"Reckon you're a man now, huh? All grown up and cursing like an adult. Figure you can kick my ass?"
"I would love to."
His mother jumped to her feet, hands flailing like frightened birds. Her wet bangs were plastered to her forehead and milk still dripped from her face.
"Barry, no. Clark! Please!"
Ignoring her, Clark swung around to Barry's side and stood right in front of him. Barry resisted the urge to step backward, and held his ground. His father leaned down and thrust his chin out.
"Go ahead, boy. Take your best shot. Better make it a good one." Trembling, Barry said, "Why are you like this? Why can't you be like Timmy's dad?" Clark laughed. "That what you want? Randy Graco don't know the first thing about being a father."
"He's better than you'll ever be. You're a drunk and an asshole. You don't let Mom or me have any friends. You don't let us go anywhere. I can' t even be next door anymore unless you 're with me."
"I told you," Clark said. "It's for your own good. Nobody is allowed in the cemetery after"
"Shut up," Barry shouted. "I'm tired of your shit. Tired of the way you treat us."
"Barry," his mother cried. "Please, stop this now. Sit back down." His father smiled. "Then like I said, take your best shot." Barry stared at him. His entire body quivered. The anger felt like a solid thing, deep down inside him. His pulse throbbed in his ears, and his lips felt swollen and full.
"Pussy," his father teased. "I knew you didn't have it in" Barry swung. Swung with all his might. His fist plowed forward with the weight of twelve years of abuse and cruelty behind it, twelve years of anger and tears and frustration. Twelve years of hell. It rocketed toward his father ' s stubbly, unshaven chin and he felt a surge of vindication. Importance. A fiery, testosteronedriven right of passage into manhood. In that brief second, he understood the magnitude of his actions, and how they 'd change the course of his life.
And then he missed.
Arm extended, body swerving with the thrust, stepping into the punch just like Luke CagePower Man did in the comicsand yet, despite all this, and despite the poetic justice he felt flowing through his veins his fist sailed by his father's jaw and clipped the older man's shoulder.
His father didn't even blink.
Still grinning, Clark swung his own fist. It smashed into Barry' s mouth, and immediately, the boy tasted blood. His lips were crushed against his teeth, splitting open. Blood flowed. The warmth squirted over his tongue, and Barry ' s stomach rolled. He spat blood, and the simple act of doing so left his mouth in agony. In the background, his mother was screaming. He stared at the bright red spot, and didn't notice the second blow coming. Clark' s other fist clobbered the side of his head. Barry became woozy. His vision dimmed on the sides and it seemed as if he were looking down a tunnel. Stunned, he kept staring at the blood, even as more of it filled his mouth.
He noticed something else. A flash of color, glinting off his father's ring finger. It had just left an imprint on his face a ring. A Freemason' s ring. Barry had only seen one like it before, and that was buried with Timmy 's grandfather.
"That's what you get," his father said. "I told you before to not talk back to me. This time, you ain't gonna forget it."
His fist and the ring came down again, but Barry' s knees gave out before it could connect. The blows followed him all the way to the floor, and continued as he wavered on the edge of consciousness. Blood his blood, he realized flowed into his eyes. The last thing he heard were his mother's screams.
Barry tried to speak, and then he passed out. Mercifully, he did not feel the next punch. When Timmy' s father arrived home at a quarter past ten, Timmy was sequestered in his room, lying in bed, surrounded by books and comics. He had his Trapper Keeper notebook in his lap. HeMan 's archnemesis Skeletor graced the front cover. Timmy was taking notes on ghouls.
He' d pulled out every reference he could find, from the House of Secrets comic to his Dungeons and Dragons Monster Manual. He wasn' t sure the latter was entirely accurate, because it dealt more with the game than it did mythology or legend. He heard his father's pickup truck pull into the driveway. Glen Campbell's "Wichita Lineman" drifted softly from the cab' s radio. Then he heard the garage door opening. Moments later, his father came inside.
The television snapped off. In the living room, his parents talked in hushed tones, and though Timmy strained to hear them, he couldn 't make out their words. Instead, he turned back to his research.
A few minutes later, there was a knock on his door.
Timmy?"
He closed the notebook. "Come on in, Dad. I'm awake." His father entered the room, looking exhausted and smelling of sweat. He sat down on the edge of the bed, and patted his son's knee through the blankets.
"You okay? Your mom says you and Doug had quite the day."
"Yeah, it was something, all right. But I'm fine."
"Well, it must have been pretty scary, I guess." Timmy shrugged. "Kind of. It's scary to know that somebody did this. When you see it on TV, it's always in faraway places like Los Angeles and New York. And I'm sad about Pat and the others."
"I shouldn't have hollered at you this morning, about the serial killer thing. I'm sorry about that. Looks like you may have been right."
"That's okay."
Randy glanced down at the books spread out all over the bed. "So what's all this?
You working on a D&D game for your friends?"
"No," Timmy said. "Just doing some research."
"On what?"
"Ghouls."
Frowning, his father picked up the Monster Manual and began flipping through it.
"Ghouls, huh? You know, Reverend Moore says that some kids get too wrapped up in this game. Can' t tell fantasy from reality anymore. A couple college kids supposedly died…"
He trailed off, put the book down, and nodded at the Iron Maiden poster on the wall.
"That, too. The Number of the Beast? That's satanic, Timmy. Don' t you think?"
"Isn't that what they used to say about the Beatles when you and Mom were kids? And Elvis?"
Randy nodded, obviously reluctant. "Yes, you' re right. Some people did say that. Especially when John Lennon joked that the Beatles were more popular than Jesus Christ. But that's different, Timmy. Elvis and the Beatles never sang songs about the devil. They certainly never had album covers like that. My parents would have kicked me out if I'd had something like that hanging on my wall. It's just evil looking."
"Come on, Dad. You know I don't worship the devil."
"I know. You're a good kid, Timmy, and I'm very proud of you. I just worry sometimes. Your attraction to stuff like this and your infatuation with monsters and thingsit just isn'
t normal for a boy your age. You should be playing sports "
"I hate sports."
"and be more interested in girls than you are little green men."
"I am interested in girls," Timmy said, feeling defensive. Randy paused, surprise and relief both clearly visible in his expression.
"You are? Well, that's good. That's very good."
"You sound surprised, Dad."
"No. Don't think that way. I just didn't know. See, we need to talk more, kiddo. You need to know that you can tell me things like that."
"Okay," Timmy said. Secretly, he wished his father would just kiss him good night and go to bed, so that he could get on with his research. It had been a long day and he still had lots to do.
Randy made no move to leave. Instead, he winked and said, "So, is it anybody I know?"
"Who?" For a moment, Timmy thought his father was talking about the ghoul.
"This girl you like. Is it someone your mother and I have met?"