Authors: Josh Malerman
Tags: #Fiction, #Horror, #Psychological, #Thrillers, #Suspense
But how
far
can a person hear?
The Boy helped get the boat loose, standing and pushing against a mossy trunk, and now Malorie paddles again. Despite these early setbacks, Malorie can feel they are making progress. It is invigorating. Birds sing in the trees now that the sun has come up. Animals roam amid the thick foliage of the woods that surround them. Fish jump out of the water, making small splashes that electrify Malorie’s nerves. All of this is heard. None of it is seen.
From birth the children have been trained to understand the sounds of the forest. As babies, Malorie would tie T-shirts over their eyes and carry them to the edge of the woods. There, despite knowing they were too young to understand any of what she told them, she would describe the sounds of the forest.
Leaves crinkling
, she would say.
A small animal, like a rabbit
. Always aware that it could be something much worse. Worse even than a bear. In those days, and the days that followed, when the children were old enough to learn, Malorie trained herself as she trained them. But she would never hear as well as they one day would. She was twenty-four years old before she was able to discern the difference between a raindrop and a tap on a window, relying only on her hearing. She was raised on
sight
. Did this then make her the wrong teacher? When she carried leaves inside and had the children, blindfolded, identify the difference between her stepping on one and crushing one in her hand, were these the right lessons to give?
How far can a person hear?
The Boy likes fish, she knows. Often Malorie caught one in the river, using a rusted fishing pole fashioned from an umbrella found in the cellar. The Boy enjoyed watching them splash in the well bucket in the kitchen. He took to drawing them, too. Malorie remembers thinking she’d have to catch every beast on the planet and bring it home for the children to know what they looked like. What else might they like if given the chance to view it? What would the Girl think of a fox? A raccoon? Even cars were a myth, with only Malorie’s amateur drawings as reference. Boots, bushes, gardens, storefronts, buildings, streets, and stars. Why, she would have had to re-create the globe for them. But the best they got was fish. And the Boy loved them.
Now, on the river, hearing another small splash, she worries lest his curiosity inspire him to remove his fold.
How far can a person hear?
Malorie needs the children to hear
into
the trees,
into
the wind,
into
the dirt banks that lead to an entire world of living creatures. The river is an amphitheater, Malorie muses, paddling.
But it’s also a grave.
The children
must
listen.
Malorie cannot stave off the visions of hands emerging from the darkness, clutching the heads of the children, deliberately untying that which protects them.
Breathing hard and sweating, Malorie prays a person can hear all the way to safety.
M
alorie is driving. The sisters use her car, a 1999 Ford Festiva, because there is more gas in it. They’re only three miles from home, yet already there are signs that things have changed.
“Look!” Shannon says, pointing at several houses. “Blankets over the windows.”
Malorie is trying to pay attention to what Shannon is saying, but her thoughts keep returning to her belly. The Russia Report media explosion worries her, but she does not take it as seriously as her sister. Others online are, like Malorie, more skeptical. She’s read blogs, particularly
Silly People
, that post photos of people taking precautions, then add funny captions beneath them. As Shannon alternately points out the window, then shields her eyes, Malorie thinks of one. It was of a woman hanging a blanket over her window. Beneath it, the caption read:
Honey, what do you think of us moving the bed right here?
“Can you believe it?” Shannon says.
Malorie nods silently. She turns left.
“Come on,” Shannon says. “You absolutely have to admit, this is getting interesting.”
A part of Malorie agrees. It
is
interesting. On the sidewalk, a couple passes with newspaper held to their temples. Some drivers have their rearview mirrors turned up. Distantly, Malorie wonders if these are the signs of a society beginning to believe something is wrong. And if so,
what
?
“I don’t understand,” Malorie says, partly trying to distract her thoughts and partly gaining interest.
“Don’t understand what?”
“Do they think it’s unsafe to look outside? To look
anywhere
?”
“Yes,” Shannon says. “That’s exactly what they think. I’ve been telling you.”
Shannon, Malorie thinks, has always been dramatic.
