Tom

One of the suited guards showed Tom to his room after dinner, and it was both as opulent and as creepy as Tom expected.

The bed was a large four-poster, with a crushed velvet bedcover. The dresser was heavy, Renaissance Revival, with a matching bureau. There was an iron, woodburning stove, an Oriental carpet on the wood floors, a rolltop desk, and portraits on the walls Tom recognized as Colton and Jebediah Butler. The light was dim, due to an antique lamp with a low wattage bulb and a very large tasseled shade. There were candles throughout the room, all unlit.

The room’s sole window faced west, and Tom looked out into the waving fields of cattails. The sky had gotten darker, and had taken on a reddish tinge. He checked the window clasp, but it, like the sash, had been thickly painted over.

Tom put his suitcase onto the bed and opened it up. First he checked his gun, a Sig Saur 9mm, and put in a fresh magazine. He holstered it, put on his holster, and then checked his fanny pack. Inside were three more mags, fifteen rounds each, twenty glow sticks, a tactical flashlight, a Zippo lighter, a Swiss Army Champion Plus knife, some handcuffs, and a Benchmade Mangus butterfly knife with sheath.

He strapped the Mangus sheath to his ankle, and was inventorying the first aid kit he’d packed when someone knocked at the door.

“Come in,” Tom said, facing the doorway.

It was Moni Draper. “Got a minute?”

“Sure.”

She strutted in, and Tom admired her moxie. Especially after what she’d gone through. Tom knew Moni from her association with a serial killer named Luther Kite. He’d tied her up and tortured her using an antique medical device called an artificial leech. It was used by doctors in the 1800s for bloodletting, back when it was thought that bad blood caused ailments and bleeding cured people.

Tom had encountered Kite in the past, and had done a lot of research on him. Moni has over two hundred scars on her body, where Kite had used the device on her. She’d been found nearly dead, but somehow had rebounded. And, judging by her general attitude, she’d moved on with her life.

Tom had his share of nightmares, mostly due to what had happened at Senator Stang’s mansion in Springfield. But he’d never been at the total mercy of a maniac who was excited by causing pain. He didn’t know if he’d be able to adjust like Moni seemed to. And he hoped he’d never have to find out.

“You smell bullshit,” Moni said.

“If something seems too good to be true, it usually is.”

“Stay with me.”

“Excuse me?”

“They’re going to try to scare us. Maybe the threat won’t be real. Maybe it will. Either way, I want to be with the strongest guy in the room, and that’s you.”

Tom nodded.

“We can…” Moni smiled slyly, “seal the deal if you like. I’ve done lots of cops.”

Back when Kite had done that to her, Moni was a prostitute. Apparently the attack hadn’t scared her out of the profession.

“Kind of you to offer, but I’m okay.”

“Is it because of the scars?”

“It’s because I’m in a committed relationship.”

Moni pulled her shirt down, revealing her pock-marked cleavage. “So this doesn’t disgust you?”

She jiggled a bit. Tom didn’t reply. Moni continued to pose for another five seconds before saying, “So are you disgusted or not?”

“I’m still deciding,” Tom said. “Give me a minute.”

Moni giggled, walked over, and gave Tom a friendly punch on the shoulder. “You’re okay for a pig, you know that?”

Tom wasn’t offended by her use of the word pig. If anything, it amused him. “Thanks. And I promise I’ll do my best to protect you if things get crazy.”

“I believe you. Who’s the special lady?”

“Her name is Joan. She’s a Hollywood producer.”

“She have any interest in the story of a plucky whore who survived multiple attacks by maniacs and then went on to become a millionaire?”

“I’ll ask her.”

“What’s that?” Moni pointed at a wrapped plastic disk in Tom’s kit.

“A Bolin chest seal. For sucking chest wounds.”

“Like getting stabbed in the lungs?”

“Or shot.”

She continued to point. “I know that’s a tourniquet, and that’s one of those airway breathers. What’s in that package? Celox?”

“Clotting powder. Stops bleeding quickly.”

“You came prepared. But I bet you don’t have one of these.”

Moni reached for her purse, then stopped. “Where are you from?”

“Chicago.”

“A Chicago pig has no jurisdiction in South Carolina.”

“True.”

Moni pulled out a large syringe and held it up, triumphantly.

“What is that?” Tom asked, feeling like he already knew.

“Heroin. Enough to make a charging bull OD. I didn’t think I could get a gun through TSA because I’d get into trouble, so I brought this to protect myself.”

“Instead of a gun you brought a lethal dose of heroin,” Tom said. “You don’t think if you got caught with that, you’d be in more trouble?”

Moni’s eyebrows crinkled and her lips pursed. “When you say it like that, it sounds like a bad idea.”

“Am I interrupting?”

They looked at the open door and saw Mal, the sports reporter missing a hand.

“The more the merrier,” Moni said, waving him in.

“Forenzi wants us to line up for our physicals, but I just wanted a moment of your time, Detective. Are you both… busy?”

“I’m just showing the pig my heroin,” Moni said.

Mal frowned. “I could come back…”

“How can I help you, Mr. Deiter?” Tom asked.

“At dinner. You didn’t seem excited about Forenzi’s experiment. You seemed like you knew something no one else did.”

Both Mal and Moni stared at Tom. He wondered what to do, but strangely he felt comfortable around them, in the same way he felt comfortable around Frank and Sara.

In that moment, he decided the benefits of telling them outweighed keeping it a secret.

“My partner, Roy Lewis, came to this house last week, supposedly doing the same thing we’re doing tonight. He never came back.”

