art  15  art

Reggie knelt beside Keech and patted the side of his bloody cheek with her hand.

“I want you awake for this. Get up.”

Keech’s eyelids fluttered and opened. He looked up and gasped, the conscious sensation of the deep cold finally registering in him. When he let out a breath, a small puff of black smoke expelled like a coughed-up insect and dispersed into nothing.

“That’s right. Your game is over,” she said.

The monster inside roiled. Reggie felt its malice.

“No. My game is just beginning.”

Reggie moved her hand to Keech’s throat and pushed with her mind. She had learned with Henry that to go into the fearscape she needed to be in contact with the Vour’s pulse, and now Keech’s throbbed against her fingertips. The confines of the freezer warped and undulated. She closed her eyes and started to fall. The descent engulfed her and all went black.

An eternal moment later, she was seated in a giant overstuffed chair. A long space with sharply sloping walls and a low ceiling enclosed her. Furniture stood under white sheets like a crowd of ghosts, illuminated by a single twilit window, and a glass-fronted cabinet towered in the far corner. Piles of junk rose everywhere, and dust stung her nose and throat.

The most outer place of Keech’s fearscape was an old attic.

She understood how a place like this would frighten a child, but to her it came as something of a relief.

“I was expecting something a bit more blood and guts.”

The Vour had taken him years ago. Keech’s essence undoubtedly suffered somewhere much more sinister, lost in a darker realm of fear than this. The dust and stench of decay marked an environment abandoned by the boy’s mind; he had long since been lured into worse places. Places she’d soon visit.

But right now, she needed a way down.

She picked up a sheet of paper among a heap of moth-eaten clothes and old curtains. It was a child’s crayon drawing of two boys, both in identical red shirts and blue pants, smiling on green grass under a yellow sun. The young artist had signed it with awkward capital letters: Keech. The picture was a shred of hope the boy had left behind. She’d found similar symbols inside Henry’s fearscape: a treasured stuffed animal, a family photograph.

These small remnants of innocence served as emotional bread crumbs left behind by Vour victims as they spiraled deeper and deeper into the fearscape.

Reggie folded the child’s drawing and put it in her pocket.

Floorboards creaked as she stepped over stacks of old magazines and sports equipment. When she moved past a red-eyed rocking horse, it wavered back and forth, then stopped. The toy’s face was twisted with agony, and Reggie realized with horror that it wasn’t a toy at all, but a real miniature horse whose hooves were nailed to the wooden rockers. It whinnied miserably, and Reggie stuck out her hand to stroke its snout, trying to soothe it. It nuzzled against her, then licked her palm. Reggie screamed and jumped back—the horse’s saliva was like acid, and it burned through her skin. She wiped her hand on the chair upholstery, but the damage had been done: half her palm was eaten away. There was no blood, but the hole in her hand emitted a gray smoke.

Reggie focused on the wound and absorbed the intense pain. She’d experienced similarly brutal injuries in Henry’s fearscape that had later appeared as faint black scars in the real world. The marks had since faded and left little trace, though Quinn had noticed, but it had proved that harm done to her in the fearscape had dangerous repercussions. From time to time, she had wondered if such wounds could ever truly heal.

But right now now she needed to find a way out of the attic.

In the dim light she saw an outline of a trapdoor in the wooden floor. There was an iron handle with a small keyhole beside it. Reggie looked around for the key, when something shifted in the giant cabinet across the room.

As she drew closer, a score of tiny round heads looked back at her through the cabinet’s glass-fronted doors. Rows of white-faced porcelain dolls stared at her with sets of cold blue eyes, their lips all set in unwavering smiles. She peered at them, but none moved.

She knelt down and gripped the trapdoor’s metal ring, but no matter how hard she yanked on the door, it wouldn’t budge. Something rustled behind her, and she whipped around. The dolls stood in neat rows at attention with their unblinking eyes locked on her.

She glanced around the room, looking for something to use as a lever to pry open the trapdoor. A high-pitched giggle came from the cabinet.

Reggie turned her head slowly and gasped.

Behind the glass, all the dolls stood as they had except for one. A doll with dark curls hung from a noose made of yarn, and she swung faintly back and forth.

Reggie opened the cabinet doors and lifted up the hanged figurine. At that instant the arms of all the other dolls shot up, pointing at Reggie. They opened their mouths in unison and began to shriek. Reggie clamped her hands over her ears as the piercing wail shattered the glass.

The scream was so loud and so high it made Reggie’s teeth ache and throb. She could feel warm liquid welling up inside her ears and within moments blood was flowing from them and pouring down the sides of her neck.

Reggie sprang up and snatched one of the dolls from the case. She yanked off its head, and the dead blue eyes rolled back like a shark’s, but instead of quelling the scream it swelled into an ocean of hellish noise. Reggie feared the sound would drive her insane. Blood dripped from her nostrils, and her vision clouded over as spurts of red sprang from the pores in her eyes. The pressure building in her head crushed against her skull. Meanwhile, the doll’s needlelike fingernails scratched at her forearm. She ripped its arm off and black smoke flooded out from the socket. She dropped the arm to the ground.

The dismembered arm scuttled across the floor, crawling on its porcelain fingers like a crab. Reggie threw the disfigured doll away and snatched up the little hand. It tried to slit her wrist with its nails, but Reggie held it at bay, and stuck one of the fingers into the trapdoor’s keyhole. She twisted the doll’s hand in the lock and it popped open. The door swung up.

The screaming continued as Reggie looked down into bottomless darkness. She scrambled around the attic, gathering up the sheets and curtains and tying them together. Blood cascaded from her ears and eyes now, and she was nearly blind and deaf. But she frantically worked, praying that she’d stay conscious until she had enough to make an attempt down into the dark. She looped one end to the front leg of the glass cabinet and dropped fifty feet of makeshift rope down through the trapdoor. She wiped her eyes once last time, smearing blood across her hands, and climbed down. Five, ten, twenty feet.

The screams faded as she descended, and Reggie began to gather herself once again. The blood stopped flowing, her ears stopped pounding, and her vision cleared. As she wiped the blood from her face with the sheet, she saw a flickering light above.

Another porcelain doll stood on the edge of the trapdoor, a lit match in its tiny hand. Reggie thought she saw a grin as the thing released the match and set the rope on fire.

Reggie tried to hurry downward, but the flames moved quickly, slipping gleefully down the fabric ladder. Above her, the little doll waved. The fire reached her fingers and Reggie let go, plummeting into the black abyss.

She landed with a bone-crunching thud, sprawled across a gritty floor. A flight of rickety stairs rose over her. Groaning, she sat up, and the surroundings began to take form in the gloom.

She was now in an old-fashioned New England cellar. Cobweb-draped lightbulbs dangled from the rafters, casting a grimy light all around. Moldering walls of stone rose up from a packed dirt floor. The cellar stretched on into the shadows, and the stairs led up into an inscrutable darkness.

An elderly woman’s voice screeched from above, “Naughty children stay down in the dark place! You’ll be here until you’ve learned your lesson!”

A dead bolt clacked into place, echoing down the steps. Reggie wondered what the lesson was. She stood up.

The place was a dungeon. Beads of water dripped down the walls and gathered in rank pools. Reggie’s stomach fluttered at the sight of little red spiders scurrying in the cobwebs overhead. Melted plastic soldiers, broken cars, and gutted teddy bears covered the floor. These were the boys’ first victims.

Reggie stepped over them and tried the stairs, but the first step turned to dust under her foot. Soon the entire staircase crumbled before her eyes. There had to be another way out—an escape other than an unseen door at the top of a disintegrating staircase.

She searched for clues to understand this fearscape. Mason jars crowded a few dilapidated shelves. She plucked up one of them and wiped away the dust, preparing herself for whatever horror might be inside. Much to her surprise, she saw it contained bright orange peaches. After blowing the dust from a few more jars, she found a variety of tasty-looking fruits and vegetables and tried to twist open a jar, but the lid was sealed too tight.

Keech must have been kept down here for long stretches of time without any food. As a small child, he would have been able to reach the jars, but not strong enough to open them. And smashing them open probably prompted a severe beating.

She hurled the jar against the wall. Glass shards flew back at her like shrapnel and she ducked. The fruit splattered against the stone, bursting like organs.

A gory stain oozed down the wall.

A cat’s low meow came from the dark shadows of the cellar. Another replied. The heated panting of a dog joined the chorus, along with several croaking frogs. Scores of animal eyes, like tiny yellow mirrors, glinted though the darkness at Reggie. Their paws and flippers, their snake-bellies and insect wings, brought them into the grimy light. These were the twins’ other—later—victims. Limping, squirming, and dragging, the casualties of the young Kassners’ terrible acts drew closer.

A skinned cat crept out from the shadows, its vertebrae like long white caterpillars tied together with oily thread. A puppy with only a lower jaw blindly stumbled after, the top of its head pulped like a melon beneath a hammer. Its tongue dangled from its roots over the side of broken teeth. A burned raccoon peered out through wet, empty sockets from behind a broken barrel. Frogs and toads with torched skin, wingless moths, bisected worms, and other tortured things writhed toward her.

Reggie wondered if the Vours appreciated the irony. They enjoyed such brutality, but the Kassner boys must have committed these atrocities before one of them fell victim to a Vour. Keech had lashed out against innocent animals because he’d been tortured himself as a child, and now his victims had come back to haunt him in his fearscape.

“Poor creatures,” Reggie murmured.

The flayed cat hissed. All of the animals’ eyes burned with hate. It wasn’t pity they were after.

It was revenge.

Reggie backed away, desperately searching for a way out.

A dime-size speck shone to her right in the gore stain on the wall. It was a hole, and light came through the other side. The animals dragged themselves closer. Reggie balled her hand into a fist and punched the wall as hard as she could.

Her fist landed solidly on the small hole. Pain reverberated up her arm and shoulder, but a large crack formed from floor to ceiling. The tide of crippled bugs and mangled frogs boiled at her feet. The skinless cat crouched to pounce.

Reggie stepped back from the crack, took a breath, and charged the wall with her shoulder. It gave way with the roar of an earthquake just as the cat leapt through the air, its skin trailing behind it, its bloody claws barely missing her. She charged through the dusty rubble and burst into the bright light.

When she looked behind her, Reggie found none of the nightmare creatures. In fact, there was no trace of the cellar at all. A bright gold savannah stretched out to the horizon. Beautiful but barren, it looked like the sort of landscape she’d seen in Animal Planet documentaries about Africa. This was a far more desolate version, though. No trees offered shade, no bugs whirred and buzzed, no birds flew or chattered.

Reggie surveyed the vast scrubby nothingness spreading out in all directions. The sun blazed directly overhead. It was a lonely and hostile place, without direction or comfort.

This must be how the young Keech saw the world.

The relentless sun beat down on her. Her mouth grew dry, her feet throbbed, and the acid from the horse’s tongue had eaten deeper into her palm; she held up her hand to shade her eyes, and light poured through a thin membrane of skin.

The cellar had been cold and damp, and she immediately longed for that darkness. The heat was torturous and she could do nothing but move forward.

And that was precisely what the Vour wanted, exactly how the fearscape had been designed. Once the victim was trapped inside, he would have no choice but to let fear and pain drive him deeper and deeper into the nightmarish prison.

In the distance, a pair of brown rock outcroppings jutted from the plain. They offered no shadow from the harsh and unmoving sun, but they were a change in the landscape. Reggie trudged toward the massive towers, and as she approached, she realized they were identical. They stood like twin stone giants. She passed between them, looking up for any dangers that might lurk overhead, but she saw nothing save the blinding sun.

Her throat burned with thirst, and the first strains of panic stirred inside of her. She could combat dolls and animals. They had scope and size that she could fathom. But how could she fight an enemy like desolation?

There was no escape from the sun, and no visible end to the desert in Keech’s mind. All Reggie could do was put one foot in front of the other. She pulled the crayon drawing from her pocket with her wounded hand. The lone ember of hope in this forsaken place gave her little reassurance now.

