Genre: Horror
ONE FOR THE BOOKS (A Jacob Slade Story)
By Daniel Skye
PART FIVE: END OF DAYS
Friday, October 9, 2015.
3:18 AM.
Jeffrey Gross had yet to make his
move. He sat in a booth by himself, refusing to drink or play cards with the
others. Jacob Slade sat on the edge of his bar stool, watching Jeffrey’s every
move, staring at his symmetrical fingers.
Lenore had warned him that this was
a sign of lycanthropy. Jeffrey was a Howler, a beast more savage, more vicious
than you could imagine. This was a werewolf on steroids. And unlike a werewolf,
Jeffrey didn’t need to wait for the next full moon. He could transform at will
and tear them all to shreds if he so desired.
But they had two advantages. They
were still packing silver bullets they acquired from the pawnshop. And they
were still armed with their squirt guns. Squirt guns may not sound very
dangerous or menacing, unless they’re filled with whiskey. Rye is like acid to
the flesh of a Howler.
“You guys came at the right time,”
Horace, the proprietor of Portside Pub joked, “Drinks are only half price.”
“I left my wallet back in the
cruiser,” Booth said, patting himself down to indicate he had nothing.
“I was just kidding,” Horace said.
“Drinks are on the house, of course. It’s the end of world. We might as well go
out with a buzz.”
Slade took his eyes off Jeffrey only
for a few moments, and when he turned back, he was face to snout. Jeffrey, or
the beast formally known as Jeffrey, howled with delight.
“Oh, shit!” Horace shouted. He
reached under the bar for his shotgun, but when he came back up, the beast was
perched atop the bar. It snatched the shotgun with its mighty paws and bent the
barrel, twisting it around like a pretzel. Then it went in for the kill. It
took no more than two bites to sever Horace’s head at the neck.
There were people screaming, running
for cover, hiding in the bathroom or storage closet. But Jacob, Karl, Drake,
and Lenore stood their ground. Drake and Lenore pumped their squirt guns and
shot whiskey straight across the bar. But the beast took cover behind the bar.
Drake approached with caution. He
couldn’t hear a sound behind the bar. He leaned over and the beast leapt up,
clawing at his chest. Drake staggered back, his shirt ripped open, blood
gushing from multiple wounds.
Karl, service revolver in hand,
opened fire. But the beast sought cover again behind the bar, and all Booth
accomplished was shattering a couple of top shelf tequila bottles.
“Let me handle this,” Lenore Foster
said.
“Are you crazy?” Booth said, almost
staring at her cross eyed.
“Trust me on this one,” she said.
“It’s time I let you all in on a little secret.”
She approached the bar and dared it
to show its snout.
The Howler, foaming at the mouth,
jumped over the bar and came at Lenore. Its prodigious claws raked across her
chest, but produced not a scratch. The beast howled in pain and looked down to
see that its chest was oozing blood.
“That’s right, tough guy,” Lenore
said with confidence. “Try it again.”
The beast clawed at her face,
drawing blood from its own snout in the process.
“Lenore, what the fuck?” Jacob was
in disbelief.
“I’m just like you Jacob,” she said.
“I’m different. I’m a human voodoo doll. Any pain inflicted upon me, is
inflicted right back on him.”
As Lenore held the beast at bay,
Jacob checked on Drake. He was badly wounded, but he’d survive. “Take this,”
Drake said, motioning towards the squirt gun. “Get that bastard for me.”
Jacob pumped the squirt gun and
blasted the Howler right in the face. Its bloody snout sizzled and began to
melt away. It released one final cry before its snout dissolved, the whiskey
melting through its fur as Jacob continued to soak the beast in rye.
Karl, finishing the job, fired one
silver bullet into its dissipating chest cavity. The beast–or what was left of
it–collapsed to the floor with a sickening wet thud. Those that had retreated
came out of hiding and breathed long sighs of relief.
There was clapping and whistling.
Everyone was cheering, hooting, and hollering. Then a dim silence fell across
the bar as they realized Horace was no longer among them.
“Rest in peace,” Jacob said and
sighed.
* * *
Horace had a first aid kit behind
the bar, which came in handy for bandaging Drake’s wounds, after the cuts were
sterilized with whiskey.
Jacob made sure to check up on his
buddy and see how he was holding up. Drake wanted a drink more than anything
else, but because of the blood loss, he decided against it.
“Tomorrow is another day,” Drake
said and laughed. “Hey, what was that Duncan said to you before he died?
Something about a kid?”
“He said to look for the boy with
copper hair.”
“Like that one over there,” Drake
said, nodding with his head towards Adam Ridley. The boy had reddish brown
hair, the color of copper. A sketchbook was tucked under one arm and Jacob gave
Drake a bemused look. “Eerie,” he said.
Jacob approached the boy casually
and with the benevolence of a politician before Election Day. “That was quite a
scare, wasn’t it, kiddo? How are you holding up?”
“I’m fine,” Adam said. “And yeah, I
guess it was a little scary. But it was kind of cool too. I mean, I feel bad
about Mr. Weaver, but I don’t know. I’m weird.”
