Page 44 of Funland


  She glanced back at her band. Drums began to pound through the noise of the cheering crowd. Robin faced forward. Her right boot tapped the stage in time with the drum. With the first notes of her banjo, a hush descended on the audience. A quick, twangy tune filled the night. A roar came up again as those in the stands recognized the intro to “Gypsy Girl.”

  I am the gypsy banjo girl.

  I’ve wandered far and near.

  I am the gypsy banjo girl

  With a song for you to hear.

  It’s a mountain song,

  It’s a desert song,

  It’s a song of the windblown sea.

  It’s a prairie song

  And a woodland song—

  It belongs to you and me.

  Kerry bounced on Dave’s lap, and he heard her soft voice as she sang along. Joan leaned against him and slipped a warm arm around his back.

  “My next number is very special to me,” Robin announced midway through the show. “I sang it for a fellow named Nate the night we met. He must’ve liked it, ’cause he married me. So this one’s for you, Nate, and for another special friend, Kerry Carson, the daughter of my two favorite cops.”

  Then she began to sing:

  Kelly and Kerry went off one day

  For the Land of Purr where the kitty-cats play.

  They packed their pockets with nacho chips,

  Bubble gum, jelly, and chocolate lips…

  Kerry twisted around on Dave’s lap. “It’s me!” she blurted. “I’m in it!”

  After Robin’s final song and the standing ovation, she played and sang three encore numbers. Then the stage went dark. Seconds later, when the amphitheater lights came on, she and the band were gone.

  Dave, Kerry, and Joan waited. When the crowd had diminished, Joan folded the old brown blanket she’d used to cover the bleacher seats. Dave took hold of Kerry’s hand, and they started down.

  Debbie and Steve met them just outside the amphitheater’s entrance. The rides and attractions had already closed for the night. The bright carnival lights were dark, but lamps near the boardwalk railing still glowed to illuminate the way for the departing concertgoers. Funland seemed strangely quiet.

  “You going to let me have your autograph?” Debbie asked Kerry.

  “Huh?”

  “Well, you’re a big celebrity now, you know.”

  “Both of you,” Joan said.

  “God, don’t remind me. I’ve never been so embarrassed in my life. I wanted to curl up and die when he was grabbing me that way.”

  “He never could’ve gotten onto the unicycle without your valuable assistance,” Dave told her.

  Debbie bared her teeth and punched his shoulder.

  “Now, now, children,” Joan said.

  Debbie took hold of Steve’s hand. “Anyway, we’ll see you guys later, okay?”

  “Where are you off to?” Joan asked.

  “Pete’s Pizza. Since Steve has to go home tomorrow and everything, we thought we’d…you know, make the most of it.”

  “Can I go too?” Kerry asked.

  “No, you may not,” Joan told her.

  “Whyyyy?”

  “Because it’s late, young lady. You should’ve been home in bed hours ago.”

  “I’m not sleepy.”

  “You’d cramp their style, kid,” Dave explained.

  “No I won’t.”

  “It’s fine with me if she wants to come along,” Steve said.

  “Sure,” Debbie said, rubbing the girl’s hair. “This is a big night for her. Wouldn’t want to spoil it now.”

  Dave and Joan looked at each other. Joan shrugged. “It’s okay with me. If you’re sure.”

  “We’ll have her home in an hour or so,” Steve said.

  “Maybe we should all go to Pete’s,” Dave suggested.

  Kerry looked up at him and shook her head. “You’d crump our style.”

  “Besides,” Joan said, “I want to take a stroll on the beach.”

  Dave caught the look in her eyes. “Me too.”

  They stood together and watched their daughter walk away with Debbie and Steve.

  “Two lovebirds and a duck,” Joan said.

  “She’ll have fun.”

  “They sure won’t get much smooching done with her around. Speaking of which…”

  She faced Dave.

  He looked up and down the boardwalk. It appeared deserted.

  He put his arms around her, pulled her close, and kissed her mouth. While they embraced, the lamps went dark.

  “Let’s go down to the beach,” she whispered against his lips.

  They strolled along the boardwalk, Joan cuddling against his side. At the bottom of the stairs they stopped while Joan shook open her blanket. The beach was pale with moonlight. Beyond it, the ocean looked black except for the white froth of combers rolling toward shore.

  “Want to share?” she asked.

  “You bet.”

  They draped the blanket over their shoulders and pulled it closed in front. “Nice and snuggly,” Joan said.

  “And private,” Dave added, slipping a hand under her sweatshirt. He caressed the sleek skin of her back.

  “Privacy from whom?”

  “You never know.”

  Joan looked over her shoulder. Toward the darkness under the boardwalk. Dave felt her back stiffen.

  He snapped his head around.

  He saw no one.

  “Now you’ve got us both spooked,” Joan said. Smiling, she slipped a hand into the seat pocket of his corduroys. “Creep.” She gave his rump a squeeze.

  “Come on.” He led her forward, anxious to put some distance between themselves and the black area that stretched under Funland.

  Probably are some derelicts under there, Dave thought. Boleta Bay still had its share of them. Not many, though. Not nearly as many as there’d been before that night so long ago.

  Trolls had fled from the Funhouse even before the police swept through it in the early-morning hours. By noon there was not a troll to be found near the boardwalk or beach. Many were spotted on roads leading out of town.

  Some who didn’t flee fell victim to outraged citizens. They were beaten, taken for rides to the city limits, even murdered. In the weeks that followed, the bodies of fourteen trolls were discovered: in alleys, dumpsters, under the boardwalk, in the woods outside town. All but three of the corpses had been left with hand-printed cards or signs that read, “Greetings from Great Big Billy Goat Gruff and Friends.”

