Ultimate Supernatural Horror Box Set (113 page)

Read Ultimate Supernatural Horror Box Set Online

Authors: F. Paul Wilson,Blake Crouch,J. A. Konrath,Jeff Strand,Scott Nicholson,Iain Rob Wright,Jordan Crouch,Jack Kilborn

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #Ghosts, #Occult, #Stephen King, #J.A. Konrath, #Blake Crouch, #Horror, #Joe Hill, #paranormal, #supernatural, #adventure

BOOK: Ultimate Supernatural Horror Box Set
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The rain fell so lightly it took almost forty-five minutes to blur her view through the windshield.

When she could no longer see through it, she opened the car door and climbed out.

The smell of fir trees was overpowering.

A mountain loomed on the far side of town, faceless and void of detail, nothing but an ominous profile through the mist.

Sophie crossed the sidewalk and opened the door as slowly as she could.

A cluster of bells hanging from the inner handle jingled anyway.

Seymour didn’t look back.

Aside from Seymour and an old man eating pie at a table against the opposite wall, the diner stood empty.

A jukebox in back played fifties rock-and-roll at an unobtrusive volume.

Two waitresses chatted at the counter, and one of them—a short blonde no more than twenty—glanced at Sophie and said, “Sit anywhere you like.”

She slid into an empty booth just two down from Seymour’s. Didn’t like having her back to the door, but there was no way around it without facing the man.

He could have been asleep he sat so still, but his posture was rigid, on alert, staring straight ahead into nothing.

Sophie peeled the menu from the table and opened it more out of habit than hunger.

The usual suspects: variations of eggs and fried meat, a few burgers, a suspicious Cobb salad.

She looked out the window.

The rain had picked up.

At the intersection, a traffic light flashed red to green, but the road was empty.

“Have you decided?”

Sophie turned to find the young waitress standing poised with pad and pencil. She wore her hair in an impossibly tight ponytail, the brown of her roots clinging for dear life.

“Just a coffee.”

“That’s it?” she grieved.

“That’s it.”

The waitress let her pad drop, cocked her head, and popped a smile so enormous it seemed to exceed the square footage of her face.

“Haven’t seen you here before. Your first time?”

Sophie’s eyes cut to Seymour two booths up.

“Just passing through. Needed a caffeine fix.”

“Oh? Where you headed?”

The question boomed in the silence of the diner as if it had been channeled through a PA system.

“Portland.”

“Business or—”

“Just visiting family.”

The waitress held her smile, as if Sophie’s explanation needed more explanation and she had all the time in the world to wait for the rest of the story.

Across the diner, the old man looked up from his pie.

This line of questioning needed to end
.
Now.

“You know what, Jenny?” Sophie said, squinting at her nametag, “I think I will have a slice of your pie.”

The waitress somehow squeezed out more smile.

“Good choice. Best in the state. Coffee and pie coming right up.”

As Jenny headed off toward the counter, Sophie kept thinking that at any moment Seymour would suddenly turn and make her.

The waitress returned with a steaming carafe, a mug, and a slice of cherry pie.

She set everything down in front of Sophie.

Poured.

“Anything else, ma’am?”

Ma’am?

“No thanks.”

“Enjoy.”

Jenny the waitress moved on to Seymour’s booth.

Sophie straightened in her seat.

The waitress smiled down at Seymour, but the speed at which it vanished indicated there was zero warmth returned from the customer.

“You haven’t touched your coffee, sir. Can I get you something else?”

Seymour lifted his coffee and polished it off in one uninterrupted tilting of the mug.

He set it down empty on the table and looked up at the waitress.

“The coffee is excellent.”

“Um, would you like some more?”

“Yes.”

She filled his mug from the carafe.

“Anything else?”

“No.”

Sophie pulled out her phone and tapped out three texts to Dobbs.

 

trailed BS to swartwoods diner in north bend

he’s just sitting here being creepy

still no sign of talbert?

 

# # #

Sophie watched a dreary afternoon unspool through the windows.

Customers came, left.

Three times she pulled out the receipt with Seymour’s sketch, drawn to it on some frequency she couldn’t name.

The weather cleared and rolled in again.

Still, she could count the number of cars that drove by on both hands.

In the beginning, the waitress had come by every ten minutes or so, pushing the menu, pushing more coffee, more pie. But after two hours, she was completely ignoring both Sophie and Seymour.

# # #

The sun dipped behind the mountains.

Darkness roused the streetlights, the empty intersection now washed in yellow light that made the wet pavement glisten.

A neon beer sign blinked to life in the window of a bar across the street.

Fifteen minutes crawled by.

Not a soul darkened its doorstep.

Happy hour on Friday night in North Bend.

And still, Seymour hadn’t moved. Not to use the restroom. Or stretch his legs. Not even to readjust his weight on the hard plastic bench that had kept one or both of Sophie’s legs in a perpetual state of pins and needles.

Out of sheer boredom, Sophie had blazed through four cups of coffee, a mistake she’d been paying the price for over the last hour as she watched customers enter the bathroom at the back of the diner and exit moments later with what she perceived to be orgasmic relief across their faces.

By 5:55 p.m., she couldn’t hold it anymore.

Rising, she walked unsteadily down the aisle of window-adjacent booths, passing Seymour without acknowledgment or glance, and made a beeline for the doors at the back of the restaurant.

It was the first time she’d used her legs in over three hours, and they felt like they belonged to someone else.

She gave one quick look back at Seymour before disappearing into the women’s restroom.

The desperation in her bladder crescendoed as she burst through the stall door and raced to unbuckle her belt.

Epic relief.

So intense it gave her chills.

She washed up quickly, uncomfortable with leaving Seymour out of sight, even for a minute.

She turned off the tap and looked around, hands dripping.

No paper towels.

No electric dryer.

Of course.

She shook them dry, finishing the job on the sides of her pants.

When she opened the door, her stomach clenched.

Three men now occupied Seymour’s booth.

Sophie rebooted, pushed through the shock, and walked right past them, digging the phone out of her purse as she eased back into her booth.

Fired off a new text to Dobbs.

 

still here ... two other men just showed up ... come now

 

She glanced out her window, saw a black van that hadn’t been there before she’d left for the bathroom.

 

possibly arrived in black GMC savana

 

Jenny the waitress sidled up to Seymour’s booth, all smiles again.

“Can I get you gentlemen something to drink?”

“Coffee.”

“Coffee.”

“More coffee.”

“Sure thing.”

Sophie slid across the bench seat to get a look at the faces of the new arrivals.

One she didn’t recognize—a man in his mid-fifties, ruggedly handsome, with wavy, graying curls that he kept swept back from his face.

The second was Barry Talbert, her other MIA.

Sophie’s pulse rate doubled.

Talbert was the youngest of the trio—early forties if she had to guess. He wore a crisp, pinstripe button-down, open at the collar. Hair pushed back and cemented in place with plenty of product. At least two days’ worth of stubble coming in.

Another text.

 

talbert just walked in with some other guy

 

Both Talbert and Rugged-Handsome exuded that same trance-like intensity.

No one spoke.

A minute into the silence, Talbert broke his thousand-yard stare, looked at Seymour, shook his head, and looked away again, as if he’d been offered something and were politely refusing it.

The waitress returned with two coffee mugs and a carafe.

“Anyone interested in dinner?”

Seymour seemed to speak for everyone. “No, we’re fine.”

When the waitress was out of earshot, Talbert said, “We have the van.”

Seymour nodded.

Talbert said, “Any word from him?”

“It hasn’t happened yet.”

Silence again.

Seymour looked at Talbert as if he’d spoken. He reached over and grabbed a plastic tub of creamer from a pile that filled a porcelain bowl beside the other condiments. Rolled it across the table to him.

Talbert tore off the seal and dumped the creamer into his coffee.

For a moment, he stared down into the cup, mesmerized, as if the swirls of cream were revealing the mysteries of the universe.

Rugged-Handsome said, “The children are there.”

