The Light at the End (19 page)

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Authors: John Skipp,Craig Spector

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Horror

BOOK: The Light at the End
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A little boy answered and started screaming in Vietnamese. He tried again.

“Hello? Is this Eddie? This is Mr. Wein…” Stephen shrieked and slammed the phone down on the hook. He stared heavenward, as if for guidance, all the while thinking
this is ridiculous, this is pointless, I’m never gonna get him, I might as well just forget about it…

But when he shut his eyes, dark things were in motion against a bright red backdrop. The light streaming through his eyelids from the bedside lamp was the color of blood.

He opened his eyes with a start, picked up the phone, and tried again.

And tried again.

And tried again.

Until he got it right.

 

CHAPTER 26

 

On the screen, somebody was getting disemboweled with an electric carving knife. Lots of blood. Lots of intestinal splatter. The audience hooted and screamed and chuckled while the poor victim yowled and thrashed, hokey synthesizers blaring and whooping it up in so-called musical accompaniment.

The name of the film was
Gore Feast
. True to its name,
Gore Feast
had been moving along at a ferocious clip, serving up fresh bodies to mutilate at regular five-minute intervals. Heads staved in with hammers. Eyes turned to pudding with eggbeaters. Torsos dangling from meathooks. Brains in blenders. Kidney pie.

It made Rudy very hungry indeed.

He was sitting in the balcony of the Cinema Village, where a special sleaze festival had been running all week. Eternal classics like
I Disemember Mama
and
I Spit On Your Grave
,
The Bloody Mutilators
and
Ilse: She-Wolf of the S.S.
, all gathered together under one roof for seven days of cinematic putrefaction. It was a big departure from the theatre’s standard fare… Woody Allen, Monty Python, Stanley Kubrick, and Federico Fellini… but it had its audience of twistos and fans who would pay good money to see it.

Two such creatures were sitting right in front of Rudy: two zit-faced butterballs with greasy hair and horn-rimmed glasses, the lenses on them thicker than bulletproof glass. Their mouths had been in motion continuously, shoveling down popcorn and making little whiny criticisms with their mouths still full. They were the kind of people that you just want to hit.

But Rudy had a better idea.

The carving knife victim had been reduced to cutlets by now; the audience had settled down; the camera had wandered off to look at something else. Ostensibly spooky music droned softly in the background as the camera finally settled on a closet door that slowly, silently, opened.

From the widening crack, a chain saw poked its many-toothed head out daintily.

“Oh,
Gawd
!” griped the fat, greasy fan on the right. “Can’t they do anything original? I mean, really!” Rudy felt his gorge become buoyant.

“Well, I have to admit that I never saw anyone get their eyes taken out with an eggbeater before,” the one on the left quipped with snooty derision.

“But a chain saw? I mean, really! Gawd!” As he packed another handful of popcorn into his face.

Shut up, you fat fuck. I can’t stand it. I mean it.
Rudy’s stomach felt hollow and coated with slime. He clutched it with cold, trembling fingers, rocking back and forth, just trying to get through the next few seconds without losing control.

But the chain saw extended itself out to its full length without making a sound. The drone built slowly in volume: far too slowly. Little clusters of impatient grumbling pockmarked the smoky air. Rudy gritted his teeth and sighed heavily, trembling. The moment dragged on and on.

“This is what passes for suspense in a Grade Z…” the second fan cleverly murmured.

And then the chain saw erupted into thundering action. The carving knife killer whirled just in time to watch the blade slice off the top of his head. Blood gushed out like paint from an overturned gallon can. He screamed. The crowd screamed with him.

The overall volume was more than adequate. Rudy leaned forward just as the first fan recoiled with involuntary disgust. He took a handful of greasy hair and pulled the fat head over the back of the seat, stretching the throat out, laying it bare.

Without hesitation, he found the carotid artery and proceeded to tap it.

The dying kid’s friend didn’t notice. He was quite absorbed, despite himself, with the spectacle of a man getting his head chain-sawed in half with one neat vertical sweep that wound up at the collarbone. The two halves of head flopped to either side and dangled like wet rubber chickens from what was left of the neck. It was quite an impressive display.