Though Henry’s fearscape had been terrifying and dangerous, the tokens of hope in his nightmare world felt immediate, guideposts leading to a frightened soul that had moved deeper into the fearscape only hours before she’d arrived. But Keech had been gone for years, and as far as Reggie knew, he’d lost his way in the desert of his fears long, long ago.

The rock towers faded into the distance behind her, but nothing appeared on the horizon. Sand, sun, empty sky.

Scalding. Hopeless. Terribly, horribly alone.

Reggie quickly grew delirious from heat and dehydration. It no longer mattered what was real and what was nightmare; her body was reacting to the experiences of her mind—and her mind was dying.

She held her wounded hand up again. The acid had burned all the way through, leaving a quarter-sized cavity in her raw flesh. Reggie could do nothing but try to ignore the throbbing pain, and tell herself over and over that this wasn’t real. She peered through the hole in her hand and saw something different now. The change in landscape was subtle, but after the eternity of broiling sameness, it gave her hope.

Black buzzards circled high above a rocky hill topped with two dead trees. Reggie stumbled forward, tripping over the crags as she climbed. When at last she crested the mound, the stink of what had drawn the buzzards nearly knocked her over.

The valley below teemed with carcasses: lions, rhinos, elephants, and scores of others. They lay in unmoving heaps, picked at by vultures. A putrid wind blew in her face, stirring the blankets of flies that covered the dead. She looked around for what might have killed these beasts, but saw no movement in the bright noon light. Warily she descended.

Some of the bodies had bloated in the heat like balloons, while others rippled with maggots. As Reggie made her way around the decaying animals, she noticed all had one thing in common. They lay in matched pairs and seemed to have died in the throes of battle. They were twins.

She passed a disemboweled leopard, rotted with its jaws clamped on another leopard’s throat. Two wildebeests lay unblinking beside one another, their bodies torn and their tusks bloody. Even a pair of snakes rested in a tangled pile.

Examine the pattern, Reggie told herself. Solve the puzzle and find Keech. Was there a rivalry between the siblings? Was one afraid he’d destroy the other? The dead twin animals were a mystery that eluded her. The unmoving sun baked their corpses, and Reggie’s tongue swelled with thirst. Flies buzzed around her as she weaved among the bodies.

A glistening up ahead caught her attention.

Giant palm trees swayed over bright blue water, and tall green reeds rustled on its shore. She staggered through the sand toward the oasis, and a cool breeze blew across its water. Reggie collapsed on her knees in the shallows, cupped her hands, and drank. Water leaked through her burnt hand, but she lapped up enough to quell the hot ache in her throat.

The palm trees swayed above, and the reeds rustled. She cleaned the wound on her leg with the clear water. Reggie had no idea what this place could be.

She guessed the life-giving pool had drawn the animals into the valley. But why they came in pairs, and then killed one another, she couldn’t understand. This oasis was peaceful.

Reggie looked down into the still pool and saw her reflection. Her dark, sweaty hair formed a tangled halo around her head, and the desert sun had burned her skin a deep mauve.

She bent down and splashed water in her face, then jerked back. Her reflection did not move in synch with her. Instead it continued to stare up at her, serious and still. Reggie turned her head to one side, then the other, but her mirror image remained transfixed.

Suddenly, the figure burst from the water’s surface and grabbed her by the throat. Reggie fell backward, the face she’d always seen in the mirror now leering and hideous. The copy tightened its hands around Reggie’s neck. She lashed out and hit her double under the chin. Bright light flashed in Reggie’s eyes, and pain exploded in her own jaw.

The hands released her throat. They both scrambled to their feet.

Reggie and her double circled. Every detail was replicated: her fresh sunburn, her disfigured palm, the doll scratches on her arms—all of it. Her evil twin glared back, eyes wild and bloodshot, mouth fixed in a snarl. A bruise was forming on its chin where Reggie had struck it. Reggie felt the ache on her own face as well.

“What do you want?” Reggie asked.

The double lashed out and clawed at Reggie’s face. She backed away, but not quickly enough. The nails scraped down her cheek to her chin. Reggie felt hot pain, and saw the bright red scratches reflected on the double’s cheek.

