Nightmare City - BestLightNovel.com
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Marie, he thought. She-or her father-was the only one who seemed to know anything. He had to get back to her, find out more. Why did he have to go to the monastery? She must know. She must know something she wasn't telling him.
He raced back to the stairs, back up the stairs. He reached the top and pushed through the door into the kitchen. He stopped short on the threshold, staring.
Marie was gone.
The breakfast nook was empty. The kitchen was empty. Other than that, everything seemed to be exactly as he had left it. The chairs were in disarray. The one chair Marie had knocked over was still lying on the floor. Tom could even still smell a trace of Marie's perfume lingering in the air. It was as if she'd only just now left the room.
"Marie?" he called out. "Marie!"
But there was no answer, and once again the house had that feeling of complete emptiness.
He stepped to the hallway and called again.
"Marie!"
But the hall was empty. He knew she was gone.
Tom felt the bizarre events of the day spinning through his mind, ideas spinning through his mind as if they were trying to put themselves into the right order, looking for the pattern in which they fit together.
It's not a dream, Marie had told him. It's not a hallucination. You're not dead. You're not mad. Go to the monastery. That's where the answers are.
What did she know? What was it she wasn't saying?
His thoughts whirling, he turned back to the kitchen. And as he turned, his thoughts stopped.
Something was off. Different. His eyes went over the empty room. He had been wrong before. He had thought the kitchen was just the way he'd left it. But it wasn't. Not exactly. Something had changed. But what? What was it?
He couldn't tell. He stood still, looking the place over. There was the table, as before. The chairs in their skewed positions, the one fallen over. The sink, the cupboards, the door across the way that led into the dining room, the stove on the opposite wall-everything familiar, everything unchanged, a scene so normal that it made Tom ache for all the ordinary mornings when he would wake up and come downstairs to find his mom in here, making breakfast.
But something was definitely different. What was it?
His searching glance went from corner to corner. The cabinets, the bas.e.m.e.nt door . . . back around to the table again, sitting empty there in the breakfast nook with the window behind it . . .
He stopped. That was it. The window.
The fog.
When he had come in here before, when he had first found Marie sitting at the table, he remembered he could see the backyard outside. There was mist out there, but it was thin. The scene was much clearer than it was out on the street, where the marine layer was so thick you could barely see a few feet in front of you.
Now, though, that had all changed. The fog had come in dense and close. It was pressed hard against the windowpanes. The gla.s.s was white, completely misted over, dripping with moisture. The backyard was now totally invisible.
Tom moved toward the window slowly. Fear and curiosity were warring within him-and the fear was winning. Up until now, he'd had the feeling that the house was somehow protected, somehow surrounded by a sort of safety zone that kept the fog-and the monsters in the fog-at bay.
But he saw now it wasn't so. The fog was right up against the house, a wall of white, impenetrable.
Did that mean the monsters were also close?
Frightened as he was, he had to find out-had to. He moved toward the breakfast nook. He edged around the table. He leaned in to the window, pressed his forehead against the cool gla.s.s, trying to peer out.
He could see nothing. Stillness. Fog, thick and swirling. Or wait . . . Was something there? Did something just move? Tom squinted, peering harder. Tendrils of fog turned and curled and the whiteness seemed to thin a little. The view began to clear.
A creature was staring back at him through the window, its sharp teeth bared, its cruel eyes gleaming.
Tom had only a second to react-only a second to step backward.
Then the window exploded as the creature lunged at him through the shattering gla.s.s.
The creature burst through the window with an echoing screech that obliterated thought. It was a screech of unG.o.dly hunger. It twisted the monster's already hideous features into a fanged, snarling portrait of pure brutality.
Tom stumbled backward in terror, his arms pinwheeling. His side banged painfully into the edge of the breakfast table. The jolt knocked him off-balance and he went down on one knee, grabbing hold of one of the chairs to break his fall. The creature-half inside the house and half out-strained and reached for him and screamed again, trying to clamber the rest of the way through the window to get at him. Tom saw the wicked, razor-sharp claws on its fingers stretched out toward him, inches away from his face.
Holding on to the chair, Tom quickly dragged himself to his feet. For a second, the monster withdrew its reaching hands and grabbed hold of the windowsill in order to propel itself inside. Completely ignoring the shards of gla.s.s that lanced into the flesh of its palms and arms, the beast started to climb in.
Tom lifted the chair with both hands. He brought it back over his shoulder. Swung it as hard as he could at the monster's face.
One of the chair legs connected with the beast's head. The thing gave an ugly grunt and tumbled backward out of the house, vanis.h.i.+ng into the fog again.
But the fog was pouring into the kitchen like smoke. Tom knew it would be only moments before the monster tried to come in again.
