CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE

The moment they were out the door, the dog ran off into the darkness and Karen knew she wouldn’t be back that night, preferring instead whatever little nest she’d made for herself in some safe corner of the surrounding area.

Karen was sad to see her go and even felt a twinge of fear at the animal’s departure. And betrayal. As if they had already been lifelong friends and Dusty was abandoning Karen to whatever horrific thing that might assault her next.

She didn’t have long to feel sorry for herself though, because after standing in the dark for no more than five minutes, trying to mentally will the dog to return, the screaming began.

It was coming from inside the house and Karen whirled, raced up the porch stairs two at a time and burst through the door and back into the living room to find Saul naked and writhing on the floor, stripped of all his clothing, raking bloody tracks over his skin with his fingernails. An instant later, she was at his side, kneeling down, terrified at the sight of what he was doing to himself as well as the obvious agony he was in.

Rory pounded down the stairs, wearing only sweatpants, shouting, “What’s wrong?”

Karen shook her head helplessly as Rory crouched beside her. “He just started scratching himself. He said his nose was itchy and now this!”

Saul rolled around on the floor, tears squirting from his eyes as he shrieked and cried, carving every inch of skin within his reach. His chest, belly, arms, legs, face, neck, feet, buttocks and even his genitals were beading up with blood, the skin accordioned from merciless gouging.

“Jesus fucking Christ!” Rory yelled. “What do we do?”

“Do you have any Benadryl?” Karen asked.

“What? No! I mean, I don’t know. Maybe!”

Frustrated, Karen rose and ran upstairs, trying to block out the sound of Saul’s screams. She flew through the hall and straight into her room, into the bathroom where she ripped open the small cloth bag she kept her toiletries in. She dumped the contents out into the sink, sifting through all the useless crap until she spotted the foil packet with the antihistamines, each pink and white pill in its own separate blister bubble.

She snatched it up and sprinted back down to the living room where Saul continued to bellow in misery, Rory scratching him in places the other man couldn’t reach himself.

“Harder!” Saul screamed. “Do it harder!”

“I can’t! You’re already bleeding!”

Karen fell to her knees beside the men, popping pills from the packet and shouting, “Swallow these, Saul!” She pushed two into his mouth. “Swallow them!”

Saul, probably not even registering what was being asked of him, did it anyway, with barely a pause of his flailing hands as they tried to scratch everywhere at once.

“Will he need a hospital?” Rory asked, real panic shining in his huge wet eyes.

“We’d better hope not,” Karen replied. “Let’s try to get him into a tub. We’re going to need baking soda.” As an afterthought, she added, “And oatmeal, if you’ve got it.” She didn’t know exactly what kind of oatmeal was necessary but she remembered her mother giving her oatmeal baths when she was a kid and had sunburns, poison ivy, or particularly bad encounters with insects, usually mosquitoes or bees.

Twenty minutes later, Saul sat up to his chin in a warm bath seasoned with baking soda, Epsom salts, and packaged instant oatmeal, though Karen doubted the last ingredient would do much good. Rory sat on the closed toilet lid, watching his friend while Karen leaned against the doorjamb feeling inadequate and foolish for not knowing what to do in such an emergency.

She said as much and Rory responded without looking away from Saul. “You know more than me. I don’t even have the right kind of pills to give him.”

“Comes from a lifetime of allergies,” she said dismissively.

For his part, Saul had finally stopped thrashing around and digging burrows into his skin, though he had hissed viciously when his wounds had hit the warm water. Now he lay back, his eyes closed while the rest of his body gave an occasional twitch. His arms gripped the sides of the claw-footed tub and Karen knew it was taking every ounce of his willpower to not continue raking at himself.

“You think it was the fleas?” Rory asked quietly.

“I guess it’s possible,” Karen replied. “But I’ve sure as hell never seen a reaction like that, especially since he doesn’t appear to have any hives, except for the welts he gave himself. And if it was the fleas, why didn’t they start biting me too? I was sitting on the couch right beside him.”

“Stop talking about me like I’m not here,” Saul said suddenly, surprising them both. “I’m not deaf, you know.”

“How do you feel?” Rory asked him.

“Like I’ve been flayed by a giant cheese grater.”

“Do you feel feverish?” Karen asked, stepping further into the room. When he shook his head, she said. “What about breathing?”

“I seem to be doing that.” Saul opened his eyes and tried to smile at her, but she could see it was a huge effort for him. His cheeks had not been spared the wrath of his furious fingernails any more than any other part of him had.

“Cute,” she said. “I mean, are you having any trouble? Your airways don’t feel swollen or anything?”

He shook his head again, closing his eyes once more.

Karen noticed Rory staring at her in bug-eyed horror. “Why are you asking him that?”

“Trouble breathing is a symptom of allergic reaction.”

“Shit. Why didn’t you mention that before?” Rory asked.

She shrugged. “I guess I assumed you knew. Not to mention, I didn’t want to think about it unless we really had to. I don’t know about you, but giving someone an emergency tracheotomy isn’t something I have a lot of experience in.”

Rory’s face darkened with anger, though Karen was fairly certain it wasn’t directed at her. “What the fuck is going on?” he demanded. “Everything is all fucked up now. This house…” He trailed off, unable — or unwilling — to finish the thought aloud.

“What about the house?” she prodded.

“I don’t know. I just know I’m sick of all this weird shit that’s been happening. It makes no sense.”

“Well, I wouldn’t disagree with that,” she replied.

“Nothing’s been right since you got here,” he said. Karen looked at him, startled he would be so blunt. He saw the look and said, “That didn’t come out the way I meant it.”

