Mountain Madness (18 page)

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Authors: Daniel Pyle

Tags: #Horror, #Suspense

BOOK: Mountain Madness
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“kkkkkkkkkkkkkk”

“What?” Mr. Boots squeezed harder before finally loosening his grip. A little.

“O…okay,” Dave said. His voice was a frog’s croak of a thing.

Mr. Boots let go and said, “Pick up the ax.”

Dave grabbed his throat, sucked in three or four agonizing breaths, doubled over and coughed. And picked up the ax. What choice did he have?

Mr. Boots kneeled by the stump and pressed on the animal. It thrashed. One of its back claws caught Mr. Boots’s forearm, but he didn’t seem to notice. Or care. Blood oozed into the crease of his elbow and from there to the dirt below.

He nodded toward the stump.

Dave coughed again, hacked out a wad of phlegm, and lifted the ax over his shoulder.

Better do it. If your choice is killing a half-dead rabbit or getting choked to death, that’s not really a choice at all, is it?

The rabbit’s side vibrated. It was practically hyperventilating.

This is your fault
, he thought at the rabbit.

But how could that be true?

He didn’t know. And no longer cared.

“I’m sorry,” he whispered, wondering if he really was, and swung the ax.

The ax head thunked into the wood. It was a perfect chop. The rabbit’s head slid down the stump and into the dirt. Mr. Boots let go of the animal’s body. It did keep kicking for a few seconds, but then it flopped off the stump and into the dirt beside the decapitated head, pumping gory juices across the ground before finally stilling.

Warm blood dripped down Dave’s face and shirt. He let go of the ax handle and turned away from the kill.

Mr. Boots got up and put a hand on his shoulder. “It was the right thing, don’t you guess?” he said. “The only thing.”

A tear slid down Dave’s cheek, but the corners of his mouth curled up just a little. He felt like he had no control over his face whatsoever.

“Killin’s a chore,” Mr. Boots said. “Why don’t you go for a walk. Clear your head.”

Dave frowned. “A walk?” The words burned their way out of his throat. He coughed again and wiped tears from his eyes.

“Sure,” Mr. Boots said. “Clear your head.”

Dave turned to face him. “Walk where?”

“Wherever you want.”

What kind of trick was this? He thought maybe he could choke out one more word: “Wherever?”

“Sure,” Mr. Boots said again. “I trust you.” He flashed his gap-toothed grin.

Dave raised his eyebrows.

“Yep.” Mr. Boots nodded. “I do. Because I know that you know that if you ran, I’d find you. And if I didn’t find you—which I would—I’d just find another boy to replace you. And that would be on you. And I know that’s nothing you wanna live with.”

Dave stared, said nothing.

“So, go on. Take a walk. Think about why what you just did was nice and righteous.”

Dave took a few steps away. When Mr. Boots didn’t follow, he turned and ran.

—:—:—:—

 

After plenty of running and scrambling through the undergrowth, he reached a road. He’d never been this far. Not since…before. He stopped and wondered how long it would be before someone drove by.
If
someone would drive by.

Does he really think I won’t run?

Who cares what he thinks. This is your chance. Finally. The best chance you’ve ever had.

He touched the sides of his throat. It felt like there were still fingers there choking the life out of him. He gritted his teeth and thought about walking up the road. But he was tired from chopping, from running, from choking. He decided to wait.

There were no cars for fifteen minutes at least, judging by the sun. When he did eventually hear an approaching motor, he wasn’t sure if it was a hundred feet away or a mile. Hard to tell. Sound had a funny way of carrying up here.

He’d been sitting with his back to a tree. Now, he got up and hurried onto the road. He stood there with his hands over his head, ready to wave down the motorist, ready to scream for help as loudly as his throbbing throat would allow and beg for a ride to the nearest police station.

I’d just find another boy
, Mr. Boots had said.