“Well, that sounds insane,” she says. “And look at that guy!”
Shannon looks to where Malorie points. Then she looks away. A man in a business suit walks with a blind man’s walking stick. His eyes are closed.
“Nobody’s ashamed to act like this,” Shannon says, her eyes on her shoes. “That’s how weird it’s gotten.”
When they pull into Stokely’s Drugs, Shannon is holding her hand up to shield her eyes. Malorie notices, then looks across the parking lot. Others are doing the same.
“What are you worried about seeing?” she asks.
“Nobody knows that answer yet.”
Malorie has seen the drugstore’s big yellow sign a thousand times. But it has never looked so uninviting.
Let’s go buy your first pregnancy test
, she thinks, getting out of the car. The sisters cross the lot.
“They’re by the
medicine
, I think,” Shannon whispers, opening the store’s front door, still covering her eyes.
“Shannon, stop it.”
Malorie leads the way to the family planning aisle. There is First Response, Clearblue Easy, New Choice, and six other brands.
“There’s so many of them,” Shannon says, taking one from the shelf. “Doesn’t anyone use condoms anymore?”
“Which one do I get?”
Shannon shrugs. “This one looks as good as any.”
A man farther down the aisle opens a box of bandages. He holds one up to his eye.
The sisters bring the test to the counter. Andrew, who is Shannon’s age and once asked her on a date, is working. Malorie wants this moment to be over with.
“Wow,” Andrew says, scanning the small box.
“Shut up, Andrew,” Shannon says. “It’s for our dog.”
“You guys have a dog now?”
“Yes,” Shannon says, taking the bag he’s put it in. “And she’s very popular in our neighborhood.”
The drive home is torturous for Malorie. The plastic bag between their seats suggests her life has already changed.
“Look,” Shannon says, pointing out the car window with the same hand she’s been using to hide her eyes.
The sisters come to a stop sign slowly. Outside the corner house they see a woman on a small ladder, nailing a comforter over the home’s bay window.
“When we get back I’m doing the same thing,” Shannon says.
“Shannon.”
Their street, usually crowded with the neighborhood kids, is empty. No blue, stickered tricycle. No Wiffle ball bats.
Once inside, Malorie heads to the bathroom and Shannon immediately turns on the television.
“I think all you gotta do is pee on it, Malorie!” Shannon calls.
Inside the bathroom, Malorie can hear the news.
By the time Shannon arrives at the bathroom door, Malorie is already staring at the pink strip, shaking her head.
“Oh boy,” Shannon says.
“I’ve got to call Mom and Dad,” Malorie says. A part of her is already steeling herself, knowing that, despite being single, she is going to have this baby.
“You need to call Henry Martin,” Shannon says.
Malorie looks to her sister quickly. All day she’s known Henry Martin will not play a big part in the raising of this child. In a way, she’s already accepted this. Shannon walks with her to the living room, where boxes of unpacked objects clutter the space in front of the television. On the screen is a funeral procession. CNN anchormen are discussing it. Shannon steps to the television and lowers the volume. Malorie sits on the couch and calls Henry Martin from her cell phone.
He does not answer. So she texts him.
Important stuff. Call me when you can
.
Suddenly Shannon springs up from the couch and hollers.
“Did you
see
that, Malorie? An incident in Michigan! I think they said it was in the Upper Peninsula!”
Their parents are already on Malorie’s mind. As Shannon raises the volume again, the sisters learn that an elderly couple from Iron Mountain were found hanging from a tree in the nearby woods. The anchorman says they used their belts.
Malorie calls her mother. She picks up after two rings.
“Malorie.”
“Mom.”
“I’m sure you’re calling because of this news?”
“No. I’m pregnant, Mom.”
“Oh, goodness, Malorie.” Her mother is quiet for a moment. Malorie can hear her television in the background. “Are you serious with someone?”
“No, it was an accident.”
Shannon is standing in front of the television now. Her eyes are wide. She is pointing toward it, as though reminding Malorie how important it is. Her mother is quiet on the phone.
“Are you okay, Mom?”
