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Authors: Michaelbrent Collings

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #Horror, #Ghosts

Rising Fears (10 page)

BOOK: Rising Fears
5.38Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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Then the hissing stopped. The line cut out. Dead. Jason toggled the disconnect switch on the receiver a few times, but knew before he did it that he would have no success in coaxing the phone into working. Then he noticed something.

The computer. It was back on. And just as he noticed it, he caught something moving across the screen. Just the barest glimpse before it was gone, but it was enough. Enough to be sure that he had seen it. Enough to wish that he hadn't.

It was Aaron. His boy's mouth was open in that same silent scream that his wife had worn when he had seen
her
image in the screen. But his son was gone in just an instant, and once again the computer flared and went dark.

At the same instant, the lights in his office went out, leaving him in a black room, his only illumination the dim moonlight that had managed to penetrate the fog that had invaded Rising in the last few hours. The light was cold and lifeless, the pale shading of a corpse.

The phone rang a moment later. It was Hatty. And her voice was, thank goodness, strong and clear, the line easily audible. "You better get here," she said without preamble. As she said it, a crash sounded on the line, as though someone had dropped an armful of glassware onto a tile floor.

"Hatty? Where are you?" said Jason. "What-" And that was when the screaming began.

"I'm at Doc Peabody's!" shouted Hatty. Behind her voice, the screams could still be heard clearly, a thunderous shouting that rivaled anything Jason had ever heard before in terms of sheer power and volume. "You better come quick!"

"What is it?" shouted Jason. "What's going on?"

At that moment, his computer screen flared. A single word appeared: "Hoer-Verde."

"It's the boy's mother," responded Hatty, sounding as though she were struggling with something - or someone. "It's Sean's mother."

In the background of the phone call, Jason could hear a sudden, awful, almost inhuman scream of pain and terror. Then he heard Amy-Lynn's voice, grown awful and deep: the voice from beyond Hell. "It's here!" she shrieked, her voice gravelly and shredded. "The monster is here!"

The computer continued to flare as the woman spoke, the single word appearing over and over again.

Hoer-Verde
.

Hoer-Verde.

Hoer-Verde. Hoer-Verde. Hoer-Verde. Hoer-Verde Hoer-Verde Hoer-Verde Hoer-Verde Hoer-Verde Hoer-Verde Hoer-Verde Hoer-Verde Hoer-Verde Hoer-Verde Hoer-Verde Hoer-Verde Hoer-Verde Hoer-Verde Hoer-Verde Hoer-Verde Hoer-Verde Hoer-Verde Hoer-Verde Hoer-Verde Hoer-Verde Hoer-Verde Hoer-Verde Hoer-Verde Hoer-Verde Hoer-Verde....

***

Jason pulled into the quaint two-story house that was both Doc Peabody's residence and his medical offices and was out of the truck and through the front door almost in a single movement. The sound of Amy-Lynn's scream resounded in his mind, and he couldn't shake the idea that every second lost meant a second closer to...

(
death
)

...something truly awful. Something for which he had no words.

He rushed into the front office area. It was deserted. Completely, spookily silent. "Doc?" he shouted. "Hatty?"

"In here," came Doc's voice from nearby. Jason went through a sliding door and into a small, convivially-furnished waiting room. Modern art graced the walls right next to pictures of Donald and Goofy, Mickey and Bugs; and newspapers like Modern Housekeeping took their places beside Teen Beat and a host of other periodicals where just about any patient of any age could find something of interest.

Hatty and Doc were sitting beside one another on a couch in the waiting room, looking at the closed door to Doc's examination room. Jason glanced at the door. All was still. Tomb silent.

"She calm down?" he asked with a hopeful smile. When neither Hatty nor Doc moved to answer, he said, "Guys?"
"She stopped screaming," whispered the doctor at last, after far too long a pause had elapsed for Jason's comfort.
"That's great," said the sheriff. "That's good, right?" Another long moment, then, "Right?"

Doc looked directly at Jason for the first time, and Jason was dismayed to see how the man looked: his eyes were bloodshot, his entire demeanor that of someone who has been broken in some small but critical fashion, whose world had suddenly and irrevocably taken a step to one side and would never return to its "normal" state ever again. "You don't understand," said Doc Peabody. "She shouldn't have ever
started
screaming. Not with the amount of tranquilizer in her."

Jason fought down the urge to shiver, knowing that the room was warm enough and also knowing that any outward display of fear was likely to slow down the process of getting to the bottom of what was going on here.

Jason looked pointedly at the closed door to the exam room. "She in there?"

Hatty and Doc nodded, their heads moving in unison to the point that Jason had an insane urge to check the couch to see if they'd been wired to respond to the same remote control. "How is she?" he asked instead.

"Don't know," said Hatty.

"She was asleep, tranquilized, when she woke up and started screaming. I tried to get to her, but before I could get into the examination room, she just barricaded herself in there," said Doc. "We couldn't get to her. And then she just went...." The old man looked at his hands.

"...Silent," finished Hatty for him.

Doc nodded. "As death," he added.

Jason went to the door. He rapped quietly on it with his knuckles. "Amy-Lynn?" he said through the door. "It's Sheriff Meeks. You okay?" No answer. Another quick rat-tat with the knuckles, an empty, dull sound that made Jason feel as though it were
he
being hit, a sturdy fist punching into him, knocking the air out of him, making it hard to breathe....

"Amy-Lynn?" he tried again.

Still no answer.

He grabbed the doorknob. It turned, but when he tried to push the door open, there was no give. He grunted as he threw his shoulder into the door. Was it his imagination, or had the door given just a centimeter or two? He drew back and hit the door again.

Slam. Slam. Slam.

Each time, the door opened a quarter-inch, then a half-inch, then an inch at a time. Soon he had the door open far enough that he could make out what was blocking his entrance: looked like Amy-Lynn had picked up every bit of furniture, medical equipment, and anything else not bolted to the floor, and used it to create a makeshift blockade, a fortification clearly built with one purpose in mind: to keep anything and everything out of that room.

"Amy-Lynn?" he called. No use getting a scalpel in the noggin for surprising her, he thought. "Amy-Lynn, it's Sheriff Meeks. I'm coming in. You're safe, I promise." He waited a moment, then grasped the doorjamb for leverage, fighting his way further into the room.

He pushed and strained, then with one final grunt and the crash and clatter of falling medical equipment, he was at last standing in a wide open door.

He took half a step, then stopped and stared, unmoving.

Hatty and Doc came up behind him a moment later, and he could tell from the collective gasps he heard that they were as dumbfounded at what he was seeing as he was.

"Impossible," whispered Doc.

The room - a windowless place with only one way in and one way out - was empty. Someone had barricaded themselves from the inside of a room with no other egress.

And subsequently disappeared.

Then Jason noticed something even more disquieting: a digital clock on the wall. It was blurred, just like the one on the Rands' microwave; just like the one in little Sean Rand's bedroom.

"The clocks," whispered Jason. "The dark. And you're all alone."

Hatty shivered and looked around, then Jason heard her shriek and spun to face her. "What, Hatty?" he snapped, concern for his old teacher almost overpowering him in an instant.

Hatty pointed to her left, down the dark hall that lay beyond the waiting and exam rooms. "What did you see?" Jason asked again.

Hatty could barely speak, her voice sounding cracked and unsure. But at last she managed to get out the words. "I think...I think it was the boy, Sheriff. I think it was little Sean."

A moment later Jason was walking through the house, room to room, his Beretta in one hand, his flashlight in the other. He flicked on lights as he went from place to place, Doc and Hatty staying a few steps behind him at all times, both looking ready to bolt as rabbits in the fox coop.

Top to bottom, bottom to top. No Sean, no Amy-Lynn.

The last place he looked was back in the exam room once again. He looked at the impossibly empty room with the blurred clock, and the words came unbidden to his mind:

"The dark. The clocks. Time slows down. And you're all alone."

