“I’m going to find some aspirin,” Kate announced, and left.
They reached the river and found it frozen. It was about twenty feet wide and couldn’t possibly be very deep; nonetheless, Todd did not like the idea of plowing through the ice even up to his shins. It was cold enough out here that his feet would freeze instantly. And there would be no turning back until after they’d completed their task. He would just have to be careful.
“You can use these overhangs for handholds,” Brendan said, inching his way out onto the ice while he gripped overhanging tree limbs like monkey bars. “They don’t go all the way across but it’s better than nothing.”
“We should probably go one at a time,” Todd said, bending down to survey the thickness of the ice. He thumped a gloved knuckle against it and it seemed sturdy enough.
When his handholds ran out, Brendan stretched his arms out like airplane wings. He took minuscule steps and looked like a tightrope walker overcautious of his balance. On the other side of the streambed, the scraggly twists of overhanging limbs dropped back down; Brendan’s long arms rose and he gripped the limbs. A number of branches snapped away and shattered like glass on the surface of the frozen stream.
With two ungraceful bounds, Brendan made it to the other side of the stream. He executed an awkward bow that nearly sent him tumbling back onto the ice, before seating himself in the Y of a nearby tree. He lit a cigarette, looking like someone waiting for a bus.
Bruce eased himself out onto the ice next. As Brendan had done before him, he utilized the overhanging limbs to facilitate his way out to the center of the frozen stream. Releasing the last of the limbs, the deputy sheriff crossed the center of the stream much quicker than Brendan, his balance more aligned and steady. He didn’t even bother grabbing for the overhanging branches on the far end of the streambed; he simply continued across at a steady pace, half sliding, half galloping.
When Bruce made it to the other side, Brendan handed him his cigarette and Bruce sucked the life out of it.
Todd slid out onto the ice, one hand groping for the branches above his head. He grabbed a sturdy one and inched out farther onto the ice. Beneath him, the ice felt solid. Thankfully, blessedly solid. As Brendan and Bruce had done, he used the overhead branches as support until he got to the center of the stream. But then he took an overzealous step and heard something that sounded like a bone breaking.
He looked down and saw a hairline fracture in the ice. It ran perpendicular underneath his right foot. Holding his breath, he lifted his boot and took one easy step backward. His heart was suddenly racing.
Something clutched at his hair.
Todd uttered a cry and jerked down, feeling something clawlike scrape his scalp. His knees gave out, sending him backward toward the ice. The world spun.
“Shit—”
He struck the ice with the center of his back—a solid punch that knocked the wind from his lungs. Instantly, he became aware of a bizarre sense of give, of surrender, and freezing water was suddenly infiltrating his clothes. He struggled to sit up but couldn’t; the small of his back had crashed through the ice, trapping him like a turtle that has been turned on its back.
Bruce and Brendan snapped to their feet on the far side of the stream. “Rope!” Bruce yelled. “Todd! Hey, Todd!”
Todd’s legs pumped at the air. The heavy police coat was becoming saturated and heavy. The back of his head was against a shelf of ice…but he soon heard that beginning to crack and break, too.
If that goes, he thought, I’m going under. For all I know, this little stream could be twenty feet deep…
Something flitted in front of his eyes. He felt something sting the side of his face: Bruce’s rope whipping across his cheek. Blindly, Todd groped for it. He found it and wrapped the rope around both his hands just as the shelf of ice at the back of his head broke apart. He felt his head snap back on his neck, followed by the heart-stopping sting of the freezing waters that engulfed him. His whole face went under, his arms pinwheeling, his legs bicycling in the air.
The rope tightened around his hands. He felt his arms nearly pop out of their sockets at the force of the pull. He was still holding his breath, his eyes clenched shut, when he realized he had been pulled clear of the water. He gasped, the force of which hurt his lungs, and he lunged forward until he was flat on his stomach atop the ice. On the other side of the stream, Bruce and Brendan were tugging the rope, dragging Todd toward them.
