Read B-Movie Reels Online

Authors: Alan Spencer

B-Movie Reels (33 page)

BOOK: B-Movie Reels
7.85Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Andy looked up in the sky and his eyes widened.
 

A green glow swarmed close to the house.
 

Chapter Seventeen

1

The demon face kept lunging in at him for bites of his face. Sheriff O’Malley was hugged up tight against the woman, both arms locked at his sides by her vice-tight grip. Her muscles rippled through her skin, the plated hardness near cutting, and he could feel each contortion and ripple. The red eyes blotted out his ability to see, his vision purple botches.
 

She took agile pecks at his skin, hungrier and hungrier with each taste. His neck was bleeding on a surface level. The monster relished each drop of blood and taste of skin, and she quivered and wrapped her legs around him upon the next gush of blood that landed on her tongue. “
Ohhhhhh…

The beating of wings muffled what transpired below, though he knew it was a mob doing their worst. Feeling weaker, he wasn’t sure how to fight against the creature. The 12 gauge was still hooked by a strap around his back, but he couldn’t reach it. The demon’s grip cut his circulation. Every limb tingled without blood flow as if she were trying to squeeze it all up to his head.
 

With another clamp of teeth, she removed an ear and spat it out. She sucked the blood flow, his ear canal filled with vicious slurping noises. He howled, unable to voice his agony. Then she covered his mouth with her own, her forked tongue working around his and miraculously tugging it back and tearing it from his mouth when she jerked her head back.
 


Awwwwggggh!

She swallowed the morsel with a wet suction.
 

He moaned as blood spilled from his mouth in quickening torrents. The demon bit at his neck again and again like a bird digging for a worm until his jugular vein was pulled from the skin. More blood flowed warm against his chest, his uniform sodden. He was losing consciousness.

The demon’s mouth was pressed hard against his throat, crushing his larynx. Lapping and what sounded like Tabitha giving him a hickey—a strange comparison he could only form in his delirium—sent him into convulsions.
 

This was his final chance to fight back.
 

The blaring red eyes were closed, savoring the blood she sucked from his jugular vein. He trained his eyes on the monster’s neck, making a split-second decision. Now or never, he thought, or die as you are. He shrieked, gaining confidence and backbone, and bit down on her windpipe.
 

His teeth clanked against the plated skin, but he broke the surface and reaped a square-shaped mouthful.
 

Black blood sprayed from the wound onto his face oil-thick.


Shraaaaaaaaaggh!

The creature released him, and he was dropped without knowing where he’d fall.

 

2

Ned hammered the stock of the rifle against the cellar door in the backyard. The two wooden doors on a brick platform were the only escape route from the threat in the sky. The locusts descended in that moment, ripping apart tree limbs and shredding their bark. His skin itched in anticipation of their attack.
 

The padlock on the cellar door was rusted over and took three direct hits to break. Throwing open the door, he felt the rise of wind and saw the green glow above him. He ducked low, stepped forward, and threw the door shut behind him. Immediately it trembled against the force of the swarming locusts. He already saw cracks and splits along the grain. They would break through any minute.
 

New looked around in every direction, but darkness disguised the cellar. He secured the iron lock in place with one hand, knowing full well it wouldn’t hold up against the locusts.
 

He stumbled down the steps and stopped on the concrete floor when he saw a shape near the stairs. He couldn’t see who or what it was, so he demanded, “Who are you?”

It was a younger girl, he could see now. She was possibly in her early twenties. Her brown hair was disheveled and in greasy tangles over her eyes. Gasping and taking one step back, he noticed an axe was driven into her sternum.
 

“My God, what happened to you?”

“You’re too late, you can’t stop me,” the girl rasped, truly angry at Ned. She threw back her head and removed the axe from her chest with an audible give of muscle and the spill of blood. “I’m already in her body…you can’t stop what’s in the soul.”

“What in hell are you talking about?
Make sense, you crazy bitch!

The locusts beat against the door, jostling the wood and breaking the hinges. Every bang made him jump.
 

