King Him
J
oelle felt a deepening pressure on her arm, which had been dangling over the mattress edge like a stray vine cadging to be cut. The squeezing sensation had been strong enough to wake her, and it quickly became vice-like, painful. She winced, opened her eyes to the dimness.
The casement window sat open, resembling a book with glass covers. March night winds took advantage of the aperture, gusting in to refrigerate the bedroom. Barbs of panic passed through Joelle as she gazed at what seemed to be evidence of a home invasion.
Something shook her. She jerked her head down and saw who the figure clutching her arm was. “Theo?”
He was crouched down at her bedside. His hand on her arm appeared grubby, stained. It sounded as though Theo was snivelling. “I need to tell you something,” he mumbled. “I can’t believe this is really happening . . .”
His voice was a strangled whimper. His body trembled as though there were live wires beneath the skin. Lengths of glistening secretions hung from his nostrils, his mouth.
“What happened?” Joelle pleaded. “Tell me!”
Theo pressed a finger to his lips, hushing her. He quickly looked to the parted window, peering into the black yard beyond it.
“Theo,” she said, quietly this time, “you’re scaring me.”
He turned back to face her briefly before flinging his arms around her blanketed legs. He pressed his head against her and began to sob. It was the first time Joelle had ever seen him cry.
“Christ, Joelle . . . I killed your baby.”
Her stomach flipped, her throat and tongue became desiccated. The shadows that surrounded her all seemed to be swaying.
“Oh, God! I wanna die!” he howled.
“You . . . you had a bad dream, Theo, that’s all. Maybe you walked in your sleep, staggered outside, got confused. But you
know
I don’t have a baby, right? That proves it was all a dream. Now . . . now stop this. Please.”
Theo’s eyes appeared lidless as he stared at the hook rug at the foot of the bed, studying it as though he were a yogi and it an ornate mandala.
“You were pregnant.” His voice was as flatline as his stare, as cold as the perennial gusts from the window. “You’ve been pregnant for weeks. I couldn’t tell you. I didn’t know how. I thought I was okay with it. I really thought I could let Him go through with it. But when He told me what the baby would be like, I couldn’t allow it to be born. I tore it out of you . . .”
She watched him flinch, double over, then vomit onto the floorboards.
“How could I do that, Jo? How? What kind of man can just rip out an unborn child as if he’s cleaning a turkey?”
“Stop!” Joelle’s reach for the lamp chain was fumbling, but she eventually found and yanked it.
The burst of light made her squint, and when she ultimately looked down at the quilt she noticed stains, ugly dark blotches. Some of these spots evaporated once her eyes grew accustomed to the lamp-glow, but those that remained became even blacker and uglier. She poked one. It was wet, and some of it came off, staining her flesh.
She flung back the covers, stood, gave her body a frantic inspection.
There were no visible injuries, no telltale reddish stains on her nightgown.
“It’s not your blood,” Theo explained, “it’s mine.” He turned his arms over to expose red-weeping divots in his flesh.
Joelle quickly yanked two T-shirts from the stack of laundry on her dresser and wound them over Theo’s forearms. She told him to get up, but Theo didn’t want to. He rose only after she forced her arm beneath his and attempted to yank him to his feet. She slapped the casement window shut before leading Theo out of the room.
Once inside the bathroom Joelle uncapped the peroxide bottle and began to clean his wounds; nearly a dozen jagged, angry-looking rings marred his forearms, palms, left wrist. The nail of his right thumb had been torn out at its root, exposing the delicate pulp beneath.
“Jesus, Theo, what did you
do
to yourself?” she managed before the lump in her throat dammed her voice.
“The baby did this, not me,” he said. “I didn’t think it’d be that strong or that big. And I didn’t expect it to have teeth. But once I managed to fight back with my silver hammer, the thing came apart so easily. It just crumbled in my hands . . . as if it was made of wet newspaper.” Theo rested his head against the tile wall.
“Your silver hammer?” Joelle asked thinly.
Theo nodded once. “Sleepy,” he whispered.
“That better?” she asked Theo as she lowered the quilt onto his trembling form.
“Yes.”
She’d transformed the sofa into a makeshift bed for him after he’d refused to leave the living room, claiming it was the only place he felt safe.
Theo’s mouth widened with a yawn. Joelle hoped he’d fall asleep. He needed it, but before he drifted she needed something too.
“I have to ask you something,” she said.
“Okay.”
“You know you were just having a bad dream, right? I mean, now that you’ve seen that I’m fine, you know I wasn’t really pregnant.”
“If you say so.”