“Well, I’m more concerned with you right now, dear.”
“Yeah. Bad timing all around.”
“How far along are you?”
“Five weeks, I think. Maybe six.”
“And you’re going to keep it? You’ve already made this decision?”
“I am. I mean, I just found out. Minutes ago. But I am. Yes.”
“Have you let the father know?”
“I wrote him. I’ll call him, too.”
Now Malorie pauses. Then continues.
“Do you feel safe up there, Mom? Are you okay?”
“I don’t know, I just don’t know. None of us do and we’re very scared. But right now I’m more worried about you.”
On the screen, a woman, using a diagram, explains what may have happened. She is drawing a line from a small road where the couple’s car was found abandoned. Malorie’s mother is telling her that she knows someone who knew the elderly couple. Their last name is Mikkonen, she is saying. The woman on-screen is now standing in what looks like a patch of bloodied grass.
“
God
,” Shannon says.
“Oh, I wish your father were home,” their mother is saying. “And you’re
pregnant
. Oh, Malorie.”
Shannon is grabbing the phone. She is asking if their mother knows any more details than the news. What are people saying up there? Is this the only incident? Are people taking precautions?
As Shannon continues to talk wildly into the phone, Malorie gets up from the couch. She steps to the front door and opens it. Looking up and down the street, she thinks to herself,
How serious is this?
There are no neighbors in their yards. No faces in the windows of the other homes. A car drives by and Malorie cannot see the face of the driver. He’s hiding it with his hand.
On the grass by the front walk is this morning’s newspaper. Malorie steps to it. The front-page headline is about the growing number of incidents. It simply says:
ANOTHER ONE
. Shannon has probably already told her everything the paper has to say. Malorie picks it up and, turning it over, stops at something on the back page.
It’s a classified. A home in Riverbridge is opening its doors to strangers. A “safe house” it says. A refuge. A place the owners hope will act as a “sanctuary” as the grim news mounts daily.
Malorie, experiencing the first real prickling feelings of panic, looks again to the street. She sees the door to a neighbor’s home open, then close quickly. Still holding the paper, Malorie looks over her shoulder back to her house, where the sounds of the television still blare. Inside, at the far wall of the living room, Shannon is tacking a blanket over one of the room’s windows.
“Come on,” Shannon says. “Get in here. And close that door.”
I
t is six months before the children are born. Malorie is showing. Blankets cover every window in the house. The front door is never left unlocked and never left open. Reports of unexplainable events have been surfacing with an alarming frequency. What was once breaking news twice a week now develops every day. Government officials are interviewed on television. Stories from as far east as Maine, as far south as Florida, have both sisters now taking precautions. Shannon, who visits dozens of blogs daily, fears a mishmash of ideas, a little bit of everything she reads. Malorie doesn’t know what to believe. New stories appear hourly online. It’s the only thing anybody talks about on social media and it’s the only topic on the news pages. New websites are devoted entirely to the evolution of information on the subject. One site features only a global map, with small red faces placed upon the cities in which something occurred. Last time Malorie checked, there were more than three hundred faces. Online, they are calling it “the Problem.” There exists the widespread communal belief that whatever “the Problem” is, it definitely begins when a person
sees something
.
Malorie resisted believing it as long as she could. The sisters argued constantly, Malorie citing the pages that derided mass hysteria, Shannon citing everything else. But soon Malorie had to relent, when the pages she frequented began to run stories about their own loved ones, and the authors of these blogs stepped forward to admit some concern.
Cracks
, Malorie thought then.
Showing even in the skeptics
.
Days passed in which Malorie experienced a sort of double life. Neither sister left the house anymore. Both made sure the windows were covered. They watched CNN, MSNBC, and Fox News until they physically couldn’t watch the same stories repeating themselves. And while Shannon grew more serious, and even grave, Malorie held on to a pinch of hope that this would all simply go away.
But it didn’t. And it got worse.
Three months into living like shut-ins, Malorie and Shannon’s worst fears came true when their parents stopped answering their phone. They didn’t answer e-mails, either.