was at his side with the flashlight, her reflection the only
distinguishable human in the mirror. "What's wrong?"
Feeling weak—from hunger as well as the horror before
him—he leaned against the dresser and pointed to the mirror. "Look at
me—if you can."
She gasped. "Is that... ?"
"That's what's left of my reflection."
Carole's image joined them in the glass. He saw her
stiffen and stare.
After a moment she said, "You're not completely
gone."
"No, but nobody can tell me that's not more proof
that I'm no longer human. What have I become? I'm asking you both again: What
am I?"
The hunger worsened. He grabbed his abdomen and doubled
over.
"Joe?" Lacey asked.
"Hungry. Can't remember the last time I ate."
He turned away and stalked to the kitchen where he began
to open the cabinets and paw through their contents. Mostly condiments and
spices.
"Damn it all!" he shouted. "Didn't these
people eat?"
"It's a summer home," Carole said softly.
"Nobody leaves food over the winter."
"God, I'm starving."
"We've got food," Lacey said.
"Right," Carole said. "You remember Mrs.
Delmonico, don't you?"
"Of course I do," Joe said. "I only died. I
didn't lose my memory." He looked from Lacey's stricken face to Carole's
stony expression and back again. "Sorry. That was supposed to be a
joke."
"Oh, yeah!" Lacey's forced laugh sounded awful.
"Funny!" Her smile cracked and she sobbed. Once.
"Lacey, I'm sorry," Joe said.
She held up a hand as she pulled herself together.
"I'm okay. Really."
No, you aren't, he thought. Not a single one of us is
anywhere near okay.
"We should eat something," Carole said.
"Who knows when we'll get another chance."
Joe looked at her. "What were you saying about Mrs.
Delmonico?"
"She baked some bread and made us peanut butter
sandwiches."
"Peanut butter! God, I can't remember the last time I
had a peanut butter sandwich."
He followed Carole and Lacey to the cocktail table. Carole
pulled out the sandwiches, unwrapped them, and handed a half to Joe. Manners
reminded him to wait but hunger forced his hands toward his mouth. He took a
deep bite and gagged.
His gorge rose in revulsion as he turned and spat it into
his hand.
"What's in that? I thought you said it was peanut
butter."
Lacey sat across the table with the other half of Joe's
sandwich. She'd taken a bite and was staring at him.
He nodded to her. "Tastes awful, doesn't it."
Lacey shook her head. "Tastes fine," she said
around her bite.
Carole leaned forward. "What did it taste like to
you, Father?"
How could he describe something so awful? "Try to
imagine rancid meat... in spoiled milk ... laced with hot tar . . . and you're
only part way there."
With a glance at Lacey, Carole pulled the book bag up onto
her lap and reached inside. With a single quick movement she removed something
and held it under his nose.
"How about this?"
Joe recoiled, almost tipping over backward in his chair.
It felt like pure ammonia shoved up his nose.
"Damn! What's that? Get it away!"
Carole showed him the flaky clove between her fingers.
"Just garlic."
A queasy nausea slithered through Joe's hunger pains. He'd
always loved garlic, the more the better. But now . . .
"I don't understand this!" Lacey cried. She was
leaning away from the table with her eyes squeezed shut. "You can stand in
sunlight and walk into a home without being invited in, but you don't cast a
full reflection and you can't stand garlic. What's going on?"
Joe shook his head. "I wish I knew." Hunger gave
him a vicious kick in the abdomen, doubling him over. "I do know I've got
to eat. Isn't there anything else around?"
"Yes," Lacey said. She was looking past him, a
strange light dancing in her eyes. "Yes, I believe there is."
She grabbed the flashlight and hurried to the kitchen. Joe
heard her opening drawer after drawer, rattling utensils. Apparently she found
what she was looking for because she returned to the table and stood beside him
with her hands behind her back.
"Close your eyes and open your mouth," she said.
"This is no time for games, Lacey. I'm
starving."
A smile appeared; it looked painted on. "Humor me,
Unk. Open your mouth and close your eyes."
Joe complied, and then things started happening—fast. He
sensed Lacey move closer, heard a gasp of shock—Carole?—then felt something
warm and firm and wet pressed into his mouth. He'd never tasted anything like
it— utterly delicious. He opened his eyes and saw Lacey close, a steak knife in
one hand, and the other—
—pressed against his mouth.
Joe flung himself backward, and this time he did go over,
landing on his back. He felt no pain, only revulsion at the sight of his
niece's bloody thumb, and at himself the way he licked his lips and wanted
more. A glimpse of Carole's white face and stricken expression over Lacey's
shoulder was the final blow.
Instead of climbing back to his feet, Joe rolled onto his
side, facing away from them, and sobbed with shame. He wished he could dissolve
into a liquid and seep between the floorboards to hide from their eyes. For he
knew how they must be looking at him—with the same revulsion as he'd felt about
the undead before . . . before . . .
And worse. He realized that his hunger was gone. Just
those few drops of Lacey's blood had sated him.
He groaned. He wanted to crawl out of this house and their
sight on his belly like the lesser being he'd become.
No ... he wanted to die. Truly die.
Keeping an arm across his eyes so he wouldn't have to see
the loathing in their faces, he rolled over onto his back and tore open his
shirt, baring his chest.
"Do it, Carole. I don't want to be this way. End it
now. Please."
No response, no sound of movement.
Joe uncovered his eyes and found Carole and Lacey staring
at him from where he'd left them at the table. They looked like mannequins, but
their expressions reflected more shock than revulsion.
He pounded a fist against his chest, over his heart.
"Please, Carole! I'm begging you. If you've ever cared the slightest for
me, either of you, you won't let me to go on as the creature I am now."
Carole only shook her head.
He looked at his niece. "Lacey? Please? You can do
this one thing for me, can't you?"
Tears streamed down her cheeks as she shook her head.
"No. I can't. You're too . . . you."
Back to Carole: "You hate the undead, Carole. I can
tell. So why won't you put this sick dog out of his misery? "
"I could never hate you, Father Joe, but I could
loathe you if you ... if you were one of them. But it's plain that you loathe
yourself more than I ever could, and that. . . that means you're not one of
them."
"But I'm halfway there. What if this is just some
sort of transitional phase and by tomorrow I'll be fully undead."
She shook her head. "There is no transitional
phase."
"You don't know that!" He was shouting now.
Carole didn't raise her voice, only shifted her gaze to
the side and said, "I do. I've seen how the change goes, and you are
different. You're asking one of us to drive a stake through your heart. I can't
say for sure, but I doubt very much that any undead in the history of time has
made such a request. The very fact that you've asked is proof that you aren't
one of them."
"Then in God's name, what am I?"
"A weapon, perhaps."
A weapon? The word stirred him. Joe sat up and hugged his
knees against his chest.
"What do you mean?"
"Do you have any desire to continue what you started
at the church?"
Joe hadn't given it a thought. He'd been too preoccupied
with figuring out what had happened to him. But now that he did think about it.
. .
"I don't see how it's possible. I can't see them
following an undead priest."
"You're not undead."
"I'm certainly not their Father Joe any longer."
"You'll always be—"
"No. I can't be a priest anymore. How can I when I
can't ever say Mass again? I can't look at a cross or touch one without getting
burned. I certainly can't taste the consecrated bread and wine—assuming I
didn't burst into flame trying to say the prayers to consecrate it."
"Father Joe—"
"Don't call me that again. I am no longer a priest,
so stop calling me 'Father.' It's an insult to all those who still deserve the
title. From now on it's Joe, just plain Joe."
"Very well, J—" Carole seemed to have trouble
with the name. "Very well, Joseph. You don't want to go back to leading
your parish. Do you have any desire to go on fighting the undead?"
"More than ever."
And with those three words a whole world of possibilities
opened up before Joe. He struggled back to his feet. He felt excited, the first
positive emotion he'd experienced since leaping from the observation deck the
other night.
Carole had called him a weapon. He could see that she was
right. By some strange quirk of fate he'd become a sort of half-breed. There
had to be a way he could use that against the undead. Make them pay for what
they'd done to his world, to his friends and loved ones, to him.
"I think it's time to fight back."
While there's still time... on the chance that I'll become
like that feral who killed me ... Devlin.
A terrible purpose surged through him. Yes, fight back,
and maybe somewhere down the road he'd meet again with Franco. If he didn't,
and if somewhere along that road he met his end—his final end—well, that was
all right too. In fact, he'd welcome it. He had no illusions that he and Carole
and Lacey and whoever else they picked up along the way could drive the undead
horde back to Europe, but when he met his inevitable end he wanted to know he'd
taken as many as possible with him.
OLIVIA . . .
"My, my," Olivia asked. "Wherever can he
be?" She was enjoying this. Artemis paced between the beds in the sleeping
room. "I don't know."
Immediately after sunset he had gone over to the church
area to watch the rectory for the priest's emergence. He'd wanted her to come
along but her get had protested. Olivia had feigned reluctance in giving in to
their wishes. In truth, she had no intention of leaving this building until she
was sure the vigilantes had been identified and removed. Jules, darling Jules,
had gone in her place.
"Perhaps he sneaked out a back door."
"The building has only two doors and we had both
covered."
"Then he must be still inside."
"He's not!" Artemis cried. "I sneaked
inside to check. He was left in the basement and he's not there now. He's not
anywhere in the rectory!"
How odd, Olivia thought. "Could he have sneaked out a
window then?"
"Possible, but unlikely."
"Then it must be a miracle!"
Artemis halted his pacing and glared with his good eye.
"Not funny, Olivia."
"And not breaking the back of the insurrection,
either. So much for Franco's coup."
"He's not going to be happy." Artemis looked
worried. "And as usual he'll blame everyone but himself."
"Poor Artemis."
He took a quick step toward her, index finger raised and
jabbing toward her face.
"Don't think you'll get off free, Olivia. Especially
when he learns how you've been hiding under a rock the whole time."
Olivia stiffened. The last thing she needed was to be on
Franco's bad side, especially when she was short on serfs.
"I'm not the enemy, Artemis," she said, wrapping
it in her most conciliatory tone.
"You're certainly not acting like an ally."
"Let's think about this logically. If he's not in the
rectory, then he's out of it."
Artemis rolled his single eye. "Brilliant."
"Just follow along with me. If he's out, then he got
out either under his own power or was carried out."
He shook his head. "I had one of your serfs watching
the building all day. If his followers had found him there'd have been an
outcry and lots of milling about. But he reported no unusual activity or even
interest in the rectory."
"Which leaves us with one conclusion: the priest left
the rectory without being seen."
"That means he's roaming the streets right now,
looking to feed." Artemis rolled his eye again. "That's not
good."
"Why not? Isn't that what Franco wanted?"
"He wanted the priest feeding on his followers, not
random strangers. That defeats the whole purpose of this little exercise."
Olivia couldn't help smiling. "I believe it's looking
more and more like I may get my full-scale attack on the church after
all."
"What you'll get," Artemis shouted, "is
your lazy cowardly ass out of this hole in the ground and out there looking for
him!"
Olivia backed up a step. "It's too late now. Dawn's
almost here."
Artemis pounded a fist against his thigh. "All right
then. First thing after sunset. Me, you, and all your get on the street,
looking. We need to find him before he goes feral. If we're too late he won't
be able to tell us anything about his vigilantes."
Olivia slumped on the edge of her bed and wrung her hands.
Outside? Searching? She'd never thought she'd be afraid of the night, but she
was.
LACEY . . .
"What was it like being dead?"
Lacey couldn't help it. She had to ask.
After bandaging her thumb, they'd sat around for hours and
hours telling their stories: what had happened to Joe after he'd been abducted,
Carole telling how she'd escaped the vampire who'd been after her, and Lacey
skimming over her gang rape that she couldn't remember too well anyway but
describing in detail the odd events in the Post Office. No one had any
explanation for what had gone down there.
Then they discussed how Joe might best wield himself
against the enemy.
With all the talk, Lacey had found herself gradually
getting used to the unthinkable: that her uncle had somehow died and risen from
the grave without becoming one of the undead—not quite one of them, at least.
He didn't look like himself, not with that unrecognizable, disfigured face, but
the more he'd talked, the easier it became to accept that, though horribly
changed, he was still his old self. The undead had changed his body, but the
man within remained untouched.
And with that acceptance, the death question had grown in
her mind. Now, with steely predawn light turning the black of the ocean to
slate gray, the conversation had lagged. So .. .
Joe shook his head. "I don't remember."
"Are you sure? Think. Wasn't there a light or a voice
or a presence or some indication that there's something out there?"
"Sorry, Lacey. I remember that feral biting and
tearing at me, and the next thing I knew I was wrapped in a sheet under the
sand. That's all. Nothing in between."
"Well, I guess that proves it then: this is it.
There's no hereafter."
"Oh, but there is," Joe told her.
"You were dead and experienced nothing
transcendental, so how can you say that?"
"Because I believe."
As much as she loved him—and even in the strange state he
was in, Lacey still loved him—she found his resistance to reason exasperating.
"After all that's just happened to you, how can you
possibly still believe in a provident god?"
Joe glanced at Carole. "Tell her, Carole."
Carole's brown eyes looked infinitely sad. "I don't
think I can. God seems terribly far away these days."
The simple statement, delivered so matter-of-factly,
seemed to shock Joe. He stared at Carole a moment, then sighed. "Yeah, He
does, doesn't He. Almost as if He's forgotten about us. But we can't let
ourselves think that way. It only leads to despair. We've got to believe that
there's a purpose to all—"
"A purpose?" Lacey wanted to throw something.
"What possible purpose could there be to all this worldwide death and
misery?"
"Only God knows," Joe said.
Lacey snorted derisively. "Which means nobody
knows."
Joe was looking at her. "Why did you ask me in the
first place?"
"You mean, about what it was like being dead? Well,
think about it: how many times do you get a chance to talk to someone who's
been dead—someone who's not trying to rip out your throat, I mean?"
"Just idle curiosity?"
"Not idle. You're my uncle and I just. . . wanted to
know."
"Would you have believed me if I told you I saw a
light, or a golden stairway, or a glowing tunnel? Or how about pearly gates and
St. Peter with the Book of Life in his hands?"
"Probably not."
"Then why ask at all?"
"I don't know."
"I think you do. I think you're in the market for a
little transcendence yourself, just like everyone else. Am I right?"
Joe's scrutiny was making her uncomfortable.
"Just because I don't believe doesn't mean I don't
want to. Don't you think I'd love to feel that a little spark of me will
continue on into eternity after this body is gone? But I can't get past the
idea that it's only wishful thinking, something we, as a sentient species, have
yearned for so deeply and for so long that we've surrounded that need with all
manner of myths to convince ourselves that it's real."
Joe picked up the knife Lacey had used to cut her thumb,
and idly ran his finger along the edge.
"All myths have a spark of truth at their core. Look
at it this way: doesn't the existence of transcendent Evil indicate that there
must be a counterbalancing transcendent Good?"
"You mean the undead? I'll grant you they're evil,
but they hardly strike me as transcendent."
"No?" He was staring at his finger. "I just
cut myself. Take a look."
He laid his hand, palm up, on the table. His palm hadn't
been exposed to the sun so it was unscarred. Lacey saw a deep slice in the pad
of his index finger, but no blood.
"I don't seem to have any blood."
Lacey gasped as he jabbed the point of the blade into the
center of his palm.
"Father Joe!" Carol cried.
"Uh-uh," he said, removing the knife and waving
it at her. "Just Joe, remember? I'm not a priest anymore."
"Doesn't it hurt?" Lacey said.
"Not really. I feel it; it's not comfortable, but I
can't call it pain." He held up his hand. "Still no blood. And
yet..." He placed the hand over his heart. "My heart is beating. Very
slowly, but beating. Why? If there's no blood to pump, why have a beating
heart?" He leaned back and shook his head. "Will I ever understand
this?"
"You have a better chance than anyone else,"
Lacey said. "Obviously something else is powering your cells, something
working outside the laws of nature."
"Which would make it supernatural. And since there's
no question that it's evil..."
"Are we back to that again?"
Carole cleared her throat. "I hate to drag this
conversation back to current reality, but there is something very important we
need to discuss."
Lacey looked at her and noticed that she seemed upset. Her
hands were locked together before her on the table.
"What is it, Carole?"
She stared at her hands. "Blood."
Lacey heard Joe groan. She glanced over and saw him lower
his ruined face into his hands.
"What blood?" Lacey said.
Carole lifted her eyes. "The blood he needs to
survive."
"Oh, that." Lacey shrugged. "He can have
some of mine whenever—"
Joe slammed his hands on the table. "No!"
"Why the hell not? You had—what?—three or four drops
and that was all you needed. Big deal."
"The amount is not the point! A drop, a gallon, what
difference does it make? It's all the same! I'm acting like one of
them—becoming a bloodsucking parasite!"
"They take it by force. I'm giving this to you. You
don't see the difference? It's my blood and I have a right to do whatever I
want with it. If I were giving a pint at a time to the Red Cross to save lives
you'd say what a fine and noble thing to do. But giving a few drops to my own
uncle—a blood relative, don't you know—is wrong?"
"Your giving isn't the issue. My taking—that's the
problem."
"What problem? Since I'm volunteering, there's no
ethical problem. So if it's not ethics, what is it? Esthetics?"
He stared at her. "What are you? A Jesuit?"
"I'm your niece and I care about you and I want to
get the sons of bitches who did this to you. With you as you are—part undead,
part human—we might have a chance to do real damage. But if you're going to let
a little squea-mishness get in the way—"
"Lacey!" Carole said, giving her a warning look.
Joe had closed his eyes and was shaking his head.
"You have no idea what it's like... to have loathed these vermin and then
be turned into one. To spend every minute of the rest of your existence knowing
you are a lesser being than you wish to be, that everything you were has been
erased and everything you hoped for or aspired to will be denied you." He
opened his eyes and glared at her. "You ... don't... know .. . what...
it's ... like."
Lacey's heart went out to her uncle. Yes, she could
imagine maybe only a tiny fraction of what he was suffering, but she couldn't
let him surrender. He had to fight back. She had a feeling that what they
decided here tonight could be of momentous importance, and it all hinged on
him. That was why she had to push him.
"I don't pretend to. But we can't turn back the
clock. You've been dealt a lousy hand, Unk—an unimaginably lousy hand—but right
now it's the only one you've got. And it may hold some hidden possibilities
that we'll never be able to use if you fold and leave the game. I know it seems
easy for me to sit here on this side of the table say it, but it's a simple
truth: you have to accept what's happened and move on. Take it and turn it back
on them. Use it to make them pay. Make them wish they'd never heard of Father
Joe Cahill. Make them curse the day they ever messed with you. If all it takes
is a few drops a day of my blood—which I'm more than willing to donate to the
cause—then where's the downside? They tried to make you like them but something
went wrong. They failed. You're not like them—you know it and Carole knows it
and I know it—and a few drops of blood is not going to change that."
Lacey leaned back, winded. She glanced at Carole who gave
a small nod, just one.
Joe seemed lost in thought. Finally he shook himself and
said, "We'll see. That's all I can say now .. . we'll see." He looked
out at the growing light filtering through the salt-stained picture window.
"Let put this aside and go out and watch the sunrise."
JOE . . .
Lacey's words tumbled back and forth through Joe's brain
as he followed the two women down to the churning water.
Accept it and move on . . .
Easy for her to say. But that didn't mean she was wrong.
Yet... how do you accept being subhuman?
Turn it against them and make them pay . . .
That he could understand. Take this aching emptiness
inside and fill the void with rage, pack it in like gunpowder in a cartridge,
then take aim at those responsible for what he'd become.
Carole had called him a weapon. That was what he would
become.
He joined Carole and Lacey at the waterline and stood
between them. Gently he placed a hand on each of their shoulders, Carole
flinching but not pulling away, Lacey leaning against him. He realized he loved
them both, but in very different ways.
He noticed Carole checking her watch as the sun hauled its
red bulk above the rumpled gray hide of the Atlantic. Immediately he sensed its
heat, just as he'd felt the fever of the setting rays last night.
Lacey turned to him. "You're okay?"
"I can tell I'm more sensitive than I ever was in
life, but it's nothing I can't tolerate."
.. . than I ever was in life. . .
How indescribably strange to be able to say that.
Lacey smiled. "Maybe we'll just have find you some
SPF 2000 sun screen."
"I'm just grateful I won't have to live like
them—hiding in the day and crawling out only at night. I don't know if I could
take that."
They stood for a while with the waves lapping at their
feet and watched the birds and the surf and spoke of how the undead plague
hadn't affected the beauty of the world or touched its wildlife. Humanity had
borne the full brunt of the assault.
Lacey said, "Some of my radical ecology friends, if
they're still alive, probably think it's all for the good—the fall of
civilization, I mean."
Carole shook her head. "How could they
possibly—"
"The end of industry, of pollution, overcrowding, all
that stuff they hate. No more forests being raped, no more fluorocarbons
depleting the ozone, all their causes made moot because the undead don't seem
to be into technology."
"Only the technology that helps them keep their
'cattle' alive. Franco went on to me about how once you've turned, your
existence becomes entirely focused on blood. All the other drives—for money,
knowledge, achievement, even sex—are gone. The undead are immune to cold and
see in the dark so they have no interest in keeping the electricity running
except as far as their cattle need it to survive. Even so, I'll bet the power
will be off more than it's on. Over time I can see the level of technology
declining and the world devolving into some sort of pre-industrial-level feudal
order. They don't seem to need technology. Or perhaps have no mind for it is
better way of putting it. They already call their human helpers 'serfs.' That
will be the social order: undead lords, serfs, and herds of human catde."
"If only the Internet were still around," Lacey
said. "We could communicate, organize—"
"The Internet is history, I'm afraid—with no reliable
power source, few working phone lines, and a decimated server network, it's a
goner."
Joe felt his skin beginning to tingle, as if the sand were
blowing, but there was no breeze. He glanced at the sun and thought it looked
considerably brighter than a few moments ago. Hotter too.
"Is anyone else hot?"
Carole and Lacey shook their heads.
"No, not really," Carole said.
Lacey spread her arms and lifted her face to the glow.
"It feels good."
"Does anyone mind if we go back inside? It's a little
too warm for me."
He turned and started back up the dunes; Carole and Lacey
came along, one on either side. As they neared the house, Joe felt his exposed
sunward skin—the back of his neck, his arms, his calves—begin to heat up, as
much from within as without.
With the growing discomfort pushing him toward the house,
he quickened his pace. Or tried to. He felt unsteady. His legs wobbled like an
old man's—a drunken eighty-year-old's. Still he somehow managed to pull ahead
of Carole and Lacey.
"Unk!" Lacey cried from behind him. "Unk,
your skin!"
He looked down and saw that his skin was starting to smoke
wherever the direct rays of the sun touched it. He broke into a lurching run.