“I’m serious! I need to hear you acknowledge that you were just confused, that you know you didn’t really hurt me. You were sleepwalking or hallucinating. You must have hurt yourself in your sleep. But I was never pregnant and you never aborted my baby with your hammer, right?”
“It wasn’t
your
baby. It was King Him’s.”
A frigid winter passed through Joelle’s insides. “What?”
“King Him.”
“I thought all that was settled a long time ago.”
“
We
did settle it, King Him didn’t.”
“But you said you banished King Him after . . . that you banished King Him the last time.”
“I did. King Him came back.”
“Enough!” Joelle turned away. She was shaking, uncertain of what to do or say next.
“So tired . . .” Theo mumbled, “I’m so . . .”
Joelle lit a cigarette and went to the kitchen to fix a cup of mint tea while Theo dozed. Mint tea had long been a nightly ritual, though Theo had always prepared it. His special brew had never failed to make her deliciously sleepy.
She sipped her own blend, surprised at the clarity and mildness of its flavour. It had none of the bitter aftertaste of Theo’s.
Settling into an armchair, Joelle clicked on the plasma screen; infomercials, a Bollywood musical, cartoons in French. The all-weather channel was, sadly, the most interesting of the lot.
She poked at the soft flesh of her belly; compulsively, absentmindedly. Now and again she would check her fingers for the telltale globs of red, would study her torso in search of some occult wound. She lit another cigarette.
Theo’s delusion had been upsetting enough, but another fact was equally disturbing: her cycle, which had run with Swiss-watch precision since she was thirteen, was off by a few weeks. She hadn’t mentioned it to Theo or anyone else, assuming it would resume at any time. She wasn’t one for immaculate conceptions. Nevertheless, she found herself unable to dismiss Theo’s delusion as just that. Had he sensed something?
The awfulness of their long ago seemed to be reviving itself in their here and now.
Theo stirred and grumbled something in his sleep. Joelle switched off the TV. The room fell silent for a beat before Theo jerked upright and bellowed. The ceramic mug jumped from Joelle’s hand and burst upon the hardwood floor.
“You’re all right!” she cried. “You must’ve had another nightmare. Just go back to sleep. You’re all right, Theo.”
He lifted his knees to cradle his head.
“Sleep,” she repeated.
Eventually Theo heeded. When she was sure he was out, Joelle began picking up the glass shards from the floor.
“Intheshed . . .”
She froze at the sound of the murmured words.
“Theo?” she whispered with reticence.
“In the shed . . . I left it in the shed, in an old rucksack.”
“What’s out in the shed?” she asked, not truly wanting the answer.
“The baby. We have to get rid of it. King Him can’t know about this.”
“Lie back down. I’ll take care of it.”
Her walk to the rear of the house and the unlocking of the patio door was partly done as a pantomime; a ruse to trick Theo into thinking that she was making good on her promise to take care of whatever he believed was in the shed.
Had he really gone outside earlier tonight, creeping through her bedroom window like a prowler? Were his superstitions once again becoming dangerously elaborate after all these years?
The answer came in the form of a backyard shed with its door wide open.
Joelle stepped out onto the deck. There was a persistent thudding, like an irregular pulse, as the winds pushed the shed door back and forth, pounding it against the jamb. The soot-dark interior of the shed made Joelle feel ill. She forced herself to descend the deck steps.
An old rucksack drooped over the shed’s edge, its frayed hem rising and falling, lung-like, with each gust of wind. Joelle’s pace slowed as she neared the shed. The door swung back again, but Joelle caught it before it slammed.
Theo’s ball peen hammer was lying on top of the rucksack. Its silvery head was coated in something dark, thick.
“No,” Joelle whimpered, “no . . .”
The fibres of the sack looked to be soaked with the same reddish-black sludge. An acrid stench hung heavy inside the shed’s hull. Bile climbed up Joelle’s throat. She swallowed it back.
‘You’re dreaming. I’m fine. Stop this.’ Joelle heard her own words echoing through her head, only this time she was using them in an attempt to calm herself.
She snagged the rucksack, pulled it out into the fledgling daylight. It was heavy and leaking foul liquid onto the snow. She held the sack closed and stood questioning whether she could even bring herself to glimpse inside.
She hurled the sack to the ground, repulsed by the possibilities of its contents. She backed away, sure to keep her eyes off the dropped bundle, and tore up the deck stairs.
Theo was sitting up when she re-entered the living room. He was balancing a stack of junk mail upon his bent knees and appeared to be scribbling on one of the envelopes.
“What are you doing?”
“I’m trying to jot something down before I forget it again. It came back to me just as I was falling asleep.”
She neared him, looked over his shoulder and read: