Authors: Greg Kihn
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Horror Show
Greg Kihn
THIS BOOK IS DEDICATED TO MY WONDERFUL
PARENTS
,
STANLEY AND JANE KIHN
.
PROLOGUE
The kid thought he heard something.
Something was coming up the basement stairs.
Heavy footsteps, ascending slowly, too slowly to be anything good. A squish, along with the creaking of the tired wooden treads. A squish?
The old man mumbled and gripped his chest, but the kid felt his panic rising with each step of the bad thing, patiently making its way up from below.
The fear was a numb blanket that wrapped him so tightly he couldn't move. His arms, his legs, the back of his neck, all tingled to the point of pain. He could hardly breathe.
Even for a kid who usually enjoyed being scared, paid good money for it, it was overwhelming.
The bad thing arrived at the top of the stairs, paused, and turned the doorknob. Time was running out.
“It's locked!” cried the old man.
“Sweet Jesus, it's locked,” the kid repeated. His voice sounded strange to him, alien and constricted, as if he were hearing a poor recording of himself played back at the wrong speed.
The kid wanted to run but couldn't move his feet. Instead, he stood facing the door, scared to death of what was trying to break through from the other side. He waited, feet rooted to the cheap linoleum, listening to the wild pounding of his heart, yet, despite his terror, he thought,
I've got to see it
.
“It” pushed against the door. Man and boy heard the frame groan, then bark and snap with the weight of the bad thing pushing it beyond its limit.
The kid's mind raced, frantically searching for explanations. The rules were twisted, he tried to make himself believe, that's all. Hell, he'd always suspected it anyway. That's what a lifetime fascination with having the shit scared out of you did to a guy. It desensitized you to the point where you were ready to believe anything. Even this.
But this was real, not a movie or a novel. Or a dream. It was actually happeningâsomething evil, something
not
natural stalking them.
Let it come, I want to see
, he thought, trying to bolster his courage.
But fear is like a drug, and, as with any drug, there are two things to consider: addictions and overdoses. For aficionados of horror, paralyzing fear is delicious. Except â¦
The physical manifestation of that fear stood on the other side of the door! All the crazy dreams that had been causing the kid sleepless nights since adolescence were suddenly real. It was just as he'd always suspected. There
were
monsters.
Even at the movies, when he covered his eyes because he was too afraid to see something that he knew would haunt his dreams for years to come, he always peeked. He had to.
Let me see. I want to see it
.
The doorjamb split, the dry wood cracking into a jagged gash. Paint chips and splinters exploded from the point of separation. The molding around the door popped, and the gates of hell opened.
The old man might have been screaming, but the kid couldn't hear it. He was vaguely aware of a roaring ocean in his ears.
This is it
, he thought.
This is totally it. Time to run. Time to take off like a jet. Time to
â
He waited just another second.
Got to see what this is all about
.
NOW
1
A house is like an old box in an attic, hidden for decades. Then some unsuspecting party comes along andâ
âopens it.
Landis Woodley's house was like that. Like a museum full of memories and memorabilia, a place that kept.
It was also a house that didn't want to be found. Clint Stockbern discovered it only after weeks of research and legwork. No easy task.
The damn place had no number. Clint knew the old man had ripped the number down in 1964 to throw off the IRS agents. They found him, of course. They always do.
A faded “No Solicitors” sign hung askew next to a doorbell from which the button had been removed, but that didn't slow Clint down. He'd expected obstacles like that. If the stories were true, Landis Woodley would be a man of few charms. He'd left a list of enemies almost as long as his list of creditors.
He hated the United States Postal Service and refused to empty his mailbox for months on end. The route man had given up with the junk mail. The only stuff he ever got now was official: bills, collection notices, tax liens, legal crap. Never a letter. So it was easy for all of Clint's hand-addressed envelopes to go unopened. They ended up with the rest of the correspondence, in the fireplace.
Landis didn't go out much. He had a feebleminded gardener's son named Emil, who worked for him and lived on the property.