Tom watched Mal’s frown deepen. “Shit.”

“You look so sad,” Moni told him. She offered the syringe. “Need a little pick me up?”

“Moni,” Tom kept his voice even, “can you please put away the heroin? And Mal, I don’t know what happened to Roy, so I can’t cry foul play yet. Maybe Forenzi is legit, and this will all be smooth sailing.”

“But you don’t believe that.”

“No. I don’t.” Tom felt like he was telling a child there was no Santa Claus.

Moni put her hand on Mal’s neck. “Buck up, little soldier. Would a little three-way action with me and your wife make you feel better?”

Mal choked out a laugh. “You know, it probably would.”

“Is she into chicks?”

He lost his mirth again. “No.”

“Too bad. Well, maybe some figging will take your mind off things.”

“What’s figging?” Mal asked.

“It’s when you take a—”

“Mal?” His wife, Deb, stuck her head into the room. “Everything okay?”

“He’s moody,” Moni explained, “so I offered him smack and a three way.”

Tom decided it was time to take some control of the situation. “I don’t know how this is all going to play out tonight, but I think we all need to stick together, and watch out for each other. Did anyone bring weapons?” He looked pointedly at Moni, who was waving her hand. “Weapons other than narcotics?”

“I packed a .38 in our suitcase,” Mal said.

“Extra rounds?”

Mal shook his head. “Just the five in the cylinder.”

“Are you a good shot?”

“I’m so-so. Deb is better.”

Tom took out his Sig, removed the magazine, and pulled back the slide to make sure the barrel was clear. Then he did a quick explanation of how to load, how to use the decocker, and what double action meant. As he was passing his gun around, one of the suited guards knocked on the door frame.

“We’re ready for you.”

Tom took his Sig back, tucked it into the holster, and followed the others into the hallway. They’d been given rooms on the second floor, all in a row, and there was an ornate wooden railing that overlooked the great room. As they headed for the stairs, they passed a marble statue of a cupid on a pedestal. Tom did a double-take, then went back for a closer look.

In the baby’s mouth were sharp fangs.

Moni, who was behind him, said, “Wouldn’t want to breastfeed that little bastard. And look at the wings.”

At first glance, they seemed like typical, feathered cherub wings. But the individual feathers weren’t feathers—they were tiny daggers.

“Dr. Madison is waiting.”

Tom turned, startled, and was surprised to see yet another guard in a gray suit standing next to him. That made five he’d seen so far. Why did Forenzi need so many guards? To protect him from ghosts? And how had he managed to sneak up on Tom? Like the others, this guard was tall, muscular, and wearing military boots. But he hadn’t made a sound during his approach.

“What branch of the military were you in?” Tom asked.

The man’s face remained blank, and he didn’t answer.

“Do you work for the government, or for Forenzi directly?”

“Please move along,” the guard said.

Tom shrugged, and he followed Moni and the others down the stairs, across the great room, and to a hallway lined with drab paintings depicting plantation life. They looked old, paint peeling and a decade’s worth of grime on them. Slaves in the field, picking tobacco. Blackjack Reedy astride a horse, whip in hand. An endless field of cattails, stretching off into the horizon. Everyone had stopped next to a closed door, and Tom assumed it was the queue for the examination room. But he quickly figured out the group had huddled around another painting, this one of Butler House.

It was massive, perhaps a meter tall and twice as wide, in an ornate frame and protected behind some non-reflective glass. The picture depicted the house in the 1800s, when it was still new, and the fields were filled with cotton. Tom didn’t understand the interest until Frank pointed to a figure in one of the windows.

It was a woman, her hair tied back, a pensive look on her face. Tom squinted at it, then turned to Sara, who had gone ashen.

The woman in the painting was a dead-ringer for her.

Tom moved in closer, checking the figures in the other windows.

He saw Frank’s face peering out between half-closed shutters on the second floor.

Deb, opening the front door to the house. Mal in the shadows behind her.

Moni’s face, complete with her pock marks.

Wellington, in the cotton field with a scythe.

Two people in a horse-drawn buggy, approaching the house. Pang and Aabir.

Tom looked for himself, dreading the search, holding his breath.

“You’re here,” Belgium said, pointing to the side of the house.

Tom didn’t understand what he was seeing. It was definitely his face, lying sideways on the ground, but his body was obscured by scrub brush.

“And over here,” Belgium continued, moving his finger.

Then Tom understood.

His body wasn’t in the bushes. His body was sitting against the house, holding a knife, his shirt drenched with blood.

Tom had apparently cut off his own head, and it had rolled away.

Deb

Mal was in much better spirits since Dr. Forenzi’s talk at supper, which was just in time for Deb’s mood to take a nose dive.

They passed co-dependency back and forth like two hobos sharing a cigar. So it was Deb’s turn to feel awful, and Mal’s to buoy her up.

But he’d gone out to ask the cop some questions, leaving Deb alone in her room.

Which was when a painting in the bedroom fell off the wall.

It scared the shit out of her, and when she went to look for him she found a convention of sorts in Tom’s room.

Now, first in line to be examined, she still hadn’t had the chance to tell Mal what had happened. The painting—a ghastly picture of a brooding southern gentlemen standing calmly in the middle of a storm—had dropped off the wall just as she was wiping the sweat off her stumps.

It could have been a coincidence. Or it could have been supernatural.

What was behind it didn’t matter. What mattered was Mal hadn’t been there for her, when she’d been there for him since the airport in Pittsburgh.

