"The barn," Johnny uttered, thinking again of the trap door in the loft and how a gust of hot, stinking air
geysered
up from below when he opened it; how the door thumped loudly against the wall, and remained perched open; how a chorus of whispering voices ascended up from the whirlpool of darkness below, like animals bounding from a cage.
Our dying souls are freeâ¦
"Correct. But because you were never crucified, it had been unable to follow through with its intentions to deliver all their souls into Hell. It's been holding them all these years, waiting for you to return to
Wellfield
so that it may gather up your soul and complete what Benjamin started. I've spent years studying the ritualâthe very one hidden in the bible, and many interrelated others, and although I cannot be certain of the spirit Jesus himself had conjured, I do know that somewhere along the line, Benjamin had failed in his intentions, and that the spirit he conjured was anything but benevolent. Johnny, the souls of the Conroy's
have returned
. They believe that once your soul is gathered, they will be released by the evil spirit to commence onward toward ancestral afterlife in the astral plane. But this is not the truth! They are being misguided by the evil that possesses them! Once they retain your soul, you and the rest of the Conroy's will be ushered into Hell!"
"And this is how you knew I would eventually return here," Johnny said. All of a sudden, the feather in his pocket grew warm.
Â
Henry nodded fearfully. "We have to stop them, Johnny. Stop
it
."
Johnny clapped his hands over his face and rubbed his cheeks nervously. So this wasn't about revenge after all. It was about stopping evil from carrying out its wicked deed.
About protecting me
. "So just how
do
we stop them?", he asked, his voice whimpering, scared.
Henry stood. "We need to ask the only person who knows."
"Who's that?"
"Eddie Carlson."
September 9
th
, 2005
3:11 AM
B
eneath the cool blue light of the moon, two bodies emerged from the back doors of a still-running van that sat in a wheat field ten feet from the edge of Flower King Road. They staggered down the road, the ethereal glow of the van's taillights pointing the way. There wasn't a soul or a vehicle within miles of them, as they moved steadily, purposefully, toward the outskirts of
Wellfield
.
Toward their home. The Conroy House.
September 9
th
, 2005
3:17 AM
"E
ddie Carlson? The dead kid? Henry, I don't understand."
"Soon you will."
"But he's
dead
âbeen dead for seventeen years."
Henry looked at Johnny, eyes dull and dry. He grinned. "If I told you the lawyer promising you a small fortune would be murdered by an escapee from an insane asylum, only to come back to life in an attempt to kill you, would you believe me?"
Johnny stared expressionlessly at Henry, then shook his head.
"Which leads me to another important factor: the psychoâthe man who murdered Judsonâis in fact David Mackey. His mother, Helen Mackey, was having an affair with Benjamin Conroy. The bodies of Helen Mackey and her husband were found murdered at Benjamin's church on the same day the Conroy family was killed. Their boy, David, who was fourteen at the time, was there as well. Somehow he survived the attack, but had come out of it severely injured, partially blinded and brain damaged. He fell into a coma for three years, and up until his escape a few days ago, had lived out his days at the Pine Oak Institute for the Mentally Insane, about ten miles from here."
Johnny shuddered. "I suppose it's no coincidence that he escaped upon my return to
Wellfield
."
Henry nodded. "And it's no coincidence that both he and Judson were killed." He paused for a moment, seemingly trying to collect his thoughts. "It's my belief that the souls of the Conroy's need the bodies of those close to their blood in order to walk the earth. And walk the earth is the only way they can come to gather your soulâto
murder you
."
Johnny's jaw dropped. "So, what you're saying isâ¦that the bodies of the psycho and Judson contain the souls of two dead
Conroys
..." The words came out impassively, without a doubt or question in them.
Henry nodded.
Brotherâ¦
Johnny shook his head. He was tired, confused. His eyesight blurred and his stomach turned.
Henry moved to the room's only closet and opened the door. "Since the animated bodies of Judson and Mackey called you brother, we can rightly assume that the souls within them are of Daniel and Elizabeth Conroy. The souls of Benjamin and Faithâ¦they are out there as well, and at this moment are seeking recently deceased people who have held some association with you."
"But I don't know anyone else here."
Henry paused, rubbed his eyes. "Then the evil driving their souls will lure them in."
Johnny felt immediately troubled. "Howâ?"
"I don't know for sure. But it happened with Andrew Judson, a man who'd spent years waiting for you to turn eighteen, and then David Mackey, whose parents were murdered by Benjamin Conroy. Andâ¦I'm afraid it just may just happen with me. Henry rubbed his cheeks solemnly. "Once all four Conroy souls walk the earth again, they can retrieve you and complete the ritual Benjamin hadn't been able to finish all those years ago."
Henry reached down onto the floor of the closet and dragged out a large black trunk. Johnny moved to assist, and together they carried it into the middle of the room. At once Henry undid the twin clasps, opened the lid, and nodded toward the contents.
Inside the trunk were a number of crudely cut wooden planks, all different sizes. They were stained with dark brown Rorschach-like blotches.
"What is this?" Johnny asked in a near-whisper, his scar itching ferociously again.
"The wood from the crosses your family was crucified on." Henry dug inside and pulled out a small leather pouch; it too was old and worn. He untied the sash at the top. "And these," he said, emptying the contents of the bag in his hand, "are the nails they were crucified with."
Johnny gazed at the six-inch spikes, each one as thick as a pencil, rusted and stained with blood. "Seems like Carl Davies let you keep more than just Benjamin's journals."
"He's always been sympathetic toward my efforts. He was there that night. He saw the bodies on the crosses."
Johnny hesitated, unable to tear his gaze away from the bloodstains on the nails.
Conroy blood. My bloodâ¦
"So why are you showing all this to me, Henry?"
"Because it will help us contact Eddie Carlson."
Again Johnny regarded Henry with befuddled skepticism. "Howâ?"
Henry jerked his gaze out the window. "At some point they're going to come for us Johnny. I think it's best we move on and get this over with." He shut the trunk, latched it, and grabbed one end. "Help me carry this downstairs, and I'll try to explain."
Heart thudding with sudden alarm, Johnny gripped the worn leather handle on the opposite end, and together with Henry hauled the trunk down the steps into the foyer, where they placed it on the floor next to the front door.
Henry stepped aside and peered out the front window, cupping his hands against the glass. Johnny asked, "Is Eddie Carlson's soul out there too, looking for a dead body to inhabit?"
Henry turned from the window and walked into the dining room. "No, he was never crucified," he responded absently. "His soul is at peace."
"So then how are we supposed to contact him?" Johnny did his best to keep close to the pacing Henry, who was now peering anxiously down the hall.
"A séance," Henry's said, eyebrows arched with sudden concern. "Eddie Carlson saved your life once before, and I'm afraid we'll need him to save it again." He moved into the kitchen, where he stopped dead in his tracks, his face a sudden, sweaty white.
Â
Johnny, trailing Henry in footsteps, nearly slammed into him. He leaned to his left and peered around Henry's trembling body.
The back door was wide open. He could see a wash of blood on the exposed jambâ¦and then the wind gusted in from outside and brought with it a horrible decay-like stench that was instantly familiar. Johnny peered up and saw mosquitoes the size of small birds dancing across kitchen ceiling.
"Oh my God!" Henry shouted, bounding forward.
Johnny fell in behind Henry as he lunged outside. A moment of dead silence followedâ¦and then Henry halted at the top of the porch steps, staring wordlessly into the darkness. Johnny, his heart beating rapidly, gazed at Henry, saw his eyes begin to bulge and his mouth draw back into a dreadful grin of terror.
And then Henry
Depford
screamed, and that was when Johnny followed Henry's line of sight and realized that the inconceivable horrors of the day had started again.
There were two bodies sprawled in the moonlit grass just feet from the porch steps. One of them was the psycho, David Mackey. His body was motionless, arms and legs outstretched from a torso bent back into a hideous 'C' shape. A thick wash of blood flooded his gaping mouth and glistened wetly beneath the silver light of the moon. Alongside him was Mrs. D. She too was laying in the grass, her head skewed at an impossible right angleâcheek-to-shoulderâa huge gaping wound in her exposed neck gushing
redly
from where the psycho had gnawed at her flesh.
Henry stepped forward. So did Johnny, and it was here that he saw Mrs. D 's body twitching. "She's still alive, Johnny!" Henry cried out. "Alive!"
For a moment Johnny was prepared to agree with Henry, until her head creaked sideways and he saw her eyes, bright and bulging and glistening malevolently beneath the moonlight, her mouth opening and closing, teeth gnashing against lips purling with blood and foam.
She croaked,
"Brotherâ¦"
Seized with horror, tottering with insanity, Johnny gripped Henry's bicep and uttered with yoga-like calm, "We need to get out of here." He yanked on Henry's arm and the two of them quickly staggered back into the house.
Once inside, Henry released his fear. He walked unsteadily into the front foyer, and without delay, grabbed one end of the chest. "Johnnyâ¦c'monâ¦" he uttered weakly, eyes doused with tears.
Johnny grabbed the opposite handle and helped Henry lug the chest out the front door.
Here, in contrast to the scene out back, the night was eerily silent, save for the trees that delivered their unvarying whisper from a distance. They took the porch steps one at a time, Johnny's eyes fixed on the large expanse of grass and gravel leading away into the forbidding darkness of
Wellfield's
farmland. A black pick-up truck sat in the driveway. They scrambled as quickly as possible to the rear of the truck and rested the trunk against the bumper. Henry lowered the tailgate, and Johnny helped to hoist the trunk onto the flatbed.
Together they slammed the tailgate shut, then quickly skirted around the truck, into the cab. Henry secured the locks as soon as the doors were shut.
"David's bodyâ¦" Henry exclaimed, panting, shaking his head. "It-It was probably too batteredâ¦the soul insideâ¦my god, it
switched
."
Suddenly, the front door to the house burst open, and dead Mrs. D. was there. Her head was at a ninety-degree tilt upon her broken neck, making her look like some child's rag doll. She tottered down the steps, heaving, staring, snatching at the air.
"Brother!"
she snarled, her voice deep and guttural, devoid of its former soft-spoken femininity.
"God rest her soul," Henry cried, his voice breaking with sobs. "My dear Godâ¦" For a moment Henry stayed frozen, staring at his wife who had become a living-dead monster, fresh blood oozing from the wound in her neck and down the front of her nightdress like a heave of vomit. She tottered unsteadily across the lawn, bathed in the ghostly amber glow of the porch light, arms and legs convulsing as if under an electrical charge, sideways head jogging up and down on her shoulder.
"Henry," Johnny said. "Start the car."
Henry groped at the ignition. There were no keys.
"Jesus Henry!" Johnny shouted, his mind rat-racing with panic. "Please tell me you have the damn keys!" He glanced out the window.
Mrs. D. stretched her arms out toward Johnny, her wound spitting blood as she moaned out:
"Brother!"
Henry yanked down the sun visor. The keys jingled out onto his lap. He fumbled for them in agonizing silence, hyperventilating as he ferreted out the right one.
"Thank God Henry!" Johnny shot a glance outside. "Now! C'mon! She's coming!" Johnny's blood went cold, and he shuddered, looking away but still seeing in his peripheral vision Mrs. D just feet away from his window.
Henry slid the key into the ignition and started the truck.
Mrs. D, or what used to be the kindly wife of Henry
Depford
, who not two hours earlier had fixed Johnny a sandwich and a hot cup of coffee, slammed her bloody hands against the window. Johnny leaped, bulleting a gaze of terror out the window at the woman whose head rolled repulsively upon her broken neck; whose open neck-gash was caked with soil and blades of grass; whose blood-matted hair was home to a multitude of mosquitoes and buzzing horseflies.