They managed to drag him up into the snowy embankment. Gasping, his skin stinging from the cold waters, Todd lay on his back, shaking violently.
“Help me get the coat off him,” Bruce instructed, and Todd was quickly manhandled like a rag doll. They stripped him of the police coat and then his shirt, too. His skin began to harden and crystallize. “Here.” Bruce thrust a fresh shirt at him, which he’d dug out of the backpack he had slung over his shoulders. “Lift your arms and we’ll help you put this on.”
Teeth chattering like typewriter keys, Todd obeyed.
Upstairs, the hallway looked slanted in the darkness. Gloomy half light bled through the pebbled windows at the end of the hall, where it pooled in murky white puddles on the tiled floor. Rubbing her forearms for warmth, Kate raced down the hall, stopping in every office she passed on the way. She searched the desks, the shelves, the file cabinets. There was no aspirin anywhere.
Opening a set of massive metal doors, she peered into the sally port. Her breath was visible right before her eyes. She saw the dark, hulking shapes of two police cruisers. The air smelled like radiator fluid.
Continuing farther down the hall, she became overly conscious of every noise that surrounded her—the ticking of a battery-powered wall clock, the rattle of old pipes deep in the walls, the sudden arrival of wind bellowing through the eaves. At the end of the hall she saw a secretarial office enclosed in stenciled glass. The door was unlocked. She entered and tiptoed around a desk, knowing with near certainty that every secretary in the good old U.S. of A. kept a bottle of aspirin in her desk drawer.
She pulled out a chair and began sifting through the drawers. It didn’t take her long to locate the pills.
“Bingo.”
She stuffed them into her pocket and, shaking like a maraca, darted back around the desk toward the office door.
However, she paused as she passed before one of the shaded windows. Peeling away the shade, she looked out into a milky haze of greenish daylight…and at the heavy snow that was falling.
Fear gripped her.
Down by the edge of the road, humanlike shapes shuffled into view. Kate could make out no details but held her breath, hoping it was Todd and the others. Had something gone wrong? Were they coming back so soon?
But no—it wasn’t Todd and the others. She counted five distinct shapes in the shadows of the looming trees. The snow refracted the greenish light from the sky, forcing her to question what exactly she was seeing. It was a trick of the light reflected off the snow.
“I hope,” she whispered, and hurried back downstairs.
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
In a fresh, warm shirt and sweater, Todd tried his best not to let both his shivering and his embarrassment show as they scaled the embankment and climbed back out of the woods. The clawing he’d felt at the back of his head had been from one of the overhanging branches. After Bruce and Brendan had pulled him up onto dry land and peeled off his soaking wet clothes in exchange for dry ones, they had all shared a good laugh and a few more cigarettes. But there was a greater nervousness among them now—unspoken, like a child’s worst fear.
Vermont Street was a ghost town. The houses were dark and there was no movement—thankfully—in any of the windows. Heads down and with a purpose, the three of them trucked up Vermont without pausing. Once, the sounds of tree limbs crackling rose up from a nearby yard, but none of them turned to look in that direction. They kept moving, not once looking back.
Vermont Street ran parallel to Fairmont. With Bruce in the lead
now, they crossed through two yards, then hunkered down between two houses while Bruce attempted to survey the street ahead.
“There’s something making noise down over there,” Bruce said, trying to peer around the corner of the house to see what it was.
“I hear it, too,” Todd said. “It’s a downed power line. Probably still kicking up sparks.”
“Where are all the skin-suits?” Brendan asked from the rear of the queue.
“Tully said they go into the houses every once in a while,” Bruce said. “I guess those snow monsters can do whatever they like when they’re floating around on their own, but maybe they can’t stay out all day and night in the skin-suits. Maybe the bodies start to freeze.” He sighed and added, “They’re just people, after all.”
Todd put a hand on Bruce’s back. “Let’s keep going.”
