26
“Lyda’s head is gone,” Nancy told Lucas and Kyle. “I just looked out and spotted it.”
“Why do I get this feeling the head will be back?” Kyle asked glumly.
“I’m with you,” Lucas said.
“But on whose side?” Mark asked. “Theirs, or ours?”
“We saw her soul leave her, Lucas,” Kyle reminded the man. “Remember?”
“If that’s so, then the head is just that, no more,” Lucas replied. “Those on the . . . other side,” he stumbled over the words, “can use it any way they wish.”
Mimi shuddered and left them talking. “Saw her soul leave her,” she muttered. “I wish I was more religious.”
They all, to a person, wished that for themselves.
Looking out the kitchen window, Lucas realized what it was that had been nagging at him. The body of Sheriff Bill Pugh was gone. He wondered if they would be seeing that headless thing again.
He felt sure they would.
* * *
No one bothered them as Kyle and Lucas walked outside and began cutting poles to use for spears. They could see no member of the Brotherhood and, for the first time in hours, neither man felt unseen eyes on him.
“I get the feeling they’re gone,” Lucas said.
“So do I, buddy. But I think they’ve just pulled back to regroup, rather than left for good. They probably can’t figure out what’s happened; why they can’t use their weapons.”
“So much has happened, Kyle,” Lucas said, whacking off a six-foot length of wrist-sized limb, “I don’t remember if I asked you. Are you a religious person?”
“I was until I went to ’Nam,” the trooper said. “A lot of guys become much more religious in a war zone. But I went the other way. I became the most profane and anti-religion guy over there. I just couldn’t believe that God—if He existed—would allow that horror. I guess I became a pain in the ass on the subject. One day this old chief petty officer—he was old to me then—took me outside the quarters and talked to me for about fifteen minutes. Then he proceeded to beat the shit out of me. It was the most humiliating experience of my life. He must have been about forty years old. I was twenty-one and thought I was the toughest man in the world. To make matters worse, he was about half my size. I never even got a lick in on him. When I woke up, he was standing over me. He dropped a little Bible on my chest and told me to read it. And he told me the next time he heard me cursing God, he would really whip my ass.”
“And that turned you around?”
Kyle shook his head. “No, not really. What turned me around was when I did some checking up on that chief. He had told me his name was Flanigan. But, Lucas . . . there was no CPO Flanigan. Not in my outfit, not in anybody’s outfit. He didn’t exist.”
Lucas forgot their job, forgot the machete in his hand. Stood and looked at Kyle.
“I knew that somebody had sure beat the hell out of me. That was no figment of my imagination. I went to see the chaplain. He said somebody like my CPO Flanigan has been popping up in wars for hundreds of years. He asked me if I would like to pray with him. I just broke down and bawled like a hurt child. There I was, Navy Cross and all, bawling. He arranged some R&R for me, and I spent the next two weeks doing a lot of soul-searching. I didn’t become a zealot; didn’t go around preaching after that. I just came to realize there was a higher power; that all this,” he waved his hand, “did not just evolve. It didn’t affect my ability to perform my duty. I won a couple more medals for killing the enemy. But the experience with the chief did turn me around.”
A very slight noise behind the men turned them both around. Two men holding guns faced them, both of the men smiling.
“Gotcha,” a heavyset man said.
“Maybe,” Kyle said. “Now comes the acid test, Lucas.”
“Don’t do nothin’ stupid,” the other man said. “Just come on with us.”
“I don’t think so,” Lucas said. He stepped forward.
The man pulled the trigger.
* * *
“This kitchen is going to be a hotbox,” Tracy said wiping her face with a dish towel. “We’re going to have to take shifts keeping this old wood-burning stove going.”
“How did our ancestors stand it in the summer?” Jan asked.
“They sweated a lot,” Anne said.
“Is that water hot?” David asked, stepping into the kitchen and immediately wiping his face with a handkerchief.
“Just under boiling,” Karen told him. “It’s going to be interesting figuring how much wood to add to keep the temperature at a constant.”
David grinned at her. “Yes, a woman’s work is never done, is it?”
The women glared at him, Anne saying, “You want me to test the temperature of this water on you, buster?”
“Thank you, but no.” David left the room, quickly.
* * *
The man looked at his pistol in shock. The other man pulled the trigger of his shotgun. Nothing happened.
Kyle laughed at their expressions and stepped forward, his short stick held in the kendo fighting position. He jammed the end into the heavyset man’s stomach just as Lucas swung his stick, the end catching the second man on the side of the head. The man screamed as his blood gushed from a torn ear. He ran around the corner of the house, leaving his friend behind, leaving Kyle and Lucas beating the man to death with heavy poles.
Jackie heard the commotion and the scream. She grabbed the handle of a pot of boiling water, yelled as her hand blistered, then grabbed a towel, wrapping that around the handle of the pot. She ran outside to the veranda just as the bleeding man staggered by. She hurled the boiling water on him.
The boiling water hit the man in the face.
Screaming in agony, blinded from the boiling water in his eyes, the man lost direction and ran toward the porch. Johnny and Peter ran out, Johnny with a short sharpened stick in his hand. The boy jammed the stick into the man’s throat.
Bright blood gushed out, splashing on the veranda. Both the boys were immediately sick, fighting to keep from throwing up. The man staggered backward, lost his balance, and fell forward, the stick striking the porch, jamming it all the way through, the sharpened end sticking out the back of his neck. He thrashed and gurgled and beat his fists on the floor in agony.
Kyle and Lucas ran around the side of the veranda. They looked at the scene, then lifted their eyes to the kids.
“It’s all right, gang,” Lucas said, still holding his bloody spear. “It had to be done and you did what you had to do.”
“Yes, sir,” the kids said.
“Go on in the house. We’ll finish it up out here.”
“It’s not over!” Ira shouted from behind a cottage. “You can’t get away. None of you. We’ll get you. You’ll die for this.”
Lucas looked in the direction of the voice. That’s what you think, brother.
* * *
From hidden places in the timber, the Rejects watched the activity around the huge white house. They held no animosity toward the man who lived in the great house, even though he had struck one of their own weeks back. It was then that they began to realize that man feared them as much, or more, than they feared man. And it was then that the wisest of them began to realize there was no reason to hate and loathe those who lived in the house. The smaller beings were cute and playful, and the Rejects sensed they posed no threat to them. Indeed, they were amused as they watched Jackie and Johnny at play and work around the ugly house.
It was the house and those who paid homage to it that they should hate and loathe.
None among them were exactly sure how they arrived at that conclusion. But they knew the strange glowing beings who also lived in the woods were friendly with the young who lived in the ugly house. And the children who came and then vanished like light had been friendly to the Rejects for many, many years. So, the Rejects concluded, the people in the house must be good people, not bad people like those who enjoyed hurting others of their kind.
It really wasn’t that complicated once it was reasoned out.
But the Rejects knew they must be careful in aiding those trapped in the house. For the Rejects were few, and those who worshipped the darkness were many. But the Rejects knew the thousands of acres of forest far better than any man ever would. They knew all the hiding places, all the holes, all the dips and valleys and streams and caves.
The elders called the others together for a meeting.
They had plans to make.
* * *
“We’re as ready as we can be,” Kyle said. “All things considered.”
“I feel like Ugh,” Harry said, hefting his spear.
“And beginning to smell like him, too,” Jan said with a grin.
They were all getting a little gamy.
Kyle and Paul had restrung the old bows with heavy waxed cord found in the pantry. The bows would not have their original power, but would have enough behind them to kill at close range.
All in the house, especially the kids, had taken a grim satisfaction at the ugly cries and the profanity of the men of the Brotherhood upon discovering their weapons useless.
Ira was working his people up into a frenzy. They could hear him shouting as he threatened and cajoled and cursed them.
“Those men have to have jobs,” Anne said. “They have families to support. Bills to pay. How long can they stay out there?”
“What is today?” Tracy asked. “I’ve lost track of time.”
“What difference does it make?” Nancy responded. “We’re locked in time.”
“I think it’s Saturday,” Kyle said. “Isn’t it?”
“Or Sunday,” Lucas said. “I think it’s Sunday.” He was silent in thought for a few seconds. “Maybe this is our day, people.”
“You mean, take the attack to them?” Kyle asked.
Lucas hefted his spear. Kyle had fastened a butcher knife on the end of the spear, after sharpening the blade to a razor hone. “Yeah. Why not?” He looked at those around him. “If we can, that is.”