Ultimate Supernatural Horror Box Set (56 page)

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Authors: F. Paul Wilson,Blake Crouch,J. A. Konrath,Jeff Strand,Scott Nicholson,Iain Rob Wright,Jordan Crouch,Jack Kilborn

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #Ghosts, #Occult, #Stephen King, #J.A. Konrath, #Blake Crouch, #Horror, #Joe Hill, #paranormal, #supernatural, #adventure

BOOK: Ultimate Supernatural Horror Box Set
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“What branch of the military were you in?” Tom asked.

The man’s face remained blank, and he didn’t answer.

“Do you work for the government, or for Forenzi directly?”

“Please move along,” the guard said.

Tom shrugged, and he followed Moni and the others down the stairs, across the great room, and to a hallway lined with drab paintings depicting plantation life. They looked old, paint peeling and a decade’s worth of grime on them. Slaves in the field, picking tobacco. Blackjack Reedy astride a horse, whip in hand. An endless field of cattails, stretching off into the horizon. Everyone had stopped next to a closed door, and Tom assumed it was the queue for the examination room. But he quickly figured out the group had huddled around another painting, this one of Butler House.

It was massive, perhaps a meter tall and twice as wide, in an ornate frame and protected behind some non-reflective glass. The picture depicted the house in the 1800s, when it was still new, and the fields were filled with cotton. Tom didn’t understand the interest until Frank pointed to a figure in one of the windows.

It was a woman, her hair tied back, a pensive look on her face. Tom squinted at it, then turned to Sara, who had gone ashen.

The woman in the painting was a dead-ringer for her.

Tom moved in closer, checking the figures in the other windows.

He saw Frank’s face peering out between half-closed shutters on the second floor.

Deb, opening the front door to the house. Mal in the shadows behind her.

Moni’s face, complete with her pock marks.

Wellington, in the cotton field with a scythe.

Two people in a horse-drawn buggy, approaching the house. Pang and Aabir.

Tom looked for himself, dreading the search, holding his breath.

“You’re here,” Belgium said, pointing to the side of the house.

Tom didn’t understand what he was seeing. It was definitely his face, lying sideways on the ground, but his body was obscured by scrub brush.

“And over here,” Belgium continued, moving his finger.

Then Tom understood.

His body wasn’t in the bushes. His body was sitting against the house, holding a knife, his shirt drenched with blood.

Tom had apparently cut off his own head, and it had rolled away.

 

Deb

Mal was in much better spirits since Dr. Forenzi’s talk at supper, which was just in time for Deb’s mood to take a nose dive.

They passed co-dependency back and forth like two hobos sharing a cigar. So it was Deb’s turn to feel awful, and Mal’s to buoy her up.

But he’d gone out to ask the cop some questions, leaving Deb alone in her room.

Which was when a painting in the bedroom fell off the wall.

It scared the shit out of her, and when she went to look for him she found a convention of sorts in Tom’s room.

Now, first in line to be examined, she still hadn’t had the chance to tell Mal what had happened. The painting—a ghastly picture of a brooding southern gentlemen standing calmly in the middle of a storm—had dropped off the wall just as she was wiping the sweat off her stumps.

It could have been a coincidence. Or it could have been supernatural.

What was behind it didn’t matter. What mattered was Mal hadn’t been there for her, when she’d been there for him since the airport in Pittsburgh.

It wasn’t fair. So now she was coping with resentment as well as fear, and having to go in first made Deb even more on edge. Add in seeing herself on the hallway painting, and Deb wanted to either cry, rip all her hair out, or both.

“Tom’s partner disappeared here last week,” Mal said, whispering over Deb’s shoulder.

Deb sensed the worry in her husband’s voice. But she was worried, too. She needed him to be strong for a while. The fact that he wasn’t made her angry as well as scared.

“Deb, did you hear me?”

She turned around so fast that she lost her balance, which for Deb was about the most humiliating thing she could do. That Mal had to quickly reach out and steady her made it even worse.

“Leave me alone,” she said, teeth clenched and trying to pull away.

He recoiled like he’d just seen a snake. “Deb? What’s wrong?”

“It isn’t all about you, Mal. I’m hurting, too. I need support just like you do.”

“Deb, I—”

“I don’t need this right now.”