He aimed the .22 rifle, giving the girl one last chance to leave him alone. “Stay away from me. I’m going upstairs, and you’re not stopping me, whoever you are.”

The girl dropped the axe.
 

He should’ve known better.

The girl’s eyes shed red tears. Both nostrils bubbled with blood. She gargled and coughed up the red liquid, every orifice leaking crimson. And then the faintest tearing of fabric gradually grew louder. A red line split down the middle of her body, like an incision created by an invisible scalpel. The skin parted, and opening by the force of its insides, the yellow fatty tissue flopped onto the ground in wads, the skin removed like an overcoat as the skeleton broke free, escaping its flesh prison.
 

Ned screamed as the blood-caked bones leapt for him. He unleashed a gunshot at its sternum. The bones collapsed at the single shot, but the pieces continued to vibrate on the floor. But now that each piece had lost its connection, they were harmless. The woman’s eyes were still in the skull’s sockets glaring up at him.
 

He planted one foot on the staircase up to the first floor, and the entire structure wobbled under his weight. He didn’t recall the stairs being so flimsy. Then he noted the layer of sawdust covering the floor. He sensed vibrations up and down the wood.
 

Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz!

The moment to climb the staircase was now. Launching forward, carefully placing each foot, he moved quickly, a haze of sawdust lifting with every step. He accidentally touched the top bar, and it crumbled. The hollow wood was occupied by thousands of termites, he now knew.
 

Ned forced open the basement door and shut it behind him.
 

An deafening collapse followed a second after. The staircase was gone.

He stood in the kitchen and gawked at the faces staring back at him through the gaps in the boarded up windows. Each pane of glass shattered and arms reached for him clutching axes, hatchets and machetes.
 

Thack! Thack! Thack! Thack!

The echo of axes driven into wood continued with increasing numbers. They were going to cut and hack their way inside. It was only a matter of time.
 

He bolted out of the room and checked both ends of the hallway. The crash of glass sounded again, and this time the voices were louder and increasing. Breaking through at the front and back porches, suddenly three of the straight jacketed people jetted after him with chainsaws kicking up gasoline fumes.
 

He fled up the stairs to the second floor, dove into the first bedroom and threw the door shut. He latched the lock in place and wedged a twin-sized bed against the door. The rest of the room was empty, without even windows.
 

He’d hit a dead end.
 

 

3

Andy kicked the face that peeked up at him over the roof’s edge: a toothless old man with a shaggy white hair and beard. He was naked beneath his robe. The man faltered from the edge after another kick to the teeth only for another hand to clutch the roof. The hand reached out for grip and the other held a nail gun. Andy pried the weapon from the old man’s hand and shoved his face backward, sending the figure sailing into the wash of people below him.
 

Andy opened fire.

The nail gun pierced eyeballs and spat out the back of skulls in bursts of blood. One elderly lady’s head exploded on contact, and she fumbled backward, headless and convulsing on the lawn. The gun suddenly grew hot in his grip, kicked up smoke, and then clanked into pieces, useless.
 

Andy had nothing to force them back anymore. Out of ideas, he avoided the edge of the house now that they were hurling their weapons, even pieces of glass. The
thump
,
thack
,
crack
repeated as they attempted to enter the house below.
 

Behind him, one of the asylum escapees closed in. They’d climbed up from the other side without him noticing. It was a woman, tall and mannequin-like in stature, and she carried a pick-axe. Her black hair waved wildly in the breeze, her eyes completely dark and her mouth a smirk.
 

“This is going up your ass, young man—just like I did to my husband when he tried to stick his thing up there! I’ll show you how it felt for him. That’s why they locked me up. They thought I was crazy, but I enjoyed what I did to my husband, and I’ll do the same to any man!”

And then from behind her, the locusts swarmed together, their rising a green net of certain death.
 

“Stay back,” Andy warned her, almost losing his footing on the shingles. “Don’t come near me. I don’t know you. I’m not like those men out there. You’re from a movie, but I’m real!”

