Read Psycho Within Us (The Psycho Series Book 2) Online
Authors: Chad Huskins
He stood right here
, he thought, looking around at the bodies.
He held Semyon hostage for a moment, used him as a human shield, then started firing
. The Grey Wolf glanced behind him. The SUV wasn’t too far away.
Was he going for it?
Perhaps, but if so, why didn’t he take it?
The house crackled and
spat, and heated glass snapped while he pondered. Shcherbakov saw the blood trail leading from the center of the other corpses up to the porch.
He dragged that one
, he thought.
An interrogation?
He nodded to himself.
Probably
. If that was so, then their killer(s) likely had some information on the families or their operations, perhaps both.
Shcherbakov
knelt to check out a pair of shell casings, turned them over in his hand. He stood, turned around and around, admiring the work.
A decent shot, but not a superb one
.
It was a messy gunfight
.
He somehow got the drop on them, or else they would’ve blown him away once Semyon was down
.
They must’ve been severely distracted by something else to let this happen
. The Wolf knew something else, too.
I just missed him
.
This was all very recent, so he couldn’t have gotten much information out of the cooking man
—
“Help!” someone cried.
Shcherbakov spun. The plea had come through the high winds, but it was so terribly distant and he couldn’t trace the source. He pulled his NVGs back on. Using night-vision, he could only see the wall of falling snow all around him. He switched to IR, and for a moment saw nothing at all. Then, a small, red-orange dot appeared on his screen. It was bobbing up and down, and getting closer.
The Wol
f held up his pistol, and knelt. He took careful aim. “Help!” Whoever it was, they were still coming closer. Perhaps they had spotted him against the blazing fire behind him. Shcherbakov knew that his dark silhouette would stand out against the inferno. “Help!” He took careful aim, and waited. As the person got closer, two more red-orange images emerged behind them. Then a third. Then a fourth and a fifth. Now a sixth. “Help!” Shcherbakov never let his aim waver. As the person approached, he saw their dimensions take shape—arms and a head, and then finally the legs—and just as he was about to call out to the person to halt, six more red-orange dots emerged behind them, chasing them down.
Wolves
.
Shcherbakov
switched back to night-vision. The man approaching looked familiar, no doubt one of Semyon’s gang that had fled when the shooting started. Shcherbakov took aim at the lead wolf and fired, but just as he did, the ten or so predators leapt onto the man, pulled him down, and consumed him. He got out one more scream before Shcherbakov opened fire on the wolves. He hit a few of the animals, but the others were too determined. And they were too many. Now six more emerged from the cold forests. Now eight more. Now five more. His comrade’s final screams were lost amidst their ravenous growls.
Shcherbakov backed away, somewhat stunned. He had the good sense to move towards the burning house. All animals feared fire, after all. He heard a single howl on the wind. A call to the rest of the pack that dinner was served.
Good god
.
And this is the land Zakhar Ogorodnikov clung to?
Thinking on it a moment longer, he figured that was part of what Zakhar would need to keep his playthings in, and strangers out.
It was a few more minutes before he got over the shocking scene. Then, he switched back to IR and looked all around. More red-orange dots were moving all around him, just within the curtain of cold forest.
There could be dozens all around me
.
Hundreds
.
He
moved with greater purpose now, searching around the house some more, finding one more corpse behind a shed, a large fellow that Shcherbakov thought he recognized. Wasn’t his name Yulian or something like that?
More howls from the woods.
By the time he was going into the front yard to inspect the two dead bodies by the SUV, Shcherbakov already had his cell phone in his hands, about to make the call. He paused. He recognized one of these men’s faces right away.
Timofei Derzhavin
.
The small family gathering six years ago
. Shcherbakov recalled it now. It had happened at the hall in Saint Petersburg, during the once-a-year family reunion, the only one in the last ten years he hadn’t been too busy to attend. He removed one of his gloves, touched Timofei’s face, gauged his body temperature.
