We entered the house.
Whalen used his own flashlight to light the way across a floor that over three decades had become even more warped and rotted. When we came to the door that led into the basement, I could see that an electric light was already on.
When he gave me a shove, I resisted. But when he pushed me I lost my footing and fell.
I slid down the wooden stairs, my body slamming against each wood tread. By the time I landed, I thought I’d pass out from the pain. My vision was distorted, going in and out of focus.
He descended the stairs, the soles of his leather boots stamping the wood treads one by one. I could already smell him. When he made it to the landing, he tucked his pistol into the waist of his filthy dungarees. He slipped his hands under my arms, dragging me across the dirt floor. My head hung so that I was staring up at the exposed beams, at the wires and meat hooks that still descended from them.
He reached down and touched my lips with his fingers. But when I bit his hand, I tasted blood.
He reared back with his hand, slapped my face.
As he straightened up, I laid my head back. The figure caught my eye. The figure of a man. Arms, legs and torso hanging upside down from the ceiling. Bare feet chained to the rafters.
Michael.
Whalen had hung him upside down like a slaughtered animal. My eyes filled with the sight of his lifeless body. I screamed without making a sound. I sobbed without shedding a tear. I died but with a beating heart.
Chapter 66
I am nearly delirious with fear by the time he drags Molly down into the basement and lays her out beside me. I can see that she’s awake, her eyes going from me to him to me again. He looks at her with a calm confident smile.
I sense that Molly is about to scream, cry.
But she doesn’t. She grits her teeth, stares the devil in the eye and spits in his face.
He reaches out, slaps her.
“ Don’t struggle against him, Bec,” she insists. “Promise me you won’t struggle.”
I look away.
Chapter 67
I came to.
How long had I been passed out?
Long enough for him to dig a good sized trench in the dirt floor. For a time I just locked my eyes onto him; watched him working, a lit cigarette dangling from his lips. That wiry body soaked with sweat, plastered with dirt and filth, reeking of tobacco. Tiny, yellow teeth ground against one another while he worked, shoveling one spade full of dirt at a time.
Then he caught sight of me.
He saw that I was conscious and he smiled.
“Hello little kitten,” he said, softly. “Cry, cry, cry, little kitten.”
I knew then that what he had in store had nothing to do with his old motivation-his taste for young girls. There would be no touching here. No violations.
There would only be death.
He reached for me. I had no strength left in me to resist. He dragged me the few feet to the trench. He dumped me in. I did a complete roll, landing on my back. I heard him laugh. At least, I thought it was a laugh. It might just as easily have been a sob. He was standing above me, the little monster of a man looking almost huge now. God like.
He had that shovel in his hand.
He stabbed at the dirt pile, retrieved a shovelful of earth, held it over my prone body, and tossed it into the trench. The dirt smacked my body, sprayed into my face. It invaded my mouth, nostrils and blocked my air supply.
There was something inside the dirt. Something other than rock and gravel and clay. The black and white-colored shards of bone. The very old bones covered me. A jaw bone, the teeth still embedded in the broken jaw. A small portion of skull cap. A leg bone. Here finally were the remains of the victims of Whalen’s torture. At long last, the bodies had been found.
Another shovelful of bone-filled dirt fell onto me, this one down by my feet.
He was burying me alive, adding me to his basement cemetery.
Yet another shovel of dirt slapped my face. I coughed, choked as a worm wiggled in my mouth. I tried to wipe the dirt from my eyes, but all strength was bled out. I was already dead. I could still see him, but only through a cloud of dirt and pain.
The bone shards and dirt kept coming, filling the trench, filling my mouth and nostrils. With each shovelful, another bit of life emptied out of me.
I was still alive, but already dead.
Chapter 68
Molly doesn’t resist.
I don’t resist when he unlocks me from the radiator, grabs my hair.
No struggling.
Our passivity seems to make the monster sad. He has Molly on the dirt floor on her back. He’s pinning her shoulders against the floor. She does nothing to resist. He can’t go through with it. He can’t do it. He grabs hold of me.
I don’t resist.
He throws me on my back.
I don’t resist.
His lips form a pout. He stands up and begins to cry.
“ Cry, cry, cry,” he chants through his own tears.
Molly and I turn to one another, lie on the dirt floor hugging one another. Until Molly spots something. Only a few feet away, a shovel. She lets go of me, lunges for the shovel and grips it in her hand. She sits up quick, raises the shovel high, brings it down hard on the monster’s head.
He drops face first to the dirt.
Molly drops the shovel and takes me in her arms. We shiver, we cry and we hold one another.
We did not resist.
We did not resist.
We did not resist.
Molly gets back onto her feet. She wipes her eyes, stemming a silent flow of tears. Marking the right side of her face is a streak of brown mud.
“ That’s enough, Bec,” she says, with a stone face.
With that, she reaches her hand out for me, helping me up off the dirt floor.
Chapter 69
Then I spotted somebody else. A short, squat silhouette of a man.
I stared at the man through the dirt and tears. Only I was aware of him.
Franny.
It was Franny and he had something in his hand. An iron bar of some kind. A two or three foot length of rusted rebar.
Franny.
Franny was holding the iron bar two-fisted over Whalen’s head. Unaware of Franny’s presence, the monster went about his work filling in the trench, burying me. It was all happening now in slow motion, one frame slowly following another as that iron bar came down, smacking Whalen in the center of his skull. Even from deep down inside the trench, the sound of metal coming down against skull and bone was like a mallet smacked against a rotting pumpkin. His black eyes went wide as knees gave out; as he collapsed onto my dirt-covered stomach.
Franny dropped the iron bar to the floor.
He came to me, bent down, and extended his left hand.
“Safe. Safe, safe, safe.”
Chapter 70
With Franny’s help, I managed to get back up onto my feet. As the fresh dirt fell off of me, I stood wobbly, out of balance. I spit out dirt and the skeletal remains of the long departed. I tried to spit out the taste of death.
But it was impossible.
Even to Franny I must have appeared a strange and desperate sight with my filthy clothing, cuts and bruises, and dirt-matted hair. Outside the house now you could hear the sound of thunder. Reaching out to me, Franny tried to brush off some of the dirt from my arms and face.