It wasn’t fair. So now she was coping with resentment as well as fear, and having to go in first made Deb even more on edge. Add in seeing herself on the hallway painting, and Deb wanted to either cry, rip all her hair out, or both.

“Tom’s partner disappeared here last week,” Mal said, whispering over Deb’s shoulder.

Deb sensed the worry in her husband’s voice. But she was worried, too. She needed him to be strong for a while. The fact that he wasn’t made her angry as well as scared.

“Deb, did you hear me?”

She turned around so fast that she lost her balance, which for Deb was about the most humiliating thing she could do. That Mal had to quickly reach out and steady her made it even worse.

“Leave me alone,” she said, teeth clenched and trying to pull away.

He recoiled like he’d just seen a snake. “Deb? What’s wrong?”

“It isn’t all about you, Mal. I’m hurting, too. I need support just like you do.”

“Deb, I—”

“I don’t need this right now.”

The door to the examination room opened, and a male voice from inside said, “Come in.”

Deb began to enter, but Mal held her back.

“Let go, Mal.”

“Let’s talk about this. We can let someone else cut ahead.”

“Let. Go.”

“At least let me go first so I can tell you what to expect. I know you hate doctors. Let me—”

Deb pulled away, wobbled into the room, and slammed the door behind her.

She immediately regretted her decision.

The exam room looked like it jumped off a postcard from the 1800s. The examination table was made of wood, with a cracked leather cushion, and metal arm rests with buckled straps. A dusty apothecary shelf, filled with old glass bottles, took up most of the left wall. Along the right wall were a desk, a water basin, and a shelf of moldering, leather-bound books. On the desk was some sort kind of organ—a human lung maybe—floating in a specimen jar of gray liquid.

“Take a seat.”

The doctor still hadn’t turned around. Her husband had been right; she was afraid of going to the doctor. She’d seen too many in her lifetime, and they always hurt her in some way.

Deb considered walking back out, letting Mal go first. But stubbornness won out over nerves and she went to the antique examination table and sat down.

“Name?” the doctor asked. He was filling out something on a clip board.

“Deborah Dieter.”

Deb looked at the old medical cart next to the table. On it were filthy old medical tools. A bone saw with crusted brown flecks. Pointy forceps. A large, curved scalpel. A jagged pair of oversized snippers. A hand drill that seemed more suited to a woodworker than a doctor. Rusty trocars. A rough-edged metal speculum that was open wider that a human being could accommodate.

Deb could feel her mouth go dry and her heart rate kick up. Getting an exam was bad enough. Getting an exam from some quack stuck in the nineteenth century was much worse.

Of course it’s much worse.

That’s the point.

Deb closed her eyes and slowed down her breathing, controlling her fear. This had to be part of Forenzi’s experiment. To try and scare her. What could be scarier than a collection of barbaric surgical implements from the past?

After ten seconds or so, Deb was able to reign in her panic. Then she opened her eyes and found herself face-to-face with—

Oh my god.

She recognized this so-called doctor. He was the hotel clerk who sent her to the Rushmore Inn. The same pale, pasty face. The same crooked toupee.

But he’s still in prison!

Isn’t he?

“I’m going to take some of your blood, Mrs. Dieter.” His breath smelled like sour milk.

“I need to…” Deb said weakly. “Are… are you…?”

“I’m Dr. Madison. I assist Dr. Forenzi.”

He was tugging on some rubber gloves, and gave Deb a crooked smile.

Is this the guy? Or does he just look like the guy, and my imagination is doing the rest?

Deb sometimes thought she saw people she knew in crowds, only to look closer and realize they just resembled the people she knew. Her mind filled in the blanks, jumped to conclusions. It happened to everyone.

Is it happening to me now?

“Why, Mrs. Dieter. You look like you’ve seen a ghost.” He opened up a plastic package, taking out a long needle attached to a clear tube.

Maybe this isn’t the guy. Maybe Forenzi hired him because he looked like the man Deb knew.

To scare her.

After all, this is a fear study.

“You… remind me of someone.”

“I get that a lot. George Clooney, right?”

More like Boris Karloff.

“Please put your arm on the armrest, Mrs. Dieter. I’m going to strap it down so you keep still.”

He buckled a strap around her wrist.

“So, are you from around here, Doctor?”

“Oh, no. I’m from West Virginia.”

Where the Rushmore was.

“Been here a while?”

“Only recently. For the past few years I’ve been… busy.”

“Busy doing what?”

He smiled again. “Just hold still, Mrs. Dieter. This will only pinch for a moment.”

The needle was jammed into her forearm. The agony was immediate.

Then he began to move it from side to side.

“Where is that vein? I can never find it.”

Deb ground her teeth, locking her jaw. The doctor wiggled it, going deeper, so deep Deb was sure he’d hit bone.

The pain was bad. But the anxiety was nuclear.

Deb shut her eyes again, begging the universe for it to stop.

“You have such tiny veins. I may have to get a smaller needle.”

Yes! Please please please do that!

Her whole world had been reduced to that needle in her flesh, probing, twisting, poking left and right like she was being tenderized instead of giving blood.

“Maybe I should try the other arm.”

No!

“Yes, I think that’ll I have to… ahh, there it is.”

Deb chanced a look and saw him attach a vacuum vial to the end of the tube, and it began to fill with blood.

“Was that so awful, Mrs. Dieter?”

Deb’s hair was stuck to her head from sweating. She blew out a deep breath, and pumped her fist to make the blood go faster.