The first one to die
.
Well, maybe not the first one. On the front porch was anoth
er corpse, this one’s pant leg just starting to catch flame. Shcherbakov took a handkerchief from his pocket and pressed it against his face. The front porch wasn’t as badly engulfed as the rest of the house, not just yet anyway, so he moved up onto the porch and, using his foot to roll the body over, discovered Zakhar Ogorodnikov was dead. It came as absolutely no surprise.
When he finally made the call, it only got off half a ring before Zverev’s voice came on at once. “What went wrong?” He knew something wasn’t right because it was Shcherbakov calling him and no one else.
“They’re all dead.”
“What? All of them?”
“Yes,” he said, starting the walk back to his car. “Send someone to take care of our friends.” He said “our friends” just in case Interpol, FSB, or Chelyabinsk Police were listening. They were listening far more these days. “Also, send someone to put out a fire. The cabin’s far enough from the road that no one will see it, but it’ll probably still be smoking come dawn, and that could be seen from far away.”
“Why don’t
you get rid of the—our
friends
yourself?”
“I’m surrounded.”
A short pause. “By who?”
“Wolves. A massive pack. They took down the last survivor before I had a chance to save him.”
“Wolves?”
Some growling and snarling from somewhere far off. A fight breaking out amongst two or three others in the pack.
“Just get someone down here to clean it up. I don’t have enough firepower to keep these animals at bay while gathering up our friends. Besides, I’m on to something else.”
“What else?”
Shcherbakov paused in front of the shed just in front of the house. He used his cell phone to take a picture of the tire tracks in the snow, up close and from four different angles. On the phone itself, Zverev was still shouting at him, “What else?” He finished taking a fifth photo and put the phone to his ear. “Tell me, cousin, do you know what kind of car Ogorodnikov drove?”
When Kaley stepped into the library, Mrs. Sanchez was standing behind the desk sorting out returned books. The librarian glanced up at Kaley and opened her mouth. Perhaps Mrs. Sanchez was about to ask her just what she presumed to be doing here with classes about to start, but something caused her to swallow her question. Kaley couldn’t be certain—maybe it was the determined way she was walking, maybe Mrs. Sanchez just realized she didn’t really care all that much, or maybe it wasn’t all that uncommon for students to be sent to the library on errands by their teachers—but she believed it had something to do with her charm.
The boy’s fear was on Kaley’s palate, and it was mixing with her own variegated fears—fears of the Prisoner, fears fr
om those Others in the Deep, but (and this was the strange part) most of all fears of Spencer. In that moment, despite every other strange and horrific thing she had seen, Spencer’s resoluteness to harm the boy eclipsed all other matters. Later, upon reflection, Kaley would realize she was unconsciously sending these fears out in all directions. The fears permeated the walls, soaked every book in the library, and drenched poor Mrs. Sanchez into almost paralysis. Perhaps a tingle went up the librarian’s spine, a worry that Kaley might be one of these bullied kids bringing a gun to school, that she, Mrs. Sanchez, would have her face on the six o’clock news with the caption beneath her picture reading
THE FIRST VICTIM OF CARTERSVILLE MIDDLE SCHOOL MASSACRE
. Or maybe, just maybe, on some level Mrs. Sanchez got a taste of that quaking evil in Kaley’s world, maybe she even thought she saw things moving around her feet, and heard the voices that made up the fugue…
Whatever the case, Kaley wasn’t stopped by the librarian, nor was she questioned at all by anyone else exiting the library—two students and one teacher, who, incidentally, appeared to
be exiting the library with a little more haste than one might expect, and with a degree of worry written about their faces. That is, if Kaley wasn’t just imagining it all, and she didn’t think she was.
Spencer’s affecting me, and I’m affecting everyone around me
.
No excuse was therefore needed when she sat down at the middle computer in the small lab at the far
end of the library, and logged on using her Student ID. Just as every other place she went, every surface in the library was coated in a watery film. And like all other places, there were things swimming beneath the floor, and up on the ceiling. Poking, prodding, testing.
