Dr. Creepen's Dungeon - S5 Ep242: Episode 242: The Vampire Church in the Woods
Episode Date: May 8, 2025Tonight’s feature-length tale of vampiric terror is all seven chapters of ‘I Am a Priest and my Parishioners are Vampires’, a wonderful story by Jrubas, kindly shared with me via my sub-reddit a...nd narrated here for you all with the author’s express permission: https://www.reddit.com/user/Jrubas/
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Welcome to Dr. Creepen's Dungeon.
There's something about the clash between sacred halls and unholy creatures that keeps us coming back.
Churches, symbols of light, faith and salvation, stand as the last refuge against creatures born of darkness.
And few monsters are as enduring or as seductive as the vampire.
In stories where holy water meets bloodlust and crosses clash with ancient evil, we explore not just horror,
horror, but the very nature of sin, redemption, and the battle for the human soul, as we shall
see in tonight's feature-length story. Now, as ever before we begin, a word of caution,
tonight's tale may contain strong language as well as descriptions of violence and horrific imagery.
That sounds like your kind of thing. Then let's begin. Part one. They came an hour before sundown.
Two boys and a girl in a van with an intricate mural painted on the sun. I was walking along
Main Street with a backpack slung over my shoulder and a wooden mallet shoved into the waistband
of my jeans. Dry wind moaned between the wrecked facades of the buildings lining the sidewalks,
and trash blue like tumbleweeds in an old western, catching here and there on overturned trash cans,
bent metal poles and abandoned cars. The stoplight over the intersection of Mainum Pines
swung back and forth in the breeze like a pendulum, and the dead trees placed every six feet,
rustled like skeletal hands, reaching from unmarked graves.
I was deep in thought, like I always was when I made my rounds.
I didn't hear the engine and over the eerie whistle of the wind.
Maybe if I hadn't been stuck in the clouds, I would have heard them.
Sound travels far when everything around you is dead and gone.
I went across Maine and caught a flicker of movement from the corner of my eye.
All at once the van stopped in front of me, its windshield glinting in the sunlight like a jovial eye.
I came to a halt and just stood there.
frozen like a deer in the headlights.
In my defence, we don't get many visitors in Pine Creek anymore.
You can say the highway missed us.
The driver's sight window buzzed down,
and a boy of about 18 stuck his head out.
Hey, he said.
The wind shows that moment to slacken,
and his voice echoed in the silence.
What happened here?
He jerked his chin to the side,
indicating the dead village around us.
windows were broken or boarded up a car sat half on the sidewalk its trunk kissing the exterior
wall of the bank front lawns were overgrown and teeming with bugs and animals it looked like the
apocalypse had come to pine creek but only because it has the town is sinking i lied the boy blinked
in surprise sinking it's the mines of caving in and the gas
Gas fire, that's part of it too.
He stared at me incredulously.
I couldn't blame him for his skepticism.
If a guy with scraggly hair and a bushy beard,
dressed like Paul Bunyan,
told you what I just told him,
would you buy it?
What do you mean, gas fire?
The kid finally asked.
I walked up to the car and he shied away
like maybe I was going to hurt him.
I put on my biggest,
most friendly smile and said,
there's a lot of natural gas underground.
while back it started burning the earth turned into ashes under our feet i stopped my foot on the pavement
but no jets of flame shot up too bad i really would have helped my case
same thing that happened in that one town the boy in the passenger seat said that place in
pennsylvania or my smile faltered a little i was counting on them not knowing about the
centralia that's where i got the story about gas fires and sinking towns yeah that's right
I said. It's our sister city.
I glanced over my shoulder at the rapidly setting sun.
It was perched just over the rooftops. It's light, rich and golden.
My stomach knotted, and I swallowed.
There was still time.
Do you live here?
The girl asked from the back.
She was tall and slim with a dirty blonde hair, blue eyes and an oval face.
She wore shorts and a top with spaghetti straps.
She looked younger than her companions, maybe a little.
Younger's 15 or 16.
No, uh, just passing through.
With those?
The driver nodded to the sharpened stakes, poking from the top of my back.
Yeah, with these, I said.
They had to mark weak spots in the earth.
I glanced at the sun again.
You guys should get going.
This place is dangerous.
That's a $500 fine for just driving through.
Why isn't the road blocked out?
The passenger asked.
genuinely curious.