“Looking good, Mrs. Dieter. Looking… oh, wait. We’re slowing down.”

He flicked the vial with a fingernail, which tugged on the needle and caused Deb a spike of pain.

“I believe your vein has collapsed.” He roughly grabbed the needle, then pulled it out.

“Do we have enough blood?” Deb whispered.

He shook his head. “I’m afraid not.”

“So…?”

“So I guess we’ll have to try that other arm after all.”

Before Deb could object, the doctor was pinning down her other wrist and buckling it to the armrest.

She was trapped.

“What are you doing?”

“You recognized me. From the hotel. I can see it in your eyes. Don’t you lie to me, girl.”

Deb immediately began to thrash and yell, but the moment she opened her mouth, the man waved his hand over her face and Deb could no longer make a sound. It felt like something foul had crawled inside her throat and was choking her from the inside out, even though she was still able to breathe. Deb screamed, loud as she could, but it only came out as a hiss of air. She tried to kick him, but he caught her left prosthetic and pressed the vacuum release, letting it drop to the floor. He did the same with the left one.

“Ya know my name is Franklin.” His voice was getting deeper, the southern accent more pronounced. “Ya know I’m very angry about what y’all did at the Rushmore.”

Deb pulled on her arms as hard as she could, until her elbows felt like they were going to pop. But old as the examination table was, it was built solid.

She was trapped.

Franklin strolled over to the equipment cart. He ran his hand over the antique medical tools, his fingers caressing the rusty speculum.

“Ya know I’m angry about going to prison. I’m really, really angry about that, girl. Do ya know why?”

He picked up the hand drill.

“I’ll tell ya why.”

Deb was growing light headed from her attempts at screaming. She tried to push Franklin away with her stumps, but he simply moved to the side of the table.

Then he placed the drill bit on Deb’s thigh, pressing down hard.

“Because,” he whispered to her, “one year ago today, I died in prison.”

He reached his hand down the front of his pants—

—and pulled out a handful of something, throwing it in Deb’s face.

At first, she thought it was rice.

Then the rice began to wiggle.

Maggots.

Franklin put both hands on the drill.

“I don’t like being dead, girl. The spirit world is all fucked up. So I’m going to hurt ya. I’m going to hurt ya so bad. And then I’m going to hurt that husband of yours even worse.”

Just as he began to turn, the back door to the examination room began to slowly open.

Then the lights flickered and went out.

Deb screamed in the blackness, making no more noise than a leaky tire.

A moment later, the lights came back on, just as the drill clattered to the floor.

Deb saw a man in a lab coat standing in front of her.

“I’m Dr. Madison,” he said. “What in God’s name has happened to you?”

Deb tried to talk, but she had no voice. she tried to point with her chin where Franklin was standing.

But Franklin wasn’t there.

Franklin had disappeared.

Mal

When the door opened, and he saw Deb crying and hysterical, something in Mal snapped. He stormed into the exam room, demanding answers from the doctor, listening to his wife try to talk but unable to.

Someone—Tom—finally figured out that she couldn’t speak, and Dr. Madison gave Deb a pen and some paper to relate her story.

Deb’s handwriting was erratic, and didn’t make much sense, but the part that stuck out the most was the word she wrote and circled several times.

GHOST

“So he bound your arms, tried to take blood, then threatened you with the drill?” Tom asked.

Deb nodded. Mal felt sick.

“And you say it was a man named Franklin? Someone you’d met before?”

Another nod.

“He’s in prison,” Mal said. “But he could have gotten out.”

Deb beckoned for the paper and wrote “Franklin said he died in prison.”

“That’s easy enough to check,” Tom said. Then he pointed to the floor. “So is this drill. My guess is that ghosts don’t leave fingerprints.”

Deb shook her head and wrote “gloves”.

“Careful ghost.” Tom looked at Madison. “And you’re sure no one went past you, Doctor?”

“Positive. I was standing in the doorway the whole time. And…”

The doctor’s face pinched.

“And?”

“When I came in here, before the lights went out, I saw Mrs. Dieter. But… I didn’t see anyone else.” He turned to Deb, looking pained. “I’m sorry, but you were alone in here, dear.”

Mal wanted to hit somebody. “This qualifies as assault, right Detective?”

“Absolutely.”

Mal pulled a cell phone from his pocket. “I’m calling the police.”

By now, everyone was in the exam room, huddling around Deb. Moni was helping her put her legs back on, and Dr. Madison was peering down his wife’s throat with a lighted opthalmoscope.

“Your vocal chords are swollen, but I don’t see any damage. How did you lose your voice?”

Deb shook her head and mouthed “I don’t know.”

Mal was walking around the office, waving his cell phone around like it was a talisman to ward off evil spirits. “Goddammit, no signal. Anyone else have a cell phone?”

Tom checked his. “No bars.”

“Doctor, where’s the phone in this place?”

Dr. Madison shrugged. “There aren’t any phones at Butler House. No electricity either, except what’s powered by the gas generators. No Internet. We’re completely cut off from the grid here.”

“This is insane,” Mal said. He turned to his wife, who was still shaking from her ordeal. “We’re leaving, Deb. Right now.”

But rather than get the expected nod, Mal watched in amazement as Deb shook her head.

“Honey, you were attacked!”

“If it was a ghost,” Deb said, her hoarse voice barely a whisper, “he went away. If it was a trick to scare me, that’s the point of this experiment.”

She reached out, held Mal’s hand. He gripped it tight.

“Let’s stay,” she said.