Her eyes flitted left and right, trying to find an escape route. There was none, only the water, or the valley where all the others had died. A rock slightly bigger than her fist lay by the waterside a few feet away. She snatched it up and raised it like a hammer. The doppelgänger crouched defensively, anticipating the attack.

Reggie didn’t want to kill her twin, but it seemed to be the rules of this place. Survival of the fittest. Reggie dove at the double, and the two rolled a few feet, scratching and clawing and biting at each other. Reggie ignored the sting of the wounds, and wrestled the double to the ground, pinning her down with her knees. It glared up at her, its eyes solid with fury, but said nothing. Reggie held the rock above her, preparing to bring it down hard on her attacker’s head.

Then she thought of the dead beasts in the desert, the scrapes on the double’s cheek, and the pain in her own jaw. What injuries one inflicted on the other, they both received. If Reggie smashed its skull, she would most likely bash out her own brains, too.

The antagonism between the twins destroyed them both. Was that the root of Keech’s fears?

Think, Reggie told herself. Rivalry. These deaths were about rivalries. She didn’t know what Keech and Mitch’s relationship had been when they were boys, but here each twin was angry and wanted to defeat the other. And here that was impossible because of an invisible link between them. Hurting one hurt the other.

She didn’t need to overpower her double—she couldn’t. They needed to be equals—sisters, not enemies.

Reggie threw the stone into the pool and held up her hands.

The double howled and seized Reggie by the throat again. But Reggie did not fight; instead she reached out and put her arms around her. The twin’s hands tightened on her neck, but Reggie didn’t flinch.

“Stop.”

The hands loosened. Reggie gently pulled the double closer to her and embraced her. Her twin tensed, then relaxed. It smiled once before dissipating like mist on a cool wind.

Reggie touched her cheek. The scrape closed under her fingertips, though she could still feel the trace of a scar.

She looked down and saw a green crayon sticking out of the sand, the wax miraculously unmelted in the heat. A second breadcrumb. She was getting closer.

Reggie picked up the crayon and put it with the drawing.

She heard a roar, and the lake began to rotate in a receding whirlpool, like the plug had been pulled from a giant bathtub. Soon, a field of wet silt was all that remained of the clear blue waters.

Reggie walked out into the drained oasis. There, in its center, was a perfectly circular metal grate. She pulled it open like a hatch to reveal a round, concrete passage that plunged straight down. Iron rungs protruded from the wall, still dripping with water. Reggie climbed down into the dark, and the ladder’s passage opened up into a large cavern.

She dropped from the last rung onto a stone ledge, and in the center of the cave was a giant rusty cage, big enough to hold a delivery truck.

Flickering torches on the wall cast light across the giant thing that slept inside. Creeping closer, circling around the corroded bars, she took a long look at the prisoner.

It was humanoid, sleeping on its side with a hand over its face. From the way it was huddled inside the cell, Reggie guessed it would stand over ten feet tall, with blobby arms and legs that looked swollen and tumescent. Reggie thought if she stuck a pin in the creature it might rupture. It looked like a Kassner, or at least like a demonic form of one with sharp, exaggerated facial features and skin specked with black. The thing’s breaths came deep and even, and now and then it snored.

The monster stirred as she circled around the cage.

A distended and rumpled wad of flesh grew from the thing’s broad back. Two spindly arms protruded from the lump, twitching and jerking, and a misshapen head with eyes that appeared sealed behind seamless eyelids.

Reggie stared in revulsion, puzzling over the pitiful abomination.

Who is Keech and who is Mitch?

Only one way to find out.

“Keech,” she whispered.

The lump’s fleshy lids opened, and its gray, watery eyes widened in terror. Reggie squeezed through the bars and tiptoed toward it.

“Keech,” she said. “It’s okay. We’re going to leave this place.”

The tiny mouth was a crude hole that trembled with a wet slurping sound.

“No. Can’t leave without the big one.”

She reached up and touched his emaciated hand.

“You don’t need Mitch to survive, Keech.”

“Mitch…”

“You’re strong, Keech. And part of you is still good.”