He was about to comment upon it when a cold hand took him by the base of the neck and squeezed. What came out of his air hole was just that: air, a great whooshing burst of it, muffled as a fart under a thick pile of blankets. His thick lips flapped impotently in the breeze. The grip on his neck tightened.

And slowly began to twist his head around.


Mrgmph
,” he managed, cow eyes bulging and bright with tears. They caught a glimpse of his dead friend’s face: the flesh bone-white and puffy, the jaw moist and slack, the eyes glimmering dully in the thin beam of light from the projectionist’s booth. He had just enough time to register the sight before a second hand came around from over his right shoulder to take him by the left side of the face.


Hey, squishy face
,” said a voice from behind him, a sibilant hiss that blew into his ear. “
How about this? Does this scare you alright?

A thin gurgle rose in the constricted throat.


I noticed that the movie wasn’t doing it for you.
” The hand on his face began to push, twisting his head around to the right, while the other hand held his neck stationary. Something went
ping
at the base of his skull, and white-hot pain shot through him like a lightning bolt.

He twisted his body onto its side in the seat, momentarily easing the pressure. His knees came up and banged against the dead meat at his side, which sagged and drooped like an overstuffed garbage bag. He pushed at it weakly, trying to keep it from falling on him. A whimper twitched, still-born, on his shuddering diaphragm.

Then he was jerked around entirely, facing toward the back of the theatre. He gulped down one last breath before the hands closed around his throat, sealing in the air like a Ziplock bag.

Rudy grinned at him, their noses only inches apart. His fangs were long and capped with darkness, like the tips of fountain pens. His eyes were dancing pools of flame.


Perhaps you’d like to offer some more criticisms
,” Rudy whispered, and his hands squeezed with all their might.


Mrgmph
,” the fan tried for, but he hadn’t the wind. His eyes rolled back under the purpling lids. His cheeks bulged like balloons. His zits darkened and swelled. He looked like an enormous pimple on the verge of bursting open.

Rudy glanced away for a moment, attracted by a sudden movement on the screen. Mr. Chain Saw was still at it, hacking poor old Mr. Carving Knife into teensy-weensy pieces. All four limbs had been severed. They lay flapping on the floor in a grotesque parody of what was actually happening in the seat before him. A line from a book popped into Rudy’s mind… something about life imitating art… and he suppressed a chuckle as he turned back to the matter in his hands.

Dark, bubbling froth had appeared in the corners of the fat kid’s mouth. His thick, blackening tongue lolled out stupidly. A wet
blatt
trumpeted from his cushioned ass-end as his bowels let go in his corduroy slacks. There was one last spasm that made the body jiggle like Jell-O on a spring.

And then it was over.

Rudy let go gradually, careful to keep the kid from sluicing all over him when the throat opened up enough to drain. Sure enough, a thick gout of something hit the floor next to him. His legs jerked away just in time. Then Rudy eased the corpse back into its seat and let go.

Abruptly, the theatre went all but silent. A quick glance up revealed that the film had cut to a new scene, from the perspective of a table on wheels being rolled down a long dark corridor. Rudy watched, slumping back in his own seat and sighing contentedly. He felt ever so much better. The first guy alone was a meal and a half.

At the end of the corridor, there was a door with a small oval window at its center. Pale bluish light filtered through it. In the moment before the rolling table connected with the door, Rudy checked his face and hands to make sure that there wasn’t any blood on them. There wasn’t. His fastidiousness pleased him.

You’re getting good
, he told himself.
Getting better all the time.

Then the door slammed open, and the camera moved into a great banquet hall. There, a vast array of kooky cannibals were munching out on the organs of their choice. Evidently, this was the much-heralded gore feast itself. Rudy smiled at the shrieks and shrill hilarity that ensued.

The chain saw killer appeared at center screen, leaning over the table that he’d just wheeled in. He removed the half-moon lid from a large circular tray, and there was Mr. Carving Knife’s head… apparently glued back together… with a rosy red apple in his mouth.

Rudy took that as a cue. He’d have loved to stay and see the rest, but the smell of fresh feces was beginning to spread. He rose to his feet and moved toward the stairs, noting that he wasn’t the only one walking out at this point in the proceedings.