“How did you mean it?”

“It’s just that…I don’t know. Like the powers that be don’t want you here or something. And I know how crazy that sounds but…there it is.”

“I would never have been here in the first place if you hadn’t called me.”

“What?” he said sharply. “You called me.”

Karen stared at him. “Um, no, you called me.”

Puzzled, he almost smiled, but at the last instant frowned instead. “Are you kidding me?”

“Rory, you called me and told me about Sean’s papers. Don’t you remember?”

He got to his feet, stepped towards her. In the small bathroom, he didn’t need to take many steps before he was in her face. “What the fuck are you trying to pull?”

She could see he meant it. He really didn’t remember calling her.

“I…” She had no idea what to say.

“You’re the one who called me,” he insisted. “Saying that you found his papers. A handwritten will, you said.” Now the anger in his face was directed at her, making her more nervous by the minute. “So,” he continued. “I’m gonna ask you again: what the fuck kind of game are you playing?”

She swallowed a lump in her throat. She licked her lips, which seemed unusually dry. “I guess I’m just a little confused,” she said slowly. “With everything that’s been going on.” She did her best to fake a chuckle, rubbing her forehead. “God, you know, I just can’t believe how exhausted I am. I’m sorry. Of course I remember…calling you, I mean.”

“Right,” he said, leaning forward until their noses were mere inches apart, his blue eyes fixed intently on hers, scanning for any trace of a lie. After a moment, he pulled back, smiled without showing his teeth. “I figured you’d remember if I jarred your memory enough. No offense but Sean did warn me that you were a little flighty.”

She nodded, almost ready to make an excuse to get the hell out of the cloistered bathroom until what he’d said made her wonder. “He warned you?”

Rory, who had turned back to study Saul now faced her again. “What’s that?”

“You said Sean warned you about me. When did he do that?”

He waved a dismissive hand. “Oh, who knows? Probably a couple years ago.”

“Why would he have done that?” she asked, brows knitting together.

Rory raised his hands in a half-shrug. “He thought you were a little flighty?” He smirked as though making a joke, but Karen could clearly see the malice he intended with his words. He wanted her to see it. But why?

“It seems strange though,” she went on, determined not to be intimidated by him. “That he would say something like that when he had no intention of us meeting.”

“Yeah, well, that was Sean. Always pulling stuff out of his hat for no apparent reason.”

“Uh huh.” She glanced around him to see if Saul was having any kind of reaction to this odd conversation, but the other man’s eyes remained closed. She decided to give him a prompt. “How you doing over there, Saul?”

Without so much as flinching, without even opening his eyes, Saul replied, “I think you two need to get a room.”

Rory laughed, a harsh, barking sound that was much too loud in this small space. “I have a room. And I think I’m going to head up there right now, if it’s okay with everyone. I mean, if you think you’ll be okay, Saul? No midnight treks through the woods and to the nearest hospital? Think you can handle that for me, buddy?”

At this, Saul did open his eyes, giving Rory an odd look. “Yeah,” he said. “I think I’m feeling better. I’ll be okay.”

“Good to hear.” Rory grinned predatorily. “Because, like our good friend Ms. Lewis here, I’m beat. I just don’t want to get dragged out of bed because someone is screaming again. You know what I mean?”

Saul miraculously pulled a smile out of somewhere. “No worries, man. I’m fine. Have a good rest.”

Rory nodded, moving past Karen, but stopped in the hallway and turned back to them. His smile reminded Karen of the shark in Jaws. “You kids be good now. Don’t do anything I wouldn’t do.” He pointed at Karen. “Especially you. I haven’t been able to get in his pants for six months and I’d be pretty devastated to find out you’d stolen him from me while I was sleeping.”

Feeling herself bristle at this uncalled for crap, Karen almost opened her mouth to tell him off, but ultimately decided against doing so. At least for now. Instead, she did her best to return his smile with an obnoxiously sour one of her own. “I wouldn’t dream of it,” she said.

“Excellent.” And then he was gone, his footsteps fading off down the hall.

She waited a moment, then quietly went to the doorway and poked her head out to be sure he was really gone, half expecting him to lunge out from around the corner, wielding a knife and a maniacal grin. But the hall was empty and she released a long-held breath that had been beginning to make her chest ache.

She closed the door before turning to Saul. “What the fuck was that about?” she whispered.

Reaching for a face cloth hanging from the soap dish on the wall, Saul dunked it into the water, soaking it, before draping it over his face, giving absolutely no indication he’d even heard the question.

“Saul?” she said, louder this time.

“Mmm?”

“I asked what that was all about?”

“What?”

She couldn’t believe this. Had he really not been paying attention to the exchange that had just happened less than six feet from where he sat? “That shit with Rory,” she said, not even attempting to hide her exasperation. “Saying I called him. Was he serious?”

Beneath the damp face cloth, Saul laughed softly.

“What’s so funny?”

“I was just remembering what he said about you trying to get in my pants.”

“Oh, yeah,” she said sarcastically. “That was hilarious.” She ran a hand through her hair, dismayed that her fingers encountered so many snarls. She looked down at the bath tub enviously for a few seconds before saying, “So, was that his idea of amusing? Saying I called him up out of the blue, claiming to have Sean’s papers and all that nonsense? I mean, come on. What kind of game is he playing?”

Saul laughed again, sounding very far away. “Isn’t that what he said about you? That you’re playing a game?”

“Yeah, but I’m not. I’m not the one making shit up for who the fuck even knows why. Because he thinks its funny, I guess.”

“But you did,” Saul said.

She sighed loudly. “Did what?”

“You did call him first.”

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