The eyes blinked, and its lower lip quivered. “Bad. That’s why we’re locked in the dark place.”

“Good kids can do bad things,” she said. “But they can make up for it.” Reggie reached into her back pocket and pulled out the folded-up piece of paper, the cheerful crayon drawing she’d found in the attic. She held it up to Keech and smiled. “Is this yours?”

The head nodded and stammered, “I like to draw.”

“Would you draw something for me?”

“I lost all my crayons.”

“I found one.” Reggie held out the green crayon and the lump looked with wonder at it. It took it in its nubby fingers and held it, then it began to color the air with it. Reggie marveled at the green swirls that appeared out of nowhere. They were faint at first, then grew in vibrancy. With every stroke of the crayon, the figure looked more boyish, until only the thinnest graft of skin tethered it to the ugly monster. The boy looked a bit older than Henry, and he wore a red baseball jersey and blue jeans. Reggie took his hands.

And then the hulking beast awoke.

Mitch.

The monster thrashed awake and twisted to face the intruder. Bones creaked and cartilage snapped. The beast howled in agony and fury. It lunged at Reggie, but she dove and tumbled away, scrambling in the dirt to the opposite side of the cage. The right arm of the behemoth lodged between two rusty bars of its prison, and it struggled to pull itself free.

“You woke the bad me,” said the boy. “Go. Go before I hurt you like I hurt everything.”

“Talk to Mitch! Tell him to stop!”

“Mitch isn’t here. Just me. Only me.” The boy was terrified. “I lost him a long time ago. I’m all alone here.”

And then Reggie understood.

The doppelgänger in the pond, the identical beasts locked in deathblows, the vast and empty desert. This fearscape wasn’t about being a weaker sibling. Keech’s deepest fear wasn’t of his brother.

Most of all, he feared himself.

As a young boy his personality had split, the dark half opening a black maw inside him to swallow pain and anger while the light half withered like rotten fruit. And in this place, all that was good in the boy had been consumed.

“You’re not alone anymore,” Reggie said. “And you’re coming with me.”

Reggie took the boy’s hands again and heaved backward. Flesh ripped and the skin holding beast and boy together tore apart. The monster roared in agony.

“Come on!”

Reggie and Keech slipped through the bars as a massive fist slammed against the cage, rocking it back and forth.

Keech stood paralyzed with fear as his monstrous self rattled the bars and bellowed. The roars echoed throughout the cave, shaking every stone. Boulders tumbled down the walls, and stalactites plummeted like daggers into the floor. The monster bent the bars of the cage and forced itself through the widened opening. Keech just crouched on the ground, huddled into a little ball.

Reggie kneeled beside him. “Remember your drawings?” Her voice was thin like a breeze. “Draw a picture for us.”

Keech gazed at the crayon in his hand. He held it up to her.

“Here. You do it.”

The monster was free now and almost upon them. Reggie did not look up at it.

“I can’t.” She smiled gently at him. “I can’t do it for you. Draw what you want to see happen.”

The boy held up the crayon and drew a green lasso in the air. It looped around the monster’s head, and Keech cinched it tight. The creature gasped and lost its balance. It fell over and landed with a crack, and smoke began to seep out its nostrils. It writhed violently on the ground, its furious convulsions pulling down the walls of the cave around them. Reggie searched frantically for another exit, but there was none.

“Keech. Get us out of here.”

He thought for a moment, and the monster wrenched the lasso off its head. It threw it to the side and held a claw out toward its weaker half. The boy wavered and reached back, dropping the crayon in the dirt, but Reggie caught his hand.

“You can do this!” She grabbed up the crayon and wrapped his fingers around it. Keech nodded.

He drew a rectangle in the air, then a circle in the middle of it. He grasped the circle and turned it; the knob twisted, and the door out of this hell swung open, revealing a light on the other side. The monster howled and ran at them. Reggie started through the door, but Keech hesitated.

“What’s over there?” he asked.

She grasped his hand.

“Mitch.”

Hand-in-hand, the two stepped into the light as the cavern collapsed, and the rest of the fearscape fell away into nothingness.