Dave lowered his hands. He imagined a station wagon with two small boys in back. He imagined Mr. Boots grabbing one of the boys and dragging him back to the room with no windows, tossing him on the not-bed of blankets, pressing his wormy lips against the boy’s ears and…

No. You can’t think like that. It’s not your problem. You’ve got to get while the getting’s good.

Dave thought he might be able to live with himself if he ran, might be able to pretend Mr. Boots would never find himself another boy, that the authorities with their guns and their handcuffs and their sharp-toothed dogs would hunt him down and lock
him
away.

Yeah right. If you run, he’ll be long gone by morning. He’ll find a new place to hole up, find a new boy, a new choke toy.

Or maybe not. Maybe he’d be too busy hunting Dave down, peeking in windows and picking locks.

And that was what Dave was really afraid of: spending the rest of his life looking over his shoulder, jumping at shadows, screaming anytime anyone closed a door or put on a pair of heavy boots.

What choice do you have? It’s either run and be scared or stay and be terrorized. Lose lose.

Dave rubbed his throat.

I’d just find another boy
, he’d said,
to replace you.

The car was getting closer. The buzzing of its motor became a grumbling. Dave looked toward the trees, up the road, back at the trees.

He remembered another car. A station wagon. He wanted to run down the road, meet the approaching car, see if it was his mom and dad and brother and dog. But then he remembered the moose, the crash, Mr. Boots. And he remembered the rotting corpses.

Replace you.

The grumbling became a roaring. The car couldn’t have been more than a couple of bends away. Dave started to raise his arms again, but then he growled and ran and dove into the bushes, screaming at himself to go back, screaming at himself not to. He dropped to the ground and watched the vehicle pass.

You idiot. Get out there. This is your chance.

No, it wasn’t. He had a chance to do something more than just escape. He had a chance to make things right. He wasn’t exactly sure how yet, but he was beginning to get an idea.

It was an old truck. Dusty. From his position, he couldn’t see into the windows, couldn’t see much more than the spinning, dirt-kicking tires.

He closed his eyes and waited until the sounds of the motor had disappeared altogether, and then he got up and turned back toward the house. 

He wondered what kinds of sounds Mr. Boots would have made if it had been him under the ax instead of the rabbit. He wondered if he would have screamed.

And then he thought he heard something move in the woods. He spun around and stared at a spot between two thick trees.

Was that a flannel shirt?

Even squinting his eyes, he wasn’t sure. Maybe it hadn’t been anything.

Or maybe it was.

He imagined Mr. Boots lying in the bushes, holding a riffle or a bow and arrow.

Don’t be ridiculous. You really think he followed you all the way out here?

Yes, of course he must have. He wouldn’t have let Dave go. He was crazy, but he wasn’t stupid. If Dave had tried to flag down the truck, how long would it have been before he felt a tug in his chest and looked down to see an arrow punched through his shirt or a bullet’s exit wound dripping blood and shredded innards.

He stood still for a long time and waited for another sound or flash of movement. When nothing happened, he said as loudly as his throat would let him, “I’m going back now.”

There was no response.

He waited another few seconds, and then headed back the way he’d come.

As always, he couldn’t say whether he was doing the right thing or not.

NINETEEN

MARSHALL WORE A
three-piece suit too warm for the season and too dressy for what he claimed was a casual visit. Libby wondered if he’d been at a meeting or a party and hadn’t bothered changing before stopping by, or if he’d put on the suit specifically for her. To impress her. Normally her thoughts didn’t tend toward such vanity, but in Marshall’s case, it wouldn’t be the first time he’d done such a thing. She couldn’t help but pity him.

Libby searched the kitchen for a vase despite an urge to run the daisies he’d brought down the garbage disposal. She peeked occasionally back at Marshall, who was wandering through the living room staring at the pictures on the walls and the knickknacks on the shelves. He’d visited the house once before, but for only a minute, not long enough to do much snooping. “I hope this wasn’t a bad time,” he said, moving from his investigation of the mantle to the bookshelf where Libby kept her paperbacks.

