"Where is he?" he cried out. "I can feel him, but where is he?"
"There!" Mark cried, pointing with one glowing hand. "What's that?"
Ben centered the light on it. A Welsh dresser. "It's not big enough," he said to Mark. "And it's flush against the wall."
"Let's look behind it."
Ben shrugged. They crossed the room to the Welsh dresser and each took a side. He felt a trickle of building excitement. Surely the odor or aura or atmosphere or whatever you wanted to call it was thicker here, more offensive?
Ben glanced up at the open kitchen door. The light was dimmer now. The gold was fading out of it.
"It's too heavy for me," Mark panted.
"Never mind," Ben said. "We're going to tip it over. Get your best hold."
Mark bent over it, his shoulder against the wood. His eyes looked fiercely out of his glowing face. "Okay."
They threw their combined weight against it and the Welsh dresser went over with a bonelike crash as Eva Miller's long-ago wedding china shattered inside.
"I knew it!" Mark cried triumphantly.
There was a small door, chest-high, set into the wall where the Welsh dresser had been. A new Yale padlock secured the hasp.
Two hard swings of the hammer convinced him that the lock wasn't going to give. "Jesus Christ," he muttered softly. Frustration welled up bitterly in his throat. To be balked like this at the end, balked by a five-dollar padlock--
No. He would bite through the wood with his teeth if he had to.
He shone the flashlight around, and its beam fell on the neatly hung tool board to the right of the stairs. Hung on two of its steel pegs was an ax with a rubber cover masking its blade.
He ran across, snatched it off the wallboard, and pulled the rubber cover from the blade. He took one of the ampoules from his pocket and dropped it. The holy water ran out on the floor, beginning to glow immediately. He got another one, twisted the small cap off, and doused the blade of the ax. It began to glimmer with eldritch fairy-light. And when he set his hands on the wooden haft, the grip felt incredibly good, incredibly right. Power seemed to have welded his flesh into its present grip. He stood holding it for a moment, looking at the shining blade, and some curious impulse made him touch it to his forehead. A hard sense of sureness clasped him, a feeling of inevitable rightness, of whiteness. For the first time in weeks he felt he was no longer groping through fogs of belief and unbelief, sparring with a partner whose body was too insubstantial to sustain blows.
Power, humming up his arms like volts.
The blade glowed brighter.
"Do it!" Mark pleaded. "Quick! Please!"
Ben Mears spread his feet, slung the ax back, and brought it down in a gleaming arc that left an afterimage on the eye. The blade bit wood with a booming, portentous sound and sunk to the haft. Splinters flew.
He pulled it out, the wood screaming against the steel. He brought it down again...again...again. He could feel the muscles of his back and arms flexing and meshing, moving with a sureness and a studied heat that they had never known before. Each blow sent chips and splinters flying like shrapnel. On the fifth blow the blade crashed through to emptiness and he began hacking the hole wider with a speed that approached frenzy.
Mark stared at him, amazed. The cold blue fire had crept down the ax handle and spread up his arms until he seemed to be working in a column of fire. His head was twisted to one side, the muscles of his neck corded with strain, one eye open and glaring, the other squeezed shut. The back of his shirt had split between the straining wings of his shoulder blades, and the muscles writhed beneath the skin like ropes. He was a man taken over, possessed, and Mark saw without knowing (or having to know) that the possession was not in the least Christian; the good was more elemental, less refined. It was ore, like something coughed up out of the ground in naked chunks. There was nothing finished about it. It was Force; it was Power; it was whatever moved the greatest wheels of the universe.
The door to Eva Miller's root cellar could not stand before it. The ax began to move at a nearly blinding speed; it became a ripple, a descending arc, a rainbow from over Ben's shoulder to the splintered wood of the last door.
He dealt it a final blow and slung the ax away. He held his hands up before his eyes. They blazed.
He held them out to Mark, and the boy flinched.
"I love you," Ben said.
They clasped hands.
FORTY-NINE
The root cellar was small and cell-like, empty except for a few dusty bottles, some crates, and a dusty bushel basket of very old potatoes that were sprouting eyes in every direction--and the bodies. Barlow's coffin stood at the far end, propped up against the wall like a mummy's sarcophagus, and the crest on it blazed coldly in the light they carried with them like St Elmo's fire.