The sun! Cooking him! Had to escape it, find shade,
shelter, darkness! The very air seemed to catch fire around him, glowing with
white-hot intensity. A heartbeat ago the house had been less than a hundred
feet ahead, now he couldn't find it through the blaze of light. And even if he
could he doubted he'd reach it on these leaden legs. His knees weakened further
and he stumbled, but felt a pair of hands grab his left arm before he could
fall.
"We've got to get him inside!" Carole cried
close to his ear.
Other hands grabbed his right arm.
Lacey. Carole. They had him and were supporting him,
tugging him forward on his rubbery legs.
They burst through the broken door and into the shady
interior.
But even inside the sunlight pursued him through the
doorway and sizzled through the big picture window, chased him like a fiery
predator, reaching for him with flaming talons of light. He shook off Carole
and Lacey and stumbled headlong on into the deeper, shadier areas of the front
room.
Not enough. The reflected sunlight, from the glass table
top, even the walls and floors, felt toxic, like scalding acid.
More—he needed more protection. No basements in these
bungalows. He spotted the alcove to his right and veered for it. The bedrooms.
He barreled into the one toward the rear. It faced north and west—the darkest
place in the house at the moment. His legs finally gave way and he collapsed in
a heap next to the bed. Thank God the curtains were closed. He grabbed the
flowered yellow bedspread and rolled it around him, cocooning himself with the
stench of his own seared flesh.
The touch of the fabric against his scorched skin sent
waves of agony to his bones, but stronger than the pain was the numbing
lethargy seeping through his limbs and mind. Only fear kept him from
succumbing, fear that his tolerance to sunlight had been only temporary and now
was deserting him. Was it a sign that whatever remnants of humanity that had
lingered with him last night were ebbing away, leaving him more like the
creatures he loathed? He prayed not.
He prayed especially that he wasn't turning feral. He saw
the creature's ravaged face now, the one Franco had called Devlin, remembered
its mad eyes, devoid of reason, compassion, or any feeling even remotely human,
heard its bestial screams as it clawed at the door, remembered its talons
sinking into his shoulders, felt its hot foul breath on his throat just before
its fangs tore into his flesh.
And worse, he remembered Franco's parting words.
. . . when you look at Devlin you are seeing your future .
. . he didn't retain enough intelligence to distinguish between friend and foe
. . . sol can't even use him as a guard dog . . . in less than two weeks you'll
be just like Devlin, only a little less intelligent, a little more bestial. . .
Was he losing his mind along with his tolerance for
sunlight? Was his descent incomplete, still in progress? Was he still changing,
devolving further into an even lower life form? Was this another step down the
road toward Devlin's fate?
He heard Carole's voice from somewhere in the room.
"Joseph! Joseph, are you all right?"
He could only nod under the bedspread, and even that was
an effort. He dared not speak, even if his numb lips would permit it.
"The mattress!" Carole's voice again. "Help
me with it."
"Help—help you what?" Lacey said.
"We've got to tilt it up against the window. That way
when the sun comes around behind the house it won't shine into the room."
Carole . .. wonderful Carole . .. always thinking ...
The lethargy deepened, tugging Joe toward sleep, or
something like it... the deathlike undead daysleep. He tried to fight it. He'd
thought, he'd hoped that he'd escaped falling victim to the undead vermin
hours, hiding from the sun, slithering around at night. Now that hope was lost.
He was more like them than he'd thought or wished or prayed against, and was
falling closer and closer to their foul state with every passing hour.
The nightmarish thought chased him into oblivion.
CAROLE . . .
"We almost lost him."
The two of them slumped on the front room's rattan
furniture, Carole in a chair, Lacey half stretched out on the sofa.
"I know," Carole replied.
Oh, how she knew. That had been too close. Her insides
were still shaking. The sight of his skin starting to smoke and cook as he was
walking . .. caused by this same sunlight bathing her now in its warmth .. .
she'd never forget it. Worse, the reek of his burnt flesh still hung in the
air.
Lacey kicked at the cocktail table, almost knocking its
glass top onto the floor. "I don't know what to say, I don't know what to
think, I don't know what to do! This is just so awful. It's a nightmare!"
Carole looked down at her trembling hands. How things had
changed. Early last evening she'd been ready to drive a stake through his
heart. And now she wanted him to survive.
For as the three of them had talked during the dark hours,
Carole had begun to sense a plan. Not her plan . . . the Lord's. She thought
about all the twists and turns of the past thirty-six hours.
After leaving her partially demolished house, why had she
turned left instead of right? If she'd turned the other way she never would have
run into Lacey. It was because of Lacey that she'd returned to the church and
the convent. And it was there that she'd been staring out her convent room
window just at the instant a winged vampire had flown away from the rectory.
There were so many other things she could have been doing at that moment, yet
she'd been standing at the window, watching the night. She'd been holding
Father—no, he doesn't want to be called "Father" anymore ... a hard
habit to break—Joseph's cross at that moment. Had that inspired her?
Imagine if she hadn't seen the departing vampire. She
wouldn't have searched the rectory basement and found Joseph's body. But what
had inspired her to bring him to the beach? At the time she'd thought it a good
place because it was deserted and they could dig more quickly in the sand.
But had Divine Inspiration been at work? For if they'd
tried to bury Joseph somewhere besides the beach, he wouldn't have been exposed
to the first rays of the morning sun. That brief exposure seemed to have partially
undone the vampires' work. The purifying rays had healed his wound and burned
away some of the undead taint. Not all—a few more minutes in the light surely
would have burned away too much, leaving him truly dead—but enough so that he
remained Joseph instead of something foul and evil. What had inspired Carole to
pull him into the shadows of his grave just in time to save him?
Yes... save him. For what?
The only answer that made any sense was that Joseph had
been chosen to become the mailed fist of God, a divine weapon against the
undead.
But the poor man was going through the tortures of the
damned to become that weapon. Pain, disfigurement, self-loathing, the
debasement of blood hunger—why did it have to be this way? Why did he have to
suffer so? Were these trials a fire through which he had to pass to be tempered
as a weapon?
The thought of fire brought her back to the sun . . .
"How long was Joseph in the sunlight this
morning?"
Lacey shrugged. "I don't know. An hour maybe? It's
hard to say. Certainly no more than that."
"An hour," Carole mused. "Not much. That's
an hour longer than any true vampire can stand, but maybe it's enough."
"Enough for what?"
"For the war the three of us are going to wage."
She placed her hand over the spot where Joseph had touched
her shoulder at sunrise. More than an hour ago but her skin still tingled, as
if his hand were still resting there. That single touch, that gentle weight of
his hand on her shoulder, meant more to her than his embrace outside the church
when they'd been reunited a few nights ago.
Despite what had been done to him and how the sun had
disfigured him, despite what he had become, she sensed the desperate struggle
within him against the undead taint in his flesh, in his mind, in his being,
and she admired him more than ever for that refusal to be dominated. He'd win,
she knew he would win.
God help her, she still loved him. More than ever.
- 9 -
JOE . . .
He awoke in a snap. No lingering drowsiness, no stretching
or yawning. Asleep, then awake, with tentacles of a dream still clinging to
him.
The dream . . . more like a nightmare—or in this case, a
daymare. He remembered clinging to the lip of a rocky precipice, his feet
dangling and kicking over an infinity of swirling darkness. But not empty
darkness. This seemed alive, and it had been beckoning him, calling to him all
day . . .
The worst thing was that a part of him had longed to
answer, tried to convince the rest of him to let go and tumble into that living
abyss.
He shook off the memory and pushed at the fabric
enshrouding him. After an instant of panicked deja-vu—had he been buried
again?—he remembered rolling himself in the bedspread this morning. He pulled
his way free and found himself on the floor of the rear bedroom. The room was
hot, stuffy, and dusty, but not dark. He lifted his head. Over the naked top of
the double box spring he saw its mattress tilted against the west window.
Orange sunlight leaked around its edges. The sun was setting but not down yet.
Not down yet...
A sudden surge of excitement pushed him to his feet. He
stepped closer to the mattress, surprised at not feeling stiff and sore after a
whole day on wooden flooring. A ray of sunlight, dust motes swirling like
fireflies along its path, was poking past the right edge to light up a square
on the room's east wall. Hesitantly, Joe edged his hand toward the ray. This
could hurt. This could be like sticking his hand into a pot of boiling water.
He gritted his teeth. Hell, what was he waiting for? Fast
or slow, if he was going to burn, he was going to burn.
He shot his hand forward and back, in and out of the ray.
It felt hot but nothing like boiling water. He looked at his palm where the sun
had licked it. No blisters. Not even red.
He tried it again, this time holding his hand in the
light. Hot, but bearable. Definitely bearable.
Taking a breath, he tipped the mattress back, letting the
light flood into the room and bathe him. He gasped at the sudden blast of heat
and squinted in the brightness, but held his ground. He could do this. Yeah, he
could do this.
With jubilation spurring him, he hurried out into the
front room where he found Carole asleep on the couch. He stopped and stared
down at her, captivated. Her face in sleep had relaxed into a soft, gentle
innocence, as if the last few months had never happened. This was the Carole
he'd known. He wanted to wake her but couldn't bring himself to break the
spell.
He stepped back to the alcove and peeked in the front
bedroom. Lacey lay huddled under the covers.
Okay, let them both sleep.
Back to the front room where he slipped as quietly as
possible through the broken door and out into the light. He walked a few steps
north to where sunlight gushed between the bungalow and its neighbor. He bathed
in its flow, spread his arms and dared it to harm him.
"Joseph? Are you all right?"
Carole's voice. He turned and saw her approaching across
the boards. Her features hadn't yet fully recomposed themselves into their
harder, waking look. He wanted to throw his arms around her but knew that would
be a mistake.
"Yes. Fine. At least for now. How long till sunset do
you think?"
She glanced at her watch. "It set at 7:11 yesterday,
so—"
"Are you sure? I seem to remember the sun setting
later than that in May."
Carole shrugged. "I guess I never got around to
switching to Daylight Savings Time. Not much point, is there."
"I guess not. So you keep a log?"
"In my head. It's very important to know when the sun
is going to be around and when it's not."
Of course it was. And he should have known that a former
science teacher like Sister Carole would be methodical as all hell about it.
"When does it set tonight?"
"About a minute later. Around forty-five minutes from
now." She looked up from her watch. "You seem to be able to tolerate
the first and last hours of sunlight."
"Why is that, do you think?"
"It may be due to your sun exposure before you
turned. Maybe it burned some of the undead taint out of you, leaving you
tolerant to the more attenuated rays of the sun."
"Attenuated?"
"As it nears the horizon, the sun's rays have to
travel through more layers of atmosphere to reach you. Those extra layers
absorb and refract the light. It's that same refraction that causes the sun and
moon to look darker and larger when they're low in the sky."
"Well, thank you, God, for refraction." He was
glad he didn't have to face the prospect of never seeing the sun again.
"Then again," Carole said, a faint smile playing
about her lips, "refraction may have nothing to do with it, and you should
be thanking God directly."
"Why?"
"Maybe He's given you these extra two hours as an
edge over the undead. Two hours during which you can move about while they
can't."
Joe thought about that. Two hours ... if he was going to
make a strike against the undead, those two hours offered the perfect windows.
He didn't know about God Himself arranging this, but he knew a good thing when
he saw it. He was not going to waste this advantage.
"I like the way you think, Carole. But first we need
an agenda. And the first thing on that agenda should be contacting the church
and letting those people know I'm still alive."
"But you can't let them see you like this, or let
them know you—"
"Absolutely not. We'll have to think of something
that'll keep them together and fighting on without me. Because I'll be fighting
my own war. I want to take the fight to the undead, get in their faces and hit
them where it will really hurt: New York."
Yes. Franco. He wanted to see that smug son of a bitch
again—and when he did, it would be on his terms, not Franco's.
"What's this about 'my' war?" Lacey said. Joe
turned to see her standing behind them, rubbing her eyes. "This is our
fight too, Unk."
He smiled. "I could use the help, but..."
The thought of either of these two precious people getting
hurt because of him ... he couldn't go there.
"But what?" Lacey said. "You're afraid we'll
get killed or something? I figure we're as good as dead if we do nothing, so we
might as well go down doing something. Better than sitting on our asses and
waiting for the ax to fall."
Carole rolled her eyes. "You have such a way with
words."
Lacey shrugged. "Am I right or am I right?"
Joe had to admit she was right. He faced the reddened,
swollen sun as it neared the rooftops. He could look at it now, and it barely
heated his skin.
"Okay then," he said. "But we'll have to
run this like a military operation."
"Does that mean you want to be made general?"
Lacey said through another yawn.
"No. Carole's the most experienced. She should be our
general."
Carole waved her hands. "Oh, no. Not me."
Lacey squinted at him. "You know much about military
operations?"
"Not a thing. But I figure we need reconnaissance and
intelligence. And most of all, we need to practice before we head for New
York."
Lacey nodded. "Sort of like an out-of-town tryout before
hitting Broadway, right?"
"Right. And I think the local nests can provide just
the sort of rehearsals we'll need."
LACEY . . .
"We have to tell the parishioners something" Joe
said. "Any ideas?"
Lacey watched him, looking for the first signs of what she
knew must come. They were back in the bungalow, seated around the cocktail
table in the same places as last night. A single candle set on the glass top
lit their faces.
"Why don't we tell them the truth?" Carole said.
Lacey shook her head. "This is one case where the
truth shall not set them free. Besides, it's too . .. complicated."
"How about a form of the truth?" Joe said.
"We'll tell them that the vampires attacked me, tried to turn me, but
failed. I survived but I'm badly hurt. I need time to recover and until I do...
until I'm back to my old self"— which will be never, he thought
grimly—"I've got to stay out of sight."
"Right," Lacey said, liking the idea.
"You're in hiding until you heal up because they're out there looking for
you, trying to finish the job they started."
"Works for me," Joe said. "How about you,
Carole?"
"Well..." She frowned. "It's not exactly
true."
"But it's not exactly false," he said.
She shrugged. "I've no objection, but if I were in
their place I'd be wondering why you wouldn't want to heal up among them ...
safety in numbers and all that."
Joe didn't answer. All of a sudden he seemed distracted.
Lacey watched his right hand trail down to his abdomen and press on it.
Her heart sank. The hunger ... it was starting.
She force-fed brightness into her tone. "We'll just
say that you feel it's safer to stay away. Your presence there might trigger an
assault on the church, causing unnecessary casualties. When you're fully healed
you'll return. But till then they must be brave and vigilant and keep up the
fight, blah-blah-blah."
Joe nodded absently, both hands over his stomach now.
"Good . . . sounds good."
Carole said, "Then the next question is, how do we
get this message to them?"
Lacey kept her eyes on her uncle. "How about a
letter, hand written by their Father Joe himself? You and I could 'find' it and
read it to the parishioners."
Carole shook her head. "They don't know his
handwriting. Some of them will think it's a fake. Doubt will spread, ruining
the whole plan."
Carole was right. Lacey searched for an alternative. She
thought of having Joe sneak up to the church at night and speak from the shadows
to someone he trusted—Carl, maybe—but discarded the idea. Too chancy. Too many
ways it could backfire, especially if anyone caught sight of his ruined face.
They'd think he was an impostor.
Then it came to her, so obvious she kicked herself for not
thinking of it immediately.
"We'll tape you! All we need is to get hold of a
little cassette recorder and have you record your message. We leave it at the
church for someone to find. It'll have a note saying it's from you. They'll
play it and recognize your voice. No doubters then."
Carole nodded. "Brilliant. I know a Radio Shack not
far from here that ought to have a cassette recorder."
Lacey looked at Joe. His teeth were clenched. He didn't
seem to be listening. She grabbed the flashlight and headed for the bathroom.
Not that there was any water pressure in the town's system to make the bathroom
useful for its intended functions, but she needed to be away from Carole. She
placed the flashlight on the glass shelf under the medicine cabinet. . . next to
the steak knife she'd left here earlier just for this purpose.
Picking up the knife, she called, "Uncle Joe? Could
you come in here a sec?"
When she heard him approaching, she bit her lip and sliced
the pad of her left index finger. She jumped with the pain, almost dropping the
knife.
Damn, that hurt!
She placed the knife in the sink and cupped her right hand
under the finger.
"Something wrong?" Joe said as he came up behind
her.
"Close the door, will you?"
When she heard it close she turned and held her bloody
finger up to his lips. "Here," she whispered. "I know you need
it."
He turned his head and stepped back. "No!"
Lacey stepped closer. "I thought we settled this last
night!" she hissed. "This is something you need and something I want
to give. Don't do this, Unk. I'm already cut and bleeding." She pushed her
finger toward his mouth. "Take what you need."
With a groan he grabbed her hand and pressed her finger to
his lips. He sucked hungrily for an instant, then pushed her hand away.
"Enough!" The word sounded as if it had been
ripped from deep inside him.
"You're sure?"
He looked away and nodded. "Look . . . I'm going out.
I need to do some reconnoitering, see if I can locate a nest or two."
"Want us to come along?" She opened the medicine
cabinet and found a tin of Band-Aids.
He shook his head. "Better if I do this alone. I'll
be less noticeable solo." He glanced at her, then away again. "Lend
me the car keys."
"Carole has them."
"Can you get them for me?"
"Just ask—"
"Please?"
Lacey bit back a remark. She wrapped a Band-Aid around her
finger and returned to the front room.
"Is everything all right?" Carole asked. Her
eyes darted from Lacey's face, to her bandaged finger then to her eyes again.
"He needs the car to go hunt up some targets. Where
are the keys?"
Carole fished them out of her sweatsuit pants pocket.
"Alone?"
"He thinks it'll be better that way."
Lacey took the keys back to the bathroom. "I don't
understand you," she whispered. "I thought we straightened this out
last night."
"We didn't." His voice was barely audible.
"I said we'd see."
"Okay. We've seen. And it was quick and simple. Now
tell me, why wouldn't you get keys yourself?"
"Because ... because Carole's in there. One look at
me and she'd know."
"So?"
"Let's just drop it."
"No. Tell me."
"Because . . . because I can't bear being in her
presence after doing this. I feel so ... so diminished." He squeezed her
hand. "Got to go."
You poor, poor man, she thought, staring at him. You've
got it bad, don't you. And this is tearing you apart.
He squeezed past her and stepped into the front room. He
turned right, heading for the rear of the bungalow.
"Good-bye, Carole," he said in a choked voice
without looking at her. "I'll be back around sunrise."
Lacey leaned against the sink until she heard the back
door open and close, then she returned to the front room. "Carole,"
she said. "We've got to talk."
JOE . . .
Standing in the deep moon shadows, he watched the church
from afar, listened to the hymns echoing from within, saw the daylight-bright
glow gushing through the open front doors, and yearned to go inside.
But that was not to be. The huge crucifix hanging over the
sanctuary and the dozens of crosses on the walls—crosses he'd helped fashion
with his own hands—would blind him now, make his presence there an ongoing
agony. That part of his life was over. The simple comfort of kneeling in a pew
and letting the cool serenity of the church ease the cares and tensions from
his soul would be forever denied him. And as for saying Mass . . .
The longing pushed a sob to the back of his throat but he
forced it down. In his other existence he might have felt tears running down
his cheeks, but they remained dry. The undead don't have tears. Their hair
doesn't grow. They don't progress or regress, they simply are.
He was about to turn away when movement to his right
caught his eye. His night vision picked out a figure—balding, with a ripe gut
bulging over his belt—leaning behind a tree.
Joe, it seemed, wasn't the only one watching the church.
He bent into a crouch and moved a few yards closer. He
caught the flash of a Vichy earring.
Not surprising that the undead would want to keep an eye
on the church. They had to be furious and more than a little unsettled by these
defiant "cattle."
With a start Joe realized that they might be watching for
him.
Of course. Franco had expected him to rise from the dead
in the rectory and start feeding on the parishioners. He must know by now that
that hadn't happened. He'd want to know why. Never in a thousand years would he
guess the truth.
Franco had to be baffled. His beautiful plan had gone awry.
More than awry, it had gone bust. He had to be furious.
Joe cradled the thought, letting it warm him, feeling the
best he'd felt all night.
He found a place between a couple of waist-high shrubs
where he could watch the watcher without being seen. He settled onto the
ground. Despite his lightweight shirt and shorts, the damp earth and cool
breeze didn't chill him. He felt perfectly comfortable. Extremes of temperature
didn't seem to bother him.
What else wouldn't bother him? He had much to learn about,
this new existence, this altered body he'd be wearing into the future.
The future . . . what did that mean anymore? How long
could he exist? Would he go on indefinitely like the true undead? And beyond
that hazy future, what of his salvation? What of his soul? Did he still have
one?
The possibility jolted him. What if his soul had departed
after Devlin had torn him up? Was he an empty vessel now, marked and doomed to
wander the earth like Cain, offensive to the sight of God and man?
Joe shifted his gaze to the dark blotch of the graveyard
to the left of the church. He could almost pick out Zev's grave among the
shadows.
Zev, he thought. Where are you, old friend?
How he wished he were here tonight, sitting beside him. He
longed for the comfort of his wit, the honed edge of his Talmudic intellect. He
wouldn't have answers, but he'd know the questions to ask, and together they
might come to understand this, or at least find a path toward understanding.
Here, on his own, would he ever understand what he'd
become? Was there anyone else like him on earth? He doubted it. He was sui
generis.
The quote, Alone and afraid in a world he never made,
trailed through his head. Whoever wrote that hadn't been thinking of Joe
Cahill, but could have been.
Joe watched the watcher through the night. When the sky
started to lighten, the Vichy slunk away from the tree and started walking
south. Pistol in hand, the man kept to the center of the street, looking wary.
Dear Carole, all on her own, had filled their rotten hearts with terror.
Joe paralleled his path, traveling through the backyards
of the deserted houses lining the street, catching only occasional glimpses of
him between the buildings, but that was enough.
Although Joe's was a much more difficult route, hopping
fences and ducking through hedges, he felt no sense of exertion. He wasn't even
breathing hard.
He stopped as he realized with a start that he wasn't
breathing at all. He had to take in air in order to talk, but otherwise he
didn't need to breathe. No blood, no respiration—what was powering his body? He
didn't know, might never know.
He'd lost ground on the Vichy and hurried to catch up. The
task of tailing him became dicier as he entered the business district. Too
open, with no cover. Joe had to settle for huddling in a doorway and watching
him. After what Lacey had told him about her abduction, he had a good idea of
where the man was headed.
Sure enough, the Vichy stopped before the Post Office where
he met with another pair of his kind.
And then, out of the shadows, a group of undead, seven
males and a female, appeared as a group. Joe couldn't make out their faces from
this distance. He couldn't hear their words, either, but he saw a lot of shaking
heads and tense, unhappy postures.
He was more sure now than ever that they'd been searching
for him.