That's a state road, I said.
They can't close it, but there should be a detour sign.
Didn't see it?
Both boys shook their heads.
Strange, anyway.
I'm going to get back to work.
You drive safe.
The driver nodded and the passenger lifted his hand.
The van pulled off and I watched it until it was gone.
Well, back to it, I thought, grimly.
Since it was so late, I didn't have time to visit.
many of the parishioners. Walking fast, I set a course for a particular house on a particular
street, cold dread beginning to roil in my stomach. I already knew I wouldn't find her there,
and maybe that's why I chose that house out of all the others in Pine Creek. The house was a pale
yellow Victorian situated on the quiet corner. A wrought iron fence separated it from the sidewalk,
and tall grass pressed against the flagstone walk leading up to the door where someone had made a big
red X with paint. Who would do such a thing? Probably the kind of guy who walked around with a
hammering his pants. The gate shrieked when I pushed it open. I went up the steps and paused
at the door, heart racing. Part of me wanted to find her, but another part didn't. Inside the
house was neat but dusty. Sunlight filtered through the narrow windows and the pent-up heat
It washed over me like a slap to the face.
I started in the root cellar and made my way to the top floor.
I found signs that someone had been there recently,
footprints in the dust and ghostly handprints on grimy windows.
Was it here?
Had she come home?
Or was it one of the others?
Well, they slept wherever, under beds and closets,
shoved into kitchen cabinets and old refrigerators, Indiana Jones style.
They had their own little nests, but if dawn caught,
them out they go to the first dark quiet place if any of them really had been here they
weren't anymore on the way out i did my best to ignore the photos hanging on the yellow walls
it hurt too much to see her face it hurt too much to remember in the daylight once more i
walked next to the post office i found one in the broom closet it hung upside down from the ceiling
its arms crossed over its chest.
Its eyes were clothes.
His face was gaunt and grey.
Its cheeks sunken.
His fingernails long and dirty.
His hair had rotted away and its clothes had turned to filthy rags.
I couldn't tell if it was a man or a woman.
Not that it mattered.
It was one of mine, a child of God.
Setting the bag aside, I took out my stole, kissed it and draped it over my shoulders.
Next I took out the Bible and gave the creature the last rites.
I spoke normally, with no fear of waking it.
They were undead.
Well, at night they were un, but during the day they were dead.
When I finished, I took the mallet out of my waistband,
withdrew one of the stakes from the backpack, and tacked it over the thing's heart.
I raised the mallets, hesitated like I always did,
and then brought it down.
The stake drove into the vampire's heart, and his eyes and mouth flew open.
Its withered yellow orbs fixed me, and an earthly hiss escaped its mouth.
I brought the mallet down again, and the stake sank deeper.
The thing had already gone, limp.
The evil inside of it returned to hell or New Jersey, wherever evil went when you vanquished it.
His grip slipped, and it fell to the floor with a thud.
I checked my watch and realized that I didn't have.
have time to bury it.
Tomorrow.
Slipping the mallet back into my waistband,
I grabbed the bag and rushed out.
Long shadows crept across the ground
and crickets chirped from the tall grass bordering the sidewalk.
The sky cooled to pink,
and then purple.
St. Anthony sat in the center of town,
its spires rising into the heavens like a beacon
to lost travelers.
I reached it just as evening turned to twilight.
inside I locked the door and let myself relax
they couldn't come inside
if they tried they burst into flames
saying that out loud so to speak
makes me laugh
if you don't believe it that's okay
I wouldn't even if I hadn't seen them with my own eyes
I tossed the bag aside
lit a candle and went into the rectory
there was no electricity in Pine Creek anymore
it gets hot in the summer and cold in the winter
but I managed.
After changing back into my Roman collar,
I opened a can of beans and ate it at the kitchen table
with a pack of jacksling's jerky.
Terrible whales reverberated through the nights.
But I ignored them.
Done, I went back into the rectory
and took my usual station by the front window.
Shadows moved in the street,
and I caught glimpses of dead white faces watching me.
But none of them were her.
She came sometimes
She'd stand on the sidewalk and smile at me
Even in death she was beautiful
Her hair golden
Her body as feminine as shapely as ever
I could almost forget that she was one of them
But then I'd force myself to look at her eyes
They were no longer sweet and kind
But cold and hungry
It wasn't her
But it was close enough to pretend
At least for a little while
I sat down and waited for nearly an hour but eventually decided she wasn't coming.
Just as well, I thought, with a burdened sign.
I prayed for a while in the chapel, watched over by Christ on his cross.
His eyes were filled with a reproach, and I begged forgiveness for my sins.
Later I climbed between the sheets and listened to the terrible moans and screeches of the living dead.
Then, finally, I slept.
I don't know how long I was out before I sat bolt up right in bed, my heart thundering in my chest.
I've been dreaming of her, of course, and for a moment I thought that the scream lingering
in my head had come from the dream.
Then it sounded again, high in frenzied.
I knew at once that it wasn't one of them.
You can tell the screams of the living from the dead, and this came from living vocal cords.
Jumping out of bed, I grabbed the crucifix from my nightstand and rushed out into the chest.
church, the wind of my passage making the candles dance and sway.
He unbolted the door and threw it open just as a scream came again, off to my right.
It was one of primal, heart-stopping fear, not of pain.
In my heart, I knew who it was before my feet even left the top step.
The girl.
I ran into the street and there I saw her in the pallid moonlight, hunched over and stumbling
toward me, her eyes wide. Behind her, an army of vampires advanced, a rank of gray and rot,
reaching out with clutching talents. My heart jumped into my chest, and I ran to her, not caring
about my own safety. She collapsed against me, her breath ragged and her body shaking with fright.
I slipped my arm around her shoulders and guided her to the church. The vampires were 15 feet
behind. Now ten, their movement stiff and dead. Their faces were twisted in dark hunger,
and their eyes glowed with the fires of hell. Come on, I urged, trying to get it to go faster.
They can't come into the church. A vampire jumped out of the bushes at the bottom step,
and I thrust the cross at him. He hissed, muled and batted at it, trying to knock it from
my hand, but not daring to touch it. The others were close enough that I could smell them, and
My heart slammed.
I pushed the girl forward and she staggered to the door, sobbing now.
I spun and a thousand hands reached from me.
I held up the cross and a chorus of pain and misery burst from their throats.
I backed slowly up the stairs, never letting the cross falter and the vampires watch me
wearing it.
One, old Matt Connor, the owner of the feed store, gave in to his black thirst and threw
himself at me. The moment his foot touched the stairs, his leg went up in flames. He screamed and fell
back, wildly kicking and trying to pat out the fire. I didn't turn my back to them until I was
inside. I slammed the door, bolted it, and pressed my back against it. The girl was on the
floor in a heap, weeping desolately. I recovered and went to her, kneeling. I ran my fingers
through her pale blonde hair and tried to shush her.
I told you to leave, was all that I could think to say.
Later she sat on the couch in the rectory, a wool blanket draped over her shoulders.
She clutched a steaming cup with hot cocoa in her hands and stared into space.
Who were they? she asked, breaking the silence that had rained since her crying had tapered off.
A voice sounded hollow, slurred, the voice of a shell-shocked soldier who had seen too much,
done too much.
Vampires, I answered honestly.
Vampires, she asked.
I nodded.
Bloodsuckers, not to be confused with tax clerks.
She stared down at her feet.
That was supposed to be funny, I said.
I guess it wasn't.
How?
She asked, ignoring my last comment.
I mean, vampires are.
aren't real. Yeah, that's what I said. I lifted my hands and let them fall to my lap with a
meaty thwack. But, well, here we are. How? She asked again. I sighed. A long story.
I glanced at the clock on the wall. It was just past 1 a.m. Well, I guess we have time
if you want to hear it. The girl didn't answer, but I started to talk. But I started to talk.
talk anyway. I needed someone to tell. I needed someone to listen. It happened a year ago. I began.
Part two. Sunday Mass. My time to shine. Everyone's week revolves around something, even if it's
just going to work. Mine revolved around standing on the pulpit and teaching the people of Pine Creek
the light of God. Priests aren't supposed to seek the limelight or to feel like hot shit, but I did.
Here, in this little town, I was God's holy emissary, and no one got to the Father except through me.
Hallelujah, amen.
I've had a lot of time to think and reflect, and I realize now that I was vain.
I treated my secret duty as a chance to feel superior to everyone else.
That was my first sin.
My second was losing my fate.
As a young man, I was filled with the calling.
I thirsted for God the way an alcohol.
Aolic thirst for his drink of choice, and from an early age, the church was the only place I saw myself going.
Over time, however, the light inside of me dim.
Right before the end, it had gone out entirely.
Well, I wasn't caught up by the fact that God let many bad things happen the way many others are, no.
I knew why I accepted it.
My problem was that the Bible didn't stand up to criticism, or at least I thought he didn't.
I went from believing in God's words with the faith of a child to doubting everything.
Talking snakes?
Magic apples?
Hmm, sadly kind of suss.
I also grappled with the idea of sin.
The Bible tells us we're made in God's image.
We're capable of great good but also great bad.
We're petty, jealous, spiteful.
How can a loving God give us these traits and then send us to hell for them?
when he himself indulges in them.
How can he imbue us with discernment and skepticism
and then banish us from his presence if we don't believe in his word?
Especially in all proof we have points in the opposite direction.
If we look at biblical record and then at science and history
and conclude that God isn't real,
would he really spite us for that?
No, I thought. He'd understand.
Those thoughts and many others led me to the realization
that God was not real, or likely not real.
Maybe I didn't bound all the way into atheism,
but I was closer than a priest should ever be.
If I had any ethics at all,
I would step down and let someone else take my place.
The people of Pine Creek, all of whom I loved, deserved better.
They deserved someone who actually believed.
Instead, they got me.
Vain glorious burnout to, like being front and center,
who like being respected and celebrated as a man of God,
a creature who walked a higher plane of existence than everyone else.
Unfortunately for them, I had no ethics, so I stayed.
I had a roof over my head, food in my stomach,
and a captive audience you thought I was great.
What else can a man in the twenties ask for?
My third sin and perhaps my greatest was loving a woman.
On the Sunday all of this started,
A pair of altar boys in white robes helped me into my vestments.
I was running late and in a foul mood because of it.
Being late was embarrassing, and for a man who cared too much what other people thought of him,
embarrassment was unacceptable.
Done, I sent the altar boys off and went out into the pulpit.
The pews were packed with well-dressed townspeople,
come to pay their weekly tribute to the Almighty.
I scanned their faces, looking for her.
I spotted her in the first row
Between her mother and father
Sarah Gillespie
A tall thing creature with vivid hazel eyes
Dirty blonde hair and pounty pink lips
Sarah was the daughter of John Gillespie
The owner of the town bank
Well I hate to say it
But she wasn't exactly right in the head
She was slow
Not severely but just enough
That she came across more as a girl
Than a woman of 25
She was always upbeat
Always smiling
so kind and sweet and innocent
that you could hardly think of her as human at all
she was something else
something better
an angel maybe
I was ashamed of myself for loving her
first because a priest isn't supposed to be in love that way
and second because she was so childlike
that word doesn't really describe her
but it's the one I always came back to
it made me sick
I guess it's true what they say about priests
I said during one prayer session
and laughed until I cried, though it wasn't funny.
In hindsight, my love for her wasn't physical.
It was spiritual, emotional.
I didn't dream of making love to her.
I dreamed of being with her, hearing her, seeing her,
being granted the holy honour of basking the warm glow of her presence.
I wouldn't look at her and think of all the things I'd do with her,
rather, I'd look at her and feel the sick, heaving sensation in my gut
that only a boy with a crush can feel.
It was beautiful at the same time.
It was maddening.
Sometimes I would think of her until my head hurt, and I wanted to scream.
I prayed over it, but the great I am turned out to be the not-so-great wasn't,
and I had to battle these feelings on my own.
That morning Sarah offered me a radiant smile, and I smiled too.
For the whole mass I felt almost like my old self,
crackling with energy and enthusiasm for the Lord.
When it was all over and I had given benediction, I stood by the door and thanked everyone for coming one at a time.
When Sarah and her family came, my throat went dry and I swallowed.
Oh, father, that was wonderful, Mr. Gillespie said, and pumped my hands.
Oh, glory goes to God, I said, even though I did all the work.
Well, you did some of it, Sarah said coyly.
I grinned.
Ah, just a little.
I wish she would stay, but she didn't.
Couldn't.
I thank God for that.
Once everyone had cleared out,
I changed into my Roman collar,
I sort of some work in my office.
It was a warm May afternoon.
The sun was shining,
a warm breeze swept through the open window,
and being cooped up in a dark, musky church
appealed to me about as much as swimming inaccessible.
