33
Wade Muggins had been wandering aimlessly through a maze of corridors underneath the school.
No.
Wait.
He’d been walking for more than an hour. He had to be beyond the school by now. Maybe underneath the woods behind the gym.
At one point, he’d dropped the rusty revolver so it would be a landmark, let him know if he was walking around in circles. He never saw the thing again.
He sniffed the air. There was a faint hint of dampness to it. Maybe he was near the Pattakonck River.
Holy crap. If he was near the river, that meant he was under the cemetery!
Dude! There were dead people snoozing in the dirt right above his head! Skeletons and worms and rotted flesh. Skulls and bones and tattered clothes.
He was about to toss his cookies.
But he had to keep going. There was gold down here, too. There had to be. Why else would somebody build a maze underground? He swung his flashlight to something painted on a row of support beams, one word on each board:
WELCOME
ABOARD
THE
CRESCENT
CITY
Freaky.
He crept up the narrow corridor.
He thought he heard breathing. Wet, wheezy breathing.
“Is anybody down here?” he shouted. “Dude? I come in peace!”
No response.
He came to a junction. Left or right? He went right again.
He shone his light into the darkness in front of him.
It flashed off two dull eyeballs.
“Whoa.” Wade stepped back. The eyes looked dead. Gross. A cadaver had fallen through the ceiling when the bottom of its coffin had rotted away.
Then the eyes moved.
The two dead eyeballs weren’t attached to a dead body!
Suddenly, the eyes sprang forward.
Some kind of living creature leapt into the air and sank its fangs into Wade’s arm. He dropped the flashlight and screamed.
The creature released its grip and opened its jaws wide to strike again. Wade could tell by the rumble in its throat that the thing was lining up for a second lunge. He could feel and smell the monster’s breath.
“No!” Wade pleaded.
Just as the beast was about to bite off his face, Wade heard an unbelievably evil voice cry out from somewhere in the darkness: “McNulty!”
The beast stopped.
“McNulty, come!”
“Yes, master,” slurred a slow, dull voice.
Wade heard soft footfalls as the creature loped off into the gloom.
Wade wasn’t dead! He reached for the flashlight lying on the ground. The bite in his arm hurt so bad it burned.
But he could walk. He could run!
Breathing hard, feeling woozy, he raced around blind corner after blind corner and finally stumbled into a room he hadn’t been in before.
He swung the flashlight around in circles until it hit an elongated black tank with steam valves popping up at either end. Wade saw a furnace below the tank with four fuel doors. A black exhaust pipe rose out of one end, angled sharply, then disappeared through a wall like a dryer vent would. Wade, who knew a thing or two about furnaces and boilers, recognized what it was immediately: the tube boiler from an old paddle wheel steamboat.
“What’s it doing way down here?” he mumbled. “The river is aboveground.”
Wade needed to talk, just to hear his own voice. Ever since that thing had bit him, his head had been feeling kind of fuzzy. Fuzzier than normal.
He leaned against a neatly stacked mountain of firewood.
“Mommy? I have a boo-boo.” He could feel his mind slipping away, his memories oozing out his ears.
“Twinkle, twinkle little star …”
Drool dribbled down his chin.
“Baa-baa black sheep …”
He could feel his teeth growing longer, their spiky tips pricking the lining of his cheeks.
“Ba-ba-ba-ba …”
He didn’t recognize his own voice.
He remembered the first word he ever learned.
“Dada.”
And then he could think of nothing.
Except the desire to taste human brains.