Never realized that the movies could be this much fun
, he thought, laughing to himself, and then headed down the stairs.

Behind him, the riotous roar of the crowd was like music, sweet music, to his ears.

 

CHAPTER 27

 

“So you say that this guy knows something about it.” Allan was dubious and, what was more, discomfited. He looked like the man who picked Door Number Three and wound up with two tons of manure.

“Yep,” Joseph said, not breaking his stride. “Like I said, he knows Rudy.”

“And who are those other people we’re going to meet?”

“One girl who says Rudy is sending her nightmares. One girl who thinks Rudy might have murdered her roommate. And some other guy, I don’t know what his story is.”

“He played basketball with Rudy back at Transylvania High,” Ian said, prodding Allan in the ribs. “Cheer up, Squiggums. This ain’t nobody’s funeral.”

Allan groaned and ground his teeth against the stem of his pipe.

They moved rapidly down Bleecker Street toward their rendezvous with destiny. The site of this encounter was slated as The Other End, a laid-back little bar and nightclub with two separate rooms. They had chosen the smaller room because the music was acoustic, not electric, and because there was no cover charge. “Besides,” Stephen had stressed, “it’s not a very busy place, and there’s a big table in the back where we could probably sit all night.”

“I’m less than thrilled by this whole idea,” Allan grumbled. They moved past a NO PARKING sign, and he tapped out his pipe against it cheerlessly.

“We know, we know,” Ian droned, mocking him.

“Some people just don’t know how to have a good time. Right, Joseph?” He elbowed both of his friends in unison.

“Cut that out,” Allan grumbled anew. Joseph just grunted and kept walking.

“So much fun, I’ve never had,” Ian added, grinning wickedly. Then his eyes perked up, and he said, “There it is.” He pointed at a dark green awning on the other side of the street.

They moved single file between a pair of parked cars and stopped in a line at the edge of traffic. The light, for the moment, was against them. Allan took the opportunity to make one last appeal to their senses.

“I’d really rather not go in there, if you don’t mind,” he said, “and I…”

“I do mind.” Joseph had turned to face him, constrained by one strand of patience that was wearing very thin. “I want you to meet these people, because I want you to see just how serious this is. I want you to see that we’re not just making this up. Okay? I want you to see for yourself.”

“I…”


Allan
.” The tone of his voice was unforgiving. “If you don’t go in there with us, I don’t even wanna talk to you.”

“He’s not kidding,” Ian piped in, not as funny as he’d have liked. “It could mean the end of a beautiful relationship.”

“This sucks,” Allan said, staring down at his feet.

But when the light changed, and Joseph stormed across with Ian capering and grimacing monsterlike behind, Allan knew that he had no choice.

Very reluctantly, he followed.

 

“Are you sure this is the right room?” Ian asked once they got inside.

“In the back,” Joseph answered, still forging ahead. They moved past the jukebox, the bar on their left. The room widened at that point, about thirty yards from the back wall and the little stage in the corner. As they stepped into the expanded space, Joseph glanced to his right and saw a very large table, catercorner to the stage. Four people were seated around it: two guys, two gals. Because the guys were facing away, it took Joseph a minute to peg the one on the right.

“Stephen,” he said, stepping forward.

At the table, all four of them looked up at once, the men half-turning in their seats. Stephen’s eyes lit up at once; it was hard to tell if the emotion behind it was fear, or relief, or both.

“Joseph,” he said, standing up gingerly and gesturing toward the seats. It crossed his mind to offer his hand for shaking. It crossed back out again.

The two young women were seated on a long bench that ran along the wall. They both slid down, and Joseph seated himself beside them. The man on the left, a tall, gangly guy with glasses and a dark ponytail at the far end of his receding hairline, moved one seat over to remain abreast of the girl he had been facing: a sultry brunette with a lot of makeup on her pale, agreeable features.

Allan sat down between the two guys and across from the other woman. Because her eyes were downcast, he took a moment to study her: the short, dark hair, unwashed and disheveled; the sunken, slightly discolored flesh around her eyes; the deep worry lines on either side of her thin, trembling lips, corresponding to the furrows in her brow.