  The killers were never apprehended.

  Soon, not a troll could be found within miles of Boleta Bay.

  Jasper’s Funhouse and Oddities were demolished that winter. The first event to take place in the amphitheater erected in their place was the June wedding of Nate and Robin.

  To Dave the wedding had seemed like an exorcism—a holy ceremony that banished all remnants of evil from the place where so much horror had been.

  That summer, a few drifters and beggars began to appear. They met no harm at the hands of the townspeople. Indeed, they seemed different from those who had haunted the area in the days of Jasper’s Funhouse. Somehow, they seemed less threatening.

  Less threatening, but the sight of one never failed to remind Dave of the night in the Funhouse, never failed to send chills crawling over his skin. Joan, he knew, had the same reaction.

  When they reached the shore, she glanced back again, as if to make certain they hadn’t been followed.

  “Is the coast clear?” Dave asked.

  “Looks okay.”

  She opened her side of the blanket as Dave eased against her. He lifted her sweatshirt above her breasts. He caressed them. Her skin was pebbled with goose bumps, her nipples standing erect. She moaned softly. “Let’s find a place to spread the blanket,” she whispered.

  “Right out here in the open?”

  She looked up and down the beach, then pointed at the lifeguard station a hundred yards or so to the north. “It’s dark under th
ere,” she said.

  Dave kissed her breasts, then drew the sweatshirt down. With the blanket wrapped around themselves, they walked over the hard-packed sand toward the patch of black shadow.

  “It’s going to be cold,” Dave said.

  “It’s your job to keep me hot, fella.”

  “Well, I’ll sure try.”

  “And I’ll return the fav—”

  A dark shape rose like a hump on the deck in front of the elevated lifeguard shack. Joan pressed herself hard against Dave’s side. Her hand tightened on his hip.

  The moonlit form dropped to the sand, stumbled, went down on its knees, then stood and began to shamble toward them.

  “Oh, shit,” Joan muttered.

  It was a man. A troll. His wild tangle of hair and beard shone like snow under the pale moon. He wore a dark overcoat that looked many sizes too large for his skinny frame. The cuffs of his baggy trousers were rolled up. His white ankles were bare. One of his ragged sneakers had no laces, and flopped under his foot as he staggered closer.

  He held out a hand.

  “Let’s get out of here,” Dave said.

  “Gimme a quarter?” The voice was harsh and whiny. It sounded too young to be coming from a white-haired troll. “Jes’ a quarter? How’s ’bout it, folks?”

  “Give him something, Dave.”

  Dave’s hand trembled as he took out his wallet. He felt sick, frightened, and angry that this damn intruder had ruined things. But he felt a little sorry for the guy too. He took out a five-dollar bill and gave it to the troll, being careful not to let the scrawny hand touch him.

  “God bless ya! God bless bote a ya!”

  He whirled away and scampered up the wooden stairs of the lifeguard station.

  Dave and Joan hurried over the sand toward the distant stairway to the boardwalk. He could feel her shaking against him. “It would’ve been nice,” he said.

  “Will be nice. In our own bed.”

  “We can spread this old blanket on it and pretend we’re on the beach.”

  “Leave the windows open.”

  “Let’s take some sand along and make it authentic.”

  “Let’s not.”

  Five whole bucks. Five smackaroonies.

  God bless ’em.

  He wondered who they were. They’d looked a little familiar. Maybe he’d seen them around someplace.

  Could be, the gal’d been one of his nurses at the funny farm. He tried to picture her dressed in white, smiling and giving him pills.

  Maybe that was it.

  He shoved the bill into his shirt pocket. Dropping to his knees, he squinted at the boards of the platform.

  He knew the spiders were there. He just couldn’t see them.

  Too dark, even with the moonlight.

  From a deep pocket of his coat he took a can of insect spray. The white mist hissed from its nozzle. He crawled along, sweeping it back and forth, trying not to miss an inch of the deck.

  “That’ll getcha,” he muttered. “Yeah! No way y’gonna get ol’ Duke.”

  When he was sure it was safe, he slipped the can into his pocket. He took out a bottle of red wine. Holding it up to the moon, he shook it.

  Still a few good swallows in there.

  He popped the cork and began to drink

  .

  Other Leisure books by Richard Laymon:

  FRIDAY NIGHT IN BEAST HOUSE

  FLESH

  DARK MOUNTAIN

  BEWARE

  THE WOODS ARE DARK

  CUTS

  TRIAGE (Anthology)

  THE MIDNIGHT TOUR

  THE BEAST HOUSE

  THE CELLAR

  INTO THE FIRE

  AFTER MIDNIGHT

  THE LAKE

  COME OUT TONIGHT

  RESURRECTION DREAMS

  ENDLESS NIGHT

  BODY RIDES

  BLOOD GAMES

  TO WAKE THE DEAD

  NO SANCTUARY

  DARKNESS, TELL US

  NIGHT IN THE LONESOME OCTOBER

  ISLAND

  THE MUSEUM OF HORRORS (Anthology)

  IN THE DARK

  THE TRAVELING VAMPIRE SHOW

  AMONG THE MISSING

  ONE RAINY NIGHT

  BITE

  Copyright

  A LEISURE BOOK®

  September 2010

  Published by

  Dorchester Publishing Co., Inc.

  200 Madison Avenue

  New York, NY 10016

  Copyright © 1990 by Richard Laymon

  All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of publisher.

  E-ISBN: 978-1-4285-0924-5

  The name “Leisure Books” and the stylized “L” with design are trademarks of Dorchester Publishing Co., Inc.

  Visit us online at www.dorchesterpub.com.

 


 

  Richard Laymon, Funland

 


 

 
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