Authors: Michael M. Hughes
Blackwater Lights
is a work of fiction. Names, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.
A Hydra eBook Original
Copyright © 2013 by Michael M. Hughes
All rights reserved.
Published in the United States of America by Hydra, an imprint of the Random House Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York.
H
YDRA
and the Hydra colophon are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.
This novel was inspired by the author’s short story entitled “The Blackwater Lights” which was originally published in
Legends of the Mountain State: Ghostly Tales from the State of West Virginia
(Chapmanville, WV: Woodland Press, 2007).
eISBN: 978-0-345-54880-1
Cover design: Dreu Pennington-McNeil
Cover illustration: © Paul Youll
v3.1_r1
For Susan
Come forth, o children, under the stars, & take your fill of love!
—Aleister Crowley,
The Book of Lies
The phone call came late on a Saturday night. Ray had just turned off the TV and was heading to bed. No one called this late, not even on a weekend.
“I need to see you,” Kevin said. It had been months since they’d spoken, but he dispensed with all formalities. They’d been friends since they were kids, having grown up on the same suburban street, and Ray knew immediately, the way old friends pick up on such things, that Kevin was more than a little upset.
Ray tried to calm him down. “Easy, easy. What’s going on?”
Kevin hesitated. “It’s happening again.”
Ray’s throat tightened. He felt poised on a tightrope, as if the world on both sides of him had disappeared, dropping into darkness. “It is? All of it?”
“Yes.” Kevin’s voice faltered. “The dreams. Worse than ever. The wake-ups, the doctors, the machines—all of it. Almost every night for weeks now. I feel like I’m going to crack. Just like when we first got home from camp.”
Ray remembered those childhood nightmares all too well. “God. I’m sorry. Are you all right?”
“No. And it’s different this time. You need to come here. You need to see something.”
“See what?”
“I can’t talk about it on the phone. You need to see it for yourself. It validates everything. It proves it. We weren’t crazy.”
Ray wiped his brow. He was sweating, despite the gooseflesh on his arms. “All right. But I can’t just jump in my car right now—”
“You have to. This is
big
, man. You need to get your ass here. Stay the weekend. Take a week off. Make it a little vacation. School’s out, right? Aren’t you on summer vacation?”
“Yeah.” He didn’t start teaching his summer classes for another two weeks. “But I have to straighten up my office before they wax the floors. The vice principal will be on my ass if I don’t.”
“Listen, I need you. You’re the only other person who understands. I can’t talk to anyone
but you, and I
need
to talk about this.” His voice caught. “Please. I’m really close to losing it, man. It’s too much for me to deal with by myself. Please.”
Ray massaged the bridge of his nose and sighed. “All right. I’ll leave tomorrow afternoon. How long will the drive take?”
“Four, maybe five hours. I’ll email you directions.”
He drew in a breath. “I’ll be there.”
“Thanks,” Kevin said. “You’ll understand when you see it. I promise.”
Ray hated the mountain roads. The trees were too close, the curves too sharp, and the hills pushed his Corolla’s engine to its limits. He’d driven for almost six hours when the sign for Blackwater appeared around a curve. Next to the sign lay a bloated deer, its stiff legs pointing toward the exit, a thick cloud of flies swirling around it. He rolled up the window and covered his nose with his hand as he drove by it, but the stench of summertime roadkill still made him gag.
You need to see something
, Kevin had said. Something that proved they weren’t crazy or suffering from a delusional artifact of childhood imagination, but that the dreams and the rest of it were real. Validation. Maybe even an explanation.
A cicada smacked into the windshield. He squirted a pale stream of washer fluid onto the glass and the wipers smeared the guts in a yellow arc. He could have blamed his rapid heartbeat on the nerve-racking drive or the crappy fast-food coffee, but he knew it was more than that. Because the previous night, for the first time in years, he’d had the dream again, too.
He was stuck at a light in front of the Blackwater High School parking lot. A marching band had begun to snake out onto the road in front of him. Antique cars, costumed kids, and a line of bright parade floats. A young cop, bored and aggravated, stood in front of Ray’s car.
The Elkins Beavers—as announced by their gaudy banner—were mostly overweight teenagers in white, ill-fitting polyester pants and red sequined shirts. They started playing
something—a popular, top-forty song from the 1970s. Steely Dan, maybe? Fleetwood Mac? The drums rattled the windshield.
A black Cadillac convertible turned in front of him. A magnetic sign on the side of the car read
CHURCH OF THE OPEN DOOR
and below it, in smaller type,
ALL ARE WELCOME IN JESUS CHRIST OUR SAVIOR
. A wooden cross was propped in the backseat, hanging out of the back of the vehicle and casting a long shadow on the street. A black man, in his sixties or seventies and dressed in an out-of-style white suit, sat in the passenger seat.
The older man’s skin was deep brown, nearly black, his face pockmarked and trenched with wrinkles, his nose wide and flat. His hands rested on a cane propped between his knees. A preacher, maybe even from one of the snake-handler churches Kevin had spoken about, where the congregants took up serpents and drank poison and spoke in tongues.
Their eyes met. The preacher smiled. He had a large gap between his front two teeth. And those eyes—something was different about them. They were curious. Looking at Ray almost as if he knew him. It felt like recognition.
The Cadillac passed, and the connection broke. Ray shook his head.
Okay, that was weird
.
Kevin’s house was hidden on the outskirts of town, at the end of several miles of dirt road that wound up and down hills deep into the woods. Ray slowed the car as the house appeared in the clearing. Very impressive. Kevin had shipped the prefab from Portland, a limited-series, eco-friendly design from a famous architect whose name Ray could never remember, and he’d plopped it down far away from any other human beings. An enormous satellite dish pointed at a patch of sky overhead. Towering old trees dwarfed the dwelling, and thick patches of rhododendron, lush with summer growth, seemed to be reaching out to claim it.
An envelope was taped to the inside of the screen door.
Ray—had to leave. Emergency. Hang tight. Back as soon as possible. Make yourself at home.
Inside the envelope was a key.
The interior was even more disordered than he had imagined: bookshelves overflowing and surrounded by piles of unshelved paperbacks and magazines, retro science fiction posters and sea-creature-like glass objets d’art, and bathroom wallpaper made out of 1980s
Playboy
covers. The office, the only windowless room, looked like the bridge of a dilapidated spaceship, a mass of hard drives, electronic assemblies, wires, hefty computer manuals, and enormous flat-screen monitors. The home of a brilliant eccentric with a lot of money and exceedingly odd taste.
Pornography and a precocious talent with computer programming had made it all possible. Seemingly overnight, in the blooming days of the Internet, Kevin created a prototype business model and software for streaming porn. A year after starting his basement business, he’d decamped from Baltimore and moved into a high-tech business park in Portland, joining the millionaire club by the time he turned thirty-six. His latest project was SeXplanet, a social media service for finding sexual partners. Ray didn’t get it—he had never been into Internet socializing—but SeXplanet had become an instant success. Kevin had been hailed as “Hefner rebooted” in a
Wired
cover story.