Authors: Clive Barker
He finally got up from behind the door and returned through the bedroom, past his sleeping beauty, to the balcony. He stepped out. The dull dawn had ushered in a dull day. Later, perhaps, the marine layer would burn off and they’d have some sun, but for now, the sky was a wall of dead cloud. He looked down into the greenery, hoping to spot Maxine, but the thickness of the jungle all around the house—especially the gigantic Bird of Paradise trees—made it virtually impossible to see very much.
And then, out of the corner of his eye, he glimpsed a motion. Somebody was running through the thicket, throwing panicked backward glances as he went. It wasn’t Maxine, it was her assistant, Sawyer, who’d been with her for the last three years. He wasn’t any more than thirty, but he’d let his body get out of shape. Too many hurried lunches, snatched because Maxine had more work for him than he could ever possibly finish; too much after-work socializing, knocking back his single malts and be-luga at fancy premieres; not to mention the Bavarian crème–filled donuts CC[348-676] 9/10/01 2:29 PM Page 466
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he would bring into the office in boxes of six, to help him through his day with a well-timed sugar rush.
Thanks to the donuts and hamburgers, and his neat scotches, he couldn’t run very fast. And he certainly couldn’t yell for help while he was running: he didn’t have enough breath for both. All he could do was sob between gasps, throwing panicking glances over his shoulder. His pursuers were closing on him. Todd could see the bushes thrashing around immediately behind him; and something else—something smaller and more nimble—was throwing itself from branch to branch overhead, to keep up with its quarry.
“M . . . Max . . . Maxine!” he managed to get out, in between gasps.
“I’m over here!” Maxine yelled. “Sawyer! I’m at the cages!”
Todd followed the sound of Maxine’s voice, and located her. She was a considerable distance from the house, and had clambered up on top of one of a series of cages. There she was kneeling, with a gun in her hand.
She’d always kept guns around the house, Todd knew, but this was the first occasion he’d seen her using one.
“Keep following my voice,” she yelled to Sawyer. “Look for a tree with bright yellow flowers, like big bells—”
“I’m looking!” Sawyer sobbed.
From his vantage point on the balcony, Todd felt like a Caesar at the Colosseum, watching the lions and the Christians. He could see the Christians perfectly clearly, and now—as the gap between the pursuer and the pursued closed—he began to glimpse the lions too.
In the bushes no more than a yard or two behind Sawyer was one of the dead’s children: a foul hybrid of ghost woman and—of all things—jaguar. The latter must have been a prisoner in Katya’s menagerie, but the marriage of anatomies had turned its sleek perfection into something rougher, uglier and entirely more bizarre. The human element had been female; no doubt of that. The face—when Todd glimpsed it—was two-thirds humanoid. The high cheekbones, the icy stare: it was surely the face of Lana Turner. Then the creature opened its mouth, and the bestial third showed itself: vast teeth, top and bottom, a mottled throat, a black CC[348-676] 9/10/01 2:29 PM Page 467
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tongue. It let out a very unladylike roar, and pounced on Sawyer, who threw himself out of its path with inches to spare.
“Are you okay?” Maxine yelled.
All that Sawyer could manage was: “No!”
“Are you close to me?” Maxine said.
“I can’t see you,” he cried. The branches over his head were shaking violently.
“Look for the yellow flowers.”
“. . . yellow . . . flowers . . .”
It would have been easy for Todd to direct Sawyer through this maze, but that would have taken all the fun out of it. Better to keep his silence and let the man find his own way. It was the kind of game he knew Katya would love. He was tempted to wake her, but it would be over in the next few seconds, he guessed. Sawyer was a few yards from the cages, and safety. Having failed to catch its victim on its first pounce, the Lana, as Todd had mentally dubbed the creature, had returned to her stalking. Todd caught glimpses of her mottled back as she slid through the thicket. Her intentions were clear, at least from Todd’s point of view. She was moving to cut Sawyer off from the gallery of cages. Sawyer and Maxine kept a banal exchange going meanwhile, so that Sawyer could find his way to her.