With the arrival of another trio of Vichy, the first three
left. The second three took up guard positions as all eight undead trudged up
the Post Office steps. Joe noticed that six of the males clustered around the
female while a lone male brought up the rear. Something familiar about that
solitary figure, but Joe couldn't place it.
No time to think about it either. He broke into a run.
Dawn was coming and he had to race the sun to the beach.
- 10 -
CAROLE . . .
Soon.
Carole sat on the bungalow's tiny rear deck and watched
the sun's lazy fall toward the horizon. A beautiful end to the day. She might
have enjoyed it but for the adrenaline buzzing through her.
A good day ... as good as could be expected. In these
times, a good day was when nothing unusually ugly occurred.
Joseph had made it home just after sunrise. Before
dropping into a deathlike sleep in the rear bedroom, he'd spoken into the
cassette recorder Carole and Lacey had looted from the Radio Shack.
Was it really looting? she wondered. Did taking something
from a store that was never going to reopen make you a looter? It seemed like a
silly thing to worry about, but she did.
When Carole had asked Lacey what she thought, she'd
replied, "Who gives a shit?"
Maybe Carole needed to adopt more of that attitude.
Carole had returned to the church this morning and, when
no one was watching, left the recorder on the front steps. It seemed to take
forever, but eventually someone found it and played it for the congregation.
Cheers and tears—that was the only way Carole could
describe the reaction. At least initially. It took a while for the anger to set
in, but when it came it was fierce. The undead and their collaborators had
tried to turn their Father Joe. A craven, cowardly, backstabbing act. The anger
bound the parishioners even more closely. They'd stay on and fight harder. To
the death if need be.
Carole tried to draw strength from the memory of their
boisterous resolve. For soon she would have to do what she and Lacey had
discussed. Part of her hummed with anticipation while an equal part recoiled.
Joseph had awakened a short while ago. He and Lacey were
inside, talking. The indistinguishable murmur of their voices drifted through
the open glass door, mixing with the thrum of the waves and the calls of the
gulls.
Her heart kicked up its tempo as their voices faded. That
meant that they were heading for the front bedroom.
Soon ...too soon . . .
"Okay."
Carole jumped and turned at the sound of Lacey's voice.
"Now?"
How inane. Of course now. That was why Lacey was here.
Carole rose unsteadily. Did she have the nerve for this?
Lacey pressed the steak knife into her hand. "He's
waiting."
Carole nodded, took the knife, and headed for the bedroom.
When she reached the alcove she hesitated. She wiped a sweaty palm on the pants
of her sweatsuit, then forced herself forward.
I can do this, she thought. I must do this.
Joe was sitting on the bed, head down, hands clasped
between his knees, looking like a man on death row. He didn't look up as she
entered.
"Okay," he said, his voice hoarse. "Let's
get this over—" He must have sensed something. His head snapped up.
"Carole? Sorry. I was expecting Lacey."
Her tongue felt like flannel. "It won't be Lacey
today."
Before he could understand, before he could protest,
Carole clenched her teeth and jabbed the point of the knife into the center of
her palm. She suppressed a gasp of pain as the blade pierced her skin.
"No!" Joseph was on his feet. "No,
don't!"
"It's already done," she said.
"Carole, I can't." He backed away a step.
"Not you."
She held out her hand, cupping her palm to hold the
pooling blood.
"Yes. Me. It's only fair. I don't want to be left
out."
That wasn't quite the way Lacey had put it last night
after Joseph had left so abruptly. She'd said that if the three of them were
going to work together, be a team, then they'd have to act and feel like a
team. "One for all and all for one, and all that shit," she'd said.
Which meant they had to feel at ease with each other, and
that would never happen unless someone broke through the wall of shame that had
sprung up between Carole and her uncle. Joseph couldn't do it. Only Carole had
the power.
Lacey had known one sure way for Carole to break through.
It was radical, she'd warned, something her uncle would balk at—and Carole
wouldn't be too crazy about it either—but it had to be done.
Joseph was shaking his head, his mouth working but saying
nothing. She could read no expression in his scarred face, but his eyes looked
terrified.
Still cupping her hand, Carole sat on the bed. She placed
the knife beside her and tugged on his sleeve.
"Sit, Joseph," she said. "You've given so
much, had so much stolen from you, let me give something to you."
"No!"
"Why will you take it from Lacey but not from me? Do
you think there's something wrong with my blood?"
"No, of course not."
"They why not me?"
"Because ..." He shook his head.
"Please don't reject me." She felt a thickness
in her throat, heard a catch in her voice. "I couldn't bear it if you
turned me away."
Joseph must have heard it too. He slumped next to her.
"Carole . .. you don't have to do this."
"I do. I want to."
That hadn't been quite true when she'd stepped into the
room, but now, this close to him, feeling his anguish, she wanted to be part of
this, she wanted this bond, terrible as it was.
She held her cupped palm beneath his chin.
"Please?"
With a groan Joseph bent his head and pressed his lips
against her palm. A shiver ran through her as his tongue swirled against her
skin.
So close . . . she'd never dreamed they'd be this close.
Carole felt him swallow, then with a sob he pushed her
hand away and sagged against her, resting his head on her thighs, facing away.
"Oh, Carole, I'm so sorry. So sorry."
She made a fist over her cut palm to stanch the bleeding.
Her other hand rose of its own accord, hovered over his head for a few
heartbeats, then dropped and began stroking his hair.
"You have nothing to apologize for, Joseph," she
said softly. "This was not your choosing. It's not your fault."
He said nothing. For a moment she feared he might rise and
leave the room, but he didn't move.
She said, "You almost told me why you didn't want to
take my blood. You got as far as 'Because.' Can you tell me the rest?"
"Because ..." He took a breath. "Because I
love you."
She gasped, her hand recoiling from him as if it had been
burned.
Joseph began to lift his head. "I'm sorry. I
shouldn't have—"
"No—no," she said, gently pushing his head back
down. "Don't move." She couldn't let him see her face right now, for
she knew her heart must be shining in her eyes. "It's all right. It's . .
. it's ..."
The intoxicating feelings bursting through her . . . she'd
never felt anything like this before. It was indescribable. Her words dried up
and blew away like dead leaves.
I love you . . . had he really said that?
"It's wonderful," she managed.
"I'm not talking about love as for a fellow human
being. I'm saying that I love you as a woman."
"All the more wonderful," she said.
"Because I've felt the same way about you."
Now his head shot up and she couldn't stop it. He stared
at her, mouth agape. "What?"
She could only nod. She felt tears brimming her eyelids
and didn't trust herself to speak.
"That can't be," he said.
She nodded again and forced the words past the swelling in
her throat. "I was taken with you the day you arrived to replace Father
McMann. And as I came to know you, I came to love you."
"You mean 'loved,' don't you."
"No. I still do. More than ever."
He looked away. "You can't. That man is gone."
She touched his scarred cheek. "No. He's been
changed, but he's not gone. He's still there, inside. I feel him when you're
near, I hear him when you speak."
"Maybe he's there now, but I don't know much longer
you can count on him being around."
"I have faith in you."
"I appreciate that, Carole but. . . I've been having
a dream, the same dream yesterday and today. Hanging from a precipice over this
swirling darkness that's calling to me, beckoning to me."
"But—"
He held up a hand. "I know what you're going to say,
but this doesn't feel symbolic. This feels real. It bothers me that part of me
wants to let go and fall into that abyss. But that's all right. I think I can
handle that. What bothers me more is there's no sense of light above me trying
to draw me the other way. Only the darkness below."
"I don't understand."
"Where's the balance? The darkness seems to be in
control with nothing opposing it. Nothing but us."
"God is out there, Joseph, working through us."
"Not working too well, I'd say. Look what's happened
to me."
She wanted to tell him that what had happened to him might
be all part of God's plan, but held back. Now was not the time.
He shook his head. "All those years at St. Anthony's
. . . you loving me, I loving you, longing for you, and neither of us knew.
Imagine if things had been different... what a team we'd have made,
Carole."
"We're a team now, at least part of one."
"Yes, but the possibilities ... all gone now."
He laid his head back on her thighs. "Gone for good."
She began stroking his hair again. "We're together
now."
"But look what it took for us to find out how we felt
about each other. You've been through a living hell since Easter week, and I. .
. I'm not even human anymore."
"I don't care what you are. I know who you are."
After a while he said, "Sex is out of the question,
you know."
"Yes. We both still have our vows."
"I don't mean that. I mean . . . one of the changes
in me . . . one of the things they stole from me ... I don't think I ever
can."
Carole said nothing. It didn't matter.
They stayed this way a long time, Joseph lying still
against her thighs, Carole stroking his hair, soothing him, murmuring to him.
In the world outside the horror still raged all about them, but here, in this
moment, in this place, she'd found a sliver of peace, the closest to heaven
she'd ever been.
CAROLE . . .
Lacey burst out laughing. She couldn't help it.
Joe glanced up from where he sat across from her at the little
dining room table. "What's so funny?"
"I was just thinking what a cozy little domestic
scene this is. Here's Papa Joe, sharpening stakes to drive through undead
hearts. There's Momma Carole at the sink mixing up a batch of napalm. And
here's baby Lacey cleaning her 9mm pistols." She laughed again.
"We're the new nuclear family!"
Carole turned from the sink where she was stirring a
strange mix with a large wooden spoon, and gave her a wry smile.
"Nuclear... there's a thought."
"No, Carole," Joe said. "Don't go
there."
What a change in Carole and Joe. Their meeting in the
bedroom had transformed them. They'd come out leaning close to each other.
Lacey wouldn't have been surprised if they started holding hands, but they
didn't. Joe seemed so much more at ease in her presence, and Carole ... well,
Carole positively glowed.
All because of me, Lacey thought. Did I have the situation
and solution nailed or what? Am I brilliant or am I brilliant?
After Joe had fed, they went their separate ways. Joe took
the car to Lake-wood to work out a plan of attack on the Post Office. Carole
walked down to the abandoned business district on Arnold Avenue to do what she
termed some "shopping." Lacey hoped that neither of them ran into
Vichy along the way.
Her own job was simpler. Armed with a makeshift siphon,
she'd been assigned the task of finding gasoline.
That had proved a cinch. Her first stop had been the
garage behind the bungalow where she discovered an old Ford convertible with a
full tank. She found a dusty five-gallon gas can, probably for a motorboat, and
filled that.
Carole returned later with a shopping cart loaded with
boxes of different brands of soap flakes, some lighter fluid, plus a bag of
sundries from a party supply shop. She immediately set up in the kitchen and
went to work filling the house with fumes.
Lacey held up one of the 9mm rounds and showed it to Joe.
"Look at this. Hollow point. They're all hollow
points."
Joe shook his head. "Nasty things. I hear they make a
little hole going in and a great big hole coming out."
"Why would the undead be carrying automatics loaded
with these?"
"To protect against humans, I imagine," Joe
said. "They're strong, they're fast, but that's not enough if they're
attacked by a mob." He pointed to the round. "That's probably what
the Vichy will be using against us this morning—if they get the chance."
"Let's go over the plan again," Lacey said.
She wasn't crazy about it. As much as she respected her
uncle's intelligence, he'd had no military training, had never engaged in any
sort of violent activity. Lacey had at least studied martial arts. That wasn't
much, but it had trained her on how to size up an opponent, how to look for
strategic openings. Joe's plan seemed to depend on too many variables.
"Okay," Joe said. "The Vichy guards spend
most of their time hanging around on the front steps. When they're not smoking
they're sleeping. They're bored and don't take their job seriously. No one's
ever attacked them on duty like that and they probably think no one ever will.
We're going to change that."
"Hitting them at dawn I understand, but why napalm?
Why don't we just shoot them?"
"Because we're not marksmen—or, excuse me,
markswomen—and we can't afford a protracted gun battle because my clock will be
running. If they hold out past my sun tolerance, we'll have lost more than the
battle. We won't be able to take them by surprise again. But more than that,
the more bullets flying, the greater chance of you or Carole getting hit."
"But how do we know the napalm will work?"
Joe's idea was for the three of them to climb to the roof
of the building across the street and each toss a napalm-filled balloon onto
the Vichy as they lounged on the Post Office steps below. The street wasn't
wide and it was an easy throw from the roof. Or so he said.
"Oh, it will work," Carole said from the sink.
"Have no fear of that."
"But it has to ignite."
"We'll make sure one of them's smoking before we
toss."
"That doesn't guarantee it will light."
Joe leaned back, staring at her. For a moment she thought
he was angry but couldn't be sure. So hard to gauge emotions when a face has no
expression.
"You're right," he said finally. "It
doesn't." He turned toward the kitchen. "Do we have any gasoline
left, Carole?"
"A little. Why?"
"Save half a dozen ounces or so. We're going to bring
along a Molotov cocktail." He turned back to Lacey. "Better?"
"You mean throw that first, then the napalm?" He nodded.
"Yeah," Lacey said. "That'll work."
JOE . . .
"Oh, no!" Joe said as he heard a thwacking noise
and the car began to vibrate. He slammed a fist against the steering wheel.
"Damn!"
They'd left an hour before dawn. The plan had been to loop
north of Lakewood through Howell and approach downtown from the west. They were
on Aldrich Road when the noise began.
"What's wrong?" Carole said. She sat next to him
in the front, Lacey sat in the rear with the arsenal.
"Can you believe it? We've got a flat!"
He popped the trunk and jumped out. Of all times for
something like this to happen.
"Can't we drive on the rim?" Carole said.
"Any other time I'd say fine, but we can't risk the
racket it will make."
He lifted the trunk lid and was relieved to find the spare
present and inflated.
Nearly half an hour later they were rolling again.
"That took too long," Carole said. "Maybe
we should put this off till tomorrow."
She's probably right, Joe thought. What's another day?
But something inside wouldn't allow him to agree. He was
primed and ready for a little payback. More than ready—aching.
"Let's see how things look," he said. "If
we can't do it the way we planned, we'll call it off."
He looked at Carole and wanted to take her hand. He
couldn't believe it. All these years she'd been as attracted to him as he'd
been to her, and neither of them had had a clue. How sad, he thought. And how
wonderful to be past that now.
They reached Lakewood just as the sun was rising. They
parked two blocks from the business district and lugged their milk crate full
of bottles, balloons, and guns between the buildings until they wound up in an
alley across the street and half a block up from the Post Office. The three-man
Vichy day shift was on the job, so to speak, smoking and lounging on the steps.
One of them sat near a shotgun that leaned against a wall; the other two had
holstered pistols.
Carole was looking at her watch. "We'll have to call
it off. By the time we carry all this stuff up to the roof and start the
attack"—she looked up at Joe— "it will be too late for you."
Joe looked at the brightening sky. Damn. She was right.
"All right. Let's head back to the car and—"
"Wait," Lacey said. "Give me a minute
here."
"For what?" Joe said.
Her jaw was set and her eyes had gone flat and cold. She
worked the slide on one of her pistols and stuck it into the waistband of her
jeans at the small of her back.
"Lacey?"
Before Joe could stop her she stepped out onto the
sidewalk and began walking toward the Vichy. He wanted to call her back but
didn't dare reveal himself. With the sun lighting her back, she moved briskly,
hips swaying, arms swinging at her sides. Joe could only peek around the corner
and pray.
She was halfway to the Post Office before they noticed
her.
"Hey, girl," one of them said, shading his eyes
as he squinted into the glare. "Where you goin?"
"Just passing through," she told him.
The two who'd been stretched out on the steps were now on
their feet, hands on hips, looking toward her and grinning.
"What's your hurry?" said a big-bellied one.
"No hurry," she said. "Just got places to
go."
Joe watched them move out into the street to intercept
her. What is she doing? he wondered. Has she gone crazy?
"Oh, I don't think so," said the first one.
"I think you're gonna stop and visit."
Lacey was within half a dozen feet of them now. "Been
there, done that. Hey, boys . . . don't you remember me?"
With that she reached behind her, ripped her pistol free,
and began firing wildly, pulling the trigger as fast as it would allow. Joe saw
the one with the shotgun take a round in the chest. His arms flew outward as
the bullet punched him back. Lacey's second shot went wild but the third caught
the fat one in the gut. The last Vichy was drawing his pistol when Lacey's
fourth shot caught him in the shoulder, spinning him around.
Four shots, three hits, but she didn't stop there. She
kept firing.
Joe leaped out from the alley and dashed toward her as she
stood over the three downed men and pumped round after round into their
twitching bodies. He reached her as the slide on her pistol locked back on
empty.
He grabbed her shoulders and spun her to face him.
"Lacey! What—?" Then he saw the tears streaming down her cheeks.
"It was them, Uncle Joe," she sobbed. "I
recognized them. They're the ones who—" She closed her eyes and took a
deep, shuddering breath.
Joe glanced at their blood-splattered remains. "Lacey
... Jesus. . . are you—?
"I'm okay. That was for Enrico ... and me. Let's just
get this done and get out of here, okay?"
Joe opened his mouth to speak—he figured he should say
something—but his mind was blank. He settled for a curt nod. They could talk
later.
Carole arrived then with her book bag full of stakes and
hammers. She took one look at the bodies, then put her arm around Lacey's
shoulders.
"It's all right, Lacey. You did the Lord's
work."
Lacey irritably shrugged off her arm. "That wasn't
any lord's work—that was mine."
Joe caught the flash of hurt in Carole's eyes and felt bad
for her. Lacey's rough edges weren't getting any smoother. No time now to
explain his niece to Carole.
He took the book bag from her and turned toward the Post
Office. "Let's go-
He led the way up the steps. Once inside he looked around.
Empty. Sunlight began to stream through the east windows.
"If there's a cellar, that's where they'll be."
Lacey pointed to a door to the left of the clerk windows.
"I saw the woman and her entourage go through there."
The door was locked. No problem. Joe kicked it open.
Another door, unlocked, opened onto a flight of stairs leading down into a
darker space.
"We'll do as many as we can in the time we
have," he said, reaching into the bag and handing out the flashlights.
"But we do the woman first. From what I've seen, she seems to be in
charge."
He didn't need a light of his own. The stairwell appeared
well lit to him.
He hurried down to where the steps made a sharp right turn
at the bottom into a dank, dusty space—
—and there they were. He could see all eight of them in
the cool darkness, stretched out on an assortment of beds and cots. Like a
dormitory in hell. If their daysleep was anything like his the past two nights,
it was like death.
Joe looked around. Concrete walls, no windows, junk piled
in the near-right corner. He spotted the woman's bed on the far side of the
room next to the wall and immediately moved toward her. Even if they managed to
stake only one this morning, he wanted it to be her—to send a message back to
Franco that nobody he sent here was safe. Eventually he wanted Franco to know
that not even he was safe.
"Hey," Lacey called from behind him. "This
guy's awake."
"This one too," Carole said.
Joe had been so fixed on the woman that he'd paid no
attention to her six guards, arrayed around her like spokes on a wheel. He
looked down at the nearest and nearly jumped when he saw wide dark eyes staring
back at him, sharp teeth bared in a snarl.
Joe didn't understand. How could they be awake?
"Forget them for now. The woman first."
He stopped at her bedside and found her awake as well. She
lay on her back, staring up at him in fear and wonder.
"This is really creepy," Lacey said.
Joe had to agree. What was going on here? Unless.. . maybe
the gunfire outside had roused them. At least none of them was able to get up.
No time to waste. He dropped the book bag on her abdomen
and pulled out the heavy maul and one of the stakes. Carole stepped up beside
him and played her beam over the woman, illuminating the corner of the room
like daylight.
Joe lifted the stake. This wasn't how he'd expected this
to go. He hadn't counted on his victims staring him in the face as he pounded
stakes through their chests.
But this was no time for squeamishness. Steeling himself,
he placed the sharpened tip against her chest, just to the left of her
breastbone. He'd never done this before, but he imagined that was where the
heart sat. As he raised the hammer, the woman hissed and grabbed the stake with
both of her hands.
Joe jumped back in surprise, releasing his own grip.
"Dear God!" Carole gasped. "She can
move!"
Joe recovered and snatched the stake back from her grasp.
He broke her grip easily.
"But she's weak," he said.
A deafening blast echoed through the basement and Joe felt
a stabbing impact, like a punch, in his back.
A shot!
Another blast as he half turned—another blow, this time to
his shoulder.
"Get down!" he shouted to Carole and Lacey.
"Way down!"
He feared the ricochets in this concrete box could be
almost as deadly as a direct hit. He turned and found the shooter, the pistol
wavering in his hand as he aimed another shot. Joe ducked to his left, darted
to the man's side, and snatched the gun from his hand.
"Hey!" Lacey cried, popping her head up. She
pointed to a guard near her. "This one's going for his gun too!"
"Get it!" Joe shouted. He turned and lunged for
another of the woman's guards who was lifting his automatic, moving like
someone in a slow-motion movie. Joe tore it from his grasp. "Get their
guns! All of them."
He saw Lacey struggling with her guard. She had a
two-handed grip on the barrel. Joe was just about to step in and help when she
twisted it from his grasp. He turned and saw Carole pulling a pistol from
another guard's belt before he could reach it. Joe disarmed two more, then
stepped over to the seventh male, the one with the cot against the opposite
wall, and found him unarmed.
"You!" Joe cried when he spotted his ruined left
eye.
This was one of Franco's guards, the one who'd stripped
him naked before taking him to his boss. What had Franco called him?
"Artemis!" That was it. "What are you doing
here?"
The good eye widened. "You know me?" the vampire
rasped.
That surprised Joe for an instant, then he remembered that
his face had been changed by the sun. He wished he knew what he looked like.
He jabbed one of the pistols at him. "Too bad you
didn't bring Franco with you. When we finish with the lady, you're next!"
This was perfect: the woman and Franco's right-hand man in
one morning. He turned and stalked back toward the guards, snatching up a
couple of machetes as he reached them. "Take their machetes too. Don't
leave them with anything that can be used against us."
He tossed the pistols and machetes toward the foot of the
steps. Carole and
Lacey did the same. He was most relieved to have the guns
out of play. The bullets hadn't affected him, but Carole and Lacey's lives had
been on the line.
"A little help over here," Lacey said. Her voice
sounded strained.
Joe looked and saw that the woman had turned over and was
trying to crawl out of her bed. Lacey was struggling to hold her back. Carole
leaned in to help.
As Joe moved toward the women, one of the guards rolled
out of bed and landed on the floor in front of him. Another to his right did
the same. Both started a slow-motion bellycrawl toward their mistress. Joe
stepped on the back of the one in front of him and rejoined Carole and Lacey.
"They're coming for us!" Lacey said, an edge of
panic in her voice. She was clutching the woman's right arm while Carole held
the left from the other side of the bed. The woman writhed slowly in their
grasp. "Let's do this and get the hell out of here!"
"Yes, Joseph," Carole said, calm but grave.
"You haven't much time."
"All right, all right." Wasn't anything going to
go according to plan?
He grabbed the stake and maul. No hesitation this time. He
placed the point of the stake over the woman's writhing chest, raised the maul—
Lacey let out a yelp and released the woman's right arm.
"Something just touched—damn! There's one here on the floor! He's trying
to grab my leg!"
She half turned and began kicking at the guard who'd
crawled to their feet.
Joe stared in shock, then looked around. Others were on
their way, inching toward them along the floor. This kind of loyalty and
devotion was almost unimaginable, especially in the undead.
"Joseph," Carole said. She had both the woman's
arms now. "Do it. Now."
Joe nodded. In a single swift move he placed the stake and
hammered it home. The heavy steel head of the maul drove the point all the way
through the woman and into the mattress beneath. She writhed, kicked, spasmed,
then stiffened and lay still.
Done. No time to waste. Move on. First get the guard by
Lacey, and then—
"What the hell—?" Lacey said.
Joe looked down. The guard at Lacey's feet was writhing on
the floor. The other five were doing the same. This lasted maybe ten seconds,
and then they lay as still as their mistress.
Lacey nudged one with the toe of her shoe. "Dead.
They're all__"
She looked up at Joe, her eyes wide. "Unk! This is
what happened the other night, right upstairs. A bunch of undead
guards—supposedly they belonged to someone named Gregor—they suddenly dropped
dead, just like these guys.
It was right after we heard a boom and ..." She
turned to Carole. "You told us you killed a vampire that night. Blew him
to bits, right?"
"Right. But I never knew his name."
Lacey nodded. "I'll bet it was Gregor. You killed him
across town, and his guards died upstairs in the Post Office. We killed this
one, and her guards die a few seconds later. What's the connection? Is there
some sort of spell that binds the guards to their masters? A life-and-death
bond that connects them? Is that why they're so loyal?"
Memories of the Empire State Building flashed through
Joe's head.
"When I mentioned to Franco how loyal his guards
seemed, he told me it wasn't out of selflessness or personal regard for him—it
was self-preservation."
"That was his word?" Lacey said.
"Self-preservation? Well then that's it. That's how they bind their guards
to them: if their master dies, they die."
Joe shook his head. "I've got a feeling it's
something more than that. Franco mentioned a secret. 'A momentous secret we
keep only to ourselves,' he said. If only—"
Artemis! Joe whirled and looked at the cot in the corner
where he'd left the vampire. Had he died too? But his bed was empty. Where—?
"Look!" Carole said, pointing her flashlight
beam at a doorway where a pair of legs were crawling through. "Someone's there!"
Joe hurried over, grabbed both ankles, and hauled Artemis
back into the dormitory. He flipped him onto his back and stood over him.
"Not so fast, Artemis. We have some questions."
"Fuck you!" His voice was barely audible.
"Why did the guards die when we killed the
woman?"
The vampire sneered up at him and said nothing.
Joe realized he had nothing to bargain with. Artemis knew
he wasn't going to walk away from this, so he had no reason to tell them
anything.
Lacey came up beside Joe and played her light over
Artemis. "Can we bring him upstairs?"
"I suppose so," Joe said. "But why?"
She looked at him. "Sunlight."
Joe glanced from her to Artemis and saw the fear in his
single eye. Joe grabbed his feet again and dragged him toward the stairs.
"Good idea!"
"No!"
Joe didn't have time for threats or deals. He hauled
Artemis up feet first to the main floor. The vampire twisted away from the
light and flung his arms over his eyes. Joe found the brightness uncomfortable
but it hadn't reached the intolerable point yet. Pulling Artemis upright, he
grabbed him by the collar and belt and walked him toward the front doors. The
sunlight blazed through the glass like burning phosphorous.
"Now's your chance, pal. Speak or burn. What's the
big secret?"
"Fuck you! I'll be just as dead either way!"
Damn him, he was right. And a dead vampire told no tales.
He spun Artemis and shoved him into a shadowed corner where he curled into a
whimpering ball.
Carole and Lacey stood in the cellar doorway staring at
Joe.
"Any ideas, or do we just finish him and get out of
here?" he said.
Lacey stepped closer to Artemis. She spoke slowly, softly.
"Tossing him out in the sun will kill him. But what if just a part of him
gets in the sunlight? What will that do?"
"Yes!" Joe said. Finally—leverage. "Anyone
have a knife?"
Lacey whipped out a stainless steel pocketknife. "My
butterfly's gone, but this should do. Someone tried to kill me with it."
Joe unfolded the blade and began slicing at the legs of
the vampire's pants below the knees. He remembered how this creature had ripped
the clothes from him a few long nights ago.
"What goes around, comes around, right,
Artemis?" he said through his teeth.
He pulled off Artemis's shoes, then moved around by his
shoulders.
"All right, ladies. Grab his feet and we'll move his
legs into that patch of sunlight over there."
"No!" Artemis wailed.
"Joseph," Carole said, giving him an unsettled
look. "Do we really—?"
"Please, Carole. Time's a-wasting, and this is one of
the undead who manhandled me in New York."
Artemis directed his one fear-filled eye at Joe. "New
York? Who—?"
"What? You don't recognize me? I'm the priest Franco
tried to turn the other night. Only he failed."
"But that's—that's impossible!"
Carole still hadn't moved. Lacey stepped in front of her.
"Let's go. I'll handle it."
She grabbed Artemis by both ankles. His feeble kicks
lacked the power to free him. Together she and Joe dragged the lower half of
his body into the light.
Immediately his flesh started to smoke and blister. Lacey
made a disgusted noise and released his ankles. His screams echoed through the
building.
"Okay! Yes! Please! I'll tell! Anything you want!
I'll tell! Please!"
Joe pulled him back into the shadows. Artemis lay in a
heap, writhing, panting, and sobbing, his hands hovering over but never touching
the blackened, still-smoking flesh of his lower legs. Sickened by the sight,
Joe turned away for a moment. He sensed Carole watching him but could not meet
her eyes.
Finally he turned back and forced himself to kneel beside
the vampire. He poked him roughly on the shoulder.
"What's the secret, Artemis? Why did those guards die
when we staked the woman?"
"They were her get," he gasped. "When she
died, all her get died, not just her guards."
"What's 'get'?" Lacey said.
Artemis sneered. "People she turned. When Olivia
died, all of her get, no matter where they were in the world, died with
her."
Joe knelt there, stunned. "I don't believe you."
"Believe it, priest. It's the one thing we don't want
the living to know about us."
"But you're telling me."
His smile was sickly. "What do I care? It won't
matter to me, will it."
"You're telling me that anyone, anywhere, that she
turned at anytime since she became undead, is now dead?"
"Yes. That's the big secret. That's why Olivia's
guards did everything to protect their get-mother. Not for her sake. For their
own."
Lacey squatted on the opposite side. "But that means
that somewhere there's a vampire who's the ultimate source of this whole undead
plague. If someone could get to him—"
Artemis was shaking his head. "No, cow. There may
have been a single Prime millennia ago, but now there are many. We undead
aren't immortal; it only seems that way. We age and die, but we last many centuries.
Eventually rot catches up to everything, including us. It hits suddenly and
over the course of a week or so we crumble to dust. But this kind of true death
does not affect the get. In fact it enhances them. Only premature death kills
one's get. Because we lived solitary existences for so long, we never knew
about get-death. But when an ancient Prime figured it out, and started the
practice of protecting getfathers, our numbers began to grow."
"Is Franco a Prime?" Joe asked.
Artemis nodded. "And my get-father." His eye
narrowed. "You want him, don't you."
"Oh, yeah. If he goes, how many go with him?"
"Many. I can't give you a definite number, but every
Nosferatu in the Empire State Building is his get. Not in the city, however.
We've learned to mix gets within a region to avoid catastrophe. I hope you get
him."
"Why?"
"I didn't want to come down here, but he made me. He
hasn't treated me right since a certain unfortunate accident, and now, because
of him, I'm done. Aren't I?" He shifted his gaze to Lacey and Carole.
"You wouldn't consider . . . ?"
"Not a chance," Lacey said.
Joe held out his hand. "Carole?"
"Not a stake!" Artemis whined. "I don't
want to be staked!"
Lacey made a face. "You rather be thrown out in the
sun?"
"No! That's even worse! Look, can't you let me go?
I've helped you. I've told you a valuable secret. I—"
Joe shook his head, as much to clear a creeping fog as to
emphasize that survival was not one of Artemis's options. "We'll give you
a choice: sun or stake. That's all you've got."
"There's another way," Carole said.
Joe looked up and saw her fishing something that looked
like a candle out of the front of her sweatshirt. He seemed to be viewing her
through a mist. The waxy stick had wires attached. She bent and placed it under
Artemis's neck, then draped a wire over each of his shoulders.
"This is a high explosive," she said. "You
won't feel a thing."
High explosive? Had she wired herself to explode? He
wanted to ask but the words wouldn't come.
"Just take the two wires ..." Carole was saying.
He watched Artemis reach up and take a wire in each hand.
"... and touch them—"
"Fuck you all!" Artemis cried as he jammed the
two wires together.
Joe managed to raise a leaden arm across his eyes and fall
back—
—but nothing happened.
Carole looked down at Artemis, her expression a mask of
dismay.
"You didn't let me finish." She held up a
battery. "You touch the wires to opposite ends of this." She shook
her head. "Your kind simply don't understand mercy or compassion, do
you."
"Damn right they don't," Lacey said.
Joe saw that she held the maul and a stake in her hands.
Before Artemis could react, she jabbed the point over his heart and slammed it
home with two quick, hard strikes.
The vampire arched his back, shuddered, then crumpled.
Lacey pulled the explosive stick from behind Artemis's
neck and handed it back to Carole. "They don't deserve a break. Any of
them."
Joe was still half sitting, half lying on the floor. He
tried to rise but hadn't the strength. He felt as if someone had pulled the
plug on his energy.
"Something's wrong," he croaked. "I can
barely move."
Carole looked at her watch. "Dear Lord! It's past
your time!"
Joe fought the lethargy stealing through him. Too tired to
worry. It was all he could do to hold his head up.
The world around him became a blur. He was dimly aware of
voices mentioning "back door" and "employee entrance" and
"bring the car around." He felt himself dragged-carried outside into
a shady area that was still blindingly bright, then lifted and folded into a
small space ... a slam that sounded like a car trunk lid, then darkness.. .
blessed darkness.
- 11 -
JOE . . .
"Carole ... are you all right?"
Joe had awakened to find the two slugs he'd taken in the
Post Office scattered around him on his mattress. He didn't know how, but his
body had extruded them during daysleep.
Then he'd fed—God, how he hated the word, the concept, the
act. It made him feel like some sort of jungle animal; he would never get used
to it. The women had decided to alternate, so Lacey had been the donor this
time. The sun was just about down, and the three of them had taken their usual
positions around the coffee table.
But Joe had noticed that Carole seemed withdrawn. She
looked tired, but he sensed it was more than that.
"I'm okay" Carole said without looking at him.
Lacey said, "She's been like this all day." This
earned her a brief glare from Carol. "Well it's true. You barely said two
words to me before we went to sleep, and maybe half a dozen since we woke
up."
"Didn't you sleep well?" Joe said.
"As a matter of fact, no," Carole said.
"Bad dreams?"
"In a way." She looked up, first at Joe, then at
Lacey. "Are we proud of ourselves?"
"About what?" Joe said.
"About this morning."
"Yeah," Lacey said. "We reduced the world's
undead population by eight and we learned something that could turn this fight
around: kill one of the big-shot undead and a whole lot of others die
too."
Carole said, "What about how we learned that
secret?"
Lacey shook her head. "I'm not following."
Carole sighed and looked at the ceiling. "Torture. Am
I the only one who's bothered by the fact that we tortured that creature into
giving us the information?"
"Yeah," Lacey said with an edge on her voice.
Joe could sense his niece's back rising. "I guess you could say you are.
They're already dead, Carole."
"No, they're undead. And they very obviously feel
pain."
"Hang on now," Joe said. He caught Carole's
troubled gaze and held it. "We did what we had to, Carole. I didn't like
it, and I'm sure Lacey didn't either, but this is war and—"
"A war for what?"
"For survival," Lacey said. "Them or us.
This isn't a war of ideologies, Carole," Lacey said. "And it's not a
war of religions either. This is a war for the survival of the human
race."
"Even if we have to sacrifice our humanity to win
it?"
Joe leaned back and kept silent. This wasn't what he'd
wanted to talk to Carole about, but he sensed this argument had been brewing
all day, maybe longer. Best to stay out of the line of fire unless it escalated
too far.
"Ever hear of the Spanish Inquisition, Carole?"
Lacey said. "That was 'humanity' at its most creative. We invented
torture."
"You sound proud of it."
"Not at all. I look at a picture of a rack or an Iron
Maiden and my stomach turns. My point is that we, as the living, don't exactly
have clean hands when it comes to depravity."
"I'm not worried about humanity's hands," Carole
said sofdy. "I'm worried about ours—the three of us. I'd like to believe
that we deserve to win. But if in the process we become like the enemy, what
have we won?"
"The right to survive!"
"Is that all you want?"
"No!" Lacey shot to her feet and pounded the
table. "I want more! I want to see every single one of those bloodsucking
parasites dead and rotting in the sun! They robbed me of the person I loved
more than anyone in my life, they took my parents—maybe I was on rotten terms
with them, and maybe I'll always be pissed at them for naming me Lacey, but
they were still my parents—and then they took one of the few men in the world
that I love and respect and tried to turn him into a monster like them. I want
them gone,
Carole, I want them wiped off the face of the earth, and I
want them to go screaming in agony, and I'm for doing whatever it takes to
achieve that!" Her voice broke and tears streamed down her cheeks as she
pounded the table with each word. "Whatever—it—takes!"
Joe rose, put an arm around Lacey's shoulders, and let her
lean against him. Time to make peace.
"I'm okay," she said.
"No, you're not. None of us has been okay since the
invasion. We're all damaged to varying degrees, but we all want the same thing.
Carole has a valid point. We need to win—we must win—but maybe there should be
a line we won't cross in order to win. I think we may have crossed that line at
the Post Office."
He felt Lacey stiffen and shake her head. "No lines,
no limits, no quarter, no mercy."
Joe tightened his grip on his niece's shoulders. How was
he going to salvage this?
"Can we leave it that we agree to disagree and hope
we don't have to cross the line again—hope that we don't find ourselves in a
position where we even have to think about crossing it?"
But if that moment came, Joe wondered, what side of that
line would he come down on?
Lacey shrugged, reluctantly, he thought. "I guess I'm
all right with that."
Carole nodded. "So am I. I pray we're never faced
with that choice again."
"Good," Joe said, sagging with relief. "You
two had me worried there."
"What?" Lacey said, looking up at him with a
half-smile playing about her lips. "You thought we'd break up the team?
Never happen. Right, Carole?"
"Never. Our work is too important. But I thought it
needed an airing."
"Well, it's aired," Joe said. "Now let me
air something else." He sat and took Carole's hands in his. "How long
have you been wiring yourself with explosives?"
She looked away. "A while."
"Why?"
"I think that should be obvious."
It was. But for Joe it was unthinkable.
"Carole, you mustn't. . . you can't..."
"I won't," she said. "Not unless all hope
is gone."
"Even then—"
She faced him. "I will not become one of them,
Joseph. And didn't you tell us yourself that you jumped off the Empire State
Building?"
Yes, he had, hadn't he. He wished he hadn't told them. It
cut off his argument at the knees. What could he say—that it was all right for
him but not for her?
"But blowing yourself up ..."
The thought of Carole being torn to pieces, bits of her
splattered against the walls and ceiling of a room, or scattered up and down a
street, sickened him.
Her smile was tremulous. "What better way to go? I
put my hand in my pocket, I press a button, and it's over—instantaneous,
painless, and, considering the straits I'll be in at that moment, I'll probably
take a few of the enemy with me."
"I kind of like that idea," Lacey said. "Maybe
you can wire me and—"
Joe held up a hand. "Lacey, please." He stared
at Carole. "All right. What can I say? It's something only you can decide,
Carole. But I beg you, when things look blackest, when you think there's no way
out and the situation can't get worse, hold off pressing that button. Give it
just one more minute."
"Why?"
"Because I don't want to lose you. And who knows?
Maybe in that one extra minute the situation will start to turn around.
Promise?"
She shrugged. "Promise."
Joe leaned back. He'd thought he'd feel better confronting
her about this, but he didn't.
He put it behind him for now and looked first at Lacey,
then Carole.
"All right. That's settled—I hope. Now we should plan
our next step. When do we leave for New York?"
Lacey dropped back into her seat. "New York? So soon?
Are we ready for that?"
"I don't think we have much choice," Joe said.
He got up and settled himself on the couch. "First off, I don't think
there's another nest we can practice on. Second, after what we did this
morning, I've got a feeling this area's going to be on the receiving end of a
lot of attention. So while they're looking this way, gearing up to make a move
against the church and the people holding it, I propose we sneak in under their
radar and strike where they least expect it."
Carole was nodding. "I like it. And from the way
things went this morning,
I believe dawn is the best time. But I assume we'll find
more than three collaborators guarding the Empire State Building."
"Lots more," Joe said. He glanced at his niece.
"Too many for even Annie Oakley here to take out."
Lacey smiled. "Oh, I don't know about that."
She got up and went to the dining area. She returned
dragging a large canvas mail sack. She set it beside the couch and pulled open
the top. Joe started when he saw the jumble of weapons inside.
"Good Lord, Lacey, what did you do? Rob an
armory?"
"Almost as good. Before we left the Post Office this
morning I collected every pistol and piece of ammo I could find, from Vichy and
undead alike. Even picked up that sawed-off shotgun."
Joe shook his head. "It's still not enough. We're
only three and there's dozens of them. We'll need another way."
Lacey looked at Carole. "Explosives? That napalm you
cooked up?"
Carole shook her head. "Nothing I can make has the
detonation velocity necessary to damage a building like the Empire State."
Lacey looked glum. "Then what? If we can't get
inside—"
"I think I have a idea," Carole said.
Lacey brightened. "What?"
"Just the start of one. Let me work it through first.
How long have we got?"
"I'd like to leave as soon as possible," Joe
said. "Hit them before they find out what we did at the Post Office. Or if
they do know, catch them while they're still off balance."
"I think we should make the trip by day," Lacey
said. "That way the only ones around to stop us will be living. At night
we'll have to dodge the undead as well."
"But I can't help you during the day."
Lacey smiled and nudged the letter bag with a toe. "I
think Carole and I can handle any Vichy we meet along the way."
Joe wasn't keen on lying helpless in a car trunk while the
two women took all the risks, but he couldn't fault Lacey's logic.
"All right then," he said. "We leave at
dawn. Will that give you enough time, Carole?"
"I hope so. I'll need to take the car to see if I can
find what I need."
"Okay. Just get back in time so we can stock up for
the trip. We need to find some gas too. The Lincoln's pretty low."
"No need," Lacey said. "There's a cool
convertible with a full tank sitting in the garage. We can take that
instead."
"Looks like you've got all the bases covered. Only
one thing left to do before we go. Carole, drop Lacey off at the church so she
can tell them what we did at the Post Office and to expect reprisals. But most
important, tell them the get-death secret. Have Gerald Vance get on his
shortwave and start broadcasting it around the world."
"You think anyone'll believe it?"
"I hope so. Maybe in New York we'll find a way to
give the world more tangible proof."
"How?"
Joe didn't answer. He was working on the beginning of an
idea of his own.
BARRETT . . .
It was a little after midnight when James Barrett stepped
out of the elevator into the Observation Deck atrium. A couple of Franco's
get-guards pulled pistols and started for him. Where was Artemis tonight? He
was usually the first to get in the face of anyone, living or undead, who set
foot on the deck.
"What do you want?"
Something in their eyes, their expressions. Was it fear?
What was going down here?
"Franco said to meet him here," Barrett said.
"I'll go check," said one of the guards.
As commander of the Empire State Building's human
contingent, Barrett was used to being taken straight to Franco. Why this extra
layer of insulation all of a sudden?
After all, he was responsible for round-the-clock
security. He could have stayed around just on days—the really important time
for security—but that meant he'd never get to see Franco, and Franco would
never see him. So he caught a few winks here and there when he could and made
sure he was around for at least some of the night shift.
He'd held the job for six months now. That meant he had
nine-and-a-half years of servitude left. That was the deal with the undead: ten
years of service and they'd turn him. Fine for the other slobs to wait that
long, but not him. He'd risen as high as a living man could go in Franco's
organization. He needed to take the next step, needed to be turned, and soon.
But he still hadn't found the lever to boost him to that stage.
"Come with us," said the returning vampire.
"But first..."
He patted Barrett down and removed the .44 Magnum from his
shoulder holster. He stared at it a moment, then handed it back.
Barrett hid his shock. He'd never been frisked before.
"Let's go," said the other.
But instead of escorting him to the outer deck, he led him
into a stairwell to the left of the elevator bank and down the steps to the
eighty-fifth floor. After a short walk along a hallway, he was passed through
another set of guards into a bare room furnished with only a king-size
four-poster bed. Large sheets of plywood had been bolted over the windows.
Franco paced the room, his hands behind his back.
"There's been some trouble," he said without
preamble, without so much as a glance at Barrett.
"Where?" It must be really serious, he thought.
"I haven't heard anything."
"You wouldn't," Franco said, his eyes were on
the floor as he paced. "I sent Artemis down to New Jersey a few days ago
to check up on Olivia and see to it that she was staying on top of things. If
she wasn't—as I was sure was the case—he was to take over. This evening I
received a report from downtown that—"
He seemed to catch himself and cast a quick sidelong
glance at Barrett. What was he hiding? He knew that Artemis and a few of his
get lived down in the Village. What had Franco heard?
Franco shook his head and went on. "I heard a report
that made me suspect that something might have happened to Artemis. So I sent a
flyer down to check." Finally he looked up at Barrett. "Artemis is
dead. So is Olivia."
"Oh, shit," Barrett said. It was the best he
could do. He was all but speechless.
Artemis dead? Barrett couldn't wrap his mind around it.
Was there a tougher undead son of a bitch in the world? He doubted it.
"How?"
"Staked. Same as Olivia."
"Her guards too?"
"All dead."
"A massacre! Who—?"
"I suspect it has something to do with that vigilante
priest. That's the only answer."
"But he's one of you now."
"His followers aren't. Maybe when they found out that
we turned him, instead of being demoralized, they went berserk. I don't
know."
Barrett heard opportunity knocking. Here was a chance to
stand out, to maybe shorten that nine-and-a-half-year wait for immortality.
A plan was already forming. Show up down there, pretend to
be another refugee, infiltrate their ranks, wait till the time was right, till
they were off guard, then blow them all away.
"Want me to go down and check it out?"
Franco shook his head. "No. I need you here. I want
you to gather your men from inside and outside the city and concentrate them
around this building. I'm going to organize a counter strike and I don't want
any interruptions. By next week I'll have gathered a horde of ferals to set
loose down there. No quarter, no survivors. Then I'm going to incinerate the
entire area. The flames will be visible for miles. Not one house or church or
synagogue will be left standing. The rest of the living will hear and
understand the consequences of resistance."