“Spencer,” she said. “I’m there. Just hold
on. Please?” she added. “I’m there, I’m looking it up. Okay? It’s going to be okay.”
“I know it is,” he said coolly, pulling the SUV over into the right lane, which petered off to the side into
a parking lot for the rest stop. Beside her in the back seat, the boy was looking up, eyes looking around like he was waking from a dream, gauging reality, testing its authenticity. Was he really here? Was this really happening?
“I’m looking it up,” she repeated. She clicked on the little “e” icon at the bottom of the desktop to bring up Internet Explorer…and it was slow coming. Agonizingly slow. “C’mon, c’mon,” she whispered. A white screen, a rotating circle at the top telling her that the computer was working on its connection. Finally, after an eternity, and after Spencer had pulled into the parking lot and began circling to look for a spot, the page came up. She could feel his anticipation so much her own hands started shaking. Nervously tapping at the keys, she brought up Google and typed in “gulls with yellow bellies in Russia.” She clicked
SEARCH
, and it came up with “
Did you mean: yellow-bellied terns
.”
“No,” she whispered.
Around her feet, something slithered. “
Gulls
. C’mon, c’mon, c’mon…” Her eyes had started watering again—it was a wonder she had any water left in her body, for all the tears spilled today—and her hands tried rewording the search: “small gulls in Russia” and “small yellow Russian gulls” and “gulls of Russia.” That last one brought up a lot of possibilities. She clicked on the top option, a list on Wikipedia, and she scrolled and scrolled. There was over a hundred.
“Heeeere we go,” Spencer said, pulling into a parking spot directly under a lamppost.
He stopped, put the SUV in park.
“No, wait, hold on! I’ve almost got it!”
“So do I,” he said, and pulled out his Glock with every intention of using it. The glee that was emanating off of him, mixed with the boy’s wondrous fear…it was almost too much to bear.
“No…no, I’ve got it.” And maybe she did.
He said it was
like
a gull, but not like the ones he saw in France, different ones
.
Maybe it’s not a gull at all
. Kaley went back to her original search string: “gulls with yellow bellies in Russia.” At the top was the same suggestion as before: “
Did you mean: yellow-bellied terns
.”
She clicked on it. At the very top was another Wikipedia entry:
Yellow-bellied Tern
. She clicked on that, and here was an article with pictures, and with something very much like what Peter had described: totally white except for strips of yellow on their bellies, with wide, flat bills that were fat enough to look kind of like the gulls she’d seen on TV. Not a gull at all, but kind of like one.
“All righty,” Spencer said, turning around in the seat.
“Wait! I’ve g—”
“Time’s up.” The Glock was at the kid’s face.
“
Chelyabinsk!
” she screamed. Spencer slowly turned to her. In the library, Kaley saw Mrs. Sanchez poke her head around the corner and give her a queer look. “They’re rare! Nowhere else in the world but in a place called Chelyabinsk, or however you say it! On the Miass River!” In the SUV she looked at him with pleading eyes, while in the library her eyes remained fixed on the screen, still scrolling. Mrs. Sanchez, perhaps still under Kaley’s spell of fear, disappeared back around the corner. Quick as she could, Kaley clicked on the blue-highlighted words
MIASS RIVER
and found that it was home to a few ports. “M-main ports are Kras…Krasno…Krasnoufimsk?” she struggled to pronounce. “A-a-and the Ruffa Docks. Both are at the m-mouth of the river. The Ruffa Docks are best known f-f-for the flocks of yellow-bellied terns that stay there year-round, even during this time of year when the Miass freezes over. Their bills help them peck into the ice and wedge portions open, especially the sh-shallow parts where some f-f-fish get trapped.” She was rambling now, just trying to throw as much information at the psychopath as possible, keeping him occupied and hoping the litany of facts would keep him—