Dead Voices (53 page)

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Authors: Rick Hautala

Tags: #horror novel

BOOK: Dead Voices
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The radio squawked with static. Norton’s hand shot for the microphone as he said, “Hey! Maybe we got something interesting.” But the call wasn’t for them, so he let his hand drop to his side and looked straight ahead as the cruiser came up to the tum onto Brook Road. As Frank signaled and slowed for the turn, he most definitely picked up a coiling tension in his partner that just plain-old shouldn’t have been there. When Norton spoke, the tightness in his voice only confirmed Frank’s suspicions.

“This is a real fuckin’ waste of time, I hope you realize,” Norton said. He finished the sentence with a rising squeak in his voice. Frank knew it was because the cemetery entrance gate had come into view. He tapped lightly on the brakes as he slowed to take the turn onto the dirt road.

“I just want to —” he started to say, but that was all he got out before he detected a quick motion from Norton. As he swung the car in under the cemetery gate, he heard a soft snap sound, then the hiss of leather and a gentle click. Looking to his right, Frank saw that Norton had eased his revolver out of his holster. He cocked it and brought it to bear on Frank.

“Brad, what the fuck are you — ?”

“You’re not going up there,” Norton said tightly, indicating with a quick nod the road leading up over the hill. He shifted forward in his seat and pressed the revolver to the side of Frank’s head. “Just stay right where you are, pardner, and don’t try anything stupid.” His voice was an octave higher than usual, but Frank didn’t doubt he meant business.

“Don’t talk to me about
stupid
,” Frank said softly. He jammed the shift into park and sat with the engine idling.

“Look, Frank,” Norton said. “I don’t wantto have to shoot you, all right? But I will if I have to.”

“Why would you go and do a stupid thing like that?” Frank asked. He could feel Norton’s hand shaking, making the muzzle of the revolver vibrate against the side of his head. He swallowed and, in the dark interior of the car, quickly tried to assess his chances of fighting back.

“I’ve got my reasons, all right?” Norton replied t.ightly.

“Just what the fuck do you think you’re doing?” Frank asked. He tried to shift to look at Norton, but the pressure of the gun to his temple stopped him. “What the fuck’s going on, anyway?” A sheen of sweat broke out on his forehead, and he wondered if Norton’s trigger finger might be sweating, too ... and if it just might slip by mistake.

Norton took a deep breath to control his voice before he spoke. “Something you weren’t supposed to find out about,” he said. He shifted away from Frank, fearful that he was coiling up, preparing to try to disarm him. Leaning back against the passenger’s door, he pointed the revolver at a spot behind Frank’s right eye. “You just keep your eyes straight ahead. We’re gonna have to kill a little time before we can decide what to do with you, but you can start by telling me
exactly
what you found out about Roland Graydon.”

Frank shrugged helplessly and eased back in his seat. He wanted to try to lull Norton into letting his guard down, but he jumped and gripped the steering wheel tightly when he saw Norton flinch. Shifting his gaze to the side, he stared in disbelief at the unblinking eye of Norton’s .357.

“Well, I — uh, I found evidence to suggest a connection between Roland Graydon and that incident of grave robbing you and I stumbled onto a few weeks back.”

Norton chuffed with laughter. “Stumbled ... yeah, I guess that’d be a good word for it.”

“What?” Frank said. “You know something more about it?”

Norton remained silent. His eyes gleamed. coldly in the light from the dashboard. Frank sensed that, if he was going to try something, he would have to try it soon because with each passing second, Norton’s confidence about his control over the situation was rising.

“You aren’t so fucking stupid you think you can get away with this, are you?” Frank asked, not really expecting Norton to reply.

“I mean, even if you kill me, whatever it is you’re involved with is gonna come out sooner or later. Why don’t you put the gun away, and we can talk about it?”

Norton burst out laughing, then quickly regained control of himself and said, “Yeah, right ... sure. I’ll reholster my gun so you can haul my ass in. That’s rich!”

Frank opened his mouth to say something else, but a sudden explosion of pain caught him in the side of the head. He yelped as a flash of light shot through his brain. For just an instant, he thought he’d been shot; then he realized Norton had nailed him with the butt end of his revolver. Dazed, he brought his hand up to his head. His fingers came away sticky and warm, and he felt a trickle of blood run down to his collar.