I shoved some paperwork into a leather case
and left St. Antonese in favor of the park down the street.
People were out and about enjoying the day, and each one of them nodded to me or offered a word of greeting.
I nodded back and spoke when spoken to.
I was almost to the park when a green and white police car came rolling down the street.
It poured an illegal U-turn in the street and pulled to the curb beside me.
I stopped, and the driver-side window rolled down.
"'Morning, father,' Sheriff Russ Hackett said.
"'Good morning, sheriff,' I said.
"'missue at Master Day.'
"'Sheriff Hackett laughed.
"'A beefy man in his mid-fifties,
"'with thinning iron-gray hair and blue eyes,
"'he always reminded me of the skipper from Gilligan's Island,
"'only not as lovable.
"'He was a fair man, but hard,
"'maybe too hard sometimes.
"'I was busy,' he said.
"'In fact, that's why I'm here.'
"'Oh,' I asked and raised a curious brow.
"'Yes, sir,' he said.
"'He leaned in a little,
and loud his voice to a conspiratorial whisper.
You haven't heard nothing weird around you, have you?
Weird, I asked, confused.
No, why?
I was just out to Gene Donovan's place.
Gene Donovan owned a farm outside of town where he raised cattle.
Someone killed a few of his cows.
Sheriff Hackett told me that Jean had found three of his cows lying dead in the pasture that morning.
Their bodies laid open and their guts missed.
missing. Each one was surrounded by a circle of stones and each had a pentagram carved into its forehead.
Well, except for the third one, its head was missing entirely.
Jeez, I muttered. Sheriff Hackett nodded.
Ah, looks like saying this to me. Gotta be outsiders. No one here would do that. I figured they'd stick out, see.
Well, I haven't seen anything, I said. I'm too busy with mass that I haven't left the church in days.
I'm sure if I had sighed but seemed to accept my stomach.
Well, see anything finally call me, okay?
That's goddamn thing we need.
He's one cause in trouble.
He realized what he'd said and dawned a sheepish smile.
Oh, ah, no offense, father.
It's not me you should apologize to.
He gave a lopsided grin and drove up.
There's no one you should be apologizing to.
I said to myself, it's just a word.
I continued onto the park and sat on a bench overlooking a duckpot.
I tried to finish the paperwork, but my mind kept drifting away.
First to Sarah, and then again to Jean Donovan's cattle.
I finally put my papers away, draped my arm over the back of the bench, and decided to enjoy the day.
The sun was warm against my face, and the breeze felt good every time it blew over me.
The scent of flowers perfumed the air and the sound of children's happy laughter found my ears.
I took in a deep breath
and let it go out
This is the life
I thought
That was part of the reason I was reluctant to leave the church
I was happy in Pine Creek
I felt comfortable here
I liked the people and had fallen in love
With this small town charm
Where would I go if I left the church
What would I do?
Better to stay
And be treated like a rockster
I caught a flicker of movement
from the corner of my eye and turned just as Sarah Galasby sat down beside me.
I blinked in surprise and sat up straighter like a soldier who'd been caught slacking by his superior.
She laid out a heavy sigh and looked at me with a pound.
It's really hot out here.
My eyes flickered to her long silken legs.
She changed out of her church clothes into a light summery dress with a floral print and a pair of sandals.
My throat tightened and my stomach twisted.
It's warm.
said and looked away from her. It could be worse.
Well, like winter, she said. The snow's pretty and it's not hot.
She karate chopped the air for emphasis.
I laughed at her enthusiasm. Yeah, winter's nice, but it has its drawbacks too, like shoveling
snow. I shuddered, yeah, that's the worst.
Daddy pays someone to do that, Sarah said. It looks fun.
Oh, trust me, I said. It's not.
"'Building snowmen's fun,' she said,
"'then scrunched her lips to the side in thought.
"'Not when they fall over and bury you.'
"'Well, that threw me for a loop.
"'Is that happened to you?' I asked.
"'Sarah's head bopped up and down.
"'Lots of times.
"'I always make the bottom wrong.
"'I don't know why.
"'She kicked her legs back and forth like a bore girl,
"'and guilt shot through me.
"'I turned away again and stared off into the distance,
"'hating myself.
Oh, maybe settle for Snow Angels, I said.
Oh, I make those too, she said.
Draw little faces on them.
Her childlike conversation was charming in small doses,
but too much of it brought home the fact that she was different.
