Read Carter & Lovecraft Online

Authors: Jonathan L. Howard

Tags: #Horror

Carter & Lovecraft (32 page)

BOOK: Carter & Lovecraft
9.23Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Carter risked opening his eyes again. Colt was right about the nausea; he was glad he’d only had a light lunch or he would be choking it up by now, and that would be a shame on such lovely carpet.

The sofa Colt was sitting on was no great improvement; a twee overstuffed thing in a floral print. The wallpaper on the wall behind him was a delicate shade of yellow. On a casual table by the side of the sofa lay a familiar, slightly irregular cube. Carter wasn’t surprised to see it there; it only confirmed that whatever Colt did, he did here.

Carter tried his wrists again. Definitely broad leather straps, the kind of thing you see in classier sex boutiques. “You always stun visitors?” he asked.

“No, not usually. But I knew you were coming.”

Carter’s mind flew through possibilities. Only Lovecraft and Harrelson had known about this, but neither made much sense. Unless Colt had gotten to Harrelson, in which case Harrelson made a better actor than cop to have carried it off. Would Harrelson have offered a bag full of firearms in that case? No, Carter couldn’t see either Lovecraft or Harrelson selling him out. Colt seemed in a talkative mood; maybe Carter could just ask him.

“How did you know that?”

Colt was wearing a check shirt, Hush Puppies, and pale chinos, sitting with his hands clasped between his knees. “Would you be surprised if I said I don’t really know? I got a phone call. A
mysterious
phone call. I’d love to know who it was from. Especially since you tell me that you only got involved because of a mysterious phone call. Was that true? I can’t see why you’d lie, but I have to be sure. Was that true?”

“Yeah. On Belasco’s phone right after you killed him. Some guy in an overcoat and wearing a hat. That’s all the parking lot’s cameras turned up. Ring any bells with you?”

He was hoping to rattle Colt with that, or at least build up a little trust between them so, if he had to lie later, he stood a better chance of getting away with it. Colt shook his head, interested but unperturbed. “That could be anyone, couldn’t it? That’s why people wear overcoats and hats in situations like that. They could be anyone. Well, fuck. I was hoping for something more useful.”

Colt leaned closer. “Dan. I have a strong sense that I’m being played. I don’t know why anyone would do that. Why would you go out of your way to give somebody the kind of power I’ve got, hmmm?”

“I wouldn’t.”

“Not you. I meant in the sense of ‘Why would one go out of one’s way…?’ And why drag you into it? Dan, why didn’t you die in the house? That’s really bugging me. Why aren’t you dead?”

“I don’t know, Colt.” Carter was wondering how long he’d been stunned. It can’t have been so very long or Harrelson would be back by now, and he didn’t strike Carter as the kind of guy who would wait for long before going on the offensive. He slowly rolled himself a few degrees over, ostensibly to look at Colt more squarely, but really hoping to feel his phone in his pocket. It had gone. Unless radio silence was enough to alert Lovecraft or Harrelson, then it looked like the cavalry wouldn’t necessarily be riding in anytime soon.

“I don’t think you know, either, Dan. But I have to be sure.”

Carter didn’t like the way this was going and, with an intention to distract, said, “You just happened to have restraints lying around the place?”

Colt smiled. “Well, it’s not
my
place anyway, Dan. And, yes, they did. The Waite family isn’t much like any other family I’ve ever come across. You might have, being an ex-cop and everything, but I don’t think so. There are Waites in every single one of these houses, Dan. Waite Road really is the street of Waites.”

“I wasn’t expecting inbred hillbillies in Providence.”

“That’s not kind and it isn’t accurate. They’re not inbred. Every one of the Waite men comes from elsewhere. The family name is maintained by the women. They wanted you, you know. I had to talk them out of it.”

“I’m not marrying a redneck anytime soon. Not on my bucket list.”

Colt’s smile returned. “Like you’d have a choice. They’re very persuasive. Not with me, of course. That’s not my relationship with them at all.” His smile faded and his brow clouded. “Very much a business relationship. Anyway, that’s neither here nor there. I need to know how you got out of the house. It’s important, Dan.”

“I don’t know how I did it.”

“Yes, well, can’t really take your word for it. Sorry. Wish I could, but the Waites are insistent, and I can understand their concern. They’ve been living with The Twist for a long time and it’s important to them. Of course it is. Somebody starts just, kind of … shrugging it off … You know we were talking about gods a minute ago? Well, what you did is kind of heretical to them. Blasphemous, even. They’re not happy with you, Dan. Can you understand that?”