They hurried down the slope of the yard toward the street. The snow was coming down hard now, limiting their visibility. Beyond a veil of pines were the brick storefronts that lined the western edge of the town square. So close. Directly above the square, the swirling eyelet in the clouds pulsed with a sickly green light. Todd thought he could feel a change in the air, like how just before a storm the atmosphere would become charged with electricity. It became more difficult to breathe, too; each inhalation was becoming more and more restrictive.
They followed Bruce across the street, where cars were parked on a slant in the shoulder’s ditch and where others had been turned completely on their sides. Todd could see windshields caked with blood and bloody streaks in the snow as the vehicles’ occupants had been dragged away.
The town square sat in a bowl ridged with trees. Bruce led them through the trees, past the bare branches of deciduous flora to where the evergreens clotted together for better concealment. On their hands and knees, the three men crawled beneath the trees and through the prickling swats of bristly, cold branches. The smell of sap was very strong. They paused only when they’d reached the end of the copse, each of the men pulling aside bristling bows to peer down into the town square.
“Oh,” said Todd, “you gotta be kidding me.”
There were perhaps thirty townspeople gathered in the center of the town square, and perhaps another dozen or so lingering in the shaded alleyways between some storefronts. They all affected the same slump-shouldered, loose-limbed stance, their faces, from what Todd could make out at this distance, a mask of catatonic nonattendance. Despite the skin-suits, there was nothing remotely human about their appearance. That empty, vacuous glaze over their upturned faces made them look like wax dummies.
“What are they doing?” asked Brendan.
“They look like they’re…listening,” Todd said. He pointed at the glowing crater carved into the clouds, the crater’s epicenter a storm of electrical current and brilliant, dazzling lights. “Like they’re getting subliminal instructions from that thing in the sky.”
“Like they’re getting something,” Bruce muttered.
Todd could see the Pack-N-Go across the square, its front windows busted out, the interior dark. The icy sidewalk in front of the store was littered with arrowheads of triangular glass as well as boxes of cereal, packets of Ramen noodles, burst soda bottles, and fluttery rolls of paper towels.
“How the hell are we supposed to get into the Pack-N-Go, then back out again without those things seeing us?” Brendan said. He was drumming his fingers against his knees—a nervous habit.
“Maybe they’re in a trance,” Todd suggested. “Maybe it won’t be as hard as it looks.”
“You willing to bet your life on it?” Bruce jerked his chin farther up the square, where the main street led back up an incline and through the town. It was the direction Todd and the others had come last night as they walked into the square, looking for signs of life. Now, a grayish slurry of snow slowly rotated like a tornado in slow motion. At first glance, it appeared camouflaged by the snowfall itself…but on closer scrutiny, Todd could make out the subtle density to it and the distinction of its shape—the funnel of twisting snowflakes trapped in a vacuum that never touched the ground. It was large enough to block the entire street—the street that led out of town.
This is insane, Todd thought. This is a nightmare. I should just curl up in a ball and sit here until I wake up.
Something akin to a giggle bubbled up from deep within Brendan. Both Todd and Bruce looked at him, matching expressions of puzzlement on their faces. Brendan’s fingers continued to drum restlessly on his knees. “You know,” he said, a grin tugging at one corner of his mouth, “I think I’ve got a plan.”
“Okay,” Kate said, shaking the bottle of aspirin, “this should help with the headache, sweetheart.” She froze in the doorway. “Where’s Charlie?”
“He went to find me my medicine,” Cody intoned, not lifting her head from the pillow.
Kate glared at Molly, who feigned interest in her book. “Why’d you let him go?”
Molly sneered and refolded her legs beneath her. “I’m not that boy’s mother.”
Fuming, Kate dropped to her knees before Cody’s cot. She popped the cap on the aspirin and shook a bunch of tablets into her palm. Then she read the directions on the bottle, realizing she’d never in her life administered medication to a child.
“How old are you, sweetie?”
“Eight and three-quarters,” Cody said.
Kate poured all but one tablet back into the bottle. “This will make you feel better,” she told the girl.
