The Administrator (12 page)

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Authors: S. Joan Popek

BOOK: The Administrator
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“Sh ... she’s HERE! I heard her! The walls buckled ... the room tilted! She’s here ... she’s here!”

Helena shouted, “Jeffery, quick. Help me lift her.”

Jeffery stood immobile, staring at his mother on the floor.

“Jeffery!”

Startled, he jumped to follow Helena’s command.

Alice began wailing about ghosts and devils and ran from the room screaming.

By the time they got her down to the sofa in the library, Donna had fainted.

Hours later, after getting her aunt tranquilized and asleep in one of the many bedrooms, Helena told her two cousins that she was leaving.

“I don’t even know why I came.” She said. “When Aunt Donna called and said I should, I tried to tell her no, but it’s impossible to tell your mother no. So, I came. It was a mistake, and I’m going home.”

“But, you can’t just leave us.” Pleaded Alice. “What if what she said is true? What will we do?”

“There is no such thing as ghosts, Alice. Even a woman as selfish as Aunt Maggie can’t come back from the dead. Your mother imagined it, but if it bothers you, perhaps you should leave too.”

Lily entered the study noiselessly. “Shall I call a taxi for you, Miss Helena?”

“Yes, thank you , Lily.”

“Would you like some tea while you wait for your ride, Miss.?”

“Yes. That would be nice, Lily. Thank you.”

The maid allowed herself a fleeting smile at the polite young lady. “Thank you, Miss. Will the rest of the family be going too?” Her scathing gaze raked over the other two in the room like she might look at a roach she was about to step on.

“Not on your life. We’re staying until we get everything we came for.” Jeffery’s voice echoed the calculating edge his mother’s had carried earlier.

“So be it.” Mumbled Lily as she limped painfully to the door.

“May I help you, Lily?” Helena asked.

“No, Miss. I’ll handle it.”

“I need more than tea.” Declared Jeffery. “I’m going down to the wine cellar. I know the old biddy kept her best stuff there.”

Old biddy, huh? You’ll get what’s coming to you all right. Maggie reached into the cellar. She was getting stronger. A chill swept through the house that no fire could warm.

Helena shuddered and moved closer to the fireplace. Alice sat on the sofa, not moving, her face pale and drawn as she stared at her brother’s retreating back.

The crash from the basement sounded like the walls had caved in. Doors all over the house began to slam open and then close repeatedly. The din was so loud it almost covered the sound of Jeffery’s screams.

Wind rushed down the halls. Helena thought she heard an outraged voice scream, Mine, somewhere amidst the uproar. Alice buried her head under a sofa cushion and started crying hysterically.

Helena rushed toward the screams. As she took the stairs two at a time, she prayed she would not find what she thought she might.
 

His body lay beneath a wine casket. She could not see his face. The uncovered bulb swung gently as if a summer breeze had touched it. In the arcing shadows of the dim light, a dark, crimson stain grew around his thick, black hair and spread slowly across the stark white tile floor. She averted her eyes from his head, reached for his extended arm, felt for a pulse, found none, and stumbled backward. Stunned, she turned and walked back up the stairs. Lily met her as she reached the door.

Her face half hidden in the shadows of the flickering light below, the maid asked if she should call the doctor.

“I don’t believe it will do any good.” Helena mumbled. Shock kept her calm. “But, I suppose we should.”

As she finished the sentence, she raised her head to listen to a tinkling noise that sounded like a thousand icicles were rolling down a hill. The sound increased. The house began to shake as if rocked by an earthquake. The tinkling rose to a crashing crescendo followed by the sound of broken glass and what sounded like a voice shouting, Mine.

Stillness, silence. Nothing moved, or even breathed. “What was that?” She whispered to Lily.

“I don’t know Miss. It sounded like it came from upstairs.”

“Oh, my God! Aunt Donna!”

Helena wanted to run outside, away from this house, but she knew she must go to her Aunt. She felt no need to hurry as her feet led her unwilling body toward the stairs. She was afraid that she knew what she would find.

