Authors: Dan Poblocki
resist what it wants you to do.”
“And what would that be?”
“To use it,” said Abigail. She squinted at him,
her eyes like lasers. “You were going to use it,
Timothy. I know you were.” Timothy didn’t
know what to say. She was right. “After
everything we’ve gone through? After
everything we’ve gone through? After
everything we’ve seen?”
She stepped toward him, as if she had the
power to hurt him, as if she might truly want
to. She didn’t look quite right. She’d always
been intense, but even when they’d fought,
horribly, she’d never appeared to be so … self-
righteous.
“I know,” said Timothy. “I came back up
here to smash that thing. If you don’t believe
me, then do it yourself.” Timothy held out the
hammer to Abigail. She took another step
toward him but ignored his of ering.
“Gramma’s the only one I can trust with this.
She’s the one who should destroy it.”
“But … how do I know that you’re strong
enough to resist what it wants?” Timothy
asked.
Abigail stepped toward him, her mouth
pul ed up in a strange smile.
He suddenly understood what was happening
here. His skin went ice cold. “Abigail, I think
you should go,” he whispered. He tried to step
you should go,” he whispered. He tried to step
past her toward his bedroom. “Go do whatever
you need to do.”
She blocked his way. “No,” she spat. She
would not let him pass. In fact, she reached
behind her and shut his bedroom door. “You’re
coming with me.”
“Abigail …” He didn’t know what to think
anymore. Al he knew was that he needed to
get into his bedroom. He had to check under
his pil ow. The jawbone was stil lying there,
hiding from him, and was not in fact in
Abigail’s fist.
Abigail shouted, then raised her hand as if to
strike him. Timothy cringed against the
banister, then stumbled backward toward his
parents’ bedroom. Abigail didn’t look like
herself anymore. Her black hair had grown past
her shoulders and had begun to show white.
Long strands of it had caught on her face, a
soiled veil. Her sweatshirt began to separate,
fal ing into tat ers of string toward the oor,
looking like dirty pieces of lacy cobweb.
looking like dirty pieces of lacy cobweb.
Behind her, Timothy’s bedroom door burst
open. Timothy gasped. Girls now crowded at
the entry as if trying to catch a glimpse of what
was about to happen. The Nightmarys had
returned. The upstairs was suddenly l ed with
their singsong chat er. They watched as Abigail
continued her slow approach. Some of the girls
scratched at the wooden doorframe with their
long fingernails, as if trying to sharpen them.
Abigail’s scream had turned into a siren wail,
so loud, Timothy felt as if his eardrums might
burst. She came closer and closer. The hammer
slipped out of Timothy’s hand as he turned
around and dashed toward his parents’
bedroom.
Once inside, he slammed the door shut and
locked it. He stared at the dark wood, listening
to the scrambling, scratching noises that were
coming from the other side, out in the hal way.
Abigail was not here. She was probably at
home, in bed. What was happening now was
caused by the curse. The jawbone was trying to
caused by the curse. The jawbone was trying to
protect itself. Timothy knew it would do
anything to survive—make him see whatever
scared him most. And right now, that was
losing his friend, having her turn against him.
Again, Abigail’s statement popped into his
head: I know they’l kil you … because I’m
terri ed that they wil . Before, Timothy had
believed that wasn’t possible, that the curse had
merely created il usions, that the only real
danger he’d been in was from himself. But
now, if this was to be a bat le for survival,
Timothy wondered if the jawbone might try to
raise the stakes a bit.
Lit le tricks, he remembered. Zilpha’s advice.
If the Nightmarys were what the jawbone had
sent to stop him, then he needed to nd a way
to beat the Nightmarys once and for al .
The door rat led. Screeching, the creatures on
the other side sounded like they might just be
able to tear it down.
Timothy glanced around for something,
anything, that might stop them. But when he
anything, that might stop them. But when he
turned toward the darkest corner of the room
near his parents’ closet, he noticed a tal patch
of cobweb. A dark shape shifted behind it. The
Nightmarys were finding another way in.
Before he could think to stop himself,
Timothy leapt at the web. He tore the patch
away from the ceiling and the wal s. It came
away as easily as the spiderwebs that he and
Stuart sometimes found stretched across their
front porches. Timothy’s arms were now
covered with a strange sticky substance, but he
quickly brushed most of it o . The long strands
fel to the oor in a dingy lump. The dark
shifting shape that had been forming behind
the web faded away into shadow, then
disappeared altogether. Timothy spun but
stumbled against the closet door when he saw
another patch of web appear across the
bedroom next to his parents’ bed.