Libby let an uncomfortable silence draw out before saying, “Well, actually, I wish you’d called. I…this wasn’t the best day. I think I’d rather be alone tonight.”

She peeked again, saw Marshall pull a book from the shelf, skim the back cover, and return it.

She wiped her hands on a dishtowel and waited for him to say
What happened?
or
Tell me about it
, but instead he answered, “Oh, come on. You’ve got time for a little visit, don’t you? I drove all the way over.”

Libby rolled her eyes and brought the vase of flowers out from the kitchen. Marshall turned and smiled at her while she set them down on an end table. He shoved his hands in his pockets and rocked a little on his feet. The gesture reminded Libby of the security guard at the Mountain View, who had done the same damn thing. Except Marshall looked nothing like that hulk of a man. He was small, maybe an inch taller than Libby and certainly no heavier than a hundred and fifty pounds. Although a relatively young man, thirty-two if Libby remembered correctly, his hair had already thinned and made him look middle-aged. He had thin lips, not so thin glasses, and a red, Irish complexion, though he’d told her on their first and last date that he didn’t think any of his ancestors had ever been to the land of ire, wording it just that way and laughing as if he’d said something witty.

“You want a beer?” she asked.

Marshall seemed to consider before replying, “No thanks. I don’t suppose you’ve got any coffee perking.”

Perking
, Libby thought,
what century does he think this is?

“I guess I could brew a pot,” she said, trying not to overemphasize the
brew
. “But then you’ve really gotta go, okay?”

Marshall didn’t respond. He followed her into the kitchen and eyed the shopping bags on the counter while she searched for a filter. He poked his finger into the open end of one of the bags and peeked inside.

“Uh oh,” he said, withdrawing the two paperbacks Libby had left when she’d picked out her reading material for the bath. “You’ve been cheating on me.” He held out the books and smiled.

Libby thought,
Jesus
, but forced a smile. “I was at the mall.” It was as much of an excuse as she would give. Marshall was a clerk at
Dog-Ears
, a downtown bookshop she frequented. She’d seen him in the store many times, exchanged a few polite conversations, every one of which had ended with some sort of advance on his part. He’d never been rude about it, never pushy, but he
had
been persistent. So much so that she’d finally agreed to dinner just to get him off her back. She hadn’t been interested romantically, of course, but she’d thought maybe they could talk books, have a few laughs, that it might be fun in an entirely platonic kind of way.

It wasn’t.

Marshall had spent most of the date ogling her. And although she had her back to him, she could sense him doing the same thing now.

“Listen,” she said suddenly, turning away from the cupboard and crossing her arms over her chest. “I’m not finding any filters.”

“Oh, that’s okay.” Marshall waved his hand. “Maybe I’ll have that beer after all.”

“No, I think I’d rather you left. No offense, but I’m just not in the mood for company tonight
.” Especially
your
company
, she wanted to add.

Marshall’s smile dropped away. “You’re kidding me.”

Libby said, “No,” and shook her head definitively.

Marshall looked at the books in his hand and then tossed them on the counter. The cover of one bent in half, and the other dropped into the sink, where it soaked up some of the water Libby had splattered while filling her vase.

Libby gaped, more outraged by the battering of the books than by Marshall’s sudden show of anger. She wasn’t a book collector, did not consider novels investments the way some people did, but she’d always tried to keep her paperbacks in decent shape. Mostly so she could read them again later if she wanted and not have to worry about them falling apart.

“What did you do that for?” She hurried over to the sink and pulled the second book from the basin before it could become completely waterlogged.

Marshall huffed. “They’re just books.”

“And you’re just an asshole,” Libby said, wiping the water from the cover of the book with the hem of her shirt. “I want you to leave right now.”

“Jesus,” Marshall said, looking nonplussed. “I’m sorry.”

Libby softened only a little. “Just please go. I’ll see you at the store sometime.”

“Wait,” he said and took a step toward her.

Libby stood her ground. Marshall wasn’t exactly a muscle-bound intimidator.

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