“Join the club,” Jacob chuckled.
“This stuff doesn’t really scare me.
It’s strange. I love horror movies. But my parents don’t really let me watch
them. That’s all this is to me. One big horror movie.”
“That’s one way of looking at it,”
Jacob said. Kid logic, he thought and laughed silently. “Mind if I see what
you’re working on?”
“It’s a comic book. But it’s not
finished yet. My parents can’t see it until it’s done. But I guess you can see
it. Just don’t tell anyone, okay?”
“Okay.”
“Promise?”
“I promise,” Jacob said and crossed
pinkies with Adam. The boy relinquished the sketchbook and Jacob flipped
through it. He was impressed with the boy’s artwork. Then his fascination
turned to horror. It was a story Jacob already knew by heart.
The dead came back to life to feed on the
living. Bodies went missing from the cemetery, from the morgue. Zombies wreaked
havoc inside a stadium. People went mad and turned into monsters. There were
vampires and werewolves aplenty. It was too eerie to be a coincidence. Jacob
sensed something about Adam Ridley. Something ominous and unsettling.
Page after page of madness and violence and
blood and gore. And the story all started right here in Dorchester.
Jacob was turning pale. “Adam,” he
said, his voice quivering. “I want you to try something for me. It might sound
strange, but I want you to draw something for me. I want you to draw this bar.”
“Okay,” Adam said, amused. He took a
seat and spent a few minutes sketching the scenery.
“Nice work,” Jacob commended him.
“Now I want you to add a zombie coming out of the storage closet.”
“What?” Adam chuckled.
“Just do it, please,” Jacob said.
“Well, alright,” Adam said. He spent
another few minutes working on the perfect zombie. This one was rotten to the
core. It only had one eye, and its skin was black with decay.
“Hey, what’s that?” Artie Clay
asked. He was the first to hear the noise emanating from the storage closet.
“Is someone still hiding in there?”
Booth asked.
“Let’s see,” Artie said.
“I wouldn’t open that door if I was
you,” Jacob warned him a second too late. His hand was already turning the
knob, and the zombie inside the storage closet did the rest, forcing its way
out. Artie stumbled back and gasped.
The overwhelming stench of decay hit
them all like a kick in the teeth. It only had one eye. The other socket was
hollow but swollen with pus. And its skin was blacker than tar. Its bone creaked
with every awkward step it took.
Jacob used his last two rounds to
put it down, splattering zombie brains all over the storage closet door.
“We have to destroy this
sketchbook,” Jacob declared.
* * *
6:44 AM.
Despite Adam’s protests, the book
was burned and the survivors rejoiced. They stepped outside and let the
sunlight embrace their skin. The zombies were curling up in the streets and
dying. There were no Howlers or vampires in sight. The nightmare was over.
Karl Booth was elated. It was the
first time Jacob had ever seen him smile. Booth’s gaunt, weathered face told
the tale of a man who’d been to hell and back, and shared no regrets. He
brushed his hand through his thinning grey hair.
“So when are you going to admit
defeat and finally shave your head?” Jacob asked, busting his chops.
“As soon as you shave off that
greasy mop top you call a hairdo.”
“So in other words, never,” Jacob
laughed.
“Nice work,” Booth said,
congratulating Jacob on a job well done. He extended his hand, even with Deputy
Brackett watching, and Jacob was happy to accept it. They shook hands and that
was when Jacob spotted an irregularity. Booth’s index and middle fingers were
exactly the same length.
“You knew my mother personally,
didn’t you?” Jacob asked. “That’s why you adopted me, right?”
“Yes, I knew your mom. Charlotte was
a great woman. It’s awful what happened to her. I still miss her. Think about
her all the time.”
“I think I know who killed her now,”
Jacob said.
“I’ve heard your werewolf theory
before.”
“I don’t think it was just any
werewolf that killed her. I think the Howler who killed her is standing right
next to me.”
“What are you saying?” Booth asked,
feigning shock and confusion.
“Lenore told me something
interesting about the fingers of a werewolf. They’re middle and index fingers are
the exact same length.”
Booth looked down and regarded his
symmetrical fingers. Guilt washed over his face. His lips parted, but no words
escaped. He let the silence be his confession.
As the survivors dispersed, Adam overheard
someone say, “I can’t wait to get home and marathon with Game of Thrones.”
Adam’s eyes lit up. His father loved the show and he’d heard so much about it,
but was forbidden to watch. But he’d heard enough about the show to know he’d
enjoy it someday. Kings and queens and battles and…dragons.
The clouds turned from white to an ominous
grey. A terrible roar echoed through the sky and fire rained down on
Dorchester.
“No,” Adam said, shaking his head defiantly.
“I didn’t draw it. I just thought it.” But that was all it took. Adam had
powers beyond his wildest imagination. He could manifest evil with the will of
his mind. It wasn’t the drawings. It was Adam himself.
Jacob turned his accusing eyes away
from Karl Booth, and gazed skyward. Beyond the smoke and fire, he saw the vast
wings of the dragon.
“Oh, now what?” Slade sighed,
exasperated.
THE END?