CHAPTER 5
Sara awoke, her face pressed against her duffel bag, which she had propped between herself and the window as a makeshift pillow.
A quick look at her watch told her it was eleven thirty.
She sat up and immediately noticed the sour smell of vomit. It made her stomach roll. She scooted over and peered back down the aisle and saw a green puddle with chunks of food in it. She also heard the soft sobs of a little girl and the woman’s attempts to soothe her daughter. Poor thing must have gotten sick and not made it to the john.
She turned back around and held her hand over her nose and mouth. The bus was slowing and the gears whined as they pulled off an exit on I-80. The driver turned right. They passed a white farmhouse and then about a mile down the road they pulled into a gas station/convenience store. The driver parked next to the building and announced they would take a ten-minute break.
The heavyset woman got off, the little girl in tow, and as the little girl passed, she looked at Sara, her turtleneck spattered with food. Sara waved to her, and to her surprise the girl smiled and waved back. Little kids were tough. Puking one minute and smiling the next. If that happened to her, Sara would have been curled up in a ball, wishing she were home.
The guy in the Duke T-shirt got off next, and Sara followed. She needed to pee, and the prospect of bouncing around on a bus toilet and the subsequent cleanup it required did not thrill her.
She stepped off the bus and under a pole-mounted sodium vapor light. The fluorescents from the canopy over the gas pumps provided the only other lighting. She looked around and to each side of the store saw only the ribbon of highway and an expanse of shadow-shrouded fields. To the rear were woods, maybe fifty yards from the parking lot.
Sara entered the store behind the others and asked the clerk where the bathroom was. The clerk pointed to the rear of the store and said, “Through those double doors.”
She saw the bus driver approach the counter with two rolls of paper towels, a package of yellow cleaning gloves, and a can of Lysol. She didn’t envy the guy and he gave a shrug and said, “Comes with the territory, I guess.”
The guy in the Duke T-shirt bought a sixteen-ounce cola and a bag of pretzels and went outside. Sara reached the double doors just as the woman and her daughter came out.
“She okay?” Sara said.
“Next time she’s going to tell mommy when her stomach gets flopsy, right?”
Flopsy?
The girl nodded, her pigtails bouncing.
Sara used the restroom and exited the store. The bus was the only vehicle in the lot, and she watched the highway for a moment, but not one car passed. It was as if they had docked at a remote space station on a distant planet. She felt small out here and longed for the protection of the bus.
From around the corner, she heard a voice say, “Lookit that.”
She rounded the corner, where the young guy in the Duke T-shirt stood sipping from his giant soft drink, the bag of pretzels tucked under his arm. He was looking at the woods.
“What is it?” Sara asked.
He looked down at her. “Those branches, look how they’re whipping around. I’m Ritchie, by the way,” he added.
Sara introduced herself, but she didn’t look at Ritchie. She watched the woods, the low branches on the pine trees brushing back and forth, as if pushed by wind. Except there was no wind tonight, and the tops of the trees stood still.
“You think it’s some deer? Or maybe a bear. Hell, I grew up in Gary, never seen anything like that,” Ritchie said, and took a swig of his cola.
She didn’t want to get that close to a bear. “We should get back on the bus.”
Now, in the woods, branches rustled across a thirty-yard front, and she could hear whispering. The branches whipped back and forth. A sparrow shot out of the trees, as if fleeing from an unseen predator.
Ritchie stood transfixed, watching the woods. Sara gripped him by the elbow and said, “Ritchie, get your ass back on the bus.”
He gave her a quizzical look and said, “Yeah, yeah, probably should.” He strode across the lot, sipping his drink.
She had a gnawing feeling that this is what Dad and Reverend Frank had talked about. She had laughed at the idea of the Dark Ones, but now she wasn’t so sure, and she wasn’t going to risk others’ lives if Dad and the Rev were right. Had something been following her?
She jogged back toward the bus. The driver stepped off the bus, a bunch of paper towels in his hand, his face twisted in a look of disgust. Sara said, “Where you going?”
“I thought I’d keep these for my collection, along with my kids’ shitty diapers. I’m throwing them out, what do you think?”
“Hurry up,” she said. “Please.”
He walked toward the trash can shaking his head and muttering. Sara climbed the bus’s three steps and peered inside. The old guy was on board, as was Ritchie. The heavyset woman walked down the aisle, checking seats as she went, and said to herself, “When I find that girl ...”
“Where’s your daughter?” Sara asked.
“I told her to go out to the bus and I’d be right there. I thought maybe she’s playing tricks and hiding, but she must be back in the store.”
“What’s her name?”
“What business of that is yours?”
“Ma’am, what is her name?”
The woman rolled her eyes. “It’s Melanie, why?”
“I’ll find her.”
Sara turned and descended the bus steps. She hurried across the lot, walking under the canopies and stopping at the building’s corner. She peeked around. A mist, black as spilled oil, rolled from the woods. It approached the store, swallowing up moonlight. So thick, it looked like you could punch it and your hand would disappear inside.
Got to find the girl
.
She entered the store. The clerk had the phone to her ear and she looked over at Sara and said, “I can’t get anyone on this line.”
“Come with me. Now.”
“I ain’t going nowhere. I leave the store, Caesar’s going to have my job.”
“Then find somewhere to hide.”
Sara moved down the first aisle, past rows of chips and pretzels and cans of fake nacho cheese. The girl was not in the first aisle, nor the second, which contained automotive supplies.
“Melanie? Melanie!”
She jogged up and down the aisles, but there was no sign of Melanie. She glanced at the front windows, which now looked as if someone had draped a black cloth over them. The clerk, sensing something wrong, ducked down behind the counter.
Maybe the girl had gone in back, through the silver doors.
Sara pushed through the double doors. To the left was a doorway and she peeked in and saw a desk with a heap of pink and yellow papers stacked on it. A filing cabinet was the only other piece of furniture in the room. Farther down the hall was a receiving area, where cases of soda, canned goods, and cases of dry goods were stacked. She scanned the area and saw the white toe of the girl’s sneaker poking out from behind a stack of cases.
Sara knelt in front of her. The girl recoiled. “It’s dark,” she said. “I want Mommy.” She sniffled, and wiped a trickle of clear snot away from her nose with her sleeve. “I forgot my doll.”
“I’m going to take you back to the bus, but we have to go now.”
Sara reached out her hand and the girl’s arm crept out, as if Sara were a dangerous animal. Sara gripped the girl’s hand and pulled her to her feet. They went back through the double doors and into the store. The front doors were chocked open. The cool night air rushed in and brought with it the scent of something old and rotten.
She stopped and Melanie halted with her. Shapes formed in the darkness. One of them, the size of a large man, stood in the doorway. From the front of the store, Sara heard the hidden clerk whimper.
“What’s that?” Melanie asked. “What is that? Where’s the bus?”
What would happen if the unnatural darkness engulfed them? The thought of being shrouded in the oily dark sent a chill through Sara. She had to do something. The little girl clung to her. Sara hugged Melanie close to her hip.
Now the mist seeped inside, engulfing the walls, blocking out the hanging beer posters and the lotto sign above the counter. The clerk popped up from her hiding spot, threw the phone at the coming shadow, and ran back through the double doors.
Sara had to use the Light. It would be only the second time. How had she done it before? By thinking of the sunlight. It had been a cool, dark night and she was walking home from the library. She had taken a back road to get home quicker. Shoulder-high weeds surrounded the road, and she had heard rustling, most likely a deer. But fear had gripped her and she wanted to be home in bed. She thought of how the sunlight slanted in her bedroom window in the morning. The bubble of Light surrounded her, and she walked the rest of the way inside it.
Now she closed her eyes. She pressed the girl closer to her and thought of the sun’s rays warming her face and hearing gulls in the background at Stoney Point.
The Light speared from her with a FOOMP! She felt good and warm and she stood in a bubble of white-gold glow. It surrounded her and the girl and now she could see the enemy backing up into the darkness. The pools of blackness that had clung to the walls like sludge receded, and she started forward, toward the doors.
As she reached the doors, the wave of blackness parted around her. She saw the bus and thought it best to keep the Light glowing until she reached it. She walked with Melanie in the bubble of light until they reached the bus door. Sara nudged the girl forward and she climbed the steps. Sara followed, and when she stood on the step, she turned and faced the store. The fog receded from where it had originated, rolling back over the grass and into the woods.
The bus driver closed the doors behind her, and she thought
done
and the Light dimmed around her and faded. She felt warm and tired. Melanie ran to her mother.
The bus driver said, “You do this all the time?”
“Only the second time I’ve done it.”
“What was it?”
“I just want to sit down now,” Sara said.
“Fine by me. I’m getting this rig the hell out of here.”
Sara moved down the aisle. She saw Melanie sitting on her mother’s lap, chattering away about Sara’s “wizard powers.” Ritchie and the old man gave her wary glances. She slumped into her seat and closed her eyes.
Sara awoke. It was still dark. She stretched, yawned. The only sounds on the bus were the roll of the big tires on blacktop and the soft snoring of one of the passengers. She felt tired and her neck was stiff. She wondered if the mist still followed her and if she was putting the other passengers in danger.
They would have attacked by now, wouldn’t they?
Ritchie sat down across from her. He took his earbuds out and set them on his lap. The iPod cord snaked down into his pants pocket. “That was something, at the gas station.”
She didn’t know what to say to him.
“Where did you learn to do that?”
“It’s nothing.”
“Seemed like more than nothing to me.”
“Only the second time it’s ever happened.”
“What was that dark stuff? It was almost alive.”
Sara crossed her arms. “Look, I really don’t want to talk about it.”
Richie shrugged. “She’s not talking,” he said to someone in the back of the bus.
The driver, hearing the exchange, turned and said, “No more trouble from you, got that?”
She didn’t favor him with a response.
She wished now that she had waited for her father to come home, but when she had found the pictures of Dr. Pennington, she had nearly started shaking. How could he lie to her all these years? Part of her had wanted a little revenge, to put the dagger in him and twist. Leaving unannounced would make him worry, and she wanted to hurt him, just a little. She felt rotten about it. And she missed him. But the pull of meeting Laura Pennington was strong and drew her farther east. She hoped Dad would understand.
Milo pulled into the driveway of his house. It was modest, a beige Cape Cod with a row of arborvitae planted beneath the bay window in front. White trim, white front door. Ordinarily it wasn’t much to look at, but now, staring at the black expanse of the bay window, Milo wished he had left a light on. Normally, he wasn’t afraid to be alone in the house, but the solid darkness unnerved him.
He had considered stopping at Mulvaney’s for a beef on weck but realized that would only delay the inevitable. He was a grown man, so why was he afraid of his own house? The sight of the man in the alley had left him shaken, but the prospect of the stranger beating him home (and even knowing where he lived) was remote.
He killed the engine, got out, and grabbed the chop saw from the bed of the pickup. His gaze on the bay window, he approached the front door. Did the curtain move? His guts felt tingly.
Stop it
, he told himself.