Still cradling the water bottle like a baby doll, Cody raised her head off the pillow. Her hair was damp with sweat and her face looked as red and as hot as a smoked ham.
Kate put the aspirin in Cody’s mouth. At her back, she could feel Molly’s eyes boring into her. “You have to swallow it whole,” Kate told her. “No chewing.”
The girl nodded. She drank from the water bottle and grimaced as the pill went down.
Kate stood and set the aspirin bottle down on the desk next to the collection of liquor bottles. The shotgun still leaned against the desk. “You shouldn’t have let Charlie go,” she said to Molly. Then, without another word, Kate snatched up the shotgun and one of the halogen lamps, and hurried out of the room.
“It just came to me,” Brendan said. He was talking fast, moving his hands a lot. “But I’m gonna need help. Like, Bruce, man—we can do this.”
“Do what?” Bruce asked, skeptical.
Ignoring him, Brendan leaned over and grabbed a fistful of Todd’s sweater. “You just sneak on down there, get as close to the Pack-N-Go as you can without actually setting foot into the square where those things can see you. Just sit tight and wait for the distraction.”
“What distraction?” Todd asked.
Still chuckling like a madman, Brendan sprang to his feet and pushed through the trees.
Todd and Bruce exchanged a look. “Just be careful,” Bruce said before rising and following Brendan through the trees.
Todd turned back to face the square. That spiraling aperture of light was slowly revolving, carving away the brownish, dirty-looking clouds as it turned. Looking at it caused something uncomfortable to turn over in Todd’s stomach. He blew into his gloved hands for warmth. Suddenly, his fingers felt numb, useless.
Then he was up and hustling through the pine boughs. The crust of snow crunched beneath his heavy boots while he toed fallen pinecones out of his way. When he finally came out of the trees, he was facing the rear of the shops along the town square, which sat maybe twenty yards ahead of him and at the bottom of a slight decline. Todd counted the number of shops over from the alleyway until he was certain he was looking at the back of the Pack-N-Go. Whatever Brendan had planned, he’d said for Todd to get as close as possible to the Pack-N-Go. Todd meant to do just that.
He crouched in the snow, adjusting the gear at his belt. The butane torch was at his right hip beside the handheld radio, the handgun wedged into the rear of his waistband. He had the shotgun’s strap slung around his chest, res
tricting his breathing.
He could sneak down there and cut through the alley between the two closest buildings…
An icy wind chilled his bones and froze tears to the sides of his face. Taking a deep breath, he poised himself…then ran down the slope and ditched into the alley. The butt of the shotgun scraped against the bricks—a sound like the grinding gears of a garbage compactor. He had the pistol in his hand now, though he couldn’t remember drawing it. He held his breath as he scaled the brick alley wall. Snow funneled through the narrow brick canyon; the sky directly above was the color of rotting vegetation.
He paused at the mouth of the alley, hiding in the shadows, his left shoulder against the wall for stability. The pistol weighed a thousand pounds in his hand. Across the darkening town square, he could see a number of Tully’s skin-suits staged around the bronze horse statue at the square’s center. They all had their heads craned up at the eyelet in the sky, their skin cast with an ungodly hue, their eyes black orbs in the pasty dough of their skulls.
What have you got planned, Brendan? Just what exactly am I waiting for?
Hunkering down into the dirty snow of the alley, Todd waited for a sign. For several moments, his heartbeat was all he could hear, somehow amplified in the freight train roar of the wind tunneling down between the buildings.
How long do I sit here? How much time do I give them? What if they get killed? I can’t waste time sitting here until nightfall.
He decided to count silently to one hundred. If nothing happened by then…
He had reached ninety-eight, his grip tightening on the pistol, when he heard a sound like a locomotive squealing into a train station. Leaning his head out the mouth of the alley, he saw something large come creeping down the street at the far end of the square. The street sloped down toward the square and as the thing approached, it began to gather speed. Todd could make out the vague suggestion of a slouching, mouthlike grill and two lantern eyes, dark and defunct and blind.