I hate to call her slow, I really do, but I don't know what other word to use.
She had the body of a woman but the soul of a child.
And I loved her.
My stomach churned and suddenly.
Suddenly I wanted to get away. I stood and grabbed my case. It was nice talking to you,
but I have to get going. I have things to do. I flashed a friendly smile to soften the blow.
Yes, I was running away, but I didn't want her to feel like I was running away.
She took it in stride, and she took everything else, and a knife twisted again in my guts.
A small part of me wanted her to be, I don't know, disappointed. And that would mean that she liked me.
Okay, she chirped.
I got stuff to do.
She smiled proudly.
I'm doing the grocery shopping today.
No candy, I said.
She pouted.
Mama said the same thing.
Leaving her to it, I hurried off at a power walk
and resisted the urge to look over my shoulder at her.
Her voice, her clean scent,
and a warm smile followed me like ghosts of Christmas
and try as I might.
I couldn't outpace it.
them. Not wanting to go back to the church, I walked aimlessly around before winding up at Lucy
Harker's boarding house. A white frame structure with a covered front porch level to the street.
It's still behind a weathered picket fence, painted sky blue. Old Bill Schepe and his pal Joe Connor
sat side by side on the porch, beers in their hands and a transistor radio on the table between
them. I could just make out the faint sounds of oldies, a popular song from the 60s or 70s.
but I didn't know the name.
Bill was one of my parishioners, but rarely came to Matt.
I decided to pay him a visit.
Fushing the gate open, I went up the wall.
He and Joe saw me coming and hurriedly hid their beer like two teenagers.
I planted one foot on the bottom step and leaned over,
a knowing smile touching my lips.
Hey there, Bill, I said.
Joe, missed you at Mass.
A short stooped man of 70 with a white,
mustache and a frail body hidden in the folds of a leather jacket. Bill wore a baseball cap that cast
his face in shadows. Even so, his eyes were sharp and blue.
"'You start too early for me, father,' he said. "'Make it noon, we'll talk. I need to sleep in.'
"'Sleep in or sleep it off?' I asked, and nodded to his clumsily hidden bear.
He rasped, laughter. "'Ah, I put the crack of dawn every day for 42 years.
I earned my right to sleep in.
Well, the Lord wants to see, I counted.
I may have believed that at one point,
may have even shamed someone like Bill into coming back.
Now, though, I was just picking on him.
Oh, I'll see him when I die, Bill said.
Won't be long now.
If you go to heaven, I said.
Joe grinned.
Or he's not going to see God.
He's going to see the other guy.
chubby with curly hair his fat rose stuffed into a plaid shirt joe was twenty or twenty-one he and bill made an odd couple that often people mistook for grandfather and grandson they were neighbours and joe didn't have a father so bill sort of filled that role for him bill in turn didn't have a son each one of them needed the other and so they came together they were sweden away they were as close as two men can be without being lovers
"'H'm like you saw the barber,' Bill asked.
"'Gave you that close cut, didn't he?'
They both cackled like madmen.
I was completely oblivious to why haircut should be funny,
but every odd couple has its inside jokes, I suppose.
Anyway, I said, I was just in the neighbourhood,
and my voice trawed off as my eyes lit
on the row of brass mailboxes by the door.
There were five of them, one for Lucy Harker,
and four for the tenants.
All of the mailboxes had strips of white tape with names on them.
The last I knew Lucy was having trouble letting the room Jimbo's steel had died in last winter.
Well, I scanned them, or spotted a name I didn't recognize.
Jay Carver.
Hmm, I said.
Lucy finally rendered Jimbo's old room.
Bill, having given up on hiding his beer, took a drink and nodded.
Yeah, so I'm tall fella.
Got in last night.
I was sitting up in the living room when he came in.
The old man lowered his voice.
There's something strange about him.
What? I asked.
Bill opened his mouth to speak, but then closed it again
and ticked his head from side to side as if trying to come up with an answer.
I don't know rightly, just feeling I got.
Room gets cold when he walks in.
Just like the room gets old when you walk in, Joe cracked.
Off they went again, laughing madly.
I laughed too, not at Joe's quip, but their evident love for another.
I better be going, I said.
I want to see you boys at mass next week.
I made a V with my fingers, touched below my eyes, and pointed at them.
Free wine, Joe said with a shrug.