She looked like someone who’d just spent the last several days as a guest of the Spanish Inquisition. Despite all that, it was obvious that she was a very good looker, under ordinary circumstances. It tugged at Allan’s heart, and he was forced to look away.

Ian, too, had been staring at her. Ever since they first looked up, his eyes had not left her face. He’d caught her gaze, in that moment, and a spark had gone off in the back of his head.

Oh, my God
, he’d thought, something tightening up inside him like a wet washcloth being wrung out by hand.
What has he done to you?

He caught himself now, still standing at the head of the table, awkwardly staring at a total stranger. He shook his head vigorously and grinned like an idiot at the wall, then turned to appropriate an empty chair from the neighboring table and seat himself, still at the head.

“Well,” he said, grinning sheepishly around the table. “Where do we start?”

There was a brief, nervous silence, full of unrealized and semi-furtive glances. Stephen shifted uncomfortably in his chair. Even Joseph seemed temporarily at a loss.

“Okay. How about this? My name’s Ian. And you are… Stephen?” Stephen nodded, smiling faintly. Ian nodded back and smiled, then looked to the other guy.

“Danny,” said the other guy, grinning affably Allan interjected with his name at that point, and Claire… the brunette… quickly followed suit with a breathy voice that bordered on the suggestive.

“And this is Joseph,” Ian said, as Joseph didn’t seem inclined to introduce himself: he nodded, expressionless, at the mention of his name, then leaned back on the bench and crossed his arms.

One person remained to be introduced. Her eyes were closed, her head tilted downward. She didn’t speak, she didn’t move. The new silence that sprang into being was as heavy as the knot on a hangman’s noose. Not even Ian knew how to go on.

Finally, Stephen leaned forward and said, “This is Josalyn. She’s had a very… rough experience…”

That was when she began to cry.

“Oh, Jesus,” Ian said, starting to reach forward with one hand. Allan echoed the gesture. They both stopped short.

It started as a sharp, sudden intake of breath that jerked her body once and then stopped. She sat there, straight-backed and rigid and motionless as a statue. The first tear rolled down her cheek as if by magic, from out of nowhere, like the stories of the bleeding Christ re-enacted.

From there, it took about fifteen seconds for the walls to cave in, and for her to collapse across the table, the air lightly shaken by her gentle sobbing sounds.

“Okay,” Joseph said abruptly, putting one large fist on the table as he leaned resolutely forward. “We got that out of the way. Now where’s the goddamn waitress? I need a drink, and we need to start talkin’.”

Nobody else knew how to react, but Ian and Allan both flashed him a look that had
you heartless cocksucker
written all over it. Joseph shrugged, not exactly apologetic, Josalyn, for her part, seemed not to have heard. Her head remained on the table. Her sobbing softly continued.

As if just slightly behind cue, the waitress appeared and asked them what they wanted to drink. “A pitcher of Bud,” Joseph answered immediately.

“Make that two,” Ian followed.

“No. Three,” Allan added.

Danny smiled despite himself and turned to Claire. “You want to split one?” he asked. She nodded, smiling back. “Okay. We’re up to four.”

Stephen, apparently remembering his last drinking session with Joseph, said, “Just a mug, please,” with an uneasy grin.

It was Allan who leaned forward and said, “Josalyn? Can we get you something?”

She paused for a moment, seemed to consider it, then lifted her head just enough to be heard and said, in a tone only slightly above a whisper, “Wine.”

“Wine?” the waitress repeated, uncertain.

“Yes. White wine.” She lifted her head and pulled herself upright, made a go of smiling around the table. It was close. Damn close. And her eyes, though bloodshot and cloudy with tears, were far more alive than they’d been a minute before.

“I’m sorry,” she said, and looked down again.

“It’s all right, kiddo,” Ian assured her. “Not to worry. So long as you’re okay, it’s okay.”

She looked at him, then. The second their eyes met, something moved between and through them like a quick jolt of electricity. It happened in a fraction of a second. That was all it took.

It didn’t get past Danny. He knew a connection when he saw one. His hand reached across the table as if by reflex to close lightly around Claire’s. She blew him a kiss and looked back at the others. She’d picked up on it, too.

In fact, none of them failed to notice the spark, though each had a different reaction: numb amazement from Stephen, mild jealousy from Allan, vast impatience from Joseph. The waitress, turning away to fulfill their orders, assumed that they were old lovers who’d fallen on hard times, and wondered why they were sitting so far apart.

“Can we get on with it?” Joseph growled, punching a hole in the moment.

Ian turned: startled at first, then smiling with a bit of his own cold annoyance. “Would you just relax for a second?”

“Hey,” Joseph retaliated. “I just didn’t know that this was the social hour. Somebody’s getting their throat ripped out right now, but what the hey? Maybe we should all just go to the movies.”

Ian rolled his eyes. His lips and shoulders tightened. He glanced at Josalyn, whose gaze dropped to the floor again, and then back at Joseph angrily.

“Okay. All right,” he said, sweeping his gaze around the table now. “I guess we all know why we’re here. Everybody’s been having some weird experiences lately. Am I right?”

Allan was the only one who didn’t nod assent. He was watching the proceedings with slit-eyed perplexity.

“Well, does anyone want to tell us what they think is going on?”

A long, shuffling, agitated silence.

“Right.” Ian smiled nervously and cleared his throat. “Well…”

“There’s a monster running around in the subways,” Joseph interrupted. “Does everybody know that already?”

Josalyn looked stunned. Stephen looked miserable. Danny and Claire lit up like Christmas trees, like kids on a rollercoaster, with matching expressions of awe and excitement. They looked at each other and beamed.

“What, you think that’s funny?” Joseph demanded, his fists squaring off.

“No, no,” Danny said, still grinning despite the force of Joseph’s anger. “It’s just that we
knew
that’s what it was! A vampire, right?”

Now it was Joseph’s turn to look stunned. That was the last thing in the world he’d expected to hear from anyone else. He nodded thickly, mouth gaping, eyes momentarily dazed.

“What makes you think that?” Ian asked, leaning into it, his eyes sharp and leveled on Danny’s. There was a little half-smile on his face that he wasn’t even aware of.

“Well…” Danny began, and then the waitress returned with their drinks.

 

Josalyn could feel herself going insane. It was like the floor had opened up under her feet, plunging her downward toward the snake-filled pit of utter madness. Fear slid through her, cold and reptilian. Her flesh crawled, clammy to her own touch as she hugged herself in sudden desperation.

A hush fell over the group as the waitress distributed the pitchers and glasses. It was the kind of silence that fells over a room when a bunch of kids are plotting a prank and somebody’s mom walks in: immediate, sly, and guilty as hell. It struck Josalyn with alarming force that she was caught up in some twisted children’s game, a terrible make-believe that had ripped through the barriers.

A nightmare made flesh.

What are they talking about?
she heard her inner voice screaming. Her eyes cast wildly about at them all.
Vampires? Vampires? What the hell are they TALKING about?
She shuddered painfully, and her fingernails dug into her bare arms.

The one named Danny poured himself a beer and started to speak again. She turned to face him. His eyes, behind the wire-rimmed glasses, looked distorted and far too large for his head. She suppressed a sob that nobody seemed to notice.

As the pit yawned, wider, beneath her feet.

*

“It started when we went to see
Nosferatu
,” Danny said eagerly. “It’s this great German vampire movie, directed by Werner Herzog and…” He saw very quickly that they didn’t want to hear about the film. With a little nervous laugh, he continued.

“Anyway, we were both sitting there,” indicating Claire, who nodded, “and all of a sudden, we both got hit with the same wild thought. We didn’t even know each other at the time… we were just sitting next to each other in the theatre… when we both got hit with it at the same time.”

“What if there were a vampire in the subways?” Claire said, re-enacting the moment. Danny laughed… the only one to do so… and continued.

“Yeah. Because there’s this one scene where Nosferatu lands in England, and his ship is full of rats. That made us think about the big mass murder… I guess it was Monday night, or Tuesday morning… that happened on the subway. Remember?”

Everybody nodded but Josalyn this time. Danny noticed for the first time that she didn’t look well at all: like she might shudder to pieces at any second. He looked away quickly and went on, a bit shakier himself.

