Turning from the ruined church, it reached out and grabbed Frank, savoring his cries of pain when it seized him by the arm.
“Stay alive a little longer, old man,” it said. “Wouldn’t want you to miss this. Kane’s going to be so happy to see you again.”
It hauled him across the parking lot to the music of his anguished screams, dragging him toward the graveyard.
Frank battled to remain conscious while the creature hauled him across the clearing. Dozens of bites had shredded his shirt, leaving hundreds of bleeding tooth marks in his skin. His strength waned with the loss of blood, and his awareness had become muddled by pain and exhaustion. The world around him distorted at the edges, and it took him a moment to recognize the devastated church when they passed it.
The creature halted at the graveyard’s iron boundary, where it dropped him face-down in the dirt. Spasms of pain rippled throughout his body. Groaning, he rolled clumsily to the side in an effort to distance himself from the beast, gaining only a few meager feet before the agony of his wounds immobilized him.
He lay there on his back for a second or two before the clang of metal and the sharp crack of breaking bonds drew his attention to the right. Beside him, the vile heap of animated body parts tore away a large section of the graveyard’s fence and cast it away.
Kane’s coffin lay just several feet away.
“At last!”
The beast took up another ruined section of the fence and used it to hook the end of Kane’s casket, pulling it within reach, free of the graveyard.
“Time to complete it, Frank. Time to put things back the way they were. Beg of us, and maybe we’ll allow you be part of the New World, host to one of our own. How does that sound?”
“Go to hell, you piece of shit.”
The monster’s rotten façade loomed closer. “Better yet, Frank, I’ll bring a part of it to you.”
The beast held its two largest hands over the filthy funerary box, and a sudden surge of energy charged the air. Amber light began to seep out from within the flimsy coffin, sizzling through the seams of its second-rate construction.
The box began to shake.
The thing inside was fighting to get out.
Mallory had trouble orienting herself in the church’s havoc-strewn darkness. To her right stood a thick iron cross that had chopped through the floorboards like a lumberjack’s ax; at her left lay a shingle-covered portion of what used to be the roof. Over her back came the tick and thunk sounds of loosened rubble still dropping to the ground.
She shuffled around and sat up. Five feet behind her, the hood of Derrick’s Mercedes had vanished into the floor’s splintered decking, buried up to its nonexistent windshield in debris.
“Mallory,” her father’s voice called. His good hand closed on her shoulder.
Turning, she found her dad and Tim, dust-covered and haggard-looking but alive. She roped her arms around her father and hugged him tight, regarding Tim over his shoulder with a teary gaze. “Thank God you’re both alive.”
Tim opened his mouth to speak, then closed it when the foggy darkness encasing them begin to recede, revealing greater detail of the devastation heaped around them.
They stood and hurried to one of the tall, glassless windows, where her father knocked loose a trio of old planks to reveal a full view of the cemetery.
Mallory gasped.
The creature stood at the churchyard fence, a blazing amber light radiating from something at its feet. Mallory squinted against the glare, trying to make out the nucleus of the blaze, when Tim uttered, “It reached the coffin.”
And the moment he said it, the rectangle of light broke open.
CHAPTER 62
Melissa spotted the amazing lightshow through countless arms of outstretched tree branches, but nothing could’ve prepared her for what she saw once Jimmy guided the truck into the clearing.
“What is that?” he howled, gawking at the huge figure silhouetted in front of the firework’s incandescent origin.
Melissa knew. She had no time to explain, but she knew what it was doing, what the light meant, and what had to be done next, before the creature’s sorcery could be completed.
“Hit it,” she ordered, remembering the beast’s only known weakness.
“What?”
“We have to stop it. Ram the damn thing. Now!”
“No way!”
“Do it,” she shouted. She slid across her seat and tromped her foot down over Jimmy’s, smashing the gas pedal to the floor, propelling the truck forward.
“Shit, lady, you’re nuts.”
Melissa held her position, pinning the accelerator all the way open. Even in their present gear, they closed the gap between the driveway and the monster with surprising speed. She spotted Frank crumpled at the creature’s feet, dangerously close to where they were headed.
She didn’t let up.
Amber light filled the cab.
The colossal figure pivoted, twisting around to greet them with three outstretched arms and a thunderous bellow of rage.
Jimmy pushed and squirmed, finally heaving Melissa off him. Screaming, he slammed both his feet down on the brake pedal, mashing it to the boards. The truck slid. Pneumatic screams joined the beast’s call while the semi’s air brakes strove to slow its advance. But regardless of its stopping power, the cab’s front end collided chest-level with the entity’s towering body, hitting the thing head on, propelling it into the one place she’d been told it couldn’t go.
Through the fence and into the cemetery.
Sprawled on the ground, Frank watched in semi-conscious wonderment when the two imposing juggernauts clashed together, the massive truck overcoming the entity’s humanoid configuration of flotsam with its inexorable momentum, launching the monster into the graveyard at the same instant one of its giant forward tires rolled over Kale Kane’s blazing coffin, crushing it like a snail shell and smearing its festering cargo.
The amber light vanished.
Mallory cheered along with Tim and her father when the hulking creature dropped to its back, smashing three grave markers to rubble beneath its bulk.
But, what next? Mallory wondered. Won’t it just switch bodies again?
The church shook.
Mallory backed away from the window, looking to Tim and then to her dad. With the light from Kane’s coffin extinguished, the old sanctuary had reverted to a cavern of shadows.
“Now what’s happening?” she cried.
“Look at that,” Tim shouted.
A glowing light had appeared within the cemetery, shining upward from the gaping pit of Kale Kane’s open grave. Mallory moved closer to the window, gripping its frame with tense fingers. Black light spilled skyward from the earthy excavation outside, impossibly black light.
The eerie luminescence began to expand across the churchyard. The soil piled around the parameter of Kane’s grave suddenly collapsed inward, the walls crumbling away like sand falling through the neck of an hourglass.
Inch by inch, the grave began to widen. Slow at first, then faster.
The killer’s headstone tilted and fell forward, vanishing into the fissure.
“I think we’d better move,” her dad said.
The hole continued to broaden. Clusters of weeds dropped out of sight, followed by two flanking gravestones, and then a third, fourth, and fifth.
They turned from the windows and hurried through the building’s wreckage, making their way outside.