Hell, when you put it like that, I'll be there with bells on, Bill grinned.
I use grape juice, I corrected.
It looked at me like I was crazy.
To hell with mass, then, Bill said.
I took the long way back to St. Anthony's, my mind wandering.
Every time it tried to go to Sarah Gillespie,
I yanked the leash and forced it onto something else.
I remembered what Sheriff Hackett had said about an outsider,
lightly being responsible for what happened at Jean Donovan's farm.
And I wondered if Lucy Harker's new tenant might be that outsider.
Well, probably not.
Then again didn't Bill say he was strange?
The room gets cold when he walks in.
It was probably nothing.
Bill was given to telling tall tales, and as for Jean's cattle, it was probably a group of edgy
four-chan kids larping as devil worship us for the night.
Well, that's what I thought at any rate.
As it turned out, I was wrong.
Later that night, after the village of Pine Creek had gone to sleep,
I climbed into bed in the rectory and stared up at the ceiling,
my mind replaying the events of the day.
I thought of my faithless benediction, Jean Donovan's cowls,
Jay Carver, and most of all about Sarah.
Fell into a light and fitful slumber past midnight
and was awoken by a loud crash sometime after two.
I sat up in bed, heart exploding and listened.
And that's when I heard it.
the crunch of broken glass as if under the shoe of a creeping burglar
my blood turned to ice water and I sat there rooted in place
I left the church open at all hours so anyone could come in
maybe it was just some poor schlabo who accidentally knocked something over
and was trying to make a quick exit
eh that was it
throwing on my robe I left the room and crept into the nave
shadows held congress in the pews and the soft flicker of flashlight bathed the
walls and noticed at once that the giant cross on the altar had been disturbed it was upside down i came to a
shuffling stop certain that i was seeing things that cross was so heavy that it took three strong
mentums there's no way that someone could have done that by himself are they still here i looked around
but the church was empty save for one thing a severed cow's head splattered in blood and
wearing a wreath of hawthorn around its head, sat on the altar like a terrible offering to a demonic gods.
Its eyes were open and staring, and its mouth was open to reveal its teeth.
A chunk of ice dropped into my stomach and I warily approached the altar,
fully expecting someone to jump out at me with a knife.
No one did.
The head had been placed upon a pentagram drawn in blood.
Staring down at that symbol, a shiver went down my spine.
Just then an evil laugh rang through the church.
I spun around in a swish of robe and almost lost my footing.
I was just in time to see a long, distorted shadow slither across the wall.
I swore that it was in the shape of a person or a grotesque parody of a person.
I can't even say now what it was about that shadow that sent me crossing myself and praying,
but it wasn't right.
There was something off about it, and even a little faithless old me could plainly tell
that he didn't belong to a person at all, but rather to the devil himself.
The laughter died out but lingered on the air like a whiff of sulphur.
When I recovered enough to go in search of its source, I found nothing.
There was no one here. Only me and the cow.
I called Sheriff Hackett.
Fifteen minutes later he and his deputy, Ryan Norris, crouched in front of the cowhead
while I stood off to the side, hugging myself a wall.
Yep, that's jeans, Sheriff Hackett said.
Whoever killed his cattle did this one too.
He got up and walked over.
Tell me what happened.
For the second time, I told him the story.
When I was done, he asked.
Did you see any faces?
Anything at all I can use.
A memory came back to me.
I don't know if this is connected.
Lucy Harker has a new tenant, an out-of-towner.
Bill Shib says he's strange.
A slimy smile crossed Sheriff Hackett's lips.
Ah, that's our man.
He clapped me hard on the back, and I almost fell over.
That night, I dreamed of a tall man wearing a cow hand.
I think he sacrificed me to Satan, or maybe to someone else, something else.
Something worse.
Something with tea.
Part 3.
If there's one thing that Sheriff Hackett loved, he was playing detective.
The morning after I caught him about the cowhead I'd found on the altar of St. Antonies,
he was up at dawn and guzzling cups of black coffee as he prepared for the task ahead.
At 6.30, he drove out to Lucy Harker's boarding house.
The sky was crimson and birds sang from lush treetop perches,
greeting the new day the only way they knew how, with song.
Sheriff Hackett knocked on the door
and a minute later an old black woman in a threadbare pink robe
and fuzzy pink slippers appeared.
