22
Vicky shot up to a sitting position in bed.
“Mommy?” she called softly. She trembled with fear. She was alone.
And there was an awful, pukey smell. She glanced at the window.
Something was there… outside the window. The screen had been pulled
out. That’s what had awakened her.
A hand—or something that looked like a hand
but really wasn’t—slipped over the windowsill. Then another. The
dark shadow of a head rose into view and two glowing yellow eyes
trapped her and pinned her where she sat in mute horror. The thing
crawled over the ledge and flowed into the room like a snake.
Vicky opened her mouth to scream out her
horror but something moist and hard and stinking jammed against her
face, cutting off her voice. It was a hand, but like no hand she
had ever imagined. There only seemed to be three fingers—three
huge fingers—and the taste of the palm
against her lips brought what was left of her Chinese dinner
boiling to the back of her throat.
As she fought to get free, she caught a
fleeting close-up glimpse of what held her—the smooth,
blunt-snouted face, the fangs showing above the scarred lower lip,
the glowing yellow eyes. It was every fear of what’s in the closet
or what’s in that shadowed corner, every bad dream, every night
horror rolled into one.
Vicky became delirious with panic. Tears of
fear and revulsion streamed down her face. She had to get away! She
kicked and twisted convulsively, clawed with her
fingernails—nothing she did seemed to matter in the slightest. She
was lifted like a toy and carried to the window—
—and out! They were
twelve floors up! Mommy! They were going to
fall!
But they didn’t fall. Using its free hand and
its clawed feet, the monster crawled down the wall like a spider.
Then it was running along the ground, through parks, down alleys,
across streets. The grip across her mouth loosened but Vicky was
clutched so tightly against the monster’s flank that she couldn’t
scream—she could barely breathe.
“Please don’t hurt me!” she whispered into
the night. “Please don’t hurt me!”
Vicky didn’t know where they were or in what
direction they were traveling. Her mind could barely function
through the haze of terror that enveloped it. But soon she heard
the lapping sound of water, smelled the river. The monster leaped,
they seemed to fly for an instant, and then water closed over them.
She couldn’t swim!
Vicky screamed as they plunged beneath the
waves. She gulped a mouthful of foul, brackish water, then broke
the surface choking and retching. Her throat was locked—there was
air all around her but she couldn’t breathe! Finally, when she
thought she was going to die, her windpipe opened and air rushed
into her lungs.
She opened her eyes. The monster had slung
her onto its back and was now cutting through the water. She clung
to the slick, slimy skin of its shoulders. Her pink nighty was
plastered to her goosefleshed skin; her hair hung in her eyes. She
was cold, wet, and miserable with terror. She wanted to jump off
and get away from the monster, but she knew she’d go down under
that water and never come back up.
Why was this happening to her? She’d been
good. Why did this monster want her?
Maybe it was a good monster, like in that
book she had, Where the Wild Things Are. It
hadn’t hurt her. Maybe it was taking her someplace to show her
something.
She looked around and recognized the
Manhattan skyline off to her right, but there was something between
them and Manhattan. Dimly she remembered the island—Roosevelt
Island—that sat in the river at the end of Aunt Nellie and Grace’s
street.
Were they going to swim around it and go back
to Manhattan? Was the monster going to take her back to Aunt
Nellie’s?
No. They passed the end of the island but the
monster didn’t turn toward Manhattan. It kept swimming in the same
direction downriver. Vicky shivered and began to cry.