Sean Rand was gone. And now Amy-Lynn had disappeared as literally and completely as a magician's assistant.

Who would be next?

 

 

 

***

TWELVE

***

The lights of the football field still blaze, but it is a cold light.
No warmth for the denizens of Rising.
All around town, doors are locked, windows are latched.

Townsfolk draw drapes - dusty with lack of use - over their windows, shutting out the presence that more and more of them are starting to feel as the mist rolls over their houses and consumes them in its unnatural whiteness.

No one wants to know what may be happening to them.
People sit down to late dinners, but can't eat.
They turn on the television, but reception is fuzzy.
Many of them are at desks or tables. Writing feverishly.

Outside, the mist has finished dripping off the mountains and is now oozing its way down the individual lanes and country roads that demark the boundaries of Rising.

Wherever it goes, the mist swallows the light.
A thing alive.
The more the mist envelopes the town, the faster the people write, the more hurried and frightened their penmanship.
Things are just getting started, each person knows in his or her heart.
Just getting started.
And about to get truly bad.

 

 

 

***

THIRTEEN

***

The lights from the high school stadium, which were a royal pain if you lived anywhere in a two-mile radius of the place and wanted to get a little sleep, were now the main source of illumination in Rising's dark streets. Jason used the light to carefully throw a pile of files on the seat of his truck, then looked at Hatty, who was getting ready to call it a night as well.

"Late night," said Jason, nodding at the football lights.

"Cheerleading practice," answered Hatty. Checking her watch, she added, "Should be through in a few hours." Then she shivered, and Jason could tell that she was still rattled from their experience at Doc Peabody's.

"You going to be all right?" he asked.

"What's going on here, Sheriff?" she asked by way of an answer.

"I don't know," said Jason truthfully. Then he glanced at the numerous files on his seat. "But I'm going to find out."

Hatty got in her car. "I hope you do, Sheriff. But any answer you find...I doubt you'll get it from your case files."

Jason didn't want to share with her his own silent conviction of the same idea as true, so instead said merely, "We do what we can."

Hatty nodded and drove off. Once she was gone, he looked at the files again and sighed, allowing the hopelessness he felt to show for a brief moment. Then he got in his truck and made the short drive to his home.

His house was one of the small places just outside of Rising, at the base of the mountains that always loomed over the town. His back yard consisted of forest that went as far as he could see and beyond: government land that, as far as he could tell, was never going to be developed beyond carving out a dirt road or two for the convenience of the Bureau of Land Management surveyors that came out his way every three or four months to map some portion of the area before returning to whatever government office had spawned them in the first place.

He pulled into his garage, closing the door behind him, and then went into his house.

His house was nothing special, just a basic place that he had purchased when he moved back to Rising. A few bedrooms, one and a half baths, an office, a den. More than what he needed for himself, but not so big that it felt like he should have his family living there, thank God.

Jason threw the files he had brought with him from the station onto a TV tray that sat by a recliner, and sat down. Soon he had the files open all over his lap, trying to find something in them that might lend a clue about what was happening in his town. He took notes as he worked, and every once in a while checked the notes to make sure that they still were what he had written, and hadn't changed into childish scrawl of nonsense words.

Harappan. Hoer-Verde
.

His thoughts kept drifting to the words, and more and more it felt like they were some kind of a message. But what kind of message he could not even guess at.

Jason sipped a cola, rubbed his eyes...and froze.
A shadowed form stood in the hallway. The person was cloaked in darkness; no features could be seen.
But it was a child.

"Aaron?" Jason whispered, then shook his head. Not Aaron, it couldn't be his son, Aaron was dead and buried and gone forever. "Sean?" he said louder. "Sean Rand?"

The figure didn't move, either to flee or to approach and walk into the pale ring of light that Jason's reading lamp cast. Jason gulped dryly, hoping against hope that this could somehow be the missing boy; could be the thing that Rising needed to set it right again.

BOOK: Rising Fears
5.38Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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