In front of the coffin, leading up to it like railroad ties, were the bodies of the people Ben had lived with and broken bread with: Eva Miller, and Weasel Craig beside her; Mabel Mullican from the room at the end of the second-floor hall; John Snow, who had been on the county and could barely walk down to the breakfast table with his arthritis; Vinnie Upshaw; Grover Verrill.
They stepped over them and stood by the coffin. Ben glanced down at his watch; it was 6:40.
"We're going to take it out there," he said. "By Jimmy."
"It must weigh a ton," Mark said.
"We can do it." He reached out, almost tentatively, and then grasped the upper right corner of the coffin. The crest glittered like an impassioned eye. The wood was crawlingly unpleasant to the touch, smooth and stonelike with years. There seemed to be no pores in the wood, no small imperfections for the fingers to recognize and mold to. Yet it rocked easily. One hand did it.
He tipped it forward with a small push, feeling the great weight held in check as if by invisible counterweights. Something thumped inside. Ben took the weight of the coffin on one hand.
"Now," he said. "Your end."
Mark lifted and the end of the coffin came up easily. The boy's face filled with pleased amazement. "I think I could do it with one finger."
"You probably could. Things are finally running our way. But we have to be quick."
They carried the coffin through the shattered door. It threatened to stick at its widest point, and Mark lowered his head and shoved. It went through with a wooden scream.
They carried it across to where Jimmy lay, covered with Eva Miller's drapes.
"Here he is, Jimmy," Ben said. "Here the bastard is. Set it down, Mark."
He glanced at his watch again. 6:45. Now the light coming through the kitchen door above them was an ashy gray.
"Now?" Mark asked.
They looked at each other over the coffin.
"Yes," Ben said.
Mark came around and they stood together in front of the coffin's locks and seals. They bent together, and the locks split as they touched them, making a sound like thin, snapping clapboards. They lifted.
Barlow lay before them, his eyes glaring upward.
He was a young man now, his black hair vibrant and lustrous, flowing over the satin pillow at the head of his narrow apartment. His skin glowed with life. The cheeks were as ruddy as wine. His teeth curved out over his full lips, white with strong streaks of yellow, like ivory.
"He--" Mark began, and never finished.
Barlow's red eyes rolled in their sockets, filling with a hideous life and mocking triumph. They locked with Mark's eyes and Mark gaped down into them, his own eyes growing blank and far away.
"Don't look at him!" Ben cried, but it was too late.
He knocked Mark away. The boy whined deep in his throat and suddenly attacked Ben. Taken by surprise, Ben staggered backward. A moment later the boy's hands were in his coat pocket, digging for Homer McCaslin's pistol.
"Mark! Don't--"
But the boy didn't hear. His face was as blank as a washed blackboard. The whining went on and on in his throat, the sound of a very small trapped animal. He had both h
ands around the pistol. They struggled for it, Ben trying to rip it from the boy's grasp and keep it pointed away from both of them.
"Mark!" he bellowed. "Mark, wake up! For Christ's sake--"
The muzzle jerked down toward his head and the gun went off. He felt the slug pass by his temple. He wrapped his hands around Mark's and kicked out with one foot. Mark staggered backward, and the gun clattered on the floor between them. The boy leaped at it, whining, and Ben punched him in the mouth with all the strength he had. He felt the boy's lips mash back against his teeth and cried out as if he himself had been hit. Mark slipped to his knees, and Ben kicked the gun away. Mark tried to go after it crawling, and Ben hit him again.
With a tired sigh, the boy collapsed.
The strength had left him now, and the sureness. He was only Ben Mears again, and he was afraid.
The square of light in the kitchen doorway had faded to thin purple; his watch said 6:51.
A huge force seemed to be dragging at his head, commanding him to look at the rosy, gorged parasite in the coffin beside him.
Look and see me, puny man. Look upon Barlow, who has passed the centuries as you have passed hours before a fireplace with a book. Look and see the great creature of the night whom you would slay with your miserable little stick. Look upon me, scribbler. I have written in human lives, and blood has been my ink. Look upon me and despair!
Jimmy, I can't do it. It's too late, he's too strong for me--
LOOK AT ME!