Moni grinned. “I’m with you, girlfriend. And if the ghost comes back, we kick his Casper ass.”

Mr. Wellington was feeling the walls. “I can’t find any secret passages or trap doors or mirrors. But any magician worth his salt can do a disappearing act. This didn’t have to be a ghost. There could be a rational explanation for all of this.”

Pang was setting up his spirit hunting equipment. Frank and Sara were holding hands in the corner of the room. Aabir had her eyes closed and was swaying where she stood.

“So much sorrow in the room,” the medium said. “So much misery. And something else. A strong presence. An evil presence. Hatred. Toward you, Deb. Toward your husband. Something to do with West Virginia. Many people died there.” She opened her eyes. “Deborah, can I touch your hand?”

Deb let go of Mal and reached for the psychic. When Aabir touched her, she gasped.

“So much pain in your past, Deborah. So many scars. Much tragedy. But much bravery, too.” Aabir’s eyelids fluttered. “A bed and breakfast. The Rushmore Inn. I see misshapen, deformed people. They’re after you. They want something from you. You’re in a room. In bed. Someone is under the bed.”

Deb’s eyes got wide, and she tried to pull her hand back. But Aabir didn’t let go.

“I see a mountain lion.”

“Enough.” Mal pulled the medium away, but then Aabir clasped his arm.

“The ghost who did this to your wife. He has a brother named Jimmy. Jimmy is the one who cut off your hand.”

Mal tried to shake her off, but the woman’s grip was like iron.

“Jimmy is here, in this house. He’s followed you here.”

Mal’s sphincter clenched. She was relating the worst thing that ever happened to him. The cause of his nightmares.

Aabir’s voice got low, so she sounded like a man.

“Maaaaaal…. I waaaaant your other hand…”

Mal was rooted there, terrified.

“Holy shit, bro!” Pang had some electronic gizmo pointed at Aabir. “The EMF is off the scale! I’ve never seen anything like this!”

“I WAAAANT YOOOOUUUUR HAAAAAAND!”

Mal shoved her away, and Aabir collapsed to the floor. Dr. Madison and Moni knelt next to her, and Pang was wide-eyed, snapping pictures with a digital camera.

“Will you fucking look at this!” Pan declared. He held out the viewfinder for Mal to see.

In the picture, Aabir was glowing like she was on fire.

Tom

Tom was on edge.

He still hadn’t talked to Forenzi about Roy, and the whole examination room incident with Deb left a bad taste. Tom had interviewed enough victims to know Deb was one.

But what was she a victim of?

Everyone had moved into the great room. Aabir slumped in her lounge chair, looking like an inflatable float with half the air leaked out. Pang was hunched over a coffee table and typing something in his laptop, his face beaming. Mal and Deb were sitting on a sofa. Deb looked like a zombie, zoned out and slack. Mal was tapping his foot rapidly. Moni was near the front doors, whispering something to Wellington. Frank and Sara were on a loveseat, Frank’s arm around her.

Despite Mal objecting, Dr. Madison had begun taking blood samples from everyone, going person to person, putting the vials into a metal case. He was also fitting everyone with a battery powered monitor, which recorded, among other things, electrical activity in the brain, heart activity, pulse, blood pressure, and calories burned. The device clipped to the belt, and worked wirelessly with ten electrode pads stuck to the skin in various locations, including the chest, wrists, neck, and temples.

“I’m scared, Frank,” Sara said to him.

“I’m scared, too.” Frank patted Sara’s leg. “But keep remembering that we’re supposed to be scared. That’s the point of the experiment. All of this could be intentional, set up by Dr. Forenzi.”

“Where is Dr. Forenzi?” Tom asked Dr. Madison as he was labeling a vial with marker.

“Hmm? In his lab, I suppose.” The doctor seemed preoccupied with his task and didn’t bother to face the cop.

“I need to talk to him.”

“I’ll tell him as soon as I finish up here.”

“Now.”

“I understand your urgency, Detective. Especially after what we all saw. But you have to understand, things like that happen in Butler House all the time. Dr. Forenzi has strict instructions not to be disturbed while he’s in his laboratory. And even if I wanted to disturb him, the doors are steel and locked all the time. I’ve never even been in there. If he doesn’t want to come out, no one can make him.”

Tom wondered if he should push, but he still had all night to force the issue. Moni was right—he had no jurisdiction here. But he did have a gun, and a lot of questions, and by tomorrow he would be damn sure he got the answers he sought.

“These readings are mind-blowing.” Pang was still staring at his laptop screen. “The electromagnetic field around Aabir surged like I was scanning a high tension power line. I wish I’d had my remote thermometer on. Did anyone notice a temperature change?”

No one answered.

“Okay okay okay.” Belgium cleared his throat. “Besides the painting in the hallway with all of us in it, and what happened in the examination room, has anyone else witnessed anything unusual since arriving at Butler House?”

Sara spoke up. “In my room. A rocking chair. It was rocking by itself.”

“Was there any explanation for it?” Belgium asked, obviously concerned.

“No. No window open. I wasn’t anywhere near it. And when I say it was rocking, I don’t mean a little bit. It seemed like someone was in it.”

Belgium shivered. “Anyone else?”

“There was a cold spot in my room,” Pang said. “Ten degrees cooler. Celsius, bro. But it went away before I could record it, so I don’t have any proof.”

“Tom?”

Tom shook his head.

“Mal?”

“What? No.”

Deb mouthed something.

“What, hon?” Mal asked, putting his arm around her.