Clint had been combing
the Hollywood Hills for days looking for Landis Woodley's home. He worked the area behind Beachwood Canyon, cruising through the ostentatious show-houses built in the 1920s. From concrete European castles to Masonite antebellum Southern mansions, the film industry had brought some rather strange fetishes from the back lots to the construction sights. Most of the places looked like movie sets.
Clint's rusty VW bug labored up and down the winding canyon roads while Clint craned his neck to read the addresses. He was twenty-two years old and almost handsome behind the faded acne scars and styleless glasses. He had a determined, earnest face, and most people liked him. Clint passed unnoticed through the neighborhood, patiently driving the search grid he'd plotted the night before.
He eventually found the house with the help of old newspaper clippings about the wild parties that used to go on there. He learned that actress Vivian Loring, a neighbor of Woodley's, used to complain about the noise. Locating her house was not difficult, and from there he fanned out until he found the Woodley estate. The old man had miraculously kept his address out of the paper for years.
Landis Woodley's house tried to blend into a hill at the end of a tricky cul-de-sac. You couldn't actually see it from the road although you did get a glimpse of tile roof. Clint had to walk down a flight of mossy steps to get to the huge front door.
Constructed of rough gray stucco, the place looked as though it hadn't been painted in decades. The only visible windows were as small and grimy as portholes on a tramp steamer.
Clint knocked for at least fifteen minutes and was about to give up when a mailbox slotâsized view window screeched open, and a pair of bloodshot eyes appeared.
“What do you want?”
“Mr. Woodley?”
“Go away!”
“Mr. Landis Woodley?”
“No Woodley here!”
“I have a proposition for you.”
The four-inch-square wrought-iron window closed with the scream of chalk on a chalkboard.
Shut out, Clint stepped back, away from the massive gray edifice that jutted from the withered hillside. He'd expected that, too. The guy was a pro, after all. The king of the recluses. Clint used the opportunity to check out the big building from a different angle.
It rose above him like an amusement park ride, a cracked and forlorn stucco structure largely hidden by untended trees and tangled shrubbery. LA shimmered in the background.
He walked down a narrow, overgrown sidewalk along the side and calibrated the size of the building. It stood three levels high and appeared to be in worse condition when viewed from the side. Dead vines clung to rotting trellises and pointed into the slate-gray sky. The stucco walls were veined with cracks and discolored by a dry, black moss.
The house had been tastelessly refurbished in the early sixties. Sliding doors, wooden decks, a cheesy birdbath, and some terribly inappropriate landscaping had been added, all of it now in a state of advanced decay, and the combination of old and cheap was disorienting.
Clint heard a door open on one of the two decks above him. He heard the old man cough, then hock a brownish loogie over the side. It would have dropped into the near-dead, yellow-brown shrubs that grew out of the hill a hundred feet below the property, but the wind blew it back toward the house, under the deck. Much to Clint's consternation, it sailed in his direction and landed with an unhealthy splat at his feet. He winced.
Clint considered going back to the front door and knocking again, but he knew that would be a waste of time. He crept, catlike, looking for an alternative entrance.
Some plank steps led up to the first of the two decks. Calculating from the hang time on the loogie, Clint fixed Landis's position to be on the upper deck, at least two stories above.
He put a foot on the first step and tested his weight on the wood. It creaked and bent in protest at his 150-pound body.
“Who's that?” a phlegmy voice called.
Clint froze.
“Who the fuck's down there?”
He considered trying to sneak off, but knew his chances of getting inside would not improve with that strategy. Better to confront the problem directly.
He was still choosing his words when the old man shouted, “Stop right there! I'm warning you, whoever you are, I've got a gun, and I'll blow your goddamn head off if you take one more step!”
“It's me, Mr. Woodley, Clint Stockbern. I was just at the front door.”
“What the hell do you want?”
“I want to talk to you, that's all.”
There was a pause, then Clint heard another extended bout of coughing.
The cough trailed into his words. “No talk, go home.”
Clint worked his way to the edge of the steps, hooked his arm on the railing, and swung out over the hill. Looking up, he could see the unshaven, dour visage of Landis Woodley.
“Sir? If I could just have a few minutes of your time. I work for
Monster Magazine
, and I'd like to interview you.”