"I don't think pulling in your perimeter is such a
good idea. That's like your early-warning system. You don't want—"
"What I don't want is to debate it. I did not bring
you up here for a discussion. I'm telling you what to do. Now do it!"
Barrett resisted a hot retort. He held up his hands and
said, "You're the boss."
As he turned and walked out, he thought, But you're an
asshole.
He didn't care what Franco said, he wasn't going to pull
in all the outriders. His ass was on the line here too, and if a caravan full
of vampire hunters was headed this way, he wanted to know about it before they
reached Fifth Avenue.
Because invariably vampire hunters were cowboy hunters
too.
- 12 -
LACEY . . .
Feeling tight and on edge, Lacey sat straight and tall in
the passenger seat, scanning the highway ahead and twisting to check out behind
as they sped north along Route 35. Her right hand rested on the .45
semiautomatic cradled in her lap.
They'd left before dawn with Carole at the wheel. The
Parkway route had been considered, but rejected. It was a wider road, but
offered fewer options should they run into any Vichy. Route 35 was local, but
it wasn't as if they had to worry about traffic lights or anything, and it
allowed them to turn off on an instant's notice. That was good; the sun was
rising into a cloudless sky, which was not so good. Lacey would have preferred
a cloudy, rainy day. Better yet, foggy. Anything to cut the visibility.
As she spotted a sign that said HAZLET she felt the
Fairlane surge forward. Joe—apparently he'd played around with cars as a
teen—had identified this one as a '57 Fairlane; he'd checked the engine before
they'd left and proclaimed it "hot," mentioning a four-barrel carburetor
and other car talk she couldn't follow. She leaned left to catch a look at the
speedometer.
"Ninety?" she said.
Carole nodded. She was dressed in some hideous mauve nylon
warm-up she'd found last night in a neighboring house. "The road is
straight and level here, and the sooner we get there, the better."
"I'll drink to that."
Carole nodded. "I don't know much about cars, but
this one handles beautifully."
They merged with Route 9 and headed over a tall bridge.
After that it was decision time.
"Turnpike or stay on 9?" Carole said.
Tough question. Lacey did not want to run into any Vichy.
"Let's think about that," Lacey said. "The
closer we get to the city, the thicker the Vichy will be. But if I were a
Vichy, the last place I'd look for someone traveling would be the Turnpike.
It's too open. So I'd concentrate on the back roads."
"You're assuming they think that far ahead. The ones
I've met so far haven't been too bright."
"But Joe said they were pretty well organized in the
city. Someone with brains is probably calling the shots. I vote Turnpike."
Carole took a deep breath. "All right. Turnpike it
is."
They followed the green-and-white signs and got on the New
Jersey Turnpike North at Exit 11. They kept to the outer lanes.
As they roared along, Lacey felt herself starting to cook
in the sunlight pouring through her side window. She rolled it down a few
inches; that helped for a while, but soon she was perspiring.
She was wearing plaid cotton comfy pants and a red V-neck
sweater over an extra-large T-shirt she'd found—it came from some restaurant
called Pete and Elda's and apparently was a prize for eating a whole large
pizza. Eventually she removed the sweater.
"If it gets much warmer we'll have to put the top
down."
"I don't think that would be wise."
"Why not? Afraid of developing skin cancer in twenty
years?"
Gallows humor. Even Carole smiled—a rare event these days.
Lacey pulled the T-shirt away from her skin and caught a
whiff of herself.
"Damn, do I ever need a shower!"
She'd tried to bathe in the ocean but it was freezing.
"Wouldn't you love to be able to take a bath?"
Carole said. "I'd give almost anything for one."
"Me too." Lacey decided Carole's cage was due
for a gentle rattle. "You know, I wish I believed in the soul. I'd trade
mine for one good hot shower."
"Don't talk like that," Carole said.
"It's true."
She glanced at Lacey. "You'd sell your soul that
cheaply?"
"We're talking hypothetically here, and no, I
wouldn't sell it that cheaply. I'd want at least three hot showers—long ones.
Carole looked as if she were about to reply when she
glanced in the rearview mirror. Her expression tightened.
"Oh, no."
Lacey turned and looked through the convertible's plastic
rear window. Two longhaired men on motorcycles had just roared out of a rest
stop and were closing in on them. They wore dirty cutaway denim jackets and
brandished pistols.
Vichy.
"Damn. Sorry. I guess I made the wrong call."
She reached down to the postal bag on the floor by the
back seat—next to their stock of mylar napalm balloons and the canister of
chemicals Carole had picked up from the town's water treatment plant—and came
up with a sawed-off ten-gauge shotgun.
"Well, I was hoping this wouldn't happen, but at
least we're prepared."
One of their pursuers raised a pistol and fired a round
over the top of the Fairlane.
"A warning shot across our bow," Lacey said. She
worked the shotgun's pump to chamber a shell. "Let's see how they
like—"
Carole grabbed her arm. "Dear God, I just thought of
something! What if they shoot into the trunk?"
"Joe can handle a bullet or two, as we've already
seen."
Her grip tightened. "I'm not worried about the
bullets so much as the holes they'll make. The sunlight will come through
and—"
"Shit!" Three good minds planning this trip and
not one of them had thought of that.
Another shot—this one whined past Lacey's open window. She
stuck her head out and waved her empty hand. The biker on the left grinned and
pointed toward the shoulder.
Lacey pulled back inside. "Pull over. But take your
time. And when you think you're going slow enough, start putting the top down.
Carole looked at her. "Top down? Wh—?"
"Can't explain now. And speaking of top down
..." She began pulling off her T-shirt.
"Lacey!"
"Just trust me."
She'd given up bras long ago. As the car decelerated, she
released the roof catches and tucked the .45 into the postal bag. Then she
climbed into the rear. She laid the shotgun in the sling between the back seat
and the roof compartment.
She began slipping out of her pants. She still liked to
wear panties but she removed those too.
The roof started to rise. The wind swirling around her
body felt good as she knelt on the back seat, gearing herself up for what was
to come. One of the Vichy, pistol at the ready, pulled his bike up along the
driver side and looked in, probably checking out the number of occupants. When
he saw Lacey his eyes went wide and he let out a whoop.
As he dropped back, Lacey said, "As soon as we stop,
get out of the car and start yelling at me to put my clothes on."
"Why don't I start right now?"
"Listen to me. I want them to see that you're not
armed—they'll for sure know I'm not. I want them off guard. So just act mad and
like you think I'm crazy."
"I'm sure I can handle that," Carole said.
The roof was three-quarters down when the car stopped.
Lacey stood and threw her arms wide.
"Guys! Am I glad to see youl Where the fuck you been
hiding?"
The Vichy pair looked at each other, stopped their bikes
half a dozen feet behind the car, and sat staring. Both still clutched their
pistols.
"Not as glad as we are to see you, little lady,"
said the red-bearded one on the left. "And I do mean see you."
He gave his buddy's arm a backhand slap and they both
laughed.
Lacey heard the car door slam behind her and Carole's
voice cry, "Lacey! You put your clothes on right this instant!"
"Who's she?" said the other one who'd twined his
salt-and-pepper goatee into a triad of greasy braids.
"Just some lezbo I hooked up with."
Redbeard grinned. "Lezzie action. Awright!"
Braids set his kickstand and got off his bike. Lacey
noticed he had PAGANS written across the back of his cutaway. She also noticed
the bulge behind his fly. Good. All that blood flowing away from his brain.
"Lezzie, huh?" He took a step toward Carole.
"No such thing. She just ain't met the right man yet."
Oh, but she has, Lacey thought.
"Never mind her." Lacey crawled out on the trunk
lid and seated herself cross legged, giving the two Vichy a panoramic view.
Braids suddenly lost interest in Carole. "I'm the one in need of a little
male tail, if you know what I'm saying. Been too damn long since I had a guy to
do me right."
"Well then," Redbeard said, getting off his
bike. He adjusted the bulge in his pants. "This is your lucky day. You get
a double dose."
"Hey, I ain't got nothing against a three-way, but I
need one guy to start me off right. You know, get me juiced up. Who's got the
biggest dick? I want the best-hung guy first."
"That'll be me," said Redbeard.
Braids snorted. "No fuckin way!"
Here was the tough part. She had to time this just right
or the whole situation would go to hell in a heartbeat. Lacey clapped her hands
and forced a giggle. "Oh, this is so cool! A cock fight! Show me! Show me!
Show me! I'll be the judge! No-no, wait! I'll be the package inspector!"
Laughing, the two men holstered their pistols and began fumbling
with their flies. With a shaking hand Lacey reached around, pulled the shotgun
from the boot, and fired at Redbeard first. The recoil almost knocked her off
the trunk and into the back seat, but the blast took Redbeard full in the
chest, slamming him back through a halo of his blood and into his bike. Some of
the scattering shot caught Braids in his arm and he spun half around, clawing
at his pistol. Lacey regained her balance and her grip on the sawed-off. She
quick-pumped another shell into the chamber as she slid off the trunk to the
ground, then pulled the trigger, catching Braids in the left side. His
shoulder, neck and cheek exploded and he went down in a spray of red.
Lacey pumped one more shell of double-ought shot into each
of them— didn't want them talking to anyone—then took their guns. She tossed
the shotgun and the new weapons onto the back seat.
"Men," she said, reaching for her clothing.
Loathing welled up in her. "No wonder I gave up on them. They're such
assholes."
She pulled on the panties and comfy pants first. As she
was shrugging the T-shirt over her head she found Carole glaring at her.
"What?"
"You shouldn't have done that."
"Killed them? What was I sup—?"
Carole shook her head. "You shouldn't have called me
a lesbian. That wasn't right."
"It was just something to distract them, set little
triple-X fantasies spooling through their heads."
Carole slipped back behind the wheel. "Still, just
because I've forsworn marriage doesn't mean I'm a lesbian. A vow of chastity
means no sex with men or women."
"I know that, Carole." She dropped back into the
passenger seat and slammed the door. "Takes one to know one, and my gaydar
doesn't so much as beep with you."
Carole glanced at her. "You're . . . ?"
"Yeah."
"Does your uncle know?"
"Sure does. He doesn't like it but he accepts it. Too
bad you aren't, Carole. You're kinda cool."
Carole's face reddened as she put the car in gear.
Lacey laughed and gave the nun's shoulder a gentle punch.
"Only kidding."
And she was. With the memory of Janey still so fresh and
haunting, she couldn't think of being with anyone else. Not yet.
"This isn't going to be a problem for you, is
it?"
Carole shook her head. "The convent had its fair
share. It was no secret behind the doors. They kept to themselves, and I kept
my mouth shut. God will be the final judge."
"I guess I have nothing to worry about then,"
Lacey said.
She turned and looked back at the two men sprawled in
their pooling blood and felt nothing.
"Why don't I feel anything, Carole? You've killed
your share of Vichy. Do you—?
"I always got sick afterward—at least when I had to
... do it myself... by hand. But what you just did doesn't bother me so much.
Perhaps because it wasn't close work ... or because it was you doing it instead
of me. I know they had to die but..." She sighed. "Nothing in my life
prepared me for this, Lacey. I was raised to be merciful—I'm a Sister of Mercy,
after all—but I don't believe the undead or their collaborators deserve any
mercy from us. I've decided to leave that to God. He can decide."
"Kill 'em all and let God sort 'em out. Right."
Just how Lacey felt.
"Perhaps. Still... I can't ignore the fact that the
Vichy are still human beings. No matter what awful things they've done, they're
still God's children, and I can't help thinking that if maybe someone had got
to them early enough and showed them the grace of God's love, their lives would
have been different."
Lacey shook her head. "Sorry. Can't buy that. Some
people are just plain evil. They're born bad and they stay bad all their lives.
They're like termites, undermining your house. There's no accommodating them,
so if you don't want to wake up with your house reduced to sawdust, you
exterminate them."
"That's what they are to you? Bugs?"
"Worse. Bugs don't have a choice in how they
act."
Lacey knew she hadn't always been like this, but something
started dying within her when Janey had gone missing; her parents' empty,
bloodstained house had pushed it closer to the grave; Uncle Joe dead with his
throat torn open had administered the coup de grace. She couldn't imagine
herself feeling anything but murderous loathing for the creatures, human and
inhuman, who'd been a part of all that.
Carole hit a switch and the top began to rise.
"Leave it down," Lacey said.
Carole looked at her. "I don't think that's a good
idea."
"It is. Think about it. You heard Joe: All the
females of childbearing age have been trucked off to farms to be breeders. That
leaves nothing for the cowboys between their stud times at the farms. They're
horny as all hell. If they see two women in an open car they'll be more likely
to ask questions first and shoot later, don't you think?"
"You also said we'd be less likely to run into
trouble on the Turnpike."
"That was just a guess. This is based on the fact
that these guys—as the two back there on the ground prove—think with their
dicks."
Carole closed her eyes for half a minute—Lacey couldn't
tell if she was thinking or praying—then hit the roof switch. The top settled
back into the boot.
"I hope you're right."
After that, Carole kept the pedal to the metal, hitting
one-twenty on the long straightaways through the flatlands by Newark Airport.
The still, silent airport streamed past to the left, the equally still
railyards to the right. Like running through an industrial graveyard.
The big road remained eerily empty except for one other
car, half a dozen lanes away, headed in the opposite direction. Whether friend
or foe, Lacey couldn't tell.
Then the roadway lifted and the Manhattan skyline hove
into view to the right, pacing them as they raced along. The gap where the
Trade Towers used to stand caused an ache in Lacey's chest. The hijackers and
their victims were long gone, and now most of the survivors were probably gone
as well. And Islam ... Islam was gone too.
Good riddance. Lacey had no use for any religion, but
she'd found Islam's treatment of women particularly offensive. A mongrel
religion, cobbled from pieces of others and strung together by adolescent sex
and power fantasies. Good fucking riddance.
A lump built in her throat as she thought about what her
city had suffered. She'd thought nothing could be worse than the Trade Tower
attack, but then the undead had come ...
A few minutes later they were passing through Union City.
She saw the weathered old sign, UNION CITY—EMBROIDERY CAPITAL OF THE WORLD, and
shook her head. Union City wasn't embroidering a thing these days.
"I can't believe this," Lacey shouted over the
wind whistling around and between them as they coasted down the Lincoln Tunnel
helix. "We made it without being hassled again."
Carole glanced at her watch and shook her head.
"Forty-five minutes. That must be a record."
"And that includes the time we lost with those two
motorcycle yo-yos. It's like everybody's on vacation."
"I think we might be able to take credit for some of
that," Carole said. "After what we did in the Post Office, I'll bet
they've drawn their collaborators closer—doubling the guard and measures like
that. The upside of that is an easier trip getting here; the downside will be a
much more difficult time accomplishing what we came here to do."
"Every silver lining has a cloud, right?"
Carole nodded as they threaded an E-ZPass lane and aimed
for the tunnel's center tube. "Always."
Carole turned on the headlights as they entered the dark,
arching maw, and just then a siren howled behind them. Lacey jumped in her seat
and looked around at the flashing red lights atop two blue-and-white units that
had appeared out of nowhere.
"Police?" Carole said.
Lacey eyed the cars. First off, the NYPD was long gone.
Second, the four shaggy-headed silhouettes crammed into that first unit didn't
look anything like cops. Probably an equal number in the unit beside it.
Eight Vichy. . . she doubted the tactics she'd used on the
two bikers would fly here. As if to emphasize that point, one of the occupants
in the lead cop car held an assault pistol out a rear passenger window and
fired a burst into the air. The bullets shattered some ceiling tiles and the
pieces rained on the cop car, denting the hood and cracking the windshield.
Lacey spotted a fist flying in the rear of the car. Someone wouldn't be trying
that again.
The following unit pulled alongside the first, high beams
flashing on and off. Lacey rose in her seat, exposing herself to the glare, and
waved.
"What do we do?" Carole shouted over the roar of
the wind, Her expression was tight.
"Your turn."
"My turn? For what?"
"To show a little titty."
"What?"
"Yeah. I did my part, now you do yours. I'll take the
wheel and—"
"Not on your life! Just shoot at them. We don't have
to worry about sunlight leaking into the trunk while we're in here."
Lacey thought of that assault pistol that had fired a
moment ago, and wondered if there were more of them in the units. She didn't
stand a chance against that sort of firepower. Then she looked down and saw the
napalm balloons.
"Slow down a little," she said as she crawled
into the rear. "Here we go again."
She crouched on the back seat and pulled off her T-shirt,
then she grabbed a napalm balloon in each hand.
"What are you doing?" Carole said.
"I'm about to play hide and seek. Just be ready to
burn rubber when I tell you."
Could she get away with something like this again? If they
were half as horny as she thought they were yeah. Maybe.
Taking a breath, she pressed a balloon over each breast,
plastered a big grin on her face, then rose to her knees.
The left blue-and-white swerved as the driver hit the
siren again and a couple of hands popped out the windows to wave the horn sign.
The right unit did the same.
She pulled the balloon off her left breast and held it
high.
The sirens wailed again.
She bared her right breast and held that balloon aloft.
Another wail.
She tossed both balloons at the cars.
"Hit it!" she yelled as she dove for the seat.
The last thing she saw as the tires screeched and the
Fairlane leaped forward was one balloon splattering harmlessly on the pavement
and the other breaking against the grill of the right car. The front of the car
exploded, rocketing the hood toward the ceiling, and then Lacey was down, flat
on the rear seat. The explosion kicked them from behind like a rear-end
collision. A wave of heat rolled over them for an instant before they left it
behind.
Lacey peeked over the back of the rear seat in time to see
the burning unit sidewipe its companion. The second bounced off the wall with a
shower of sparks, then slammed into the first as someone's gas tank exploded.
The second car flipped then and landed against the first. Amid the agonized
screech and groan of metal grinding against concrete and asphalt and tile, both
slid to a halt across the tunnel roadway in a single, twisted, flaming mass.
Lacey shook her head. Wow. Powerful stuff.
She thought she saw something moving, a flaming man-shaped
thing crawling out a window, but she couldn't be sure. Suddenly a third
explosion rocked the mass. The other gas tank, she guessed.
Lacey tugged her shirt back over her head and climbed up
into the passenger seat.
"That's it! The last time I strip down for these
animals."
"Let's hope so," Carole said. "By the way,
that was an amazing piece of indirection."
Was that a note of genuine admiration Lacey detected in
her voice?
"Thank you. And my compliments to the chef on that
napalm." Lacey pointed ahead at the splotch of brightness ahead in the
dark of the tiled gullet. "Look. The light at the end of the tunnel."
"More Vichy there?"
Lacey grabbed the shotgun. Her stomach crawled. How long
could their luck last?
But to their amazement, the Manhattan side of the tunnel
was deserted. Gasping with relief, they swerved left and roared into the
concrete box of an enclosed above-and-below-ground park-and-lock lot on 42nd
Street.
BARRETT . . .
Neal kicked a piece of blackened metal from the wrecks and
sent it spinning across the scorched pavement. He tugged on his beard.
"What the fuck?"
"What the fuck is right," Barrett said.
"All seven guys gone. Just like that."
Franco was going to be pissed ... if he found out.
The relief crews had arrived on the Manhattan side at noon
to find smoke billowing from the middle tube. They'd waited till it tapered
off, then drove inside. This was what they'd found.
Lights from the headlights of a couple of cars illuminated
the twisted mess of metal. The ceiling and walls were scorched black for
hundreds of feet in both directions.
"You think it was a hit?" Neal said.
"You mean like what happened at the Lakewood Post
Office. I don't know. See any bullet holes?"
Neal shook his head. "Not a one."
Neither had Barrett.
Two carloads of cowboys reduced to crispy critters. It
looked like one car had plowed into the other, smashing it against the side of
the tunnel. Barrett visualized a bent side panel, showers of sparks, a gas cap
tearing off, then kablam!
What had they been doing—drag racing through the tubes?
Assholes. One car was supposed to be stationed at each end of the tunnel, but
this wouldn't be the first time they'd got bored and hung out together on the
Jersey end. He'd caught them at it before and this was probably another
instance. Most of these guys had the attention span of a gnat.
"Well, without bullet holes in the cars—or what's
left of them—how could it be a hit? Must have been an accident. Caused by
terminal stupidity."
Barrett ground his teeth. He had to get out of this job.
He had to take the next step. Get turned. He'd go crazy if he had to spend
another nine-plus years with these assholes.
- 13 -
CAROLE ...
"Look, Ma," Lacey said. "A double threat:
no hands while walking on the third rail."
Carole knew Lacey had to be as uneasy as she, walking
these subway tracks, but she was doing a better job of hiding it. She briefly
angled her flashlight beam at Lacey, then back to the tracks again.
"Under different circumstances I might call that a
shocking display of brashness, but after yesterday ..."
Lacey laughed.
They'd huddled in the car in the park-and-lock garage all
day, venturing out only to relieve themselves. When the sun had fallen and
Joseph was awake, he left alone to begin nighttime surveillance on the Empire
State Building and the area around it. But he'd returned less than an hour
later driving a huge Lincoln Navigator he'd appropriated from a nearby parking
lot. He insisted that she and Lacey transfer to it, not because of the comfort
its extra size afforded, but because of its hard top. They were already
insulated by the garage's layers of reinforced concrete, but he wanted them
further sealed in steel. He begged them to stay locked in during the dark
hours, telling them their warm blood made them easy to pick out against the
cold concrete and granite of the city. If a hybrid like him could sense them,
what about the fully undead?
Carole had missed him, worried about him, but had taken
his advice. She and Lacey had slept when they could, and talked when they
couldn't—talked about anything they could think of. Except sex. Lacey's
lesbianism made Carole uncomfortable. Or was it the fact that she felt a
growing fondness for this young woman who happened to be a lesbian.
She'd been relieved to see Joseph return with the dawn. He
was excited. He'd found a place where they could watch the comings and goings
at the
Empire State Building in relative safety and comfort, and
told them how to get there.
So now it was their turn. They'd left the garage at
sunrise when the undead were no threat. Only the living.
They'd walked the deserted pedestrian tunnel from the Port
Authority to Times Square, and were now down on the tracks of the 42nd Street
Shuttle. This seemed like the safest way to move about the city. Certainly less
risk down here of running into a pack of cruising Vichy than up on the street.
At least she hoped so.
Flashlight in one hand, cocked-and-ready pistol in the
other; backpacks filled with sharpened stakes, hammers, batteries, and cans of
salmon they'd brought from the Shore.
What a way to travel. What a way to live.