“Why don’t you just back the fucking car on out of here,” Norton commanded roughly. “Head out on Mitchell Hill Road, so that if I do end up wasting you, I won’t have to disturb any of the neighbors.”

“What — ?” Frank said, but that was all. Blinding pain still rippled through him. He shook his head in an attempt to clear it, then eased the cruiser into gear and backed out of the cemetery. He bit his lower lip, wishing to hell he could think more clearly as he gripped the steering wheel with both hands and drove slowly down Brook Road toward Mitchell Hill Road. As much as he was worried and concerned about how-or if-he was going to get out of this situation, he couldn’t stop wondering what in the name of Christ was going on back there at Oak Grove Cemetery ... and what the fuck Norton had to do with it.

 

3.

Moving quickly, Graydon went from point to point of the pentagram and, using a cigarette lighter, lit each black candle in turn. In spite of the wind blowing high in the trees, at Caroline’s grave not even a slight breeze disturbed the flames. The candles burned with a cold, yellow light that illuminated the area, casting the surrounding area into deeper darkness. With the addition of each candle’s light, Elizabeth saw with increasing clarity her daughter’s name and birth and death dates carved into the stone. Waves of dizziness threatened to knock her over.

“Step into the center of the pentagram. Quickly!” Graydon said. He waved his hand anxiously at her as he knelt beside the bag and loaded his hands with an assortment of items. In the glow of the candlelight, Elizabeth again saw, along with various other implements, the long blade of a knife. Cold fear gripped her as she considered what use it could possibly have during the ceremony.

Elizabeth stepped into the center of the design, careful not to kick or smudge the white outline. Then she waited, her stomach tightening as her eyes flicked back and forth between Caroline’s headstone and Graydon. She was burning to ask him what she should expect next, but fear held her tongue.

“Now remember,” Graydon said, entering the design and standing behind Elizabeth, so close she could feel his warm breath on the back of her neck. It raised goose bumps on her arms. “You must not say
anything
until I indicate that it’s all right. And you absolutely
must
do what I tell you to do-without hesitation. When you first see Caroline, you’ll be —”

“I — I really will see her?” Elizabeth asked. She choked on the raw burning in her throat, surprised that she could speak at all.

“Oh, I assure you,” Graydon said. “You’ll see her, and soon. For now, just be patient.”

With that, he slipped his hand into his left coat pocket and removed something; she couldn’t quite see what it was. He approached the two candles pointing toward the headstone and, bending down, reached out with both hands and sprinkled onto each flame a fine powder that glittered in the moonlight. With a sudden, blinding flash, accompanied by a dull whoosh, two green flames shot at least six feet into the night sky. Startled, Elizabeth jumped back. Only after her pulse slowed was she aware that Graydon was muttering something softly under his breath. She caught herself before she spoke aloud to ask him what he was saying.

Time seemed to dilate, to stretch out like a looping strand of Silly Putty and lose all meaning, as Elizabeth stood in the center of the design, watching and listening as Graydon went on with his ceremony. Several times, he threw the fine white powder into the flames of the candles, making green fire flash into the air like bolts of hissing lightning. Heavy smoke wafted up into the sky, masking the stars and hanging like a rippling black curtain above the grave. The air was filled with a nauseating smell of sulfur that parched Elizabeth’s lungs with its thick, cloying fumes.

Elizabeth never understood a word Graydon was saying; it sounded as though he was muttering snatches of Latin; several times she had the impression he was saying things backward, and her nervousness only intensified when she recalled the backward voice she had recorded with Eldon Cody’s white noise.

“Watch,” Graydon said suddenly, making Elizabeth jump. Knowing or sensing that he meant for her to look at Caroline’s grave, Elizabeth let her gaze drop down to the ground. The yellow flames of the candles deepened to orange. Mixed with the brilliant green flashes, they made the white lines of the pentagram vibrate with a hallucinatory intensity. Elizabeth found it difficult to focus and had to blink her eyes rapidly to dispel the illusion that the pentagram was actually floating up off the ground. At first, it looked to be no more than an inch or two above the close-cropped grass; but even as she stared long and hard at it, it seemed to rise higher and higher, until it was hovering more than a foot in the air.