It was 6:53.
Mark groaned on the floor. "Mom? Momma, where are you? My head hurts...it's dark..."
He shall enter my service castratum...
Ben fumbled one of the stakes from his belt and dropped it. He cried out miserably, in utter despair. Outside, the sun had deserted Jerusalem's Lot. Its last rays lingered on the roof of the Marsten House.
He snatched the stake up. But where was the hammer? Where was the fucking hammer?
By the root cellar door. He had swung at the padlock with it.
He scrambled across the cellar and picked it up where it lay.
Mark was half sitting, his mouth a bloody gash. He wiped a hand across it and looked dazedly at the blood. "Momma!" he cried. "Where's my mother?"
6:55 now. Light and darkness hung perfectly balanced.
Ben ran back across the darkening cellar, the stake clutched in his left hand, the hammer in his right.
There was a booming, triumphant laugh. Barlow was sitting up in his coffin, those red eyes flashing with hellish triumph. They locked with Ben's, and he felt the will draining away from him.
With a mad, convulsive yell, he raised the stake over his head and brought it down in a whistling arc. Its razored point sheared through Barlow's shirt, and he felt it strike into the flesh beneath.
Barlow screamed. It was an eerie, hurt sound, like the howl of a wolf. The force of the stake slamming home drove him back into the coffin on his back. His hands rose out of it, hooked into claws, waving crazily.
Ben brought the hammer down on the top of the stake, and Barlow screamed again. One of his hands, as cold as the grave, seized Ben's left hand, which was locked around the stake.
Ben wriggled into the coffin, his knees planted on Barlow's knees. He stared down into the hate and pain-driven face.
"Let me GO!" Barlow cried.
"Here it comes, you bastard," Ben sobbed. "Here it is, leech. Here it is for you."
He brought the hammer down again. Blood splashed upward in a cold gush, blinding him momentarily. Barlow's head lashed from side to side on the satin pillow.
"Let me go, you dare not, you dare not, you dare not do this--"
He brought the hammer down again and again. Blood burst from Barlow's nostrils. His body began to jerk in the coffin like a stabbed fish. The hands clawed at Ben's cheeks, pulling long gouges in his skin.
"LET ME GOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO--"
He brought the hammer down on the stake once more, and the blood that pulsed from Barlow's chest turned black.
Then, dissolution.
It came in the space of two seconds, too fast to ever be believed in the daylight of later years, yet slow enough to recur again and again in nightmares, with awful stop-motion slowness.
The skin yellowed, coarsened, blistered like old sheets of canvas. The eyes faded, filmed white, fell in. The hair went white and fell like a drift of feathers. The body inside the dark suit shriveled and retreated. The mouth widened gapingly as the lips drew back and drew back, meeting the nose and disappearing in an oral ring of jutting teeth. The fingernails went black and peeled off, and then there were only bones, still dressed with rings, clicking and clenching like castanets. Dust puffed through the fibers of the linen shirt. The bald and wrinkled head became a skull. The pants, with nothing to fill them out, fell away to broomsticks clad in black silk. For a moment a hideously animated scarecrow writhed beneath him, and Ben lunged out of the coffin with a strangled cry of horror. But it was impossible to tear the gaze away from Barlow's last metamorphosis; it hypnotized. The fleshless skull whipped from side to side on the satin pillow. The nude jawbone opened in a soundless scream that had no vocal cords to power it. The skeletal fingers danced and clicked on the dark air like marionettes.
Smells struck his nose and then vanished, each in a tight little puff: gas; putrescence, horrid and fleshy; a moldy library smell; acrid dust; then nothing. The twisting, protesting finger bones shredded and flaked away like pencils. The nasal cavity of the skull widened and met the oral cavity. The empty eye sockets widened in a fleshless expression of surprise and horror, met, and were no more. The skull caved in like an ancient Ming vase. The clothes settled flat and became as neutral as dirty laundry.
And still there was no end to its tenacious hold on the world--even the dust billowed and writhed in tiny dust devils within the coffin. And then, suddenly, he felt the passage of something which buffeted past him like a strong wind, making him shudder. At the same instant, every window of Eva Miller's boardinghouse blew outward.