Carole knew nothing about guns, had never liked them, had
never so much as laid a finger on one until a few days ago. She'd always
imagined she'd be afraid of them, but had to admit she found something
comforting in the weight, the solidity, the pent-up lethality of the
semi-automatic Lacey had given her. She'd shown her how to work the safety. All
she had to do if the need arose was point and pull the trigger. She prayed that
need would never arise. There was no place to practice so she hadn't fired it
yet, and had no idea how it would feel when she did.
"You know," Lacey said, dancing along the third
rail like a gymnast on a balance beam, "it's strange. From the instant we
jumped off the platform onto the tracks, I had to touch this rail. I was scared
to—I mean, what if by some freak chance it was live—but I had to. Didn't you
feel any of that?"
"Not at all." But seeing Lacey on the third rail
made her nervous. The chance of the power coming back on was about equal to
that of a subway full of commuters coming by, but still it put her on edge.
"We've been told all our lives that we could never touch the third rail
because we'd be fried to a cinder. At first opportunity you're up on the rail,
walking along it. That's pretty much you in a nutshell, isn't it."
Lacey snickered. "I guess so. What's the psychology
there? It no longer has power over me, so now I'm dancing on its grave?"
"I never placed much stock in psychology."
"But look where you're walking, Carole. What does that
say about you?"
"It says nothing's changed. I was quite happy staying
off the third rail when it was live, and am just as happy to stay off it
now."
"Ever watch Ren and Stimpy?"
"Can't say that I have, although years ago at a
school picnic I remember some of my students wearing badly drawn T-shirts with
those words on them."
"It's a cartoon show, and in one of the early
episodes they're in outer space and they come across this button with all these
warnings about 'Do not press or you will destroy the space-time continuum,' or
something like that. Anyway, Stimpy just has to press it. And when I saw that I
said, Yeah, I think I'd press it too."
"Good Lord, why?"
"Well, first off, part of me would be going, Yeah,
right, like this button's gonna end the space-time continuum. Uh-huh. And
another part would be thinking, Really? What would that be like? Let's find
out..."
"How about a part of you saying, Let's lock the door
to this place and throw away the key?"
"I think when they were giving out parts I missed
that one." She flashed her light at Carole and held out a hand. "Come
on. I'll help you up."
"No, thank you. If one of us slips off and sprains an
ankle, the other has to remain well enough to carry on."
Lacey loosed a dramatic sigh, then stepped off the rail
and fell in beside her. "Spoil sport." She flashed her beam ahead.
"Damn, it's dark."
Carole nodded. The light-colored tiles—she supposed they'd
once been white—in the pedestrian tunnel and in the Times Square station had
reflected the glow from their flashes, letting them see more than just what was
in the beam. But down here on the tracks, surrounded by grimy steel girders and
soot-blackened concrete walls, with no reflective surface except the polished
upper surface of the tracks and an occasional puddle, the darkness seemed a
living thing, pressing against them. And all those recesses and access tunnels
and crawl spaces . . .
Something splashed behind them.
Carole heard Lacey gasp. Both whirled and flashed their
beams madly about but found nothing moving. Carole could feel her heart
pounding.
"Think it was a rat?" Lacey said.
"Could have been."
"I hate rats."
"They're just animals."
"Yeah, but I really skeeve them."
"Skeeve?"
"Yeah. Heard it from some Italian girl I knew. Means
to make your skin crawl. If we see a rat, that'll be a good time for you to get
used to firing your pistol. I think we can risk a few shots down here."
"I'm not shooting a rat. And neither are you. They're
no threat to us, it's a waste of ammunition, and besides, they were here first.
It isn't rodentia you should be worried about down here. Genus Homo offers the
main threat right now."
They started walking through the dark again, but every so
often one of them—they took turns—would turn and flash her light behind them.
Lacey whispered, "I remember hearing about homeless
people who used to live in the subway tunnels. I wonder if any of them are
left."
"If I were a betting woman—and I'm not—I'd say no.
Underground is where the undead go to hide from the light. Once down here
they'd sniff out the living in no time."
Lacey grabbed her arm. "Speaking of sniffing, what is
that?"
Carole felt her nose wrinkling. She knew the odor:
carrion. "Something died nearby."
"Which means there's a good chance one of them is
nearby."
They followed the stench to a recess in the right wall
that led to an alcove beyond it. Carol flashed her beam down the narrow
passage. The floor was littered with the bodies, of beheaded rats, some of them
acrawl with maggots.
"What's with the dead rats?" Lacey whispered
behind her.
"I don't know."
"We don't want to go in there."
"Right," Carole said. "But we must."
"Like hell."
"We can't leave any undead along our route. What if
we're delayed coming back and we're caught down here after sundown? We can't
see in the dark; they can."
Lacey was silent a moment, then grumbled, "All right,
but let's go in with all bases covered." Carole felt a tug on her
backpack. "I'll handle the gun and flashlight—in case whatever's in there
is human—while you take the hammer-and-stake detail."
A moment later Carole had her crucifix and a stake in her
left hand, thrust out ahead of her, the hammer clutched in her right. Lacey was
squeezed beside her, manning the flashlight. Carole wished she had a third hand
to hold a cloth over her mouth and nose. The stench was unbearable.
They edged down the passage, shuffling to avoid stepping
on the dead rats, and entered a small square alcove, maybe ten feet on a side.
The first thing Carole saw was a naked corpse crumpled in the far corner, face
to the wall; the position made it impossible to determine its sex. The floor
was littered with more dead rats, most of them clustered around the naked
emaciated male figure that lay in the center of the space. When Lacey shone the
light on its face, the gummy lids parted slowly. It let out a feeble hiss and
bared its fangs. Although this one didn't quite qualify as a feral, its
appearance was a long way from human.
Carole wasted no time. "Keep the light on it,"
she told Lacey as she knelt beside the thing.
She touched the crucifix to its sunken belly, eliciting a
flash and a puff of smoke. That proved beyond doubt it was undead. The creature
writhed as she raised the stake—she'd have no trouble finding a space between
the jutting ribs of this washboard chest. But just as Carole pressed the point
of the wooden shaft against its skin, Lacey let out a cry of terror and the
flash beam darted around the room.
Carole turned and saw Lacey struggling as if her foot was
caught.
"It's got me!" Lacey cried. "Damn it to hell,
I thought it was dead!"
In the wildly wavering light Carole saw that what she too
had assumed to be a human cadaver had locked its fingers around Lacey's ankle.
Lacey was trying to kick herself free but the creature clung to her like a
weighted manacle. Panic bloomed in the hollow of her gut. Were there more?
Something hit Carole's hand, knocking the stake from her
grasp. She turned back to her vampire and felt it reaching for her. She patted
the floor around her but found only dead rats.
"Lacey! The light!"
But her words didn't penetrate Lacey's stream of shouted
curses as she frantically tried to free her ankle. Carole could feel things
spinning out of control as events accelerated, becoming increasingly surreal,
chaotic, epileptic. The creature before Carole clutched her wrist as Lacey
began shooting at the one grasping her. The shots were deafening in the small
space. Lacey's wildly gyrating flashlight beam raked across Carole, revealing
the lost stake. Ears ringing, she swung the hammer at the forearm of the hand
holding her wrist, heard a bone snap, felt the grip break. She grabbed the
stake and in the dark, placed it on the creature's chest over where she hoped
its heart would be, then hammered it into the flesh. Its limbs flailed, back arched,
chest heaved, but Carole kept her grip on the stake, taking a second swing, the
hammer head glancing off the end of the stake and grazing her hand. She
clenched her teeth against the pain as Lacey fired again, the strobe of the
muzzle flash giving Carole just enough light to see where to strike a third
blow. This one landed solidly, driving the stake through the heart beneath it.
The creature spasmed and lay still.
Carole looked around for Lacey, saw her limping away down
the narrow corridor, dragging the still-attached vampire after her through the
maggoty rats. Carole reached around and pulled another stake from her backpack,
then followed.
"Lacey, stop."
"Carole, get this damn thing off of me!"
"I will. Just hold the light steady."
Lacey stopped moving. Carole knelt on the back of the
thing, placed the point of the stake to the left of the spine, and drove it
through with three swift blows. The thing shuddered and finally released its
grip on Lacey's ankle.
Lacey lurched away and leaned against a steel support
beam, gasping.
"I think I'm going to be sick. The undead always
disgusted me, but these things . .. what the hell?"
Carole rose and leaned against the wall, waiting for her
pounding heart to slow. "I think they're strays, and obviously they're
starving."
"Have they been living on rats? Is that
possible?"
"I don't know. Joseph said Franco told him Manhattan
was empty and they were hunting in the other boroughs. I do know that we got
careless."
"Yeah," Lacey said. "Sorry for losing it in
there. I didn't expect... wasn't ready for being grabbed like that. I hope no
one topside heard the shots."
So did Carole. "Let's keep moving."
JOE . . .
Joe suffers again through his daymare. Every day, the same
dream, clinging by his fingertips to the lip of the same rocky precipice, his
feet swinging and kicking over the same dark swirling infinity. The living
darkness calling to him, beckoning, and still that same traitorous part
of him longing to answer, to let go and fall...
No. Not fall. Go home.
Then a sudden shift. He's now standing on the ledge. And
below him, clinging by their fingertips, hang Carole andLacey. He laughs as he
grinds a heel into their fingers and sends them screaming, tumbling into the
abyss.
LACEY . . .
"This is creepy, Carole," Lacey said as she
scanned the street from the subway stairwell. Cars lined the curbs as always,
but the streets lay still and silent. "Nothing is moving. Nothing."
Except for the birds, but they didn't count.
The silence got to Lacey. She found the emptiness here
eerier and far more surreal than the close call with that pair of emaciated
vampires. It sent cramps rippling through her intestines.
But even so, it was good to be out of the tunnels, to feel
a fresh breeze on her face, to inhale clean air. They'd found three more undead
scattered in alcoves along the shuttle tracks before they reached the Lexington
Avenue line, and a half a dozen more on the nine-block length of track they
walked down to the Thirty-third Street station. All were emaciated, and they
dispatched them without difficulty.
The morning was further along than they'd intended by the
time they crept up to street level.
"We've got to head uptown a couple of blocks, then
west," Lacey said.
Her uncle had laid out their route, but this was her city
so it was only natural that she take the lead here.
"We'll be exposed," Carole said. "I don't
like that."
"Neither do I, but the only really open spot will be
crossing Thirty-fourth. After that there should be lots of nooks and crannies
to hide in if need be."
They made a headlong dash to Thirty-fifth, then turned
left.
"This area used to be called Murray Hill," Lacey
told Carole as they hurried along the sidewalk, staying low, ever ready to duck
into a doorway at the first sign of movement or sound of a car. "I guess
it still is. Very tony, very high rent. At least it was."
But now it was a ghost town, pimpled here and there with
piles of black plastic garbage bags, torn open, their contents pawed and pecked
through by rats and pigeons, perhaps even people. Waiting in vain to be picked
up by a non-existent sanitation department. Waiting for Godot.
She led Carole past the brick-fronted Community Church of
New York with BLESSED ARE THE PEACEMAKERS emblazoned on its front wall.
Peacemakers... is that us? she wondered.
Further up on the right, on the corner of Madison Avenue,
sat a brown-stone church and steeple.
"The Church of the Incarnation," Carole muttered
as they passed. "I wonder ... oh, it's Episcopal."
"Almost as good as Catholic, right?"
Carole smiled. "But not quite."
They dashed across Madison to the shadows of the Oxford
University Press offices, then continued on toward Fifth Avenue. Before
reaching Fifth they found the broken side doors of the City University Graduate
Building. They squeezed through and climbed to the second floor. There, through
huge arched windows, they had a panoramic view of the Art Deco lower levels of
the Empire State Building and the intersection of Fifth Avenue and
Thirty-fourth Street.
Lacey leaned forward to see if she could see the top.
"Don't get too close to the window," Carole
said, pointing to the sunlight slanting through the dusty air. "Somebody
might see you."
Lacey nodded, too awestruck by what she saw.
"Look. They have electricity."
Houlihan's bar and restaurant, occupying the ground-floor
corner of the Empire State nearest them, was lit up inside. A neon Red Hook
Lager sign glowed in the window. She'd stopped in there once to eat but had
walked out. Fourteen bucks for a hamburger. Location, location, location.
"Joseph told us they were using the generators."
"I know. But it's been so long since Eve seen a
working electric light, I. .. it's kind of wonderful in a way. Gives me
hope."
They found some chairs well back in the shadows and
settled down to watch. A few Vichy hung around under the canopied front
entrance, but otherwise there wasn't much activity.
"Do you think this is the right way to go?"
Lacey said after a while. "The three of us attacking the Empire State
Building, I mean."
"We don't know that we will be. That's why we're here
now. To see if it's feasible."
"Don't get me wrong, but do you get the feeling that
no matter what we find, somehow Joe's going to think it's feasible?"
Carole turned and stared at her. "I don't think I
understand."
"I think you do. My uncle's got a major hard on for
this Franco."
Lacey—
"It's true and you know it. That's all he's talked
about since we did the Post Office: Franco, Franco, Franco. Here we are,
possibly the only three humans in the world with firsthand knowledge of the
vampires' secret—how the death of one reverberates through the progeny, wiping
out all his or her get down the line—and we're all together in New York instead
of splitting up and trying to make it into the unoccupied areas of the country
to spread the news."
"We've been through that."
"Yeah, I know, but..."
It was easier to move around within the occupied zone than
to get out of it. Vichy were stacked at the Delaware River crossings waiting to
pick off anyone who tried. Joe's theory was that if they could knock off Franco
and his get, the Vichy network would collapse in disarray—at least for a
while—and they could waltz across.
Maybe.
"And remember," Carole said, "one of the
parishioners has a shortwave and is probably broadcasting the news to the world
right now."
"We don't know that. And who'd believe him?"
"Exactly. That's why we agreed it will be much better
to be able to show than simply tell."
Another idea of Joe's: use the building's security system
to videotape the deaths of Franco and his get. Then they'd have proof.
"Look, Carole, I know Franco is the head honcho and
taking him down will put a serious crimp in the undead master plan, but do you
get the feeling that there's more to it, that if Joe could demonstrate this
get-death on another undead of equal stature, he'd bypass the opportunity and
remain fixed on Franco?"
Carole's tone took on a definite chill. "You're
saying that Joseph would jeopardize our lives and what we know just to get
revenge on Franco?"
"You're not answering the question."
Carole looked away.
Was it simple revenge? That had to be part of it, Lacey
knew, and she had her own score to settle with this monster for what he had
done to her Uncle Joe. But she sensed something more than revenge driving Joe
to this showdown, something she was missing.
That worried her.
"Look, Carole, you've got to admit that Joe isn't
exactly the same guy he was a week ago. He was dead, and now he's not. What
brought him back to life? It wasn't your God, so what was it?"
"God intervened. Joseph was supposed to become one of
the undead, but he did not. God has turned the Devil's own work back on him,
making Joseph an instrument of His divine vengeance."
"Buy into that if you want, Carole. I don't. I can't.
And I'm a little worried about that weird dream he's been having. We know Joe's
been to hell and back. I just hope he didn't bring a little of that hell back
with him."
- 14 -
CAROLE . . .
By Sunday evening they were ready to make their move.
Fifty-three minutes before sundown, as soon as Joe was up
and fed—Lacey's turn tonight—he got behind the wheel of the Navigator and drove
down Broadway. Lacey sat up front next to her uncle; Carole had the rear to
herself.
"Are we ready for this?" he said as they
approached Thirty-fourth Street.
Carole wasn't sure. She hoped so.
They'd learned through three days and three nights of
steady surveillance that the Vichy—the more time she spent with Joseph and
Lacey, the more Carole found herself using that designation—stuck to a fairly
rigid schedule of two shifts: a large contingent of perhaps twenty-five or
thirty worked the days, while only a half dozen or so manned the entrance at
night.
They'd taken over Houlihan's and turned the bar-restaurant
into a cafeteria of sorts. It served two meals a day—breakfast and dinner—at
change of shift. Using binoculars, Carole and Lacey had watched from their
perch across the street as the Vichy attacked heaps of scrambled eggs every
morning—the cook had to be using the powdered kind—and pots of some sort of
stew every evening.
All three agreed that the meal break at shift change was
the time to strike. All the Vichy were concentrated in Houlihan's then. They'd
settled on dawn, Monday, for their assault.
But assault how?
Joseph and Lacey had wanted to find a way to use the
napalm, rig it somehow to explode and turn the restaurant into an inferno while
the Vichy were eating their breakfast. But the "somehow" eluded them.
And even if they did manage to come up with a way to explode it, the napalm
presented too many chances for something to go wrong. If they were only
partially successful—if they killed some but not all of the Vichy—they'd have
to abandon all hope of success. They couldn't win a fire fight with them, and
from then on the Vichy would be warned and on full alert.
Carole had had a better idea. This was why she'd brought
along the canister of sodium fluorosilicate. She'd had a feeling they might
need a more silent form of death than bullets and napalm. She'd found canisters
of the chemical at one of the local municipal utility authorities where it was
used to purify the water supply. At a few parts per million, sodium
fluorosilicate was harmless. But ingestion of half a gram of the odorless and
tasteless powder interfered with cellular metabolism, making you deathly ill. A
gram caused convulsions and death. Not a pretty way to go, but probably better
than being burned alive by napalm.
Carole wished there were another way, one that could be
delivered by someone else and not multiply the number of lives she'd already
taken. But there was nothing and no one. It was her idea, her responsibility.
She couldn't shirk it off on someone else.
The question was, how to get it into the Vichy? Obviously
via their food. This evening's sortie would accomplish that—they hoped.
Joseph turned the big SUV onto Thirty-fourth and said,
"Let's pray that those technicians I've been watching don't eat with the
rest of them tomorrow. We need them. And besides, they appear to be innocent.
The three of them seem older than the typical Vichy, they're unarmed, and dress
like middle managers. They arrive in a group every morning, flanked by two
Vichy.
They're not tied or manacled, but I get the impression
they're prisoners of some sort."
"But they could wind up sick or dead," Lacey
said. "Then what do we do?"
"Please, God, don't let them," Carole said. She
had blood on her hands, she was crimson to her elbows, but so far none of it
was innocent.
"But what if they do?" Lacey persisted.
Joseph shook his head. "I've been watching three
dawns in a row and not once have they eaten with the others. In fact, by the
time they're brought in, breakfast is just about done, and they're taken
directly inside. Let's hope tomorrow is no exception."
Halfway between Sixth and Fifth Avenues, Joseph slowed the
car to a crawl. Carole leaned forward, peering ahead between Joseph and Lacey
toward the lighted windows of Houlihan's, glowing like a beacon in the fading
light. She searched for signs of stray Vichy who'd wandered away from the Fifth
Avenue entrance around the corner where they usually hung out. But nothing was
moving on the street except their car.
"Damn!" Joseph said. "The earring. Would
somebody do the honor?"
Lacey fished the Vichy earring off the dashboard and
punched it through his earlobe.
"Didn't feel a thing," he said. "Are you
ladies ready?"
"Ready as I'll ever be," Lacey said. "How
about you, Carole?"
Carole could only nod. Her mouth was too dry for speech.
They were entering the belly of the beast.
Joseph swung the car into the curb and stopped. Houlihan's
lit-up interior was empty. Dinner wasn't ready yet. The cook was back in the
kitchen.
"I'll turn the car around and wait here. Hurry. And
be careful."
Carole watched Lacey shove a pair of steel bars she called
"nunchucks" up the left sleeve of her sweatshirt. She turned to
Carole and took a deep, quavering breath.
"Let's roll."
Carole alighted with her backpack in her hand. She'd
removed the stakes and crosses and hammer and replaced them with a
football-size sack of sodium fluorosilicate. A pound of the stuff. Enough to
kill the Empire State Building's Vichy contingent a dozen times over.
They hurried across the sidewalk, pushed through the
revolving glass doors, and headed straight for the rear of the restaurant area.
The air smelled sour. The bar, tables, and floor were littered with paper
plates, food scraps, and empty beer cans. Waves of glistening brown beetles
scurried out of their way as they approached.
"Cockroaches," Carole whispered. "I've
never seen so many."
"Maybe they feel some kinship with the
clientele," Lacey replied.
They paused outside the swinging doors to the kitchen.
Light filtered through the two round, grease-smeared windows.
"Okay," Lacey said. "I go first."
She pushed through the doors; Carole followed. A fat,
balding, cigar-chewing man in a bulging tank top stood before a stove, stirring
a big pot. He looked up as they entered.
"Who the fuck are you?" he said.
"A couple of hungry ladies," Lacey said.
"Got any dinner you can spare?"
"Yo." He grinned and grabbed his crotch. "I
got dinner right here."
"That's not exactly what we had in mind."
"You eat some of this, you get to eat some of what's
cookin in the pot. Capisce?"
While Lacey talked, Carole looked around the filthy mess
of a kitchen. She didn't see a gun. The cook probably couldn't imagine he'd
need one. Immediately to her right she spotted the other thing she was looking
for: half a dozen ten-pound canisters of powdered eggs. One was open, its lid
slightly askew.
"I'm kind of cranky right now," Lacey was
saying. "I'm hungry, I've got low blood sugar, and I'm feeling
premenstrual. You'll like me better when I'm not hypoglycemic."
"Ay, this ain't no Let's Make A Deal." He jabbed
a finger at Lacey. "You do me before you eat"—then at
Carole—"and she does me after. Otherwise you can get the fuck outta
here."
Lacey sighed and took a step toward him. "Oh, all
right."
He grinned and started loosening his belt. "That's
more like it!"
Lacey's hand darted to her sleeve and came up with her
nunchucks. She whipped her hand around in a small circle, snapping her wrist
and slamming one of the steel bars against the side of the cook's head. He
grunted and staggered back, clutching his head. Lacey followed, swinging her
nunchucks left, right, left, right, then vertically, connecting each time with
either the man's head or his raised elbows. With blood spurting from his face
and scalp, the cook turned away, dropped to his knees, then fell forward,
covering his head with his hands and groaning.
"Stop, stop! Take what you want!"
"Warned you I was cranky. Now get flat on your belly
and stay there." He complied, leaving the patterned soles of his sneakers
facing Carole. Lacey turned and gave her a nod.
Carole knelt beside the open canister of powdered eggs and
removed the lid. It was three-quarters full. A heavy metal scoop lay inside.
She pulled the bag of sodium fluorosilicate out of her backpack and began
scooping the egg powder into its place.
"You could have been nice, you know," she heard
Lacey saying. "All we wanted was something to eat. Didn't your mother ever
teach you to share?"
"I'm sorry," the cook moaned. "I'm
sorry!"
"Now we'll have to take it."
When Carole figured she'd scooped out about two pounds of
egg, she zipped up the backpack, then emptied the pound of sodium
fluorosilicate into the canister. The chemical was white and the powdered egg
was a pale yellow. She used the scoop to mix them into a consistent color, then
replaced the lid.
God forgive her. She'd just sealed the fates and numbered
the hours of dozens of men. Vicious, evil men, but men nonetheless.