Turning toward the closet, Timothy grappled
with the knob, then swung the door open.
Lit le tricks. There had to be something in here
Lit le tricks. There had to be something in here
he could use to stop this. Rows of hanging
clothes stared back at him. Al useless. Then,
way up on the top shelf, something caught his
eye. His mother kept cleaning supplies in here.
Jumping as high as he could reach, Timothy
managed to catch the tip of a feather duster
between his bandaged ngers. He turned
around.
One of the creepy girls stood behind him, her
screech piercing his eardrums, her claws
reaching forward as if to tear him apart.
Before she came too close, he swiped at her
face. Using the duster as if it were a sword,
Timothy waved his weapon until her cobweb
veil became entangled in the feathers. After a
few swipes, al that was left of her head was a
cloud of dust motes. Between her col arbone, a
black hole coughed and wheezed, and a musty
stench burped forth. Disgusted, Timothy
covered his mouth. The girl shuddered; then, to
Timothy’s surprise, she simply unraveled into
longs pieces of string and lace and dirt, which
longs pieces of string and lace and dirt, which
piled at his feet and disappeared.
Outside, the scratching grew louder. Timothy
moved cautiously toward the bedroom door.
He counted to three, then managed to swing it
open. The girls rushed him the same way they
had at the house on Ash Tree Lane, but now
Timothy was prepared. He ducked and swung
down the landing, smashing and slashing his
way past them. The feather duster was his own
Excalibur. With each step he took, pieces of the
phantom girls piled up on the oor behind
him. Every time he took o one of their heads,
another girl shrieked in surprise and ducked
away. It was as if the curse couldn’t believe
he’d figured out a way to beat it.
He quickly made his way down the landing
toward his own bedroom. Slipping inside, he
slammed the door shut and moved his desk
chair in front of it, locking the rest of the
Nightmarys outside. Panting, he turned toward
his bed. Clutching the feather duster painful y,
he approached his pil ow with caution, as if
he approached his pil ow with caution, as if
another nightmare might leap out from
underneath his sheets to at ack him. He
managed to lift the pil ow away from his
mat ress. The jawbone stil lay inconspicuously
underneath. Something inside the black tooth
glowed violently, angrily. Timothy was afraid
to touch the thing, as if whatever control it had
exerted over him earlier might take hold once
more. Using his weapon, Timothy simply
knocked the smal object to the cold wooden
oor, where it eventual y rat led into stil ness
beside his nightstand. He dropped the duster.
Then, grabbing his thick history textbook from
his nearby desk, Timothy knelt down next to
the bone. As he raised the book over his head,
Timothy thought, This is for you, Ben. Then he
brought his arms down as hard as he could.
GRADUATION DAY
ENDINGS
[FROM THE NEW STARKHAM RECORD—OBITUARIES]
BYRON FLANDERS—FORMER NEW
STARKHAM DISTRICT ATTORNEY
… Mr. Flanders had recently su ered a heart
attack and passed away at New Starkham Hospital
before his surgery … Known best for his un appable
work ethic and strong personality, Flanders strove
tirelessly to protect the citizens of New Starkham
from those whom he had once referred to as “The
Real Monsters.” He is survived by his wife and three
children.
Percival Ankh closed the newspaper with a
shudder. He hadn’t thought of his old friend
Flanders in quite some time. “Do you want to
Flanders in quite some time. “Do you want to
at end the service?” his wife asked.
“I don’t think so,” he answered quietly. It had
been during a dinner with Flanders many years
ago that the topic of Christian Hesselius’s
abandoned o ce had been raised. Flanders had
been the prosecutor in the case and had asked
if his friend believed in ghosts. That had been
the seed that had sparked Percival’s fear of the
old professor—and the subsequent raising of
the wal that had sealed o the room in the
library.
After the horrible experience at the birthday
party several weeks ago, Percival wanted once
more to forget the old stories that had haunted
him for so long. He had good reason to forget
too. At the restaurant, his son had found Ankh
lying on the bathroom oor, weeping. The old
man never told anyone what he’d seen in there.
“Are you sure?” asked his wife. “He was your
friend.”
Get ing up from the dining room table, he
tossed the newspaper onto the oor and said,
tossed the newspaper onto the oor and said,
“I’d rather just stay here with you, my dear.”
Careful y bending down, he kissed his wife’s
cheek.
She smiled and pat ed his head. “Whatever
you like,” she answered.