The Exorcist (5 page)

Read The Exorcist Online

Authors: William Peter Blatty

Tags: #Horror, #Fiction, #Exorcism, #Supernatural, #Horror fiction, #Demoniac possession, #Media Tie-In

BOOK: The Exorcist
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"Darling, all you really need is a brilliant cutter," the director cackled, rounding it off. "I mean someone who really knows his doors."

 

He'd grown charming and bubbly, and seemed to have passed the threatened danger pointy.

 

"Beg pardon, madam. You wish something?"

 

Karl stood attentively at the door to the study.

 

"Oh, hullo, Thorndike," Dennings giggled. "Or is it Heinrich? I can't keep it straight."

 

"It is Karl."

 

"Yes, of course it is. Damn. I'd forgotten. Tell me, Karl, was it public relations you told me you did for the Gestapo, or was it community relations? I believe there's a difference."

 

Karl spoke politely. "Neither one, sir. I am Swiss."

 

"Oh, yes, of course." The director guffawed. "And you never went bowling with Goebbels, I suppose."

 

Karl, impervious, turned to Chris.

 

"And never went flying with Rudolph Hess!"

 

"Madam wishes?"

 

"Oh, l don't know. Burke, you want coffee?"

 

"Fuck it!"

 

The director stood up abruptly and strode belligerently from the room and the house.

 

Chris shook her head, and then turned to Karl. "Unplug the phones," she ordered expressionlessly.

 

"Yes, madam. Anything else?"

 

"Oh, maybe some Sanka. Where's Rags?"

 

"Down in playroom. I call her?"

 

"Yeah, it's bedtime. Oh, no, wait a second, Karl. Never mind. I'd better go see the bird. Just get me the Sanka, please."

 

"Yes, madam."

 

"And for the umpty-eighth time, I apologize for Burke."

 

"I pay no attention."

 

"I know. That's what bugs him."

 

Chris walked to the entry hall of the house, pulled open the door to the basement staircase and started downstairs.

 

"Hi ya, stinky, whatchya doin' down there? Got the bird?"

 

"Oh, yes, come see! Come on down, it's all finished!"

 

The playroom was paneled and brightly decorated. Easels. Paintings. Phonograph. Tables for games and a table for sculpting. Red and white bunting left over from a party for the previous tenant's teenaged son.

 

"Hey, that's great!" exclaimed Chris as her daughter handed her the figure. It was not quite dry and looked something like a "worry bird," painted orange, except for the beak, which was laterally striped in green and white. A tuft of feathers was glued to the head.

 

"Do you like it?" asked Regan.

 

"Oh, honey, I do, I really .do. Got a name for it?"

 

"Uh-uh."

 

"What's a good one?"

 

"I dunno," Regan shrugged.

 

"Let me see, let me see." Chris tapped fingertips to teeth. "I don't know. Whaddya think? Wqiaddya think about 'Dumbbird'? Huh? just 'Dumbbird.' "

 

Regan was snickering, hand to her mouth to conceal the braces. Nodding.

 

" 'Dumbbird' by a landslide! I'll leave it here to dry and then I'll put him in my room."

 

Chris was setting flown the bird when she noticed the Ouija board. Close. On the table. She'd forgotten she had it. Almost as curious about herself as she was about others, she'd originally bought it as a possible means of exposing clues to her subconscious. It hadn't worked. She'd used it a time or two with Sharon, and once with Dennings, who had skillfully steered the plastic planchette ("Are you the one who's moving it, ducky?") so that all of the "messages" were obscene, and then afterward blamed it on the "fucking spirits!"

 

"You playin' with the Ouija board?"

 

"Yep."

 

"You know how?"

 

"Oh, well, sure. Here, I'll show you." She was moving to sit by the board.

 

"Well, I think you need two people, honey."

 

"No ya don't, Mom; I do it all the time."

 

Chris was pulling up a chair. "Well, let's both play, okay"

 

Hesitation. "Well, okay." She had her fingertips positioned on the white planchette and as Chris reached out to position hers, the pianchette made a swift, sudden move to the position on the board marked No.

 

Chris smiled at her slyly. "Mother, I'd rather do it myself? Is that it? You don't want me to play?"