Her sunken face brightened with a smile
and she seemed to stand up straighter.
Hi there, Sheriff, she said.
Hackett was not a lovable man or even a nice man
but he and Lucy had always gotten along well.
There was talk that years ago they were lovers
but no one myself included could see that being true.
morning lucy sheriff hakett said can i come in sure you can you're always welcome here they went into the kitchen where lucy was cooking bacon and eggs she offered him a cup of coffee and he took it with a nod of thanks even though he was already peering every five minutes
i gotta ask you something luce he said what's that lucy asked she was at the stove now about your new tenant carver what about him lucy asked
Sheriff Hackett told her about what had happened at Jean Donovan's, even though the news had already spread through town and back again several times, and then about the break-in at the church.
I'm thinking maybe he has something to do with it. I wanted to talk to him. He's not here, Lucy said. The bacon grease popped and splattered the front of her robe.
She cursed softly and dabbed it with a dish towel.
Where is he? Sheriff Hackett asked. Lucy lifted.
and lowered one shoulder.
I don't know.
Works at night and doesn't come back till the afternoon.
That's what he told me.
That was what Hackett called a red flag.
Hmm.
What's he like?
Tall, Lucy said.
Got curly hair, blue eyes, kind of narrow face.
Comes off real educated.
British?
Sheriff Hackett asked.
Lucy turned around and favoured him with a look
one usually reserved for an especially stupid.
person.
The British, I'm the only ones that can be educated.
I have a degree in business management
and here you are running a flop house.
Heard it a thousand times, loose.
This is serious.
Takes one sick bastard to hack up cattle
and put their heads in someone's church.
Turning back to the stove,
Lucy shrugged.
Maybe a Baptist?
Sheriff Hackett's sight.
Can I go up to his room and take a look around?
Well, again, Lucy looked at him, this time with something approaching shock, as if he'd made a dirty
proposition without buying her dinner first.
No, you can.
He's rent in that room.
It's his space.
If you want to do that, you're going to need a warrant.
Ah, come on, Lose, please.
For me?
Stuck out his bottom lip and put on his best puppy dog face.
Lucy glared at him, but her expression gradually softened.
All right, just hurry up.
Don't steal anything.
Scouts on it, Sheriff Hackett said.
Key in hand, he climbed the stairs and went to Carver's door.
It was the last on the left.
He unlocked it and poked his head in.
Like all of the rooms at Lucy's, it was spartanly furnished,
with a twin bed, writing desk, and a wardrobe.
Unlike the other rooms, however, this one contained an oblong box.
At first Sheriff Hackett thought it was a coffin,
but upon further inspection decided it was a steamer trunk of some kind.
Garber probably kept his things in there.
Hackett searched the room for anything worth looking at, but found nothing.
The bed was neatly made and looked like it hadn't been slept in,
and there wasn't so much as a single garment hanging up in the wardrobe.
Finally he came to the trunk.
He lowered himself stiffly to one knee and reached for its lid,
but Lucy's voice called out from below.
You done up there! I got food waiting.
For a second there, Sheriff Hackett was caught between.
been his two great loves, sleuthing and Lucy's cooking.
Finally, he made his choice.
He got up, popped his back, and went downstairs.
He never did find out what was in that oblong box that day.
But he would soon enough.
The whole town would.
All that morning, I was restless.
The memory of the previous night's events were still fresh in my mind,
and every time I looked at the altar,
I could still see that Steer's head watching me with dead eyes.
The cross remained upside down, immovable even by five altar boys, and looking at it gave me a bad feeling.
Just before noon I left the church and went to the park for fresh air.
I sat on the bench in the golden sunshine for over an hour, collecting my thoughts.
Who would do such a thing?
Who defile an altar?
If there was anything that flew in the face of God any more than that, I sure didn't know about it,
and I was a priest for Christ's sake.
Well, I thought you didn't.
believing God. Yeah, well, I don't. Not really, but still. I don't believe in Allah either,
but I wouldn't dump bacon grease all over a carat. I told myself that I was outraged by the
callous disrespect of the act, but looking back, I think I was offended more on a spiritual
level. When I got tired of the park, I walked across the street to the town diner. Business was
slow, as it was between the breakfast rush and the lunch rush, and only a few people were in. Once at
the end of the counter staring at a book, her face propped against her upturned palm.
Her bare legs were crossed at the knee and the hem of