And now he heard the sound of shattering gla.s.s in the living room.
"Oh no," he whispered.
They were breaking in everywhere.
He dropped the chair. He rushed across the kitchen to the far door. He looked through-through the dining room-into the living room at the front of the house.
He thought he had been afraid before. He thought he had been afraid out in the fog when the creature had attacked him. That was nothing compared to this. Now the fear was like a raging fire inside him. It nearly burned his will away. It nearly left him weak and helpless.
Three of the things were crawling, clawing, climbing into the house. They had smashed the living room windows-the windows that ran all across the front wall-they had smashed all of them, and the fog was pouring through the openings. Second by second, the room was filling with white, swirling mist and the three creatures were coming in with it. They were scrabbling over the jagged shards of gla.s.s and tumbling through. One landed on the sofa, two fell to the floor. They all climbed slowly and clumsily to their feet. They looked around them with gleaming eyes.
They were searching-searching for Tom.
Tom ran right toward them. It cost him every ounce of courage he had, but he ran right through the dining room, right past the dining room table and into the living room, right at the beasts. It was the fastest way to get back to the front stairs-and the stairs were the only hope of survival he had. The kitchen was filling with fog behind him. The living room was growing misty in front of him. If he stayed where he was, the creatures would come cras.h.i.+ng in through every window till the house was full of them and he would have nowhere to make a stand. Upstairs, at least he had a chance.
The hunched, grunting creatures spotted him at once as he raced toward them. They came to attention like hunting dogs when they get the scent of game. For a second, they went rigid, their horribly distorted faces twisting, their sunken nostrils flaring. Then they let out a hollow shriek of triumph-and they charged.
They moved slowly with their slumped, lumbering, limping gaits. Tom was already racing past them and heading for the front hall as they made their move. The monster closest to him reached out, and Tom felt the tip of one of its claws brush his arm. He dodged out of its way. The terror of the near miss gave him fresh agility and speed. He was past the thing before it could try again to grab him.
There was the front door now, the front hall, the stairs. He'd almost made it. He rushed through the connecting doorway, out of the living room, into the foyer. He began to reach for the newel-post to pull himself up the steps.
But as he did, the sidelight next to the front door burst. A clawed hand shot in and grabbed hold of him.
Tom saw the furred fingers close around his wrist. He felt the long claws slas.h.i.+ng his flesh. He saw the pocked, elongated, skull-like face of the thing pressing through the hole in the sidelight. He saw the monster's eyes gleaming with cruelty and antic.i.p.ation as it gripped him and began to pull him toward itself. Tom thought his heart would stop with sheer horror.
He tried to yank himself free, but the beast was strong-and worse than that: the creature's touch was somehow poisonous. The minute its hand wrapped around him, the minute its claws slashed him, Tom felt a swirling darkness enter his mind. He felt himself losing strength.
The beast held him fast, trying to pull him toward the sidelight. The fog poured in around him and his mind grew foggy, too. With every second, Tom felt himself becoming weaker. Out of the corner of his eye, he saw the monsters in the living room humping toward him. He heard them grunting and gasping. He saw their eyes gleaming, their teeth bared.
The monster at the sidelight continued to hold him and the fog swirled around him and the dark poison swirled through his brain. Tom wasn't even sure he wanted to fight anymore. So what if they got him? What was the worst thing that could happen, anyway? At least if they killed him, it would put an end to this day of horror and confusion . . .
His will was seeping away.
The beast leaning in through the window gibbered wildly and kept trying to pull the weakening Tom toward him. Tom's legs went wobbly. His eyes rolled in his head as he began to lose consciousness. He saw the portrait on the wall, tilting and spinning. His mom. His brother. He saw the cross hanging beside it.
"Fight them! Fight them off! Despair is never an option!"
Tom shook his head, trying to clear it. Was that Burt?
"Don't give them even half a chance. Remember the Warrior . . ."
It was! It was Burt! On the television set again. His voice dim, far away but still shouting up to him from the bas.e.m.e.nt.
"Don't give in! That's just the poison talking! Come on! You're my brother! You do not surrender! The Warrior, Tom!"
A surge of strength went through him. Tom gave a roar and pulled himself free of the monster's grasp, ignoring the claws that sliced his arm.
At once the poison seemed to leave his body, the darkness seemed to drain out of his mind. Light and alertness flooded through him and he was fully awake again.
With the new energy surging through his muscles, he started moving. Just as the monsters clumped out of the living room into the front hall, just as they began to close in on him, he shot up the stairs as fast as he could go.
He took the stairs two and three at a time. He broke free of the fog. It fell away behind him. The shuffling, limping monsters cl.u.s.tered on the stairs beneath him, b.u.mping into the walls, b.u.mping into one another, unable to rise above the level of the mist.
Tom was at the second-floor landing-was racing down the hall toward his room. Another moment and he was through his bedroom door. He slammed it shut. Locked it. Seized hold of the dresser with both hands. Dragged it across the floor and shoved it against the door, barricading himself inside.
He was safe-for now.
Panting hard, Tom leaned against the dresser. His forearm stung from where the creature's claws had dug into him. There was blood soaking into his sweats.h.i.+rt sleeve. The fear inside him was so powerful it was sickening. For a moment, he thought he was actually going to throw up. But he remembered his brother's voice shouting to him from the bas.e.m.e.nt.
Fight them! Fight them off! Despair is never an option!
Shouting to him, calling him by name, as if it weren't just Burt on a video but the real Burt, really there, still alive.
Remember the Warrior, Tom!
Tom didn't know how it was possible for his brother to reach out to him from the grave like that. But right this minute, with everything so crazy, he didn't care. Nothing made sense now, so he might as well cling to the sound of that familiar voice he missed so much. He fought off the fear and the sickness. He gritted his teeth, and his mouth twisted as a low growl of determination came out of him.
He had to do something. Now. The beasts were still out there. The fog was rising. They would rise with it, come up the stairs, down the hall. They'd be at the door soon, any second. He had to find a way out of here. Find a way to get help.
Tom looked around at his bedroom for something he could use: the computer on the desk, the window by the bed, the sports pennants on the wall, the framed newspaper pages . . .
"Sources: Tiger Champs Used Drugs."
Something flashed through his mind. Some fragment of memory. Why couldn't he grasp it? He had to think . . .
Go to the monastery, Tom. That's where the answers are.
For a moment, Tom felt as if everything were on the verge of making sense . . .
Then the creatures reached his bedroom, and all his thoughts were scattered.
The first thud was soft, as if one of the beasts had stumbled coming down the hallway and fallen against the door. The noise was so faint Tom might have pretended to himself he hadn't really heard it.
But then the thing started mewling. That high-pitched, weirdly echoing sound was unmistakable. Tom took an involuntary step back as a fresh wave of fear went over him. He stared at the door.
The doork.n.o.b began to turn.
Tom heard the clicking of long claws against the metal. The k.n.o.b turned tentatively at first. Once this way, once that. Then again. Then it clicked back and forth harder-back and forth. Then the k.n.o.b began to rattle as the creature grew frustrated. The door began to s.h.i.+ver on its hinges . . .
Tom gasped as the door leapt in its frame. One of the things started pounding on the wood, slamming the wood-it sounded like with its open hand-again and again. Then it stopped. But the next noise went up Tom's spine and made his teeth ache. Scratching. Long claws were digging into the surface of the door, trying to rip their way through. Then there was more pounding-steady pounding now. Tom heard grunts, gasps, small animal shrieks out in the hall. How many of them were out there? He couldn't tell.
The snarling got louder. The pounding on the door got more insistent. The dresser that barricaded the door began to s.h.i.+ver.
Eyes wide, Tom turned this way and that, looking for some way out. The window . . .
He crossed the room to the window. Peered outside.
His bedroom looked out on the backyard. He could see the fog lying over the small square of gra.s.s. At first he couldn't make out much more than the ruffled whiteness. It was like staring down into clouds from an airplane.
But then he saw them.
There must have been nearly a dozen of them out there, dim hulking shadows ranging back and forth through the mist. Some were climbing into the house through the broken windows. Others were moving in slow, stumbling circles right below him, as if they were waiting for him to try to climb out and escape.
The pounding on the door continued behind him. And the growls and snorts and shrieks out in the hall continued, too. Grimly, Tom looked over his shoulder and saw the door rattling and the dresser trembling. The barricade couldn't hold forever. The creatures were going to come bursting in, and soon.
Tom prayed for help as he scrabbled in his pocket for his cell phone. Please, G.o.d, help me, help me . . .
He fished his phone out. His hands trembling, he quickly called up the number pad and keyed in 911. He raised the phone to his ear. Waited. But there was nothing. There was no sound. Quickly, he lowered the phone. Looked desperately at the readout. He felt his stomach go sour again as one of the creatures out in the hall gave a loud echoing cry and hit the bedroom door full force.
No bars on the phone. No reception.
He quickly stuffed the phone back in his pocket. He went to the computer on the desk. His fingers were so unsteady, he had to try three times before he could call up his browser. Maybe he could raise a friend, or contact the police by FaceTime or Skype or even e-mail. Something. Anything. He had to reach anyone he could.