 

"No, I do! Captain Howdy said 'no.' "

 

"Captain who?"

 

"Captain Howdy."

 

"Honey, who's Captain Howdy?"

 

"Oh, ya know. I make questions and he does the answers."

 

"Oh?"

 

"Oh, he's nice."

 

Chris tried not to frown as she felt a dim and sudden concern. The child had loved her father deeply, yet never had reacted visibly to her parents' divorce. And Chris didn't like it. Maybe she cried in her room; she didn't know. But Chris was fearful she was repressing and that her emotions might one day erupt in some harmful form. A fantasy playmate. It didn't sound healthy. Why "Howdy"? For Howard? Her father? Pretty close.

 

"So how come you couldn't even come up with a name for a dum-dum bird, and then you hit me with something like 'Captain Howdy'? Why do you call him 'Captain Howdy'?"

 

" 'Cause that's his name, of course," Regan snickered.

 

"Says who?"

 

"Well, him."

 

"Of course."

 

"Of course."

 

"And what else does he say to you?"

 

"Stuff."

 

"What stuff?"

 

Regan shrugged. "Just stuff."

 

"For instance."

 

"I'll show you. I'll ask him some questions."

 

"You do that"

 

Her fingertips on the planchette, Regan stared at the board with eyes drawn tight in concentration. "Captain Howdy, don't you think my mom is pretty?"

 

A second... five... ten... twenty...

 

"Captain Howdy?"

 

More seconds. Chris was surprised. She'd expected her daughter to slide the planchette to the section marked Yes. Oh, for pete's sake, what now? An unconscious hostility? Oh, that's crazy.

 

"Captain Howdy, that's really not very polite," chided Regan.

 

"Honey, maybe he's sleeping."

 

"Do you think?"

 

"I think you should be sleeping."

 

"Already?"

 

"C'mon, babe! Up to bed!" Chris stood up.

 

"He's a poop," muttered Regan, then followed her mother up the stairs.

 

Chris tucked her into bed and then sat on the bedside. "Honey, Sunday's no work. You want to do somethin'?"

 

"What?"

 

When they'd first come to Washington, Chris had made an effort to find playmates for Regan. She'd uncovered only one, a twelve-year-old girl named Judy. But Judy's family was away for Easter, and Chris was concerned now that Regan might be lonely.

 

"Oh, well, I don't know," Chris replied. "Somethin'. You want to go see the sights? Hey, the cherry blossoms, maybe! That's right, they're out early! You want to go see 'em?"

 

"Oh, yeah, Mom!"

 

"And tomorrow night a movie! How's that?"

 

"Oh, I love you!"

 

Regan gave her a hug and Chris hugged her back with an extra fervor, whispering, "Oh, Rags, honey, I love you."

 

"You can bring Mr. Dennings if you like."

 

Chris pulled back for an appraisal. "Mr. Dennings?"

 

"Well, I mean, it's okay."

 

Chris chuckled. "No, it isn't okay. Honey, why would I want to bring Mr. Dennings?"

 

"Well, you like him."

 

"Oh, well, sure I like him, honey; don't you?"

 

She made no answer.

 

"Baby, what's going on?" Chris prodded her daughter.

 

"You're going to many him, Mommy, aren't you." It wasn't a question, but a sullen statement.

 

Chris exploded into a laugh. "Oh, my baby, of course not! What on earth are you talking about? Mr. Dennings? Where'd you get that idea?"

 

"But you like him."

 

"I like pizzas, but I wouldn't ever marry one! Honey, he's a friend, just a crazy old friend!"

 

"You don't like him like Daddy?"

 

"I love your daddy, honey; I'll always love your daddy. Mr. Dennings comes by here a lot 'cause he's lonely, that's all; he's a friend."

 

"Well, I heard..."

 

"You heard what? Heard from who?"

 

Whirling slivers of doubt in the eyes; hesitation; then a shrug of dismissal "I don't know. I just thought."

 

"Well, it's silly, so forget it."

 

"Okay."

 

"Now go to sleep."

 

"Can I read? I'm not sleepy."

 

"Sure. Read your new book, hon, until you get tired."

 

"Thanks, Mommy."