“You’re getting louder.”
“Am I?”
“Sure. You see the yellow flowers, yet?”
“Yeah. I see them.”
“You’re
really
close.”
“I’m under them—”
He stopped talking because he heard the low growl of the Lana. Todd could hear the creature too, though he couldn’t see it. He silently willed Sawyer not to make any sudden moves; just stand still, shut up, and maybe the animal would lose interest. Sawyer could stand still without any problem, but could he shut up? No, he could not. Sawyer was a gabber. “Oh God, Maxine. Oh God. It’s close to me.”
“Shush,” Maxine advised.
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He stopped talking, but it was too late. The Lana knew exactly where Sawyer was positioned. She launched herself out of the thicket, striking Sawyer so that he fell sideways, through the very patch of yellow flowers which had been his beacon.
He was now in view of Maxine, who yelled to him to
get up, get up
quickly
—
He started to do so, but the breath had been knocked out of him by the blow, and before he could get to his knees the creature was on him a second time, her claws digging deep into the mass of his shoulder-muscle.
From her perch on the cage Maxine was attempting to get a clear shot, but it would have been difficult for anyone, however sophisticated his skill with guns, to put a bullet in the animal and not wound Sawyer in the process. But Maxine was ready to give it a try. She’d been taking lessons with an ex-cop from the LAPD for several months; she knew to keep a steady hand and her eye fixed on the target.
Sawyer couldn’t have moved if his life had depended upon it. The creature had him held in a death-grip.
Maxine fired. The sound was sharp in the still air of the Canyon, like a whip-crack. It echoed off the other wall of the Canyon, the blow of the bullet throwing Sawyer’s attacker off her victim. She lay, this not-so-distant relation of the exquisite Miss Turner, on the ground beside Sawyer, whom she’d loosed as soon as she was hit. Blood ran copiously from them both, mingling on the ground between them.
“Get up,” Maxine said to Sawyer.
It was good advice. The Lana was still alive, her breathing quick and shallow.
Sawyer wasn’t so badly injured that he failed to realize the danger he was still in. He rolled away from his attacker and started to get to his feet. As he did so, the creature suddenly sat up beside him and, opening her sizable jaws, lunged. She took a chunk from Sawyer’s leg, twisting her head to take away the bulk of his calf. He screamed, and fell forward onto his hands.
Maxine had a clear shot at the beast, and took it. But her second shot was not as efficient as her first; it struck the creature’s shoulder, passing through CC[348-676] 9/10/01 2:29 PM Page 469
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the muscle without appearing to significantly slow the animal, which threw itself on top of Sawyer as though she were attempting to mount him.
Seconds later, the Lana opened her mouth and sank her teeth into the bones of Sawyer’s skull. The man’s sobs ceased instantly, and what little strength his limbs had possessed fled. He hung beneath the Lana’s body like a zebra’s corpse from the jaws of a lion, glassy-eyed and lifeless.
Todd heard Maxine say, “Oh Christ . . . oh Christ . . .”
But the horror wasn’t over with yet. The creature apparently wanted to get her teeth into her wounder, because having dispatched Sawyer she let the body drop from her jaws and began to move toward the cage on which Maxine was crouched. Even in her hurt state there was no doubt that she had the physical power to get up onto the cage and attack Maxine. In fact, the wounds she had sustained didn’t seem to be hurting her that much; her hybrid face carried a look that was somewhere between an animal snarl and a human smile. Maxine didn’t hesitate. Taking a bead on the animal, she fired. The bullet struck the creature in the middle of her face, taking out the flat nose and the top half of the mouth.
For one long moment she seemed not to comprehend the fatal damage she had sustained. She lifted her front leg, which ended in a hand which erupted into claws, toward her face, almost as though she intended to explore the damage she had sustained. But before her corrupted limb could reach her face the creature’s system closed down, and she fell forward, dead.
There had been a good deal of motion in the foliage throughout this episode; Todd had the sense that there were several other creatures watching to see how this proceeded before they showed their own faces.