Carter looked at Colt. “Colt, you’re in as much danger as I am. Can
you
understand that?”

Colt broke eye contact to look off and up into the middle distance, thinking. “I know I am, but not from the Waites. I’m too important to them. Y’know, I thought they were just riding on my coattails at first, but now I’m not so sure. I might be riding on theirs. The Twist is tied into their destiny, Dan. That’s how they see it, and I guess they’re right.”

Carter scrabbled around for anything he could use for ammunition, anything he could use to undermine Colt, and settled on recent events. “You screwed up with Ken Rothwell.”

Carter was disappointed when Colt barely reacted. “Yes, I know. That was a mistake. I saw your friend go off with him and thought,
synchronicity
. I recognized him immediately. I read the papers, you see? I thought,
Well, here’s how I leverage one form of power into another. It’s meant to be
. But it wasn’t. There’s perceived destiny, something tangible but just out of reach, like the Waites’ destiny. And there’s just seeing a pattern in coincidence. With everything that’s been happening, I thought I’d know the difference without trying, but I was wrong. Rothwell’s whole worldview was so rigid. I guess that’s why he wants to be a politician. Showed him he was wrong about the way things work and that the reality has the most amazing opportunities. I thought he’d like that, thought it would excite him, but no.
Crack!
” Colt almost shouted it. “More than he could bear. And there go my political ambitions for the time being. Have to be more
circumspect
about it next time. People like you and me are different, Dan. Special. More than I realized. Turns out there’s a knack to dealing with all this stuff.”

“There’s no trick to how you do it,” said Carter. “You’re a sociopath.”

“Yes,” said Colt, nodding philosophically, “there’s that. I do have a certain degree of dissociative behavior. You don’t though, Dan. You’re a reg’lar guy, a straight-up guy, a pillar-of-the-community kind of guy. Why aren’t you as broken as Ken? What’s so special about you? Good idea to tell me before the Waites lose patience.”

The door opened. Carter couldn’t see who was there, but Colt looked up, nodded, and then said to him, “Oops. Time’s up, Dan.”

*   *   *

Carter was lifted by his elbows by two men who brought him to his feet, and then off them, dangling so that his toes barely brushed the floor. They turned him to the door. One of the women was leaning by it, watching events proceed with interest. She was wearing a red tee washed to a patchy pink, the transfer on it flaked and indecipherable, jeans that ended at her shins, and sandals, dark brown hair in a scrunchie. She looked to be in her late twenties, all but her eyes, and there was no dating them. She was smiling; Carter doubted it was because she was being polite.

“Hey, remember what they used to say in old Westerns, Dan?” Carter heard Colt say behind him. He put on an accent. “
Don’t let them give you to the squaws, boy.

“Who was that meant to be?”

“Walter Brennan,” said Colt, offended.

“Nothing like him,” said Carter. He was carried out.

In the hallway was a cheap, lurid rug. The men held him still while the woman lifted the rug and exposed a long trapdoor. Carter looked around, looking for anything that might provide an advantage. He couldn’t feel the weight of his pistol at his hip, nor of his backup on his ankle; they could hardly have missed it while securing his feet.

Thinking of the ankle restraints, he looked down and saw that they were indeed made of broad brown leather, but looked more like historical artifacts from some abandoned asylum rather than an upmarket sex shop. They were certainly old, and had seen heavy use to judge from the cracked leather and aged stains on them. The stains looked like they might be old blood.

The woman hooked her finger into the recessed ring and lifted the trapdoor, six feet long by three feet wide easily. From the underside it was plain that the trapdoor was reinforced wood and must weigh a great deal. The effortless way the woman had raised it was something else to worry about. Carter raised the bar of “necessary force” still higher; as far as he could see, the only way to be sure of dealing with the Waites was through the use of lethal force. Part of him was starting to worry that still wouldn’t be enough.

The men started to move forward to what looked like simply a dark pit, but as they drew up to it, Carter saw the top of a set of utilitarian wooden steps descending.

“Wait, you idiots,” said the woman. She said it without vigor or rancor, as if “idiots” was a standard and accepted term for the men of the street. Carter remembered Harrelson’s story about the man who’d married into the Waites. Looking at the two holding him, they looked similar enough to be brothers, and much like the man he’d spoken to on the riverside that time. Yet if what he’d learned was true, the men weren’t related by blood at all. A thought about the lack of children on the street started to form, but he withdrew his attention from it, throttling it before he came to any conclusions he didn’t want to know.