A shriek of agony marked a form dropping from the sky. It crashed into the house so hard, dropped from so far up high, it smashed through the shingles. Andy wasn’t sure what to make of it, but he dived into the hole to avoid the woman and the crowd of locusts, his opportunity to reach safety literally crashing down from the sky. Jumping down, he landed in a cushion of pink insulation. The force that broke the hole had also broken through a soft patch in the flooring.
 

He crawled to the hole in the floor and peered down. Below, Ned was inside, staring in horror at Sheriff O’Malley’s body slumped on the floor. He looked up at Andy.
 

“Andy, you’re alive! Get down here quick, before it’s too late. They’re coming in from everywhere.”

Andy worked through the hole and landed below, his maneuvering clumsy and nervous yet effective. He studied the sheriff’s body. His throat was torn to ribbons, and his mouth was wide open, tongue-less and pooled in blood. He didn’t move or breathe. Dead.

“Take his shotgun,” Ned instructed. “They’re coming from every direction. They don’t want us anywhere near the living room or the film projector. They know that’s why we’re here. How they know, it beats me, but they know.”

“Why is this happening, Ned? You haven’t explained it to me.”

He shook his head, sighing, “It’s not simple.”

The woman with the pick-axe poked her head through the hole in the ceiling, and she smiled at her find. “
Ah-hah!
Found you!

Andy squeezed the trigger without thinking.
 

Ba-Blam!
 

Her body was thrown backward into the attic with a clatter. He remained poised to fire, watching the hole for any more lookers. The knock and smash, knock and smash against the room’s door was overwhelming. The barrier wouldn’t last long. Even the walls throbbed and shook with the pounding of fists. “Where do we go now? There’s no window or any other escape route.”

Ned’s brow furrowed. He blinked sweat out of his eyes. “I’m not sure—
I don’t fucking know
.”

“You know why this is happening!” Andy accused him. “Explain it to me. I want to understand everything.”

His uncle gathered saliva, stealing glances at the hole in the ceiling and the door to the room. “I’ll tell you the condensed version. Your uncle keeps coming back to life through dead corpses, and he’s been speaking to me. In the beginning, he talked to me through a psychic tarot card reader. James spoke through her and told me the objects in his magic act were inhabited by spirits who made his tricks possible. He used ghosts in all of his performances.”

Another person jutted their head down at them for a peek, and in the instant he made out his target a hatchet struck the floorboards between Andy and Ned, missing Andy’s foot by an inch. Andy pumped the shotgun, startled by the close call. The man was struck in the chest and was thrown back into the attic like the woman before him.

“Keep talking,” Andy demanded, sure the maniacs in the attic would keep attacking. “I’m not going anywhere.”

His uncle leveled with him, keeping his eyes glued to the ceiling as he explained everything. Ned related the story as he’d been told by James. “The ghosts, spirits, whatever the fuck they really are, want the living to die. They want us slaughtered! You see, we have to destroy it at any cost.”

Andy’s stomach knotted, and it occurred to him what part he’d taken in creating these horrors. “It’s my fault this started. I found the damn projector and started using it. Shit, I didn’t know. I swear to you, Ned, I didn’t know!”

“It’s your Uncle James’s fault,” Ned corrected. “He was so desperate to be a master magician, instead of honing his craft over many years and earning his talent like everybody else, Edgar and the spirits convinced him to take the shorter road. That’s why all those people died at the comedy club. The spirits want to live in our world again. They can’t be flesh and blood, but they certainly can recreate the experience. These ghosts wish us death, like I said. They’re jealous we’re alive and they’re not. It’s the simple reason that’s caused all this bloodshed.”

BOOK: B-Movie Reels
7.85Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

In Springdale Town by Robert Freeman Wexler
The Hollow-Eyed Angel by Janwillem Van De Wetering
The Copper Horse #1 Fear by K.A. Merikan
A Montana Cowboy by Rebecca Winters
Training His Pet by Jasmine Starr
The Bucket List by Gynger Fyer
Wrangling the Cowboy's Heart by Carolyne Aarsen