Now, with the death of Lana, the thicket was still. Nothing moved; nothing breathed.
The only sound Todd could hear was the very soft sound of Maxine saying
Oh God
to herself, over and over. She quickly got control of her horror and her fear and started to clamber down off the cage where she’d been perched.
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encouragement, but he refrained from doing so. For one thing, he didn’t want to admit that he’d stood as a spectator to this whole drama; second, he was afraid of distracting Maxine while she was down there. Certainly her killing of the creature had silenced its brethren in the thicket, but their silence didn’t mean they’d given up their stalking. They were simply sitting in the shadows waiting for Maxine to make a mistake, when no doubt they would fall upon her in a vengeful mob.
Thus, keeping his silence, Todd watched Maxine make her way between the cages, glancing back at the house constantly, as though she was trying to find a path that would lead her back to safety but was at present only able to find one that ran parallel to the house. She was now thirty or forty yards from the cages, which was a good thing, because that meant she couldn’t see what was happening on the walkway beneath them.
A minute or two after her exit, a few of Lana’s family members appeared from the thicket where—as Todd had known—they’d been waiting. Now about six of them came out of hiding. They had no interest in the corpse of their sibling. It was Sawyer they wanted. Surrounding his body they began to play with the corpse like children with some grue-some toy. They tore off his clothes, and bit off his penis and balls. They followed that by biting off fingers, knuckle by knuckle, and spitting the pieces out. They seemed to take infantile pleasure in the mess they were making. Todd was horribly disgusted by the spectacle, but he kept watching until they were finished with the fingers and began to disembowel the man. Only then did he retreat from the balcony railing and go back inside.
It would not necessarily be easy for Maxine to find her way back up to the house, he realized. Many of the pathways were overgrown, and in her present, no doubt panicked, state of mind, she could easily lose her way and keep on losing it. He would have to go outside and find her.
Katya was still sleeping. The shots hadn’t even stirred her. Indeed, she seemed to have scarcely moved, so profound was her slumber. Her hand was still up at her mouth, limply curled round on itself.
He kissed her, saw that this did not wake her either, and left her to her slumbers.
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F I V E
Eppstadt was in the Devil’s Country. A fine drizzle, almost a mist, was drooping from the bloated clouds; it came in soft waves against his face, cooling his flushed skin. If he doubted the reality of this place, its chill seemed designed to undo his doubt.
He hated the idea that what he was witnessing was real; doing so violated all his logical faculties. But what was the alternative? That he’d slipped and fallen, and was now lying at the bottom of the stairs in a semi-comatose state, imagining all this? It was a pretty solution, but as he had no way of knowing whether it was true or not, his only option was to find Joe and get the hell out of here before the place began to get even crazier than it already was. The less he knew about this country—the less its grotesqueries lodged in his psyche—the happier the rest of his life would surely be.
With that thought he began a three-hundred-and-sixty-degree scanning of the landscape, calling Joe’s name as he did so. His din (even his simple presence) was enough to stir life in the bushes and trees. He felt himself watched by several species of unlikely animal, their eyes huge and luminous, their postures, and in some cases the details of their physiognomies, vaguely human, as though this twilight world had witnessed all kinds of criminal couplings.
Finally, he heard a response from Joe.
“Who’s there?”
“Eppstadt.”
“Come over here. Quickly. You gotta help me.”
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He followed the sound of the man’s shouting. There was a small copse ahead, and Joe had clambered a few feet into a tree by means of a crude wooden ladder which had been propped against one of the trunks.
“What the hell are you doing?” Eppstadt wanted to know.
Joe simply repeated his plea: “You gotta help me.”
“There’s no time, Joe,” Eppstadt said. “You’ve got to come back with me.
Right now
. Christ, I sent you down to close the door. Why’d you come in?”
“For the same reason you did,” Joe said. “I couldn’t believe what I was seeing. Are you going to help me or not?”
Eppstadt had pressed his way into the midst of the thicket as he and Joe spoke, snagging his suit on the briars that grew in profusion here several times as he did so. The tableau that now came into view appalled him.