 

"Good night, hon."

 

"Good night."

 

Chris blew her a kiss from the door and them closed it. She walked down the stairs. Kids! Where do they get their ideas! She wondered if Regan connected Dennings to her filing for divorce. Oh, come on, that's dumb. Regan knew only that Chris had filed. Yet Howard had wanted it. Long separations. Erosion of ego as the husband of a star. He'd found someone else. Regan didn't know that. Oh, quit all this amateur psychoanalyzing and try to spend a little more time with her!

 

Back to the study. The script. Chris read. Halfway through, she saw Regan coming toward her.

 

"Hi, honey. What's wrong?"

 

"There's these real funny noises, Mom."

 

"In your room?"

 

"It's like knocking. I can't go to sleep."

 

Where the hell are those traps!

 

"Honey, sleep in my bedroom and I'll see what it is."

 

Chris led her to the bedroom and tucked her in.

 

"Can I watch TV for a while till I sleep?"

 

"Where's your book?"

 

"l can't find it. Can I watch?"

 

"Sure; okay." Chris tuned in a channel on the bedroom portable. "Loud enough?"

 

"Yes, Mom."

 

"Try to sleep."

 

Chris turned out the light and went down the hall. She climbed the narrow, carpeted stairs that led to the attic. She opened the door and felt for the light switch; found it; flicked it, stooping as she entered.

 

She glanced around. Cartons of clippings and correspondence on the pinewood floor. Nothing else, except the traps. Six of them. Baited. The room was spotless. Even the air smelled clean and cool. The attic was unheated. No pipe. No radiator. No little holes in the roof.

 

"There is nothing."

 

Chris jumped from her skin. "0h, good Jesus!" she gasped, turning quickly with her hand to a fluttering heart. "Jesus Christ, Karl, don't do that!"

 

He was standing on the steps.

 

"Very sorry. But you see? It is clean."

 

"Yeah, it's clean. Thanks a lot."

 

"Maybe cat better."

 

"What?"

 

"To catch rats."

 

Without Waiting for an answer, he nodded and left.

 

For a moment, Chris stared at the doorway. Either Karl hadn't any sense of humor whatever, or he had one so sly it escaped her detection. She couldn't decide which one it was.

 

She considered the rappings again, then glanced at the angled roof. The street was shaded by various trees, most of them gnarled and interwined with vines; and the branches of a mushrooming, massive basswood umbrellaed the entire front third of the house. Was it squirrels after all? It must be. Or branches. Right. Could be branches. The nights had been windy."

 

"Maybe cat better."

 

Chris glanced at the doorway again. Pretty smartass? Abruptly she smiled, looking pertly mischievous.

 

She went downstairs to Regan's bedroom, picked something up, brought it back to the attic, and then after a minute went back to her bedroon. Regan was sleeping. She returned her to her room, tucked her Into her bed, then went back to her own bedroom, turned off the television set and went to sleep.

 

The house was quiet until morning.

 

Eating her breakfast, Chris told Karl in an offhand way that she thought she'd heard a trap springing shut during the night.

 

"Like to go and take a look?" Chris suggested, sipping coffee and pretending to be engrossed in the morning paper. Without any comment, he went up to investigate.

 

Chris passed him in the hall on the second floor as he was returning, staring expressionlessly at the large stuffed mouse he was holding. He'd found it with its snout clamped tight in a trap.

 

As she walked toward her bedroom, Chris lifted an eyebrow at the mouse.

 

"Someone is funny," Karl muttered as he passed her. He returned the stuffed animal to Regan's bedroom.

 

"Sure a lot of things goin' on," Chris murmured, shaking her head as she entered her bedroom. She slipped off her robe and prepared to go to work. Yeah, maybe cat better, old buddy. Much better. Whenever she grinned, her entire face appeared to crinkle.

 

**********

 

The filming went smoothly that day. Later in the morning, Sharon came by the set and during breaks between scenes, in her portable dressing room, she and Chris handled items of business: a letter to her agent (she would think about the script); "okay" to the White House; a wire to Howard reminding him to telephone on Regan's birthday; a call to her business manager asking if she could afford to take off for a year; plans for a dinner party April twenty-third.

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