Donna lay underneath a massive chandelier that sprawled over her body like a million, glistening teardrops. Her staring eyes were wide, full of horror, her arms and legs at unnatural angles. The blood from where the sharp crystal shards had pierced her skin had begun to stain the glittering glass a delicate shade of pink.

Helena vomited on Maggie’s expensive, Persian rug.

Lily helped her walk, on trembling legs, back downstairs and disappeared to call the police and the doctor.

She was numb. This couldn’t be happening. It was a nightmare. But, the white-faced girl opposite her on the sofa proved it was real.

“Was ... was it Mama?” Alice whispered.

Helena nodded silently.

“We’re next, you know.” Alice croaked. “It’s Aunt Maggie. She’s going to kill us all.”

“Don’t be ridiculous. Just accidents. That’s all. Just accidents.” Helena tried to convince herself along with the younger girl.

“I want to see Mama.”

“No, Alice, wait until the doctor gets here.”

“Can he help her?”

The lump in Helena’s dry throat prevented her from lying to the girl. She said nothing.

Alice nodded and rose from the sofa. “I’m going to take a bath.” She said.

“A bath? You’re going to take a ba ... . Oh hell. Okay. It will relax you until the doctor gets here.”

“Yes. . .relax.”

Alice strolled down the hall almost happy. She was humming when she closed the door to the bathroom. She was still humming when she sliced her wrists with the razor, and she sighed contentedly as she sunk down into the tub full of warm water. She thought how pretty the rosy, swirling water was as she closed her eyes for the last time.
 

Lily stood beside her mistress’ bed looking down at the body. “Must the girl die too, Miss Maggie?”

Yes. She is the last. No one else will come when they are all dead. Maggie’s voice echoed from the mirror, the walls, the floors.

“But, she is so young, and she treats me with respect.”

It is all mine. Do you understand? No one else may have any of it. It is all mine. She must die.

“Must it be violent?”
 
      

The windows vibrated with impatience as Maggie snarled. Do it any way you like. Just do it!

Lily’s gnarled hand trembled slightly as she brought the tea tray to Helena. The empty bottle of sweet poison lay nestled in her apron pocket as she poured a cup for the silent girl. “Here, Miss. This will make you feel better.”

Helena looked into Lily’s ancient eyes. Her gaze stroked the furrowed skin on the old woman’s cheek. “How old are you, Lily?”

“Older than time,” Lily answered. “Older than Satan.”

Helena took the proffered cup of tea, and her eyes searched the old woman’s ancient face. Her look caught and held the time-shadowed, gray eyes. “You didn’t phone anyone. Did you?” It was not really a question—more, a statement of fact.
 

“No, Miss. Drink your tea now, Miss.”

Obediently lifting the cup to her lips, she watched a tear form in Lily’s eye and lazily flow onto the old lady’s cheek to follow an age line down to the corner of her puckered mouth. As the warm tea wrapped its flavor around her lips, Helena closed her eyes and savored the sweetness on her tongue for a moment, then quickly drained the cup. She studied Lily’s face again in silence. After a while, she whispered, “Yes . . .very old.”

Her limp hand lost its hold, and the cup tumbled to the floor. She wanted to say she was sorry for the mess, but her lips wouldn’t move. As shadows drifted across her eyes blocking her view of Lily’s face, she heard a triumphant cry.

Mine! All mine. For Eternity!
 

 

 

Terra-4U

 

“Why do I let you talk me into these idiotic schemes?” Jonas shook his thin forefinger in front of Gordon’s broad face, then ran his hand across his own receding hairline. Static electricity pulled his sparse hair to attention on top of his head where it stood straight up like an emaciated shock of wheat and waved gently at Gordon.

Gordon chuckled, “Nice Freudian choice of words there, Jonas. Especially since you’re losing all of yours.” He laughed and tauntingly patted his own full head of hair.

Jonas snorted, “Well, at least its not dead-mouse gray like that mop on your head. And that has nothing to do with my question. Why are we here? Why didn’t you let Amalgamated Electronics send one of their young, flashy geniuses to fix Terra-4U?” He waved his thin hands in the air, screwed his face into a grimace and mimicked, “‘Let us go to Mars’, you said. ‘We’ll fix old Terra-4U,’ you said. ‘We built him. We’ll fix him,’ you said.” His voice rose to a high pitched sing-song, then subsided to a growl, “Gordon, you know I hate weightlessness, and the Mars colony is just about the dullest spot in the universe. They recycle the water and even some of the food, for heaven’s sake. Why do I let you put me through this torture for a stupid machine?” He shook an accusing finger again just inches from Gordon’s nose.

Gordon dodged his friend’s stabbing digit and said, “Machines aren’t stupid. Or smart either. They’re just machines. They follow orders. Hell, you know that. You designed Terra-4U.”

Jonas’ fine-lined lips pulled into a leer. “Yeah. And you built him, but obviously not very well, or we wouldn’t be here.”
 

“I just followed your specifications. Unmistakably the fault is yours, not mine,” Gordon shot back.

“Oh yeah? Any technical engineer with half a brain could follow the schematics and figure out what’s wrong with him. Which brings me back to my original question. Why did we have to come?”

“For the money, Old Pal. We’re broke. This free-lancing scientist stuff isn’t as lucrative as we thought. And put those wild hands of yours away before you give me another black eye. Someday I’m gonna’ handcuff your hands behind your back just to see if your mouth works without ‘em.”

Jonas crammed his hands into his pockets where they jiggled in confinement. “Well we wouldn’t be broke if you hadn’t insisted on that Singapore fiasco. Big ideas. Always big ideas,” he mumbled as he turned to stare out the view port at the red planet below.

“Oh come on, you old goat. Get in the landing boat. The sooner we get down there and fix the robot, the sooner we get to go home.” Gordon turned and strode toward the hatch. He glanced back at Jonas just in time to see him make an obscene gesture in his direction.

Gordon’s large, blue eyes grew round in mock surprise as he grinned. His craggy face displayed traces of heavy lines beginning to etch themselves into the corners of his mouth and eyes. He returned the gesture good-naturedly. “Promises, promises.”

Jonas’ grudging laugh at the two men’s long standing signal that the disagreement was ended and it was time to go to work rang against the whirring whoosh of the opening hatch. “All right. Let’s do it, you old pervert,” he grumbled as he followed Gordon into the landing boat.

The short, bulky redheaded engineer who met them at the port smiled, but his blue eyes flashed anxiety. Countless freckles appeared stark against his pale, young face. He shook hands with the two middle-aged men and introduced himself as Charles, the head engineer of the Mars Terra-form project.

As he turned sharply to take them to their quarters, Jonas mouthed to Gordon, “It’s happened again. He called us, Sir.” Are we that old?”

Gordon grinned and whispered, “To him, we are.” Then he said aloud, “Charles, hold up a minute.”

The young man stopped and turned to them. “Yes, Sir?”

Jonas scowled, and Gordon said, “Forget quarters for now. Take us to see the robot, and tell us what’s happening on the way.”
      

Charles smiled and said, “I was hoping you would get right to work. This thing has us all spooked.”

“Spooked?”

“Yeah, we’ve never seen a robot behave this way before. Especially one as large and heavily equipped as Terra-4U is. We thought about shutting it down, but no one wants to get that close to its evacuation pods.”

“Where is he now?” asked Jonas.

“Same place it’s been for the last four days. Just inside the bay door. It hasn’t moved. Just sits there and....”

Gordon frowned. “And what?”

“It sings songs, and then it cries.”

Jonas’ mouth fell open, “Sings and cries? A robot can’t cry.”

“Well this one does. Not tears, of course. But sobs. Loud, wailing sobs. I tell you, Sir, it gives me the jeebies.” Charles’ shoulders shivered as if he was suddenly attacked by a chill wind, which was impossible in the absolute, 68 degree temperature of the underground city. He led them through a maze of seemingly unending corridors walled with a metallic, silver alloy.

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