"All right," she told Lacey. "I've got the
eggs."
Lacey had the big chrome refrigerator door open and was
peering inside.
"What have we here?" she said. She reached in
and removed what looked like a pepperoni and half a wheel of white cheese.
"Looks like cookie's got his own private stash!" She turned to the cook
and squatted beside him. "All right. We're leaving. Don't even think about
moving or making a sound until we're gone or I'll bust your head wide open and
fry your brains on the grill. Capisce? "
The cook moaned and nodded.
Lacey looked at Carole and waggled her eyebrows. "Let
go."
JOE . . .
Joe could see the kitchen doors through Houlihan's plate
glass windows. He'd watched Carole and Lacey push through them only a few
minutes ago, but it seemed like an hour.
"Come on, ladies," he whispered. "Come
on."
The idea was to make this look like a food raid—desperate
people risking their lives to take food out, not leave something behind. That
was why he'd asked Lacey not to show a gun unless she had to. All it would take
was one shot to bring the Vichy running. Let them think the thieves who'd hit
them were amateurs armed only with nunchucks and knives.
Am I doing the right thing? he wondered for the thousandth
time since they'd arrived in New York. He had a feeling he wasn't.
They were following his lead, trusting him with their
lives. Was he, as the phrase went, exercising due diligence? He didn't know.
All he knew was that once the idea of targeting Franco in his aerie had taken
hold, he couldn't uproot it. He'd considered other options, but none of them held
a candle to this. Because this was unquestionably the best tactic or because
he'd become fixated on Franco? Part of him argued that he should have sent
either Carole or Lacey west, to try to cross into unoccupied territory with the
secret. But a stronger part had countered that he needed both of them along to
take Franco down, and that argument had prevailed.
And he knew why. He had a secondary goal in mind, one he
dared not tell Carole and Lacey. They'd never let him go through with it.
But he had another concern. Joe was noticing wild mood
swings. In life he'd been prone to periodic lows that usually responded to a
couple of stiff Scotches. Now he found himself experiencing surges of rage at
the slightest provocation. He'd managed to control them so far. Like early this
morning when Lacey had questioned him about some minor point in tonight's plan,
he'd had this sudden urge to grab her by the throat and scream at her to stop
asking so many goddamned questions.
He'd managed to fight it off, but that urge still
frightened him. Was it the stress, the responsibility of what they'd planned,
or was he edging closer to the darkness in his daymares? What if—?
Movement in the SUV's side mirror caught his attention. A
Vichy, bearded and denimed like so many of them, had rounded the corner and was
approaching the Navigator with a raised pistol. Then Joe recognized him: the
one who'd been with the head Vichy in the Armani suit when Joe was dropped
outside the front entrance.
He'll recognize me! This will ruin—
Wait. He won't recognize me.
Joe had forgotten momentarily how his face had been
disfigured by the sun. Easy to forget when you'd never seen it, when mirrors
gave back only a smeary blur.
"What the fuck is this?" the Vichy said,
stepping up to the open driver window and leveling his semiautomatic at Joe.
"Who are you and what the fuck you think you're—shit! What happened to
your face?"
That voice ... Joe remembered it taunting him in the long
elevator ride to the Observation Deck.
I'm glad I ain't you. Holy shit, am I glad I ain't you.
"Good morning," Joe said. "Just waiting to
pick up a friend. And the face? An industrial accident."
"Who gives a shit. What're you doin here, man? You
think this is some kinda taxi stand?"
Joe turned his head and showed his right earlobe. He
flicked the dangly earring. "Hey, I'm in the club."
"That don't mean shit. Who you waitin for?"
Joe cudgeled his brain for the name of this guy's buddy,
the one in the suit who'd called him "god-boy."
"Barrett," he said as it came back to him.
"He told me to meet him here at sundown."
The Vichy's eyes narrowed. "Barrett's on night duty
with me. Should be here any minute." He pulled open Joe's door.
"Let's go see about this."
As Joe stepped out of the car, he saw movement in
Houlihan's over the Vichy's shoulder: Carole and Lacey leaving the kitchen.
Joe reached for the man's pistol and was surprised by how
fast his hand moved. It darted out in a blur of motion; he grabbed the weapon
and twisted it from his grasp. The Vichy jumped back with a shocked look and
stared at his empty palm. Then he opened his mouth to shout but Joe's other
hand reached his throat first, fingers gripping the nape of his neck while the
thumb jammed against the windpipe. The man made a strangled sound. Joe pressed
harder, hearing the cartilage crunch as it began to give way.
Stop, he told himself.
They'd decided no killing tonight, it might rile the Vichy
too much, send them out hunting instead of staying close to Houlihan's and
tomorrow's breakfast.
But this felt too, too good. And oh this man deserved
dying for how he'd taunted him. Worse yet, he'd seen too much.
A crushed throat might raise too many alarms, though.
With a heave Joe lifted him off his feet and hurled him
head first toward the sidewalk. The back of his skull hit the concrete with a
meaty crunch; his arms stiffened straight out to either side, then fell limp
beside him.
"Joseph?" It was Carole, stepping through the
revolving door. She stared at the body with the blood pooling around its head.
"What—?"
"Hey, Unk," Lacey said. "I thought we
said—"
"In the car, both of you!" he snapped.
"We've wasted too much time already!"
Their fault. If they hadn't dawdled so damn long inside,
this wouldn't have happened.
The two women piled into the back seat as Joe slipped
behind the wheel. He wanted to slam his foot against the accelerator and burn
rubber out of here, but a quiet departure was best. When he reached Sixth he
turned uptown one block, then raced east on Thirty-fifth. Mostly pubs and
parking garages along this block. He pulled into a multi-level garage and
parked far in the rear. If the Vichy went hunting for the thieves who stole
their food and killed their man, they'd never expect them to hide just one
block away.
As he shut off the engine he noticed a foul odor emanating
from the back seat.
"What is that?" he said.
"Just some snack foods we picked up," Lacey
said. "A pepperoni and what looks like provolone."
"The pepperoni—does it have garlic in it?"
"Probably, I—oops. Sorry about that."
"Throw it out."
"No way, Unk. We might never see another pepperoni
again. But we'll eat it outside the car."
Joe was halfway turned around, ready to grab the damn
pepperoni and shove it down her throat when he stopped himself.
He turned back and leaned his head against the steering
wheel.
What's happening to me?
- 15 -
CAROLE. . . .
At dawn, and not a minute before, Joseph, Carole, and
Lacey stepped out of the garage and started toward Fifth Avenue. The pistol in
Carole's hand— Joseph had told her it was a 9mm Glock—felt heavy as it swung
with her gait, muzzle toward the sidewalk.
They'd been waiting for Joseph when he awoke an hour ago.
After Carole had fed him a few drops of her blood, they'd gone to work checking
weapons and mentally preparing themselves for the coming ordeal.
While Joseph and Lacey had tinkered with their guns,
Carole sidled off with her gear to a far corner of the garage to make her own
preparations. In a little while they'd be entering the heart of darkness, with
a fair chance of not coming out alive. Carole wasn't afraid of dying. It was
undying that terrified her. So while Joseph and Lacey armed themselves from the
collection of weapons confiscated along the way, Carole added extra precautions
to guarantee she'd never be an undead: extra charges front and back, and extra
triggers. If it came to the point where all hope was lost, she'd make her exit.
But not alone.
If worse came to worst, she'd be risking eternal damnation
to avoid undeath. Carole shuddered at the prospect. She'd been taught that
suicide was a one-way ticket to hell, but she hoped and prayed that God would
understand. Death before dishonor . . . death before undeath . . . surely that
was the right thing to do.
And now they were on the street, heading toward . . .
what?
"All right," Joseph said as they neared Fifth
Avenue. He was walking between them. "This is it. We take it slow down to
Thirty-fourth. If things went as planned we won't meet any resistance. If
things didn't, well, we might have to fight to escape."
Carole knew all this but let him talk. She sensed an
unusual tension in
Joseph. Was it because this was their D-Day, when all
their planning and watching and waiting would either bring them success or
death? Or was it something else?
He stopped them at Fifth and worked the slide on his gun.
"Ladies—time to lock and load."
Carole followed his example. The slide gave more
resistance than she'd expected.
"Remember what I said," Joseph told them.
"If anything happens to me, get out of town and do your best to reach
unoccupied territory."
He leaned away and peered around the corner, then turned
back to them and nodded.
"I think we're in business."
He motioned them to follow when Carole cleared the corner
she saw what he meant. Down the gentle slope, past Thirty-Fourth Street, she
spotted three still figures lying on the sidewalk under the Empire State
Building's front canopy.
As they passed a smashed and looted Duane Reade,
Houlihan's came into view. Writhing forms littered the sidewalk in front of it.
One lay in the open doorway next to the revolving door. The odor of fresh
coffee wafted across the street through the cool dawn air. On another day, in
another place, the smell would have had her salivating, but right now her
stomach had shrunk to a tight little knot the size of a walnut.
They crossed the street and now Carole could see the Vichy
close up— their gray faces, their bloodshot eyes, their blue lips. She tensed
and ducked into a half crouch as she caught movement to her right. One of the
Vichy was convulsing on the sidewalk. Her first impulse was to run to his side
and help him, but she suppressed it. She, after all, was the reason for his
seizure.
Carole stared in horror at the thrashing arms, the
foam-flecked lips. It was one thing to plan for their deaths, to imagine them
dead. It was something else entirely to witness their death throes.
"Dear God, what have I done?"
JOE . . .
"Let's keep moving," Joe said.
He noticed Carole's sick look. He felt for her, but this
was no time for Carole to start second-guessing herself. The old Father Joe
might have been appalled, but ex-Father Joe was more fatalistic. It was an ugly
scene, but what was done was done. No turning back now.
"Eight," Lacey said. "Your window is
shrinking."
Joe checked his watch. He had less than fifty minutes
before daysleep took hold. They entered the building and he led Lacey and
Carole on a winding course through the prostrate forms in the Empire State's
front lobby.
At the elevator banks he stopped when he noticed the
closed doors to the local car. He pressed the call button, then stepped back
and aimed his pistol at the doors.
He motioned Carole and Lacey to the side. "Be ready
to fire. This may not arrive empty."
"But this car is waiting," Carole said, pointing
to a set of open doors.
"That's the Observation Deck express. At this point
we only want to go to three."
The car arrived empty. Joe got on after Lacey and Carole,
stabbed the 3 button, and they were on their way. Mentally he was anxious, but
physically he was calm—no butterflies in his gut, no pounding heart. As if his
emotions were divorced from his body. Or maybe because his body had entered a
new mode of existence, one without adrenaline.
Joe pointed his gun at the doors as the car slowed to a
stop on three. They parted to reveal an empty hallway. He touched his fingers
to his lips and stepped out. Keeping his pistol raised before him, he
approached the open double doors to the security center. He was four feet away
when a heavyset Vichy stepped into view.
"About fuckin—"
His eyes widened as he saw them and he was reaching for
the pistol in his belt when Joe shot him once in the chest. He staggered back,
eyes even wider, and then another shot rang out, catching him below the left
eye and snapping his head back. He fell like a tree to lay stretched out on the
hall carpet.
Joe glanced at Lacey who had her pistol extended in a
two-handed grip.
She smiled. "Just making sure."
He looked at Carol. She clutched her pistol waist high,
pointed at the wall. She looked like a startled deer.
Joe stepped into the security area and found the three
technicians staring at him in shock. He pointed to the fallen Vichy in the
hall.
"Any more like him here?"
They shook their heads.
"No," said the oldest of the three. He looked
about sixty with gray hair and a receding hairline. "But there will be
soon. He was waiting for his relief so he could go get breakfast."
"His relief's not coming," Joe said. "And
breakfast has been canceled."
He allowed himself a moment of congratulation. They'd done
it. They'd knocked out the Vichy and captured the Security Center.
Now they had to hold it.
"Who are you?" said the technician. He couldn't
seem to pull his gaze from Joe's face.
Joe opened his mouth to speak but Lacey beat him to it.
"Just some nobodies who've come to liberate the
building."
"No shit?" said the youngest, who appeared to be
in his forties.
"No shit," Lacey agreed. "Who are you three
and why are you working for the bloodsuckers?"
"I'm Marty Considine," said the gray-headed one.
He pointed to the young one. "This is Mike Leland, and that's Kevin
Fowler." The third technician was fat and wore a stained half-sleeve white
shirt. He nodded but said nothing.
"As for being here," Considine went on, "we
don't have much choice."
"Yeah," said the fat one, Fowler. "Not if
we want our wives and kids to live."
Lacey shook her head. "You call this living?"
Leland looked away. "No. But when they slap your kid
around and rape your wife in front of you, just to give you a taste of what
will happen if you screw up, you get the message."
Joe felt for them, but not terribly. Everyone had
suffered. He was scanning the monitors. When he recognized views of the
Observation Deck, he said, "We've got one job for you, then you can go
back to your families."
"And do what?" said Fowler. His lower lip
trembled. "Where can we go?"
"That's up to you. Within half an hour, if all goes
well, your services will no longer be needed here. By anyone." He stepped
closer to the monitors. "Is there a camera in the stairwell to the
Observation Deck?"
Leland began typing on a keyboard. "We've got three
there. Which one do you want?"
"The highest—between the eighty-fifth and
eighty-sixth if you've got one."
"We do."
"Audio?"
"Just video." He grabbed a mouse and clicked.
"Here you go."
A monitor went blank, then cut back in with a view of a
door marked 85 in an empty stairwell. A sawed-off shotgun leaned in the corner
next to the door.
"Excellent," Joe said.
Leland squinted at the screen. "Hey, somebody's
usually guarding the door to eight-five from dawn to dusk."
"We gave him the day off," Lacey said. "Any
way of broadcasting from here?"
Considine shook his head. "The building has a huge TV
antenna, but that's another department. We're security. We don't know squat
about TV transmission."
"It's okay," Joe said, tapping the screen.
"We'll tape as planned. Record that one, and then I'll tell you another
one to record when I get to the Observation Deck."
"It's true then?" Considine said. "You're
really liberating the building?"
"That's the plan," Joe said.
"About time. How many of you are there?"
"Just us," Lacey said.
He stared. "Three? Just three? You've got to be
kidding! Are you people crazy?
Joe shrugged. "Probably. But we're already more than
halfway to succeeding. We—"
A burst of static from the hallway startled him.
"Security! Security, do you copy?"
Joe tensed. "What's that?"
"One of their two-ways."
Joe stepped out into the hall, found the little
walkie-talkie clipped to the dead guard's belt, and turned it off. He returned
to the Security Center and faced Carole and Lacey.
"That means at least one of the Vichy is still alive
out there. Probably more."
"Well," Lacey said, "we knew from the
get-go we wouldn't get them all."
"I don't like leaving you two alone here."
Considine stepped past him. Joe tensed as he picked up the
fallen guard's pistol. He worked the slide and chambered a round.
"Who said they're alone? Your ranks just swelled to
four."
Joe stared at him. "You know how to use that?"
Considine nodded. "Nam, pal. Eighteen months in
country."
Joe liked leaving Carole and Lacey with an armed stranger
even less, but sensed he could trust Considine. He didn't have much choice.
"You folks hold the fort here. Lock the door and pull
that desk in front of it. Shoot anyone who tries to get in."
"Where are you going?" Considine said.
"Upstairs. I've got a date with Franco."
He glanced at Carole. She had a dazed air about her that
worried him. "Carole, are you all right?"
"I'll be fine," she said. "Hurry. You
haven't much time."
"I know." He stepped close to her and took her
in his arms and held her. He never wanted to leave her.
"I love you," he murmured as he kissed her hair.
"Always remember that. We—"
He stopped as he felt a lump between her shoulder blades,
and another farther down near the small of her back. He knew what they were.
"Oh, God, Carole!" he whispered. "Don't
ever push those buttons. I know they give you comfort, but I beg you, don't.
Please don't."
He released her she stared at him with stricken eyes.
"Only as a last resort," she told him. "Only when all hope is
gone."
"Then I pray that moment never comes." He turned
and hugged Lacey. "My favorite niece," he said. "One of my
favorite people in the whole world. Just remember: if anything happens to me,
you and Carole get these tapes to the unoccupied territories."
Lacey backed away and gave him a strange look. "Why
do you keep saying that? It's like you don't think you'll see us again."
"I might not. But I'm not what this is about. I'm
expendable. If I can't make it back, you two must go on without me."
He couldn't tell them the truth. He turned to go.
"Wait," Carole said, holding a zipped-up
backpack. "Don't forget this,"
He nodded and began slipping his arms through the straps
as he ran for the elevators. The pack was hot against his back.
BARRETT . . .
Home from the night shift, James Barrett stepped into his
Murray Hill brownstone and checked the long-pork filet he'd put in the
refrigerator to thaw when he'd left at sunset. It had softened considerably but
still had a ways to go.
He yawned. Christ, this was a boring way to live. Sleeping
days, working nights. His internal clock couldn't seem to get used to it.
Cooking was the only interesting thing in his life now, and even that was
palling on him. Without fresh spices there were only so many ways you could
cook human flesh. At least it was better than eating that slop they served the
troops at Houlihan's day after day.
Not that he'd eat with the hoi polloi anyway. He needed to
set himself apart, both in their eyes and in the undead's.
At least they'd had a little excitement last night with
Neal getting killed and those two women stealing food from the kitchen. Neal
wound up with the back of his head stove in. He was one tough mother. Barrett
couldn't see a couple of women doing that. Must've had help.
He wondered if they were connected to the mess in the
Lincoln tunnel. What if that hadn't been an accident?
He had put the cowboys on full alert tonight, stationed a
couple of guards in Houlihan's, and sent out teams to look for someone, anyone
who might be connected. They'd returned with a few stray cattle but no one who
fit the cook's description.
He'd miss Neal. He was good for a laugh and for the
application of a little muscle when Barrett gave him the go-ahead. But did he
feel even a trace of sadness at his passing? They said when you were turned and
rose as undead, you lost all your emotions. That would be a breeze for Barrett.
He had no memory of feeling anything for anybody. Ever.
That was why his situation was so frustrating. He was
already most of the way to undead. All he needed was the bite and he'd be
there. If he could just—
His two-way squawked. Now what? Couldn't they do anything
over there without him? He snatched it up.
"Yeah. Talk to me."
Nothing but faint static from the other end.
"Hey, you called. What do you want?"
Nothing again, then something that sounded like a groan, a
very agonized groan.
"Hello? Who's there? What's going on?"
Again the groan, fainter this time, then nothing. Barrett
tried to get a response but nothing came through. He tried calling the Security
Center but no one picked up.
His chest tightened. Something was up. Remembering Neal's
cracked dome, he stuck his Dirty Harry gun—his .44 Magnum—into his shoulder
holster and hurried back to the Empire State.
JOE . . .
When Joe stepped out on the eightieth floor, instead of
heading for the other bank of elevators to take him the last six floors to the
Observation Deck, he looked around and found an exit door. He pushed through
and climbed the stairs.
Outside the door marked 85 he looked around for the
security camera. When he found it he waved, then reached for the handle.
A foul miasma of rot engulfed Joe when he opened the door.
The stairwell was well lit but the space beyond the door was dark as a tomb.
How appropriate, he thought.
His night vision was extraordinary but it wasn't up to
this, so he stepped through and found a light switch on the wall. The hallway
was strewn with office furniture. He began searching room to room. The first
two were filled with somnolent get-guards stretched out on mattresses and
futons, but Franco was not among them. He looked down the hall and saw a form
stretched out before a doorway. Could be a dead victim, but if it was a
get-guard . . .
It was. That could only mean Franco was inside. Joe picked
up the pistol and machete at the guard's side and tossed them down the hall.
Then he tried the door. Locked. He reared back and kicked it in.
There, in the center of the otherwise empty room with
boarded-up windows, a four-poster bed sat like a ship becalmed on a still dark
sea.
And in that bed .. . Joe recognized the big blond hair and
mustache, the sharp angle of the nose. A burst of fury like nothing he'd ever
experience took hold of him. He wanted to run down the hallway, find that
machete, and start hacking away at this worthless cluster of cells. But no
killing blows. Just slicing off small pieces, one at a time . . .
Joe shook it off. These dark impulses were getting
stronger. Had to stick to the plan.
"Franco!" he shouted as he stepped over the
get-guard. "Franco, I've got something to show you!"
Franco lay on his back in gray silk suit pants and a
glossy white, loose-sleeved shirt that reminded Joe of a woman's blouse. Slowly
he pivoted his head toward Joe. His eyes widened in surprise as his lips formed
the word, Who?
"We'll get to that in a minute."
He lifted the big vampire onto his shoulder, something
that would have been a back-wrenching task a week ago; but now, with his
semi-undead strength, he found it easy. Franco struggled but his movements were
weak, futile. The get-guard at the door clutched at him as he passed but didn't
have a prayer of restraining him.
Joe moved down the hall, kicking in each door he passed,
shouting, "Hey! I've got your daddy and I'm going to send him to his final
reward. Try and stop me!"
Back in the stairwell he started up the flight to the
Observation Deck but stopped halfway. He put Franco down and let him slump on
the concrete steps.
"Who are you?" Franco rasped.
"Am I that easy to forget?" Joe said. "It
was only a week ago—a week ago today, as a matter of fact."
He heard something scrape against the concrete under
Franco. He flipped him over and saw the leathery tips of his wings struggling
to emerge through the slits in his shirt. Joe pulled off his backpack and
unzipped it. Rays of bright white light shot from the opening.
Blinking in the glare, Joe reached in and found the
foam-rubber padding Carole had duct-taped to the lower end of his silver cross.
Even through the padding he felt its heat. Averting his eyes he pulled out the
cross and slammed it against one of the emerging wings. A hiss of burning
flesh, a puff of acrid smoke as Franco writhed and let out a hoarse scream.
Then the other wing— with the same results.
He returned the cross to the back pack and zipped it. He
blinked to regain his vision; when it cleared he looked down at Franco's back.
The wing tips were now smoldering lumps of scar tissue. He turned as he heard
the door from the eighty-fifth floor hallway swing open. Members of Franco's
get-guard began to crawl into the stairwell.
Good.
He grabbed the gasping, whimpering Franco and turned him
onto his back. The vampire stared at Joe's face, his expression terrified and
confused.
"I'll refresh your memory, Franco. You allowed
something called Devlin to lunch on me." Joe's anger flared again as he
recalled his terror, his helplessness, and the searing pain of having his
throat ripped open. "Remember?" He heard his voice growing louder.
"Told me I'd soon be just like him. Remember? " He grabbed Franco by
the neck and drew his face close. "Remember?"
He was shouting now and he wanted to rip Franco's head
off.
No. Not yet.
He looked down and saw that the get-guards had reached the
steps and were crawling up, their progress slow, tortured.
"Come on, guys," he said. "Move it. I
haven't got all day."