“The whole back of the train was full of rats. That’s what the papers said, anyway. And one guy had his throat torn out, like an animal did it. Vampires are supposed to be able to change into all kinds of shit. Like wolves, for instance.”

“But did they find any people with the blood sucked out of them?” Allan asked, turning to face him directly.

“Well, no, but…”

“Well, then, why did it have to be a vampire? I mean, it seems to me like twin puncture wounds in the jugular vein would be the thing you’d want to look for, right?” When Danny didn’t say anything, Allan’s nod was grimly triumphant. “That’s a pretty off-the-wall theory, if you ask me.”

“The whole thing’s off-the-wall,” Ian said, his eyes thoughtful. “That doesn’t mean that it’s not happening.”

“Yeah, but…”

“It might have been just because we were stoned, and we made some kind of subconscious association,” Danny broke in now. “But like I said, it hit both of us at once; and it was a very strong, gut-level kind of feeling. We knew it was true. We just knew it. And then…”


What are you talking about?
” Josalyn stood up suddenly. Her eyes were wide and crazy; her face was flushed; she was shaking so hard that the whole table vibrated as she leaned her hands upon it. “
What is all this vampire garbage? I don’t understand! What does this have to do with anything?

Nobody knew how to react. Ian mouthed the word whoa and sank back into his wooden chair. Danny gaped in silence. Stephen swallowed a lump of something nasty and cringed. Something nastier was on the way. He could feel it coming.

It was Claire who reached out to take Josalyn’s arm and broke the silence.

“I’ll tell you what this has to do with,” Claire said, her voice level and almost chillingly controlled. “My roommate was murdered on Friday night. Her blood was drained, and her head was torn off.” Josalyn twitched violently, but Claire retained her grip. “I saw who she was with earlier that night. Not too well, really… we were in a bar, and it was packed in there… but I definitely caught a glimpse of him.”

“And when she described him to me,” Danny added “it sounded just like this guy I’d seen hanging around with Stephen.”

“Omigod,” Josalyn whispered, sagging back into her seat, her face bleaching out from the inside. “Omigod. omigod…”

“And then I remembered,” Danny concluded, “that Stephen was looking for him on the day after those murders in the subway.”

“That was the day you called me up,” Josalyn said, the words slow and ponderous, turning to stare at Stephen with numb, disbelieving eyes. “You said he disappeared, and… and that you thought he was
dead
…”

“WHAT?” Joseph roared, slamming his fists against the table. Stephen practically flew out of his chair. “You little bastard! You didn’t tell me!” He reached for Stephen’s collar and missed by an inch.

Stephen slid his chair back a foot from the table before he even knew he’d moved. Ian grabbed onto Joseph’s arm and tried to drag it back, nearly upsetting both of their pitchers. “
Hey!
” Joseph yelled, yanking violently free. They stared at each other, red-eyed and panting, for a long, dangerous second.

Then Stephen bolted from his seat and started to walk across the room.

“Hey!” Joseph repeated. He started to pull himself up from the bench; and for a second time, Ian grabbed him by the arm.

“Let me try to get him,” Ian said. The anger had drained from his face. “He isn’t scared half to death of me. Yet.” Then he flashed a crafty, knowing grin, waited for Joseph to acknowledge it, and took off after Stephen.

“Jesus H. Christ,” Allan murmured. The rest of them were speechless. Joseph reached for his pitcher and sullenly refilled his glass, draining it at a gulp. Then he filled it up again and set it down, staring defiantly around the table.

Suddenly, Josalyn started to giggle. Her hands curled up into little limp fists. She brought them up daintily and held them to her lips, as if they could hold the laughter in. Her eyes were glassy and remote and unreal, like two polished buttons on the face of a doll. When she spoke, her voice was squeaky as a rubber squeeze toy.

“So Rudy is… a
vampire
, huh?” A high-pitched titter escaped her, and a tear rolled down one cheek. “Oh, that’s great. That’s just fantastic. I… I can’t believe all the
fun
we’re having!”

The laughter got louder, more hysterical. Joseph looked at his hands, wondering if he should slap her. He decided against it, and emptied his glass instead.

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