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“Just calm down and listen to me.”

“I’m not going to calm down!  Like I don’t have enough to deal with out here without worrying that you’re going to go poking around in all the places I was almost killed today because you won’t believe me when I say it’s not safe!”

“I do believe you!  That’s the whole fucking point!  I’m not cool with just sitting around all day and waiting for my little brother to call and tell me he’s still alive, okay?”

Eric ran a hand through his hair.  He wasn’t sure what to say, so he remained quiet.

“This is some really weird shit,” Paul went on.  “I needed to check it out for myself, okay?  It’s not about me not trusting you.  I mean, think about it.  All these things you’re seeing…  None of it should be possible.  But not only is it real, you’re out in the middle of it all.  What would you do if you were me?  If I was out there and you were just the guy who was picking up the car, what would you do?”

Eric remained silent.  He couldn’t deny that Paul was right.  If their positions had been switched, he would have gone through the barn, even if he knew it meant ending up stranded.

“Well?”

“Fine.  But if you were in my place—”

“I’d be pretty pissed about you following me.  I know.”

“Good.”

“But I want to go to the resort.”

“I’m telling you, you’d make a terrible nudist.”

“I know, but besides that…  I figure that resort…  What was it called?”

“Gold Sunshine Resort.”

“Gold Sunshine.  Stupid name.”

“I have heard better names.”

“I don’t have a clue where I am now, but I think Kevin could probably find Gold Sunshine Resort and pick me up.”

“There’s a monster inside the biggest building there.  It almost killed me.  Tore up my shoulder pretty bad.  I only survived by dumb luck.  It’s blocking the only way forward.  Even if you did survive, the next stop is the lake.  I took the last boat.  No going around it unless you want to run into the monkey with the huge teeth.  And he doesn’t get over things quickly.  Also, I might’ve insulted his parentage.”

“So the resort’s as far as I could go.  Got it.  I’ll call Kevin, see if he can find the address.”

“The place closed in nineteen-seventy-eight.  He might not be able to look up the address on the internet.”

“He’ll figure it out.  If not, I’ll find my way to the highway like I did here and find somewhere to ask for directions.”

Eric didn’t like the idea of Paul wandering around in the fissure.  It simply didn’t seem like a good idea, no matter how he rationalized it.

“So how do I get there from here?”

“You swear to me you won’t go any farther than the resort, and you won’t go into the biggest building.”

“I won’t.  I promise.”

“You better not.  I swear to God if you go near that building I’ll see to it you never taste Karen’s chocolate truffle cheesecake again.”

“You wouldn’t!”  Karen’s chocolate truffle cheesecake was Paul’s favorite desert.  She made it every holiday.  And she made him one every year for his birthday.  He couldn’t get enough of it.

“I would.  In a heartbeat.  Don’t push me on this.  She’ll side with me when I tell her you’re out here with me.”

“Fine.  I swear.”

“Really?”

Really.  You already said the way is blocked.  I believe you.  I’ve been to the barn.  Those things in there were scary as hell.  Shit, the barn itself was scary as hell.  I mean, it just kept going!  I’m really not interested in running into anything that’s actually dangerous.”

“I can’t say for sure there’s not something dangerous waiting for you anyway.  Anything could be hiding out there.  You’ll have to be careful.”

“I will.”

Eric sighed.  “I’d really rather you just walk home from there.”

“Noted.  Just tell me where to go next.”

“There’s a little tool shed backed up into the woods.  The path is behind it.  When it gets too overgrown, you’ll have to look carefully to find the next path.  It’s hard to see.  You’ll have to take the bridge.  Hope you like heights.”

“What kind of heights are we talking about?”

“You’ll just have to see for yourself, I guess.”

“Nice.  I’m going to get off of here and call Kevin.”

“Be careful.”

“I will.  Bye.”

“Bye.”

Eric pocketed the phone again and continued walking.  He didn’t like that Paul was here in the fissure.  It worried him.  But on the other hand, at least he’d validated his experience in the barn.  As crazy as all this was, he would not have been surprised to hear that no such barn existed and that everything he’d experienced today had all been inside his own head.

It was like Karen finding Isabelle on the missing persons list and connecting her to a real Gold Sunshine Resort.  It didn’t prove that someone wasn’t messing with his mind, but at least it was some measure of evidence in favor of his sanity.

Add to these things the pictures he’d taken and he could at least remain confident about the soundness of his mind.

He squinted up at the hot sun, wiped the sweat from his face again and continued on toward whatever mysteries awaited him ahead.

He watched the cows as he walked.  He’d never been particularly fond of cattle, or any farm animals for that matter.  They smelled terrible.  They were filthy.  They drew flies.  He preferred them fully prepared and placed neatly on his plate with a side of vegetables and a potato.  But now he was simply happy that they weren’t throwing stones at him.

In fact, given all that he’d been through, all that he’d seen, they looked almost majestic standing out there.

Then the one closest to him lifted its tail and took a crap right in front of him.

Of course.

Eric moved on, his eyes fixed on the road before him again.

He wondered how much farther he’d have to go.  For that matter, how far had he actually gone?  Grant told him that his trip through the mutant livestock barn had carried him some fifty miles northwest.  Taylor later informed him that he’d traveled another eighty-five miles due north after crossing the gorge on that terrifying bridge.  Since then, he’d passed through that shadowy otherworld twice, once past the Altrusk house and once through the marsh.

But as far as he knew, he didn’t jump forward when he passed the stunted corn in Annette’s field.  So maybe he hadn’t jumped those last two times, either.

Or maybe he was all the way in Canada by now.

Thinking back on it, he recalled Karen’s assertion that it was almost noon when his watch and phone had only read a little later than half-past ten.  At some point, it seemed that he’d lost more than an hour.

Could that be true?  If the fissure could distort space in such a way that he was flung forward fifty and eighty-five miles at a stretch, why couldn’t time scrunch down so that the minutes had passed considerably more quickly inside Altrusk’s house?

He didn’t have time to consider it further.  Movement caught his eye to his left and he glanced over in time to see several of the cows running from the far corner of the field as if something had spooked them.

On an ordinary day, he would not have thought anything about it.  On an ordinary day, there simply wouldn’t have been any reason to think anything about it.  But today had been no ordinary day by any stretch of the imagination.  Today, he would be a fool not to be concerned about what might have spooked the cows.

Shielding his eyes from the sun with his hand, he scanned the far corner of the field, but he could see nothing more than corn beyond the fence.

Perhaps the cows were just restless.  Or perhaps one of them had stirred up a hornet’s nest or a rattlesnake.

Or perhaps there was something extremely unpleasant in the corn.

He remembered the first cornfield, between Annette’s back yard and the mutant barn, the sickly, stunted corn that was his first glimpse of the strange effects of the fissure.  He’d heard something moving in the corn, something he couldn’t quite see, something that had filled him with dread that he assumed, stupidly, was senseless.