"Look out, Ben!" Mark screamed. "Look out!"
He whirled over on his back and saw them coming out of the root cellar--Eva, Weasel, Mabel, Grover, and the others. Their time was on the world.
Mark's screams echoed in his ears like great fire bells, and he grabbed the boy by the shoulders.
"The holy water!" he yelled into Mark's tormented face. "They can't touch us!"
Mark's cries turned to whimpers.
"Go up the board," Ben said. "Go on." He had to turn the boy to face it, and then slap his bottom to make him climb. When he was sure the boy was going up, he turned back and looked at them, the Undead.
They were standing passively some fifteen feet away, looking at him with a flat hate that was not human.
"You killed the Master," Eva said, and he could almost believe there was grief in her voice. "How could you kill the Master?"
"I'll be back," he told her. "For all of you."
He went up the board, climbing bent over, using his hands. It groaned under his weight, but held. At the top, he spared one glance back down. They were gathered around the coffin now, looking in silently. They reminded him of the people who had gathered around Miranda's body after the accident with the moving van.
He looked around for Mark, and saw him lying by the porch door, on his face.
FIFTY
Ben told himself that the boy had just fainted, and nothing more. It might be true. His pulse was strong and regular. He gathered him in his arms and carried him out to the Citroen.
He got behind the wheel and started the engine. As he pulled out onto Railroad Street, delayed reaction struck him like a physical blow, and he had to stifle a scream.
They were in the streets, the walking dead.
Cold and hot, his head full of a wild roaring sound, he turned left on Jointner Avenue and drove out of 'salem's Lot.
Chapter Fifteen
Ben and Mark
Mark woke up a little at a time, letting th
e Citroen's steady hum bring him back without thought or memory. At last he looked out the window, and fright took him in rough hands. It was dark. The trees at the sides of the road were vague blurs, and the cars that passed them had their parking lights and headlights on. A gagging, inarticulate groan escaped him, and he clawed at his neck for the cross that still hung there.
"Relax," Ben said. "We're out of town. It's twenty miles behind us."
The boy reached over him, almost making him swerve, and locked the driver's side door. Whirling, he locked his own door. Then he crouched slowly down in a ball on his side of the seat. He wished the nothingness would come back. The nothingness was nice. Nice nothingness with no nasty pictures in it.
The steady sound of the Citroen's engine was soothing. Mmmmmmmmmmm. Nice. He closed his eyes.
"Mark?"
Safer not to answer.
"Mark, are you all right?"
Mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm.
"--mark--"
Far away. That was all right. Nice nothingness came back, and shades of gray swallowed him.
TWO
Ben checked them into a motel just across the New Hampshire state line, signing the register Ben Cody and Son, scrawling it. Mark walked into the room holding his cross out. His eyes darted from side to side in their sockets like small, trapped beasts. He held the cross until Ben had closed the door, locked it, and hung his own cross from the doorknob. There was a color TV and Ben watched it for a while. Two African nations had gone to war. The President had a cold but it wasn't considered serious. And a man in Los Angeles had gone berserk and shot fourteen people. The weather forecast was for rain--snow flurries in northern Maine.
THREE
'Salem's Lot slept darkly, and the vampires walked its streets and country roads like a trace memory of evil. Some of them had emerged enough from the shadows of death to have regained some rudimentary cunning. Lawrence Crockett called up Royal Snow and invited him over to the office to play some cribbage. When Royal pulled up front and walked in, Lawrence and his wife fell on him. Glynis Mayberry called Mabel Werts, said she was frightened, and asked if she could come over and spend the evening with her until her husband got back from Waterville. Mabel agreed with almost pitiful relief, and when she opened the door ten minutes later, Glynis was standing there stark naked, her purse over her arm, grinning with huge, ravenous incisors. Mabel had time to scream, but only once. When Delbert Markey stepped out of his deserted tavern just after eight o'clock, Carl Foreman and a grinning Homer McCaslin stepped out of the shadows and said they had come for a drink. Milt Crossen was visited at his store just after closing time by a number of his most faithful customers and oldest cronies. And George Middler visited several of the high school boys who bought things at his store and always had looked at him with a mixture of scorn and knowledge; and his darkest fantasies were satisfied.