The woman descended the steps until she could reach under the lip and flick a switch. The harsh fluorescent glare of strip lighting flickered into life with the clacking of initiators. The woman walked down, turned, and waited, watching the men as one released Carter’s elbow and gathered up his feet, leading down the steps, his fellow holding Carter under the armpits. The procedure felt very practiced. Carter never stopped looking for opportunities, and he never stopped failing to spot anything at all. It would have been too easy to accept that there was no way out, to slip into despair, to go to his death—for they surely meant to finish him—without hope. Daniel Carter did not intend to do that. He would choose his moment, and he would fight. All noble enough but, as he reminded himself, pointless if the moment never arrived. The bindings were secure and the Waites were watchful. He concluded his best chance would come from an external distraction. If Lovecraft should want to kick in the door and start firing, this would be an ideal moment.

In the meantime, he would keep gathering data in the hope that some fragment of it might prove useful. The steps were not professionally made, but sturdy enough. The cellar floor was earthen, but an underbed of smoothly rolling stone was visible beneath it. The woman wore a knife in a brown leather scabbard on her belt, about a six-inch blade, he guessed. The lighting was a pair of cheap tube lights mounted on a wooden lattice across the ceiling, and again was not a professional job. The walls were irregular and continuous stone was visible in many places; it seemed the cellar had been crudely excavated down into the surface of a large boulder. Lovecraft was sitting in the corner, her hands tied with cord.

Well, shit.

“If you were depending on her,” said the woman, “you made a bad choice.”

 

Chapter 27

THE VERY ODD FOLK

“So, let’s go back to the top and start again, huh, Dan?” Colt was descending the stairs behind Carter. Carter was still looking for options. There was an exit from the cellar; a crudely cut hole in one wall opened into darkness. Carter distinctly felt a breeze blow from it. Not a dead end, then. Or, possibly a dead end with ventilation. He’d take that chance if he could get an even break here.

“We don’t want to hurt you—”

“So you say,” interrupted Carter.

“It’s true,” said the woman. “You’re interesting, Mr. Carter. We want to know all about you.”

“And I’m telling you nothing. So I guess that’s a stalemate.”

“No,” said the woman, “not while we have your friend.
She
we have no use for.”

Lovecraft was watching him and must have heard the words, but she didn’t flinch or react. Carter guessed she’d already heard enough threats to desensitize her to them. She looked disheveled, but not beaten up. He wondered what had happened. Then he decided to ask, largely because it was putting off the inevitable.

“How did you catch her? How did you even know where she was?”

“We sent a couple of the men to go around the long way and sneak up on her, Mr. Carter,” said the woman. “As to where she was, the trees told us.” Carter glared at her, but she only smiled lazily. “They whisper all the time. Easy to unnerstan’ them if you only listen.”

“Okay, Dan,” said Colt. He was sitting halfway down the steps. “Crunch time. Tell us what we want to know, or Keturah will start playing with Ms. Lovecraft there. It’ll get messy.”

“Keturah?” scoffed Carter, but he was just playing for time, and everyone in that cellar knew it.

Then Lovecraft spoke. “It’s Hebrew. The second wife of Abraham. Old Puritan name.”

“Well, now, ain’t you educated?” said Keturah Waite, crouching by Lovecraft. “Shame that it’s not really what we wanna know. But Mr. Carter could take a lesson from that for sure. Be a little more forthcoming”—she drew her knife and held it against Lovecraft’s cheek—“afore I start peeling.”

“‘Afore’?” said Carter, clutching at straws. “You people really are inbred.”

“Okay,” said Keturah. She looked unimpressed, even bored. “I’m tired of this shilly-shallyin’. I’m going to cut Ms. Lovecraft’s right ear off now, an’ maybe that’ll concentrate your attention, Mr. Carter.”

BOOK: Carter & Lovecraft
9.23Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Blood Done Sign My Name by Timothy B. Tyson
Secret Sacrament by Sherryl Jordan
Changing Scenes (Changing Teams #2) by Jennifer Allis Provost
Surrender in Silk by Susan Mallery
Gentleman's Relish by Patrick Gale
Jet by Russell Blake
The Cost of Love by Parke, Nerika