"Somebody might pull up," she said.
Eric put his beer in the holder. "Okay, I'll come." He hadn't meant to sound so annoyed.
"Forget it. I'll go by myself." She started to step from the van, then paused. "Did you hear that?"
"What?"
"Some weird sound."
She turned down the stereo until they were surrounded by nothing but the trilling of cicadas.
"I don't hear anything," Eric said.
"It was probably a cat. Or my imagination. You know how I am."
Amy had a history of seeing and hearing things that weren't thete. Like the time amp;he swote she'd seea. the guy from Tora! Tora! Torrance! in the school cafeteria, claiming he'd ordered a veggie burger and fries. Or the time she'd gotten to shake hands with the president of the United States, and thought he'd said, "Like to fuck you." Everybody else heard, "Good luck to you," because she'd been about to compete in a state swimming competition.
Amy ducked from the van, slamming the door behind her. Eric waited a few seconds, listening to her crashing through the brush before deciding to grab the keys from the ignition and go after her.
He followed the sound of snapping twigs, making his way around broken tombstones ensnarled by vines and roots and deep grass.
"Amy?"
He could hear her moving to his right.
He took a few steps that direction,, just beyond the haze cast by the parking lights, unzipped his pants, and peed. He was rezipping when his ears picked up a muffled sound that seemed to come from inside his own head. He froze, ears straining, the hairs on his neck standing up.
"Amy?"
Another noise. This one directly below him.
Something pattered across the toe of his sneaker.
What the hell? Was Amy hiding, tossing dirt at him?
Something touched his ankle.
It felt suspiciously like a hand.
"Ha-ha. Very funny."
She was trying to get him back for not immediately volunteering to baby-sit while she peed.
Branches snapped and he looked toward a faint ctt-cle of light to see Amy walking toward him. "Did you say something?" she asked.
Eric's jaw dropped and terror rapid-rushed through his body, weakening his muscles, making it impossible to breathe or move.
It seemed years later that he was finally able to bend his neck to look down.
A clawed hand was reaching out of the ground, its fingers wrapped around his shoe.
Jordan Kemp had been buried alive. Swaddled in a heavy wool blanket, he was dragged through heavy brush.
He couldn't move, couldn't speak. Trapped in his own body.
He'd been deposited in a low area like a ditch. He could smell the damp earth, the wet leaves.
Was he dead?
He'd heard the sound of a shovel striking the ground, slicing through soil. Heard heavy breathing. A clump of earth hit him in the face. That was followed by another and another.
Then silence.
Dead silence.
Inside his head, he cried and screamed.
Nobody heard.
Nobody came.
His mind drifted. Sometimes it shut off completely.
Then a sound came to him. Like somebody moving around.
He didn't want to die like this. Didn't want his mother to find out he'd become a prostitute. He could see it in the papers.
Body of male prostitute found in shallow grave.
They would think he got what he deserved. He would think he got what he deserved.
Once more he tried to move, tried to make a sound. Air left his lungs and rushed past his lips. He let out a faint whimper.
He tried again.
Louder. Had to be louder.
He moved a finger. Just a twitch. Then another.
Like being reborn.
Sensation gradually seeped into his body. He slowly became aware of his arms, his legs. Of the weight of the soil against his chest.
He heard a muffled snapping, a crackling, not far from his head. Was someone taking a piss? Because that's sure as hell what it sounded like.
Wasn't that a zipper?
If he could only cry out, only see-
His hand.
It was the only thing he could move. He struggled to lift it until it broke through the loose soil. Until he felt something.
A shoe.
An ankle.
A person!
He heard a shout, followed by the sound of running feet. Not moving toward him, but away.
No! he cried out in his mind. Don't go!
He fought the heaviness, rocking left and right, trying to make more room.
Air.
Needed air.
The muscles in his neck tightened. In one swift movement, he strained upward, his head breaking through the soil. Like a swimmer, he surfaced and gasped, sucking dirt into his mouth, his lungs.
He gagged. He coughed. Sitting up, he pulled his arms free, then his legs.
Naked.
Cold.
He grabbed the blanket and wound it around himself. His body began to tremble, to come alive.
Music.
He heard music.
Somehow he shoved himself upright, then stiffly shuffled in the direction of the sound.
Couldn't feel his feet.
Couldn't see.
He fell down. He got back up.
Follow the music.
The music would save him.
His legs shook. He felt dizzy and sick. Even though he was free of the grave, an overwhelming sensation of impending doom washed over him.
He was going to die. He was dying. Right now. His body was shutting down, giving up.
Follow the music.
Hurry. Follow the music.
He stumbled into a cleared area. He stood there swaying, trying to see where the sound was coming from, but everything was out of focus.
The music stopped.
Not much time left. You 'd better haul ass.
He ran.
Or at least he thought he was running. Prancing along, stumbling, trying to hurry before he fell again. Because if that happened, he wouldn't be able to get back up. That would be it. Last call for alcohol. Checkout time.
Straight. Go straight.
He zeroed in on the vehicle and flew toward it, the dark wool blanket fluttering like wings.
With one quick, forward motion he slammed into the van, smacking his forehead, his palms spread flat against the window.
A girl screamed.
He tried to cling to the glass. His legs buckled and he hugged the van as he melted to the ground.
Help me, he said, but no words came out. Help me!
He was pretty sure he'd died and come back to life. And now he was dying again.
How many times could a person die? he wondered. Were people like cats? Confused, he began to crawl, to drag himself back into the woods until he blacked out.
The death he'd been expecting was very near.
Chapter 8
Officer Eve Salazar was thinking that the night had been fairly quiet when the police scanner flashed and the dispatcher spit out a suspicious-person code. The location, an abandoned cemetery where kids liked to hang out, was close. Her partner, Officer Reilley, flipped on the siren and swung the car around in the middle of the deserted street, tires squealing.
Kids thought cops liked busting parties, but Eve hated it. It made her feel like such a hypocrite.
Two miles later, Reilley executed a sharp right turn, leaving the blacktop behind. He barely slowed as the car bounced roughly over a narrow, rutted lane, the road eventually opening to a clearing.