“Painting in our room.” Deb’s voice was scratchy, but audible. “Fell off the wall.”

“Aabir,” Belgium pressed, “have you noticed anything?”

Aabir remained quiet.

“Cornelius? Moni? Have you had had had any… um… encounters, since you’re arrival?”

“Naw,” Moni said.

“Neither have I,” said the Brit.

“You told me you saw an orb,” Pang countered.

Wellington shrugged. “I saw a flash of light in the hallway, while I was walking to the loo. You called it an orb, Mr. Pang, not I.”

“What’s an orb?” Belgium asked.

“Ghost lights,” Pang said. “Also known as orbs, ignis fatuus, will-o’-the-wisp. One pervading theory is that hauntings are residual energy that lingers after a traumatic event. Another is that the energy leaks into our dimension from another one. Like in quantum theory, where a particle can be in more than one place at the same time. In this case, our world, and the afterlife.”

“I thought you were a skeptic, Mr. Pang.”

“I am, Mr. Wellington. But skepticism requires me to be aware of the hypothesis I try to debunk.”

“There are reasonable, scientific explanations for everything that has happened so far,” Wellington said.

“A ghost assaulted my wife, Mr. Wellington,” Mal said, his chin out and his voice clipped.

“It could have been a man who said he was a ghost,” Wellington said. “Or, perhaps, Mrs. Dieter might be mistaken in her account.”

Mal stood up, his fist clenched. “Are you saying she’s lying?”

“I’m not saying anything, Mr. Dieter. Only that I don’t know. I haven’t met anyone here before today, so I can’t voice for anyone’s honesty. But even if I trusted your wife was speaking what she believes to be the truth, couldn’t her account of the events be colored by her past traumas?”

“So now she’s not a liar. Now she’s insane.”

“I’m simply calling attention to the obvious. We have ample proof of liars in our society, as well as ample proof of mental dysfunction. But we don’t have any proof of spirits. So if I’m being asked to dwell on what is more likely—either supernatural activity, or lies, hoaxes, and hallucinations—I think Occam’s Razor bears me out. The simplest explanation is usually the correct one.”

“Let’s all of us take it down a notch,” Tom said. Dr. Madison was attaching a sticky pad to his neck, and the conducting gel was cold. “But I think that anyone who wants to leave Butler House, should do so.”

Moni snorted. “And give up a million bucks? You’re on crack.”

“Dr. Belgium?” Tom met his eyes. “Do you and Sara want to leave?”

They exchanged a look. “I believe we’re staying.”

“Mal and Deb?”

Mal faced his wife. “We should go, hon. We don’t need this.”

Deb shook her head.

“Deb…”

“I’m done running away,” she rasped. “Go if you want. I’m staying.”

Deb crossed her arms. Mal pursed his lips, and then he walked away, to the other side of the great room.

“Cornelius?” Tom asked.

He folded his arms across his vest. “Naturally, I’m staying. I don’t believe we have anything to fear here, except our own overactive imaginations.”

“That leaves you, Aabir. Do you want to stay, or go?”

The psychic’s lips moved, but no sound came out.

“Can you speak up?”

“Paper,” she whispered.

“Paper? Dr. Madison, can you give Aabir your clip board?”

“Certainly.” The doctor placed it in front of the psychic, and put a black marker on top.

Her face still devoid of expression, Aabir began to write. Frank moved in for a closer look.

I IS JASPER

The words were in block letters, almost childish in their scrawl. They also took up most of the page, so Dr. Madison flipped to the next one.

I WORKS THE FIELDS AT BUTLER HOUSE

“What’s she doing?” Moni asked.

“Psychography,” Pang said. “Also known as automatic writing. She’s channeling a spirit and writing what it’s telling her. Sounds like it’s the ghost of Ol’ Jasper, the slave that Colton Butler sewed two extra arms on. Shit, my EMF meter is going berserk!”

Tom remembered the Butler House website. The picture of the scarred, old slave with the extra arm.

THEY HURTS JASPER BAD

Dr. Madison flipped to a fresh page.

NOW JASPER GON’ HURT DEM BACK

Frank realized he was holding the armchair of the loveseat so tightly his knuckles were white.

I... IS...

Aabir’s eyes rolled up into the back of her head.

HERE

Aabir screamed, and collapsed onto the floor.

Then the lights went out.

The great room was very dark with the chandeliers out, but enough dusk was peeking in through the cracks in the shudders that Tom could still make out some shadows. A moment later, Pang’s camcorder light went on. Tom followed suit, digging his tactical flashlight out of his pack.

“Cornelius, you’re near the front doors.” Tom pointed the beam in his direction. “Try the light switch there.”

Wellington found the wall panel and flipped the switch, to no effect.

“Nothing. Might be the circuit breaker. Or the generator.”

Tom waved the light across the group, taking a head count. He saw Deb and Mal, Moni, Frank and Sara, Pang, Aabir—”

“What’s that sound?” Frank asked.

Everyone went quiet. Tom was acutely aware of how silent true silence actually was. Living in Chicago, silence was an anomaly. There were always sounds. Traffic, heat or air conditioning, birds, constant human noise from talking, yelling, playing music.

But this house was completely devoid of noise. The only thing Tom could liken it to was when he put on his ear muffs on the shooting range. Silence had its own sound; the steady, inaudible hum of consciousness, which made you realize how alone you really were in the universe.

And then, like a slap to the face, he heard it.

Something dragging across the wooden floor.

Like a claw. Or a—

“Machete,” Tom whispered.