I’m imagining all of this
! Elizabeth told herself, and the thought crossed her mind that the smoke she had inhaled from whatever was making the candles flash green was some kind of drug. Maybe that was how Graydon achieved his results-by drugging his clients and working with the power of suggestion and hallucination.

Either that or I’m asleep, dreaming
, she thought.

Whatever the explanation, it sure as hell
looked
like the pentagram had magically levitated. And Elizabeth was positive it wasn’t simply the power of suggestion that made the ground in front of Caroline’s gravestone look like it was moving. At first there was nothing more than a subtle motion she could have easily dismissed as the result of the flickering candlelight; but the longer she stared at the ground, the more violent the movement of the grass .and soil became. She had the impression of a large, tangled knot of black worms or snakes seething on the grass, growing larger with each passing second.

“Is that —” she started to say, but Graydon hushed her with a sharp hiss that seemed oddly magnified in the darkness. Magnified by what? Elizabeth wondered, feeling wave after wave of frantic fear clawing at her mind. What the hell is happening?

She couldn’t tear her gaze away from the ground over her daughter’s grave. The longer she looked, the wider and more active the seething blackness became until she was convinced the dirt itself had magically come alive. She wasn’t sure quite when it happened, but at some point she saw — and fully accepted — that the ground over Caroline’s grave was thinning out, becoming almost invisible. She had the sense that, if she bent down and reached out her hand, her fingers wouldn’t be stopped by the hard packed soil and sod; they would pass right through it and down ... down into the earth all the way to the smooth wooden surface of Caroline’s coffin!

Oh, Jesus
! she thought, resisting the truth of the illusion and fighting her mounting terror that Graydon had drugged her and was playing with her mind, causing this hallucination to happen.

But she couldn’t deny what she was seeing; there was no way she could be imagining this. The ground covering Caroline’s coffin — even under Elizabeth’s own feet — was now nothing more than a heaving, churning black tangle, like storm clouds being ripped apart by gale-force winds. Elizabeth resisted a dizzying wave of vertigo as she looked down, imagining she was floating high in the sky. Her awareness was drawn inexorably down, into the black void below her.

Through the darkness, she could see with nearly mind-numbing clarity that something was struggling to emerge from the black maelstrom at her feet. Long, thin, and white, at first it looked like some kind of strange insect or creature, scrambling upward toward her. Her eyes struggled to pierce the pitchy blackness, to focus clearly on what she was seeing, but for long, drawn-out seconds, all she could perceive was a white smear of activity fluttering like helpless birds caught in a storm. And then, in a jolting instant, she saw what it was-two hands, reaching up toward her out of the darkness beneath her feet.

“Oh, my Lord,” she muttered. She clamped her hands over her mouth to keep from screaming as her legs gave way, and she dropped to the ground. She was dimly surprised when her knees hit solid ground and she didn’t just keep falling, tumbling headlong into nothingness, but that sensation was lost in the complete horror of watching those two bony hands claw up toward her from the darkness of her daughter’s grave.

Elizabeth groaned with the physical effort of looking away from the apparition as she glanced over her shoulder at Graydon. He had been standing close behind her, but her vision telescoped madly, and his figure receded to an impossible distance. She tried to open her mouth to speak, but when her lips moved, all she could hear was a slow, steady rumbling that sounded like huge boulders, tumbling down a mountainside in a landslide. A spark of recognition lit up in her mind when she saw something long and gleaming in Graydon’s upraised hand, but she pushed that aside as she lurched to her feet and stared down at the ground.

The hands were coming closer, reaching up at her from the churning blackness. Fingernails, grown long and curling in upon themselves, a sickly ivory color beneath caked dirt, clicked viciously. And then, as Elizabeth watched with mind-numbing horror, a face materialized, leering up at her from the black earth. The pale face was framed by a twisting tangle of long, blonde hair; the dried flesh of the face was withered and rotten, crawling with worms and maggots. Although the features seemed somehow blurry and out of focus, as though seen through heavy layers of gauze, Elizabeth immediately recognized who it was.

“Oh, my
God
!” she gasped, as every ounce of strength snapped out of her body. “Oh, my sweet, loving Jesus! ...
Caroline
!”

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