But Florence knew Warren had to die if she was going to find Letti and Kelly.
Strangely, she was okay with that.
“How many brothers do you have, Warren?”
Warren plodded over to the dresser, picking up a packet. He tore it open and slapped white powder onto his thigh and forehead. The bleeding stopped almost immediately.
The styptic the Sheriff mentioned.
“Warren has lots of brothers.”
“How many is lots?”
He turned to face her. “Lots.”
“Your brothers have my daughter and granddaughter. I want to know where they are.”
Warren took a step toward her, spreading out his arms. “In the slave cellar. Where y’all ‘r gonna be.”
“Warren, if you go back to bed, and promise not to tell anyone, I won’t kill you.”
Warren made a low, throaty sound, that Florence figured out was laughter.
“Warren is big ‘n strong. You ain’t gonna kill Warren.”
He reached out his hands. They were so swollen and distorted they looked less like hands, and more like balloons with sausages sticking out of them. Florence gracefully sidestepped his attempted grab, clutched one of his fingers, and drew the blade across the underside of his wrist, cutting as deep as she could.
The blood came out like a lawn sprinkler turned on. Warren howled, turning to reach for the styptic. Florence changed her grip on the knife and stabbed him through his grossly deformed big toe, pinning his foot to the floor. Then she backed out of his range.
Warren tried to reach for the knife handle, but his stomach was so distended he couldn’t bend down low enough. It took him less than a minute to bleed to death, and Florence was surprised by how detached she felt watching him.
Then she stumbled into the bathroom and puked her guts out into the sink.
Good. For a second I thought I’d stopped being human.
Still queasy, Florence retrieved the knife and crept out of the room and into the hallway, almost bumping into a man with no arms. Her mind flashed back to Eleanor’s words.
“Legend says one slave, after his fifth drop, lost both of his arms when they ripped from his sockets. He’s said to roam the hallways at night, looking for his missing limbs.”
But this was no ghost of a slave. This was another of Eleanor’s perverted brood. And while he didn’t have arms, he did have hands. Underdeveloped baby hands, sticking directly out of his shoulders.
He lumbered toward Florence with a bowlegged gait, and his mouth seemed too small for his overabundance of teeth, which jutted crookedly from his lips in all directions.
“Don’t come any closer,” Florence said.
Like Warren, this one didn’t heed her warning. He came up fast, kicking at her chest, knocking Florence onto her back. One of his filthy feet pinned her wrist to the floor, and he actually gripped the knife with his toes, trying to wrestle it away from Florence.
She made a fist and punched upward, connecting between his legs. He groaned, doubling over, giving Florence easy access to his neck. She raised the knife.
The red sluiced down like hot, sticky rain.
Getting out from under him, Florence heard a thump. She crawled to the railing and looked down.
Deb, and a man, were sprawled out on the first floor. There was a growing pool of blood, and neither one was moving.
Then Florence heard a door open. Followed by a few others.
She did a slow turn, taking everything in, and saw she was surrounded by freaks.
# # #
When JD took off through the open door, Kelly followed. The smell hit her first. A rotten, putrid smell. It reminded her of the time she was taking out the garbage and one of the bags broke open, spilling out the remains of a chicken dinner from a week ago.
There’s something dead in this room.
But Kelly couldn’t see what it was. Unlike the other rooms in these underground tunnels, this one had no overhead light bulbs.
Then the door behind her slammed shut, cutting of the little light that had been filtering in.
“JD?”
The dog didn’t come. Kelly took a few steps forward, hands out in front of her so she didn’t run into anything in the darkness.
Her fingers brushed something.
Something moist.
She recoiled, and strong arms grabbed her from behind. Before she had a chance to scream, the man clutching her said, “Kelly?”
“Cam?”
Kelly was still afraid, but he kept his hands on her shoulders, and that felt kind of nice. She felt her face get warm.
He’s way too old for me. He’s got to be at least nineteen or twenty.
Still, he is cute. And I am almost a teenager.
“I can’t find JD,” Kelly said, trying to keep her voice strong.
“Hold on. I have a lighter in my pocket.”
A flame appeared in front of Kelly, illuminating Cam’s outstretched arm, along with—
“Oh, wow…”
The room was filled with suitcases. A maze of suitcases, stacked floor to ceiling. Some of them looked really old, and were moldering in the dampness. Others looked so new they could have been purchased yesterday.
“How many do you think there are?” Kelly asked.
“I dunno. Hundreds.”
“Do you think…?” Kelly let the sentence trail off, not wanting to speak her thoughts out loud.
“Yeah. I think each one came from a person these psychos murdered.”
Kelly shivered. “I don’t like this place. We need to find my dog. He ran in here.”
“I know. I saw you and followed…”
The flame went off. Kelly pressed herself tighter against Cam.
“Sorry,” he said, flicking the lighter back on. “Thumb slipped. Let’s see what’s around that stack.”
Cam walked around Kelly, taking the lead, and she was sort of sorry he wasn’t holding her anymore. She followed close, a single step behind him. The lighter flame cast wild, flickering shadows, making the heaps of luggage seem like they were swaying.
They rounded the corner, and the smell got worse. Kelly put her hand over her mouth and nose.
“What’s that awful—”
The light went out again.
“Kelly,” Cam said. “I want you to do me a favor, okay?”
Kelly didn’t like his tone. He sounded scared. “What?”
“Take my hand, and close your eyes.”
“Why, Cam? What’s—”
“Trust me. You don’t want to see this. Just keep them closed until I say it’s okay.”
“Cam, you’re freaking me out.”
“Just do it. Please.”
Kelly believed after everything she’d already been through today, there was nothing else that could scare her. But when Cam said please, she gave in.
Besides, I get to hold his hand.
“Okay.”
Kelly closed her eyes, and Cam’s gloved hand encircled hers. They walked slowly, the smell getting almost unbearable. Cam made a gagging sound, and Kelly had to press her shirt against her face.
What could possibly smell this bad?
“We should go back for my mom,” Kelly said. She instantly regretted speaking, because the rotten stench got on her tongue.
“We will. But I feel a draft up ahead. I think it’s a way out. Unh!”
Cam’s hand pulled from hers, and she was left standing there alone. Her eyes sprung open.
“Cam?”
“I tripped, Kelly. Keep your eyes closed.”
But she didn’t. And when the light went on, she saw what Cam had tripped over.
A dead body.
The whole room was filled with dead people.