“Full house,” Seymour said.

“He looks a lot like him.”

“So does she,” Talbert said without looking up.

The other two nodded in agreement.

“Won’t be long now,” Seymour said.

Silence descended on their booth again.

Sophie reeled.

On those rare occasions when she escaped the precinct for lunch hour, she liked to head downtown to Lola on Fourth and Virginia. She’d always take a book, intending to read, but inevitably she’d never even power it on. Instead, she’d sit alone, eating and soaking up fragments of conversation from the pleasant noise of the restaurant, reassembling them as best she could into a picture of the lives and stories of the people all around her. She was good at it too. Easy work for a detective and aspiring novelist.

But that particular aptitude was failing her at the moment.

It was different with Seymour, Talbert, and Rugged-Handsome.

Eavesdropping on their conversation was like trying to make sense of a dream. Like reading a code without the cipher. The words were plain enough, but they were fragments of a larger picture that she couldn’t even begin to guess at.

She dug out her phone and sent another text to Dobbs.

 

something about to happen ... how far?

 

Ten seconds later, her screen illuminated.

 

10 min

 

She set the phone on the table.

Seymour straightened.

So did Sophie.

His head ticked to the left, as imperceptibly as the twitch of the minute hand, but she caught it.

The other two men watched him, something like wonder and fear exploding in their eyes.

Sophie thumbed off the brass snap that secured her Glock in the holster.

“The fourth?” Talbert said.

Seymour nodded. “He just arrived.”

 

 

 

Chapter 22

 

Grant had just thrown up for the third time in the last hour, and he was still hunched over the toilet in the downstairs bathroom, gasping for breath while Paige patted his back.

“You’re going to feel better soon,” she said. “I promise.”

Grant wiped his mouth as an intense shiver wracked his body.

“How long until your client—”

“Anytime.”

“You ready?”

“Yes.”

She looked the part at least, having changed back into her kimono.

“Got your phone set up?” he asked.

“I didn’t want to go in there alone. I’ll do it when I take Steve up.”

“You be careful. Guy could flip out he catches you trying to record him.”

“I will be.”

Grant struggled onto his feet and flushed the toilet. The spinning of the water made him queasy all over again. He ran the tap, bent down, rinsed and spit until his mouth no longer burned with bile.

Already, it was dark outside and even darker in the brownstone. By the illumination of the candle on the sink, Grant studied his reflection in the mirror. The soft light should have knocked off ten years, but instead he looked worse—pallid and sweat-glazed and thinner.

Eyes as dark as pits.

The headache raged on—felt like his frontal lobe had been dropped in a food processor.

“What time is it, Paige?”

“Six fifteen.”

Through the pain and the fog, Grant registered the distant, manic anthem of an alarm, although it took him a minute to land upon the crisis that had triggered it.

He staggered out of the bathroom and into the kitchen, steadying himself against the island where his phone waited. There were candles everywhere—in the living room, dining room, at least a half dozen casting a flickering warmth across the kitchen.

“Stu was supposed to call me fifteen minutes ago,” he said, picking it up.

He held the power button down for several seconds.

Nothing happened.

He tried again, pressing harder and longer, his thumbnail blanching from the pressure.

Might as well have been trying to power up a brick.

He finally dropped the phone and put his head on the counter, the chill of the tile providing the briefest flash of relief.

“Grant, what’s wrong?”

“Battery’s dead.”

“So your friend can’t call you?”

“Right.”

“Just use my phone.”

“I don’t know his number off the top of my head, and he’s not on the Internet.”

“So what do we do?”

Grant looked up from the counter.

It felt like someone was prodding around in his head with a screwdriver.

“I don’t know. That was our best chance.”

Paige came over, laid a cool hand on the back of his neck.

“We’re gonna get through this,” she said.

A noise reverberated down the hallway—someone pounding on the front door. It seemed to shake the entire building.

“That would be Steve,” Paige said.

Grant choked down the despair, the exhaustion, the agony.

No time for pain.

He pulled himself up.

“I’ll be in the closet by the bar.”

 

 

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