The scarecrow, he thinks, his mind shattering. It’s gone.
From behind him, shuffling movement.
A strange shape comes toward him through the tall grass, hobbling like a crippled man.
Only this is not a man.
Landon fires the revolver. Keeps firing even when the revolver is empty and makes only clicking sounds.
And then something coarse covers his head, cold dead hands wrap around his throat and he hears another scream shred the night, unaware that this one is his own.
In the farmhouse, Starker and Rooster run through the burning front room, trying to find a way out in all the madness and confusion. The darkness is alive, shifting and thick with the shrieking cries of countless dead, nameless lost souls all wailing in the night with violent fury. Rooster sees a pillar of fire and realizes it is Snow kneeling before them, his body wrapped in blankets of flame.
Like a cold winter wind, something follows them up the stairs, gusts into the room and cuts through them. It feeds the flames and Snow’s body becomes a firestorm. Yet he doesn’t topple. Instead he struggles slowly to his feet.
Rooster shoots him, emptying his gun.
Snow finally topples over and the fire spreads, racing up the walls and along the floor in search of more victims.
The strange wind passes, surging out to the field beyond the doorway, and Rooster feels some part of himself go with it. He stumbles after it, dazed and fighting the gripping cold suddenly rising from the depths of his body. He finds Starker standing next to Snow’s body, staring at it with a strange look of…satisfaction? He throws the AK-47 aside, drops down, and eyes ablaze with passion claws at the burned heap that had once been Snow, ripping charred meat in stringy handfuls he hungrily devours.
And as the fire spreads, Rooster understands. He feels it too. Lust not for sex but violence, death, mayhem, destruction and pain…as if these things have been his destiny all along. Rather than reload the 9mm, he drops it and reaches for a combat knife tucked in his boot. He slides it free, already salivating as he closes on Starker.
Behind him, Nauls slowly ascends the stairs, his hollow eyes piercing the smoke and darkness, his mouth twisted into a hideous demonic smile.
Rooster slams the blade deep into Starker’s lower back, pulls it free and stabs him again. He seems not to notice at first, but then collapses from his knees to his side and lies there laughing, his large teeth bright in the darkness and caked with blood and human flesh.
As Rooster sets to work on him, gutting Starker from throat to pelvis, Nauls moves past, through the fire and out the doorway to the field.
His feet do not touch the floor.
Rooster focuses on Starker’s laughter. No—not laughter—not anymore, cries now, screams. Beautiful screams…his face and bald head covered in blood as he spits and slobbers, each scream more horrific than the last. As Rooster tears at the enormous incision then plunges his hands inside the body, Starker chokes on the bodily fluids bubbling up into his throat and begs for mercy.
But all Rooster hears are the shrieks of souls trapped in the darkness and flames surrounding him.
Cords of intestines clutched in one hand and the knife in the other, he leaves Starker’s now silent but convulsing body and slowly approaches the doorway. Darkness waits…a field of tall grass and weeds…six wooden crosses…three with fresh scarecrows nailed to them…three still waiting…
Rooster begins to laugh, bringing the intestines to his lips and eating as he steps out of the flames and into the night.
Somewhere within the hurricane of violence and howling souls, a frantic, familiar and decidedly human voice screams for salvation.
Visions of demonic creatures—some human, some not, and others still stranded at various horrific points between the two—flashed through his mind. Held in rusty metal cages, pinned, strapped or chained to medieval devices of torture and imprisonment, the creatures gawked at him in horror, several deathly still, others violently struggling to free themselves, all of them moist with blood, urine and excrement, their bodies grotesquely deformed and savaged.
The terrifying chambers of blood and death dissolved; became a roadside.
Landon had already gone quite a ways up the incline on the side of the road and looked back as if he expected Rooster to follow. But Rooster knew now what lay on the other side of the tall grass blowing in the wind behind him.
With a shrug, Landon held his arms out like the victim of crucifixion and backed away over the ridge, vanishing from sight.
Nauls turned to him, removed his sunglasses.
We’re going where there are no eyes…
His eyes were gone, just empty sockets.
Where everyone is blind…yet everyone sees.
Without warning his body shook with impossible velocity, transforming him into little more than a blur before he again fell still. “Come with us,” Nauls said. “We’ll all figure this out together.”
Rooster shook his head no.
Nauls slid his sunglasses back on, slowly walked up the embankment after Landon then hesitated and looked back. “You really think you have a choice?”
“That’s all any of us have.”
Nauls reached into his jacket pocket, pulled free the car keys and tossed them to Rooster. “We’ll be waiting,” he said sadly. “Forever.”
-10-
He made the car tailing him even before he’d reached his apartment. Rooster pulled over a block from the housing projects and continued on foot. As he crossed the courtyard, hurrying through the cold, the black Crown Vic crept slowly past, the windows and windshield impenetrably tinted. It continued a bit further down the street then pulled over and parked. Rooster kept checking back over his shoulder, but no one emerged from the vehicle.
When he’d reached his floor, Rooster stopped at the incinerator shoot and dropped the briefcase in, listening to it slide away down the shaft to the fires below.
Burn, he thought. Burn in Hell.
He slipped into the apartment and was met by a welcome burst of heat. Moving silently, he went to the bedroom and stopped just inside the doorway. Gaby was standing next to the bed, a blanket in her arms and a laundry basket at her feet. She’d already stripped the comforter, blanket and top-sheet from the bed but the bottom sheet remained. She seemed surprised to find him there, but smiled anyway. It was perhaps the most reassuring and comforting thing he’d ever seen.
Until he took a closer look at the bed. Rich dark soil was scattered across the sheet, blood and straw along the pillows. He narrowed his eyes and grimaced as fear clawed at what few defenses he had left.
“It’s all right,” Gaby said, quickly tossing the blanket over the bed. “Don’t look. It doesn’t mean anything. They’re just trying to frighten you.”
The night sky rolled above, moving, the fog turning and twisting as the rough ground tore at his back and shoulders.
“Gaby,” he said softly, voice breaking. “Gabrielle…help me.”
They were dragging him by his legs…pulling him across the field, the grass and weeds tangling and scratching him as he went, the night sky overhead, vast and ominous, the smell of death and burning flesh filling the air.