The door to the examination room opened, and a male voice from inside said, “Come in.”

Deb began to enter, but Mal held her back.

“Let go, Mal.”

“Let’s talk about this. We can let someone else cut ahead.”

“Let. Go.”

“At least let me go first so I can tell you what to expect. I know you hate doctors. Let me—”

Deb pulled away, wobbled into the room, and slammed the door behind her.

She immediately regretted her decision.

The exam room looked like it jumped off a postcard from the 1800s. The examination table was made of wood, with a cracked leather cushion, and metal arm rests with buckled straps. A dusty apothecary shelf, filled with old glass bottles, took up most of the left wall. Along the right wall were a desk, a water basin, and a shelf of moldering, leather-bound books. On the desk was some sort kind of organ—a human lung maybe—floating in a specimen jar of gray liquid.

“Take a seat.”

The doctor still hadn’t turned around. Her husband had been right; she was afraid of going to the doctor. She’d seen too many in her lifetime, and they always hurt her in some way.

Deb considered walking back out, letting Mal go first. But stubbornness won out over nerves and she went to the antique examination table and sat down.

“Name?” the doctor asked. He was filling out something on a clip board.

“Deborah Dieter.”

Deb looked at the old medical cart next to the table. On it were filthy old medical tools. A bone saw with crusted brown flecks. Pointy forceps. A large, curved scalpel. A jagged pair of oversized snippers. A hand drill that seemed more suited to a woodworker than a doctor. Rusty trocars. A rough-edged metal speculum that was open wider that a human being could accommodate.

Deb could feel her mouth go dry and her heart rate kick up. Getting an exam was bad enough. Getting an exam from some quack stuck in the nineteenth century was much worse.

Of course it’s much worse.

That’s the point.

Deb closed her eyes and slowed down her breathing, controlling her fear. This had to be part of Forenzi’s experiment. To try and scare her. What could be scarier than a collection of barbaric surgical implements from the past?

After ten seconds or so, Deb was able to reign in her panic. Then she opened her eyes and found herself face-to-face with—

Oh my god.

She recognized this so-called doctor. He was the hotel clerk who sent her to the Rushmore Inn. The same pale, pasty face. The same crooked toupee.

But he’s still in prison!

Isn’t he?

“I’m going to take some of your blood, Mrs. Dieter.” His breath smelled like sour milk.

“I need to…” Deb said weakly. “Are… are you…?”

“I’m Dr. Madison. I assist Dr. Forenzi.”

He was tugging on some rubber gloves, and gave Deb a crooked smile.

Is this the guy? Or does he just look like the guy, and my imagination is doing the rest?

Deb sometimes thought she saw people she knew in crowds, only to look closer and realize they just resembled the people she knew. Her mind filled in the blanks, jumped to conclusions. It happened to everyone.

Is it happening to me now?

“Why, Mrs. Dieter. You look like you’ve seen a ghost.” He opened up a plastic package, taking out a long needle attached to a clear tube.

Maybe this isn’t the guy. Maybe Forenzi hired him because he looked like the man Deb knew.

To scare her.

After all, this is a fear study.

“You… remind me of someone.”

“I get that a lot. George Clooney, right?”

More like Boris Karloff.

“Please put your arm on the armrest, Mrs. Dieter. I’m going to strap it down so you keep still.”

He buckled a strap around her wrist.

“So, are you from around here, Doctor?”

“Oh, no. I’m from West Virginia.”

Where the Rushmore was.

“Been here a while?”

“Only recently. For the past few years I’ve been… busy.”

“Busy doing what?”

He smiled again. “Just hold still, Mrs. Dieter. This will only pinch for a moment.”

The needle was jammed into her forearm. The agony was immediate.

Then he began to move it from side to side.

“Where is that vein? I can never find it.”

Deb ground her teeth, locking her jaw. The doctor wiggled it, going deeper, so deep Deb was sure he’d hit bone.

The pain was bad. But the anxiety was nuclear.

Deb shut her eyes again, begging the universe for it to stop.

“You have such tiny veins. I may have to get a smaller needle.”

Yes! Please please please do that!

Her whole world had been reduced to that needle in her flesh, probing, twisting, poking left and right like she was being tenderized instead of giving blood.

“Maybe I should try the other arm.”

No!

“Yes, I think that’ll I have to… ahh, there it is.”

Deb chanced a look and saw him attach a vacuum vial to the end of the tube, and it began to fill with blood.

“Was that so awful, Mrs. Dieter?”

Deb’s hair was stuck to her head from sweating. She blew out a deep breath, and pumped her fist to make the blood go faster.

“Looking good, Mrs. Dieter. Looking… oh, wait. We’re slowing down.”

He flicked the vial with a fingernail, which tugged on the needle and caused Deb a spike of pain.

“I believe your vein has collapsed.” He roughly grabbed the needle, then pulled it out.

“Do we have enough blood?” Deb whispered.

He shook his head. “I’m afraid not.”

“So…?”

“So I guess we’ll have to try that other arm after all.”

Before Deb could object, the doctor was pinning down her other wrist and buckling it to the armrest.

She was trapped.

“What are you doing?”

“You recognized me. From the hotel. I can see it in your eyes. Don’t you lie to me, girl.”

Deb immediately began to thrash and yell, but the moment she opened her mouth, the man waved his hand over her face and Deb could no longer make a sound. It felt like something foul had crawled inside her throat and was choking her from the inside out, even though she was still able to breathe. Deb screamed, loud as she could, but it only came out as a hiss of air. She tried to kick him, but he caught her left prosthetic and pressed the vacuum release, letting it drop to the floor. He did the same with the left one.

“Ya know my name is Franklin.” His voice was getting deeper, the southern accent more pronounced. “Ya know I’m very angry about what y’all did at the Rushmore.”

Deb pulled on her arms as hard as she could, until her elbows felt like they were going to pop. But old as the examination table was, it was built solid.

She was trapped.

Franklin strolled over to the equipment cart. He ran his hand over the antique medical tools, his fingers caressing the rusty speculum.

“Ya know I’m angry about going to prison. I’m really,
really
angry about that, girl. Do ya know why?”

He picked up the hand drill.

“I’ll tell ya why.”

Deb was growing light headed from her attempts at screaming. She tried to push Franklin away with her stumps, but he simply moved to the side of the table.

Then he placed the drill bit on Deb’s thigh, pressing down hard.

“Because,” he whispered to her, “one year ago today, I died in prison.”

He reached his hand down the front of his pants—

—and pulled out a handful of something, throwing it in Deb’s face.

At first, she thought it was rice.

Then the rice began to wiggle.

Maggots.

Franklin put both hands on the drill.

“I don’t like being dead, girl. The spirit world is all fucked up. So I’m going to hurt ya. I’m going to hurt ya so bad. And then I’m going to hurt that husband of yours even worse.”

Just as he began to turn, the back door to the examination room began to slowly open.

Then the lights flickered and went out.

Deb screamed in the blackness, making no more noise than a leaky tire.

A moment later, the lights came back on, just as the drill clattered to the floor.

Deb saw a man in a lab coat standing in front of her.

“I’m Dr. Madison,” he said. “What in God’s name has happened to you?”

Deb tried to talk, but she had no voice. she tried to point with her chin where Franklin was standing.

But Franklin wasn’t there.

Franklin had disappeared.

 

Mal

When the door opened, and he saw Deb crying and hysterical, something in Mal snapped. He stormed into the exam room, demanding answers from the doctor, listening to his wife try to talk but unable to.

Someone—Tom—finally figured out that she couldn’t speak, and Dr. Madison gave Deb a pen and some paper to relate her story.

Deb’s handwriting was erratic, and didn’t make much sense, but the part that stuck out the most was the word she wrote and circled several times.

GHOST

“So he bound your arms, tried to take blood, then threatened you with the drill?” Tom asked.

Deb nodded. Mal felt sick.

“And you say it was a man named Franklin? Someone you’d met before?”

Another nod.

“He’s in prison,” Mal said. “But he could have gotten out.”

Deb beckoned for the paper and wrote “Franklin said he died in prison.”

“That’s easy enough to check,” Tom said. Then he pointed to the floor. “So is this drill. My guess is that ghosts don’t leave fingerprints.”

Deb shook her head and wrote “gloves”.

“Careful ghost.” Tom looked at Madison. “And you’re sure no one went past you, Doctor?”

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