A machete like Ol’ Jasper was supposed to carry.

Tom twisted his flashlight to widen the beam, and then did a slow pan across the great room, trying to locate the sound.

He saw empty chairs, the fireplace, an old piano, a wall, a hallway, a table, another hallway, another wall…

“I think it’s near me,” Wellington said in a metered tone.

Tom turned the beam on the author.

A few meters away from him was—

“Sweet Jesus Christ,” Moni whispered.

It was a black man, muscular, shirtless, shuffling across the floor in a slow, steady gate, dragging a rusty-looking machete behind him.

At first, Tom thought it was Roy.

But Roy doesn’t have four arms.

The two extra appendages sprouted from his back like angel wings, and hung, limply, over his shoulders.

“Well,” Cornelius Wellington said, “I certainly do commend the make-up artist. That’s quite a special effect. And the pure black eyes are a nice touch.”

Ol’ Jasper kept walking toward him.

Tom drew his Sig. “I’m a police officer. Drop your weapon and put your hands up.”

“All four of his hands?” Wellington asked. Tom detected the bravado, but it seemed forced.

Ol’ Jasper didn’t stop.

“Halt right now, or I will shoot.” Tom aimed his 9mm at the man’s center mass, supporting his gun hand with the flashlight.

Wellington tried to smile, but it looked more like a wince. “Oh, let him come, Detective. I’ll pull off one of those phony arms, and we’ll expose this for the farce it is.”

Ol’ Jasper got within two meters.

“Last warning.” Tom placed his finger in the trigger guard, and cocked the Sig with his thumb. “I will shoot you.”

Ol’ Jasper stopped an arm’s length away from Wellington.

Then he slowly raised the machete.

“Oh my.” Wellington giggled, but it sounded forced. “I’m so scared.”

“Get away from him, Wellington.”

“This is only a joke, Detective. I refuse to play along.”

“Drop the weapon, now!” Tom ordered.

Ol’ Jasper didn’t drop it.

Time seemed to slow down. Tom had enough time to think it through, make a gut decision, reverse the decision, then go with what his gut told him to do.

He squeezed the trigger twice, a double tap to the black man’s chest.

He felt the gun buck in his hands.

He heard the shots.

He smelled the gunpowder.

He knew he’d hit the target, dead on.

But Ol’ Jasper didn’t even flinch.

Instead, he swung the machete with vicious force, connecting with the side of Wellington’s neck.

Wellington went down like one of those buildings being demoed, collapsing in a heap right where he stood, his head flopping to the side as if on a hinge, a bright spray of arterial blood painting the front doors.

Chaos ensued.

Tom tuned out all the screaming from the others, tuned out the spectacle of Wellington’s dying body flopping and twitching on the floor like a landed fish, and emptied his magazine into Ol’ Jasper.

At least ten shots hit home.

Ol’ Jasper stood there, unaffected.

Then he looked at Tom—

—smiled wide—

—and roaches came out of his mouth.

It was the scariest thing Tom had ever seen in his life.

He ejected the empty magazine, fished out a new one, and loaded it as he backed away. Tom’s hands had begun to shake, and the beam flitted over Ol’ Jasper, catching him sporadically, until Tom somehow lost him in the darkness.

“Everyone!” Tom yelled. “Follow me! Let’s go!”

Tom hurried to the nearest hallway, alternating between lighting the way for people and trying to find Ol’ Jasper. Pang with his camcorder brought up the rear.

“Keep moving!” Tom said, covering the rear and walking sideways. He followed the group down a left turn, and into a large room.

“Dr. Belgium?” he called, keeping his gun on the doorway. Not that shooting had helped, but Tom didn’t have a better plan.

“Yes yes yes!”

“My fanny pack. I have some glow sticks. Pass them around.”

He pointed the flashlight at his pack, and Belgium fished out a handful. Tom listened for the sound of a machete scraping the floor, but all he heard was cellophane wrappers being opened. Soon the room was bathed in soft, multicolored neon light. Greens and blues and pinks.

Tom took a quick look around, discovered they were in a massive library.

“Pang, Frank, get that desk, move it over here to block the door. Mal, you got your gun?”

“Left it in my room.”

Shit. “Okay, do a head count.”

Tom peeked his head down the hall. Still no Jasper.

“Everyone say your name,” Mal said.

A bunch of people began talking at once.

“Okay, everyone shut up. Let’s try this again. I’m here, Deb is here, Tom, Frank, and Pang are here. Moni?”

“Yeah. Here. I’m here.”

“Sara?”

“Yes.”

“Dr. Madison?”

No one answered.

“Dr. Madison, are you here?”

No answer.

“Did anyone see where he went?”

Sara, bathed in pink light, said, “I think he ran down the other hallway.”

“How about Aabir?” Mal asked. “Aabir, are you here?”

“She was passed out on the table,” Pang said.

Tom ground his teeth.

Shit. One dead, and two missing.

How quickly things all went to hell.

“Tom, move over.”

Tom stepped aside, then helped Frank and Pang slide the heavy desk in front of the door.

“Are there any other doors in this room?”

General murmuring, and lights crisscrossing the space.

“I think that’s the only one,” Mal said.

Having only one entry point was a good thing. Easier to guard.

Having only one escape route was bad.

“Are there windows in this room?” Tom asked. “We need to find one, get out of here, and find the cars.”

More scrambling around.

“Got a window!” Deb croaked. Her voice was getting stronger.

People rushed over.

“Bars,” Moni said. “Thick ass metal bars.”