Damn right. He glanced at his watch. He had maybe twenty,
twenty-five minutes before he became as weak as they.
He turned back to Franco and saw that a light had dawned
in the undead's eyes—realization, but not belief.
"The priest?" he whispered in a voice like tiny
claws scratching stone. "You? No ..."
"Yes!" Joe heard the word hiss out like escaping
steam. "The priest. Killing me wasn't good enough. You had to condemn me
to an eternity of depravity, rob me of every shred of dignity, undo every scrap
of good I'd done in my entire life. At least that was your plan. But it didn't
work."
"How?" The word was an exhalation.
"I'm not even sure myself. All I know is this is how
it works out in the end: I lose, but you lose too."
He flinched at a deafening report and the spang of a
bullet ricocheting off the concrete above his head. Another shot and this time
the bullet dug into his hip with a painful sting.
He stood and faced them, spreading his arms. "Go
ahead. It won't matter. I'm one of you."
Not true. He'd never be one of them, but no reason they
shouldn't suffer some confusion and dismay in their final minutes.
More shots. Most were misses because their weak, wavering
hands were unable to aim, but a few hit home. He jerked with the impacts, felt
the heat and pain of their entries, but it was nothing he couldn't bear.
Finally they gave it up. He smiled at the alarm in their faces.
He turned to Franco and lifted him in his arms.
"Let's go."
"Where?"
"To see the sun. Don't you miss it? We're too late
for sunrise, but it promises to be a beautiful day."
Franco grabbed Joe's shirt and pulled on it. A feeble
gesture. But Joe was surprised to see a nasty grin stretch his thin lips.
"You idiot! Devlin was my get! That makes you my get
as well. When I die, you die!"
"I know," Joe said, returning a grin he hoped
was just as nasty: "I'm counting on that."
Franco's jaw dropped open. "N-no! You can't!
You—"
"I can. Because I don't want to exist like
this."
Joe pushed through the door at the top of the steps and
emerged into the green-tiled atrium by the elevators. Sunlight, searingly
bright, blazed through the huge windows of the enclosed observation area that
lay a few steps up and beyond. Only a six-foot swath, no more than two feet
wide, penetrated the atrium.
I'm here. I've done it.
Amazing what someone can do when they don't care if they
live or die, he thought. But they can achieve so much more, achieve the
seemingly impossible, when they're looking to die.
He forced himself to look at that swath of direct light.
That was where Franco would meet his end, sealing Joe's fate as well. But first
he'd wait for the get-guards to arrive. He wanted as many as possible on camera
when Franco bought it.
CAROLE . . .
Carole's stomach clenched as she stared at the monitors.
"What is he doing?" "Just what he said he would," Lacey
replied. "Getting as many get-guards onscreen before he pushes Franco into
the sunlight."
"But there's a whole stairwell full of guards. Too many
of them. He's letting them get too close. Why doesn't he have the cross
out?"
"What can they do? After that display in the
stairwell they know they can't shoot him."
"But they have those machetes."
"So? They can barely lift them. Don't worry, Carole.
He's got them beat." Carole wasn't so sure. A lucky swing from a machete
could sever an Achilles tendon, or worse, a higher swing could catch Joseph's
hamstrings. He wouldn't be able to stand then. He'd go down and they'd swarm
over him. One of them might be strong enough to behead him ...
Her chest tightened at the thought. She couldn't, wouldn't
lose him.
"I'm going up there," she blurted.
"No way!" Lacey said. "Our job is to stay
here."
Carole began pushing the desk away from the door.
"No. I can help. I can use the cross to keep them back."
Lacey grabbed her arm. "Carole—"
Carole wrenched free. "Please don't fight me on this.
I've got to go. I've just got to."
"Shit!" Lacey said. "Then I'll go with
you."
"No." She cracked the door and peeked out into
the hall. Empty. "One of us has to stay here. That's you."
Without looking back, she stepped into the hall and
started for the elevators.
She heard Considine's voice behind her. "Tell her
she's got to go down to one and catch an express to eighty."
"Carole—" Lacey began.
"I heard," Carole said over her shoulder.
"Keep your gun ready," Lacey called. "You
see anything moving, shoot first and ask questions later."
"I will."
And she would. Joseph needed her and no one was going to
bar her from reaching him.
BARRETT . . .
Barrett staggered through the Empire State lobby in a
daze. His men lay strewn about like jackstraws. Blue-gray faces everywhere.
Those who weren't dead were well on their way.
Obviously they'd been poisoned, but how? The water supply?
The breakfast eggs? The coffee? Didn't much matter now. He just had to remember
not to eat or drink anything within blocks of this building.
But all of his men? Surely there had to be a couple who'd
missed breakfast. But he didn't know who and he had no way of contacting them.
They were scattered throughout the building. He'd have to go floor to floor and
door to door.
The other question was who. Who did this? What did they
want? Were they after the cowboys, to send a message to anyone who collaborated
with the enemy? Or were they after the undead too? If so, they'd be upstairs,
on eight-five—where the vamps would be sitting ducks and the shit would really
be hitting the fan.
Barrett turned and looked back at the front doors. His
first impulse was to cut and run. As top cowboy the responsibility for all this
would be laid on him. But on the other hand, he'd been looking for a chance to
put himself in the spotlight. Maybe this was opportunity knocking.
He had to reach the Security Center. He could get the lay
of the land there and decide what, if anything, he could do. He headed for the
elevators. As he passed the security kiosk in the main lobby he remembered it
was equipped with a couple of monitors.
He stepped up to the console and dialed through the
various feeds but stopped when he came to the Observation Deck. He gaped at the
scene playing out on the little black-and-white screen. Some guy with a
scarred-up face had Franco. The head vampire hung in his grip like a rag doll.
A couple of get-guards were crawling through the stairway door. Where were
their guns? Why didn't they shoot?
They needed someone to take charge up there and take this
fucker out.
James Barrett grinned. His moment had come.
He searched the drawers of the kiosk looking for something
to give him an advantage, no matter how small, beyond his big gun. He found
some pepper spray and a couple of pairs of handcuffs. He took the spray, then
pulled his Magnum and headed for the elevators.
As he approached the Observation Deck express bank, he
heard a set of doors slide open. He started to step back, then reversed field.
The car couldn't hold that many; he might be outnumbered but he had surprise on
his side. So he made a snap decision and charged with both arms held straight
out before him, pepper spray in his left, pistol in the right. He'd reached
full speed when a woman stepped out of the car. He collided with her head on.
As they fell to the floor he began firing into the car. He got off two booming
shots before he realized it was empty.
Barrett turned his attention to the woman who was
struggling beneath him. He slammed the heavy barrel of his Magnum against her
head, stunning her. Then he rushed back to the guard kiosk and grabbed the
handcuffs. She was stirring as he returned so he quickly pulled her arms behind
her and snapped the cuffs on. He didn't have the keys and didn't need them to
lock her into them. As for getting her out—not his worry.
He stood and looked down at her. A slim brunette. Not bad
looking, but not his type. One thing he knew about her was that she didn't
belong here. That meant she was with the ugly guy on the Observation Deck. And
that meant he had a hostage. Perfecto.
JOE . . .
Half a dozen get-guards were through the door now, their
machetes scraping against the marble as they dragged themselves across the
floor.
These should be enough to make the point, he thought as he
edged himself and Franco away from them and closer to the patch of sunlight.
They appeared to be in the camera's field of view.
Now .. . the moment of truth.
Questions surged unbidden into his mind. Did he really
want to do this? It would end everything. No more Carole, no more Lacey. Wasn't
this existence, hideous as it was, better than no existence at all?
No. Unequivocally no. He would not spend the centuries
this half-breed existence might give him as a creature of the darkness and
twilight. Yes, he'd have more time with Carole and Lacey, but he'd also have to
watch them age and die.
Better to make a clean break, better to end his personal
horror by removing another horror from the earth.
He lifted Franco and tensed his muscles to hurl him into
the light.
"Get ready to burn, Franco," he whispered.
"No! Please—!"
Just then an elevator chimed to his left. The doors slid
open and his heart sank when he saw Carole. He didn't want her to have to watch
his death throes. But panic and rage exploded within him when he saw the
grinning face hovering behind her shoulder.
Barrett.
The head Vichy propelled Carole ahead of him into the
atrium. The doors whispered closed behind them.
"Well, well," he said, still grinning.
"What have we here? I guess this is what we call a stand-off."
"Carole, are you all right?"
She shook her head. A thin stream of blood trickled down
her temple from her scalp. Her eyes filled with tears.
"Joseph, I'm so sorry."
"It's all right."
He made a silent promise: I'll get you out of this, no
matter what it takes.
He noticed that her arms were pulled behind her, which
meant her hands were bound. In a way, that was a relief. Barrett had no idea
how lucky he was. If Carole were able to get her hands into her pockets, she
might have blown them both to pieces by now.
"Let her go, Barrett," Joe said.
His eyebrows lifted. "You know my name? You have the
advantage over me, sir. And I'm sure I'd not forget a face like yours."
There wasn't time to get into that.
"Just let her go."
"And why would I want to do that?"
"It's the right thing to do."
"For you maybe, but not for me. I'm willing to make a
trade, though. Her for him." He pointed to Franco. "Hear that,
Bossman? I'm saving your ass. And I expect something in return—big time. After
I straighten this out, I want to be turned. Immediately. We waive the ten-year
clause. Agreed?"
"Yes," Franco rasped. "Of course."
"And I don't want to be turned by some low-level
drone, either. By you or, better yet, by the guy who turned you, if he's still
around. I want wings."
Franco nodded. "Yes. Anything. Anything you
want."
"You want to be like them?" Joe pointed to the
undead guards who were continuing their inching crawl toward him. They'd be
within striking distance in a minute. "Look at them. Slithering along the floor.
They're vermin!"
"But they're the vermin who're running the
show."
"Not for long. And then where will you be?"
"It's over for us, Mister Melted Face. The New World
Order has arrived, and though it's not what anyone imagined, the choices come
down to predator or prey. I've never seen myself as prey." He smiled.
"So . .. how do you want to work the trade?"
"Joseph, no!" Carole cried.
Barrett grabbed a fistful of her hair and yanked her head
back. "No one asked you! You're nothing but merchandise, so keep it
zipped. I do the negotiating here!"
Joe took a step toward him. He wanted to kill Barrett, but
slowly. Twist his head around an inch at a time until it was facing the other
way.
"Uh-uh!" Barrett said. He held up an
old-fashioned stiletto, pressed the button, and out snapped a gleaming four-inch
blade. He pressed the point against Carole's throat. "Don't make me damage
the merchandise."
LACEY . . .
Lacey stared at the Observation Deck feed. Joe's lips were
moving and he was looking away from the camera.
"Who's he talking to?" she said.
Considine shrugged. "Maybe Franco, maybe your friend.
She should have arrived by now."
The scars made Joe's face all but unreadable, especially
on this small, grainy screen, but something about his body language set off
warning alarms throughout her brain.
"Do you have other cameras up there?"
Leland grabbed his mouse. "One other that catches the
atrium." Windows opened and closed on his computer screen, menus dropped
down and rolled up. "Here we go."
The scene that flickered to life on the screen froze
Lacey's heart. Carole ... held prisoner by a Vichy.
"Barrett!" Considine said over her shoulder.
"Fucking Barrett. How'd you miss him?"
"Who's he?"
"Chief rat."
Lacey pulled her pistol from her belt. "I'm going up
there."
"Not alone, you're not," Considine said.
"Stay here," she said. "We need that
tape."
"These guys can handle that. Going alone is what got
your friend in trouble." He was already heading for the door. "Let's
move."
Lacey followed him out into the hall. They were almost to
the elevators when one of them chimed. The UP light glowed over the second set
of doors. Considine went into a crouch and motioned her toward the near wall.
Pistol fully extended, he hurried forward and flattened himself against the wall
immediately to the right of the doors.
When they slid open and a scraggly-haired head peeked out,
Considine shot him in the face from six inches away. Lacey heard someone inside
the car shout "Fuck!" as the shot man went down in a spray of red,
landing in the doorway. The doors tried to close but the body blocked them.
Considine knelt and, without turning his head, motioned
Lacey down to the floor. Seconds later another Vichy burst from the car with a
hoarse cry, spraying the hall with an assault pistol. As the bullets screamed
over her head, Lacey returned fire along with Considine. She didn't know who
hit him but suddenly he went into spin, falling one way while his weapon sailed
in another. He ended up huddled against the wall, clutching his shoulder.
Considine peeked into the elevator car, then stepped over
to the fallen Vichy, picking up his assault pistol on the way. He turned him
over with his foot and—to Lacey's shock—shot him in his good shoulder, then
once again in the stomach.
"Not exactly a kill shot," Lacey said as the
Vichy screamed and writhed in agony.
Considine's face was a grim mask as he returned to the
elevator and pulled the first body clear of the door.
"Not intended," he said.
"We don't want to leave any live ones."
He motioned her into the car. "That one we do.
Between the messed-up shoulders and the gut shot, he's out of the fight."
The doors closed and he pressed the lobby button.
Lacey stared at him. "You've got something personal
going on here?"
Considine's eyes remained fixed straight ahead on the
doors. His voice was dead flat. "Back in January two of this guy's buddies
held me and made me watch while he raped my wife. Said if I didn't cooperate
they'd pass her around the cowboys like that until they were tired of her, then
she'd be turned and sent to kill me."
Lacey swallowed. The terror, the humiliation this man had
had to live with .. . she couldn't think of anything else to say except,
"I'm sorry."
"And now he's sorry. It should take him hours to die.
If I'm real lucky, maybe a couple of days, every minute of it in excruciating
agony."
"My kind of guy," she said. He glanced at her.
"That is, if I liked guys."
JOE . . .
Joe winced as he saw the point of the stiletto indent the
flesh of Carole's throat.
"Don't hurt her,"
"Then stop dragging this out," Barrett said.
"We make the switch and we all walk away free and clear." He smiled.
"Until I come and hunt you down."
Joe felt his strength beginning to slip. He glanced toward
the observation windows. He couldn't see the glass or anything beyond, only a
featureless blaze of white. The sun was nearing the point where it would suck
off his energy and reduce him to a crawling weakling like Franco and his get.
What could he do? If there was a way out of this, he
couldn't see it. He could barely think.
So close to success—ending Franco and all his get, no
matter where in the world they were. Ending himself.
Maybe that was the answer: shove Franco into the sun, and
while his screams caused a distraction, make a leap toward Carole and Barrett.
Did he dare?
As if Barrett were reading his mind, he moved into the
patch of sunlight, pulling Carole with him. Joe could barely look at them.
"No funny stuff," Barrett said.
Joe slumped. Now what?
"I sense indecision," Barrett said. "Let me
offer some incentive." He held up the stiletto, twisting it back and forth
to catch the light. "Always wanted one of these, but they've been illegal
for decades. Found it in the house I'm occupying. Snap it open and you feel
like a juvenile delinquent from a bad fifties movie. But it's a good
street-fighting knife. Know why? This slim little blade doesn't get caught up
in clothing. Watch."
With that he stabbed it into Carole's flank right below
her ribs. Joe cried out as he saw her stiffen in pain and try to pull away. But
Barrett had her by the neck.
"Don't worry," he said. "The cut's only an
inch or so deep. Nothing that'll do serious damage. But it can cause a lot of
pain." He angled the blade. "Especially when I drag the point along a
rib."
Carole gasped as all the color drained from her face. Her
knees buckled but Barrett held her up.
"All right!" Joe shouted. "All right! Just
stop it! Please!"
Carole was shaking her head. "No!" He could
barely hear her voice. "You can't!"
Barrett jabbed her again and this time she screamed. The
sound was like shards of glass being driven through his brain. He wanted to
cry.
"Carole, he's got us. We've lost this round."
"Just as you'll lose every round," Barrett said.
"I can't let this happen, Joseph," she gasped.
What was she saying? Thank God she couldn't get her hands
into her pockets.
"It'll be all right, Carole."
"Forgive me, Joseph, forgive me, Lord. I love you
both."
She turned her head, lifted her left shoulder, and bit
something there that looked like a knotted thread.
What's she doing?
"Yeah, I know," Barrett said. "You love
everyone. That's why you haven't a prayer of winning."
Joe saw a string clenched in Carole's teeth, saw her close
her eyes and jerk her head back.
"No!"
The explosion hit him like a falling slab of concrete,
knocking Franco into him and sending them both flying. He lost his grip on
Franco and slammed into the marble wall behind them, then tumbled to the floor.
For a moment he lay there dazed, not sure of where he was, and then it came
back to him.
"Carole!"
He struggled to his feet and looked around. Red . . .
everything, including Joe, was splattered with red. The blast had shattered the
observation windows and now a small gale rushed through the atrium.
Where was Carole? He staggered around, searching, but
could find no recognizable trace of her. There had to be something left,
something more than the bits of flesh clinging to the walls. Something glinted
in a corner: a single bloody handcuff.
Gone . .. she was gone ... as if she'd never been.
Movement caught his eye. The get-guards had been tossed
around by the blast but were recovering now. They were crawling back toward the
stairwell, dragging Franco with them, and licking the blood from the floor as
they moved.
With a cry of rage in a voice he didn't recognize, Joe
lurched toward them. His strength was leaking away like water down a drain. Had
to do this while he still was able.
He grabbed Franco's ankle, ripped him free of the guards holding
him, and dragged him toward the light. No hesitations, last words, no taunts,
just finish the job he'd come here to do. He pulled Franco to his feet at the
edge of the sunlit patch and shoved him forward with everything he had.
Franco must have been an old one because he burst into
flame as soon as the light touched his skin. His scream was musical, at least
to Joe. He spun as his skin charred to black and his eyes bubbled in his head,
tried to lunge back to the shadows but his legs wouldn't support him. He
collapsed in a flaming heap. Joe fell back against the nearest wall and slid to
the floor, arms open wide to embrace his oncoming death.
LACEY . . .
Lacey and Considine had reached the eightieth floor and
were headed for the final elevator bank when the building shook. Lacey saw
glass and debris rain past the windows.
A sick certainty about what had just happened nearly drove
Lacey to her knees.
"Oh, no! Carole!"
"Your friend?" Considine said.
"What—?"
She waved off his questions as she leaned against a wall
and sobbed. Oh, Carole. Did you have to? Did you really have to?
"Look," Considine said, "I know we decided
to stay off the stairwell, but if there's been an explosion up on the deck,
these elevators won't be trustworthy. We're going to have to take the stairs.
You have a cross?"
Lacey pulled one out of her pocket and handed it to him.
"Here. But I've got a feeling we're not going to need it."
He led her to the stairwell where they were backed up by a
blast of smoke when they opened it. The air cleared quickly, however, propelled
by the wind blowing through the doorway. The lights were still on, and they
hurried up the steps.
"What's that stink?" Considine said.
"Dead vampires. Lots of them."
"Why should they be dead?"
Lacey gave him a quick explanation of get-death.
"No offense," he said, "but I'll believe
that when I see it. Sounds too much like wishful thinking."
"That's how most people will react. Which is why we
wanted to catch it on tape.
On the eighty-fifth-floor landing they came upon the piled
rotting corpses of Franco's get.
"Believe me now?"
"Jesus Christ. It's true." He looked at her with
wide eyes. "That means..."
"Yeah, that we're not beaten, that the living have
still got a shot. But we have to get those tapes to people who can use
them."
She led the way over the stinking cadavers, stepping
around them when she could, and on them when she couldn't. The door to the
Observation Deck had been blown off its hinges and the wind flowing through it
carried most of the stink away.
Lacey hesitated at the door, afraid to go any further, but
forced herself through. The carnage—the blood, the shattered marble, the
stove-in elevator doors—stopped her in her tracks.
"Jesus God," Considine said behind her.
"What happened here?"
Lacey said nothing, but she knew ... she could see the
scene play out in her brain . .. Carole ran out of options and took Barrett
with her.
In the sunlight she saw a pile of charred, smoking,
semi-molten flesh. That would be Franco. But Joe .. . where was Joe?
"Uncle Joe?" she called. "Uncle—?"
And then she saw him, curled in the fetal position in a
corner, face to the wall. He wasn't moving.
"Uncle Joe?" She hurried to him and turned him
over. His eyes were closed and his scarred face was twisted into a mask of
pain. "Uncle Joe, are you all right?"
He opened his eyes and sobbed, "I was supposed to
die, not her! But I'm still here and she's not!"
Lacey didn't understand and didn't try to. He was weak as
a newborn. She cradled him in her arms and they cried together. He had no tears
but she had enough for both of them. They fell on his face, wetting his cheeks.
Behind them Lacey heard a clatter from the stairwell and
recognized Leland's voice. "What the hell happened here?"
"I'm still trying to figure that out," Considine
said. "Did you get it on tape?"
"The cameras here went dead but I switched to one of
the deck cameras in time to catch Franco's meltdown. Also caught his guards
dying like poisoned rats on the stairs. What happened to them?"
"Tell you later. Can you believe it? They did it!
They liberated the building!"
"I'd say they damn near liberated the whole
city."
"Hear that, Unk?" Lacey whispered. "We did
it, you and me and Carole. And we can prove it."
Suddenly Considine was hovering over them.
"I just sent Leland downstairs. He's going to dupe
the tape while Fowler finds a car for you two. We're going to put you on the
road with a copy, then we're each going to get our families together and head
west with our own copies. One of us has to get through."
"I don't think I can get downstairs," Joe said.
"You'll get down," Considine said. "I'm
going to check the elevator. If it doesn't work, well, after what you just did,
I'll carry you down on my back if need be."
As Considine moved away, Joe squeezed Lacey's arm.
"We can't leave Carole."
"Carole left us, Unk. And she didn't leave anything
behind."
"Let me die," he whispered. "I want an end
to this."
"I know you do, but—"
"I was Franco's get. I was supposed to die with
him."
So that was the reason behind the "If anything
happens to me" mantra ... He was planning to go out with Franco.
"I guess since you're not truly undead, you're not
truly his get."
"But I am. I have to die."
"No way, Unk. You're going to see this through till
the end. This is just a step, but we're on our way. We're going to push these
slime bags back into the sea. And you and me, we're going to be there to see
it."
"Carole was our conscience, Lacey. She made us whole
and kept us on track. What will happen to us without her?"
"I'll tell you what'll happen. You and I will become
the Terrible Two. We'll make those fuckers wish on the hell they come from that
Sister Carole Hanarty was still alive to rein us in. They think they've seen
trouble today? They haven't seen a goddamn thing."
She thought she saw him smile as he closed his eyes and
slipped deep into daysleep.
"Hey!" Considine called from the other side of
the atrium. "The elevator's still working."
"Give us half a minute," Lacey said.
She held her uncle tighter and rocked him like a baby.
* * *
version 1.0 scanned and proofed by maspr2004
25/05/2006 version 1.0