Mal grunted. “They’re set in concrete.”

“Okay.” Tom wasn’t sure on what to do next. He knew the right thing to do was go and look for Dr. Madison and Aabir. But he didn’t want to leave everyone alone.

Bullshit. Be honest. It isn’t about them. It’s about you. You’re afraid to go back out there.

“Everyone look around. Find something you can use as a weapon.”

“A weapon?” Pang giggled. “Why? Your gun didn’t do much good with Ol’ Jasper.”

“Did you miss, Tom?” Sara asked.

“I don’t think so.”

“You shot a whole shitload of times,” Moni said. “You sure you didn’t panic and miss?”

“I’m sure,” Tom said, but as soon as the words passed his lips he questioned them. He’d been less than five meters away, and had emptied an entire fourteen round magazine. He should have been able to hit that target with his eyes closed.

But could he have been so afraid he missed?

“Did you see those extra arms?” Pang’s voice had an edge to it.

Tom ignored him. “Does everyone have something to defend themselves with?”

Grunts and grumbling.

“If not, find something fast. I’m…” Tom swallowed. “I’m going to go look for Madison and Aabir.”

“Bad idea, Tommy boy,” Moni said. “I saw that movie. As soon as the people split up, they start dying.”

“They’ve already started dying,” Pang said. “Did you see what happened to Wellington? His head was practically cut off!”

Tom swallowed again. “I have to go check. When I come back, I’ll knock three times. Frank? Pang? Move the desk and put it back when I leave.”

“I’m going with you,” Moni said, stepping up next to him.

Tom shook his head. “You’re staying here.”

“I’m staying with the guy holding the gun. And you promised you wouldn’t leave me.”

Shit.

“Okay. You stay close, move when I tell you to. Got it?”

“Yeah.”

“Pang, Frank, move the desk.”

They shoved it back, Tom took a deep breath, held it, and opened the door, expecting Ol’ Jasper to be standing right there.

But the doorway, and the hall, were clear.

Tom stepped out, Moni close enough to be his shadow. Behind them the door slammed shut, and Tom heard the scraping of the desk along the floor.

They began to make their way back toward the great room. Slowly. Cautiously. Tom waving the gun and flashlight in front of him in a steady, sweeping motion. Left to right to left to right.

“My nana believed in spirits,” Moni whispered. “She told me some people were so wicked, the devil kicked them out of hell because he was afraid of them.”

“Shh.”

“I thought ghosts went through walls and shit. How could one hold a machete?”

“Be quiet.”

The floorboards creaked under Tom’s foot, and he winced at the sound.

“Why should I be quiet? Can ghosts hear us? Do they even have senses like we do? Maybe they can zone in on our life force or something like that.”

Tom stopped. “And maybe,” he whispered, “there are no such things as ghosts, and you’re going to give away our position.”

“Doesn’t your flashlight and my pink glow stick give away our position, too?”

She had a point. Tom resumed creeping down the hall. He was coming to the left turn, a right angle corner he couldn’t see around. He paused again, unsure of how to proceed.

“I wish I had a cross or a rosary or something,” Moni said.

“That’s for vampires.”

“Did you hear about that vampire outbreak in Colorado? At some hospital? I read it in a tabloid. They said crosses didn’t work.”

“Can you please stop talking?”

“Do you believe in bigfoot?”

“Christ, Moni, can you please—”

That’s when Tom smelled something.

BBQ?

He sniffed the air, trying to pinpoint where it was coming from.

Moni grabbed Tom’s shoulder, startling him.

“Didn’t that doctor guy talk about a ghost that smelled like burnt meat?”

Tom remembered. Sturgis Butler. A serial killer from the 1800s who killed prostitutes in satanic rituals. According to that website, he was caught and burned alive, laughing as he died.

Was the odor coming from around the corner?

Tom’s heart rate, already above normal, got even faster. Against his better judgment he began to imagine Sturgis, his flesh burned black, his charred bones poking out through his crispy skin.

“Moni, let go of me,” he said softly.

She did.

“I hear something, Tom.”

Tom listened. He heard it, too. A shuffling sound. Not a scraping, like a machete being dragged. More like someone scuffing their shoes across the floor.

Tom flashed the light into the hallway behind him.

Empty.

The shuffling drew closer.

Tom gritted his teeth and did a quick peek around the corner.

Clear.

“Okay, we’re going to run down the hallway. Keep up with me. And no matter what happens, keep silent. On three. One… two… three!”

Tom sprinted around the corner, barreling down the hallway as fast as he could, gun pointed ahead, flashlight bobbing and throwing crazy shadows. Right before he got to the great room he stopped, putting his back against the wall, sweeping his light ahead of him.

Moni stopped right behind him, again clutching his shoulder.

Tom didn’t see anyone in the great room. But the charred pork smell had become overpowering. Like he’d stuck his nose over a meat smoker.

“Aabir,” he said in a stage whisper. “Dr. Madison. Are you here?”

He focused the beam on the table where Aabir had been sitting. She was gone.

“I’m going to check the front door,” Tom said. He was close to gagging from the stench. “If it’s open, we’ll go back and get the others, find the cars. Do you want to stay here?”

Moni squeezed him.

“Is that a yes?”

Moni squeezed again, so hard it hurt.

Tom laughed softly. “I’m glad you’re finally taking this silence thing to heart.”

He turned to look at her, and his smile froze when he saw it wasn’t Moni grabbing him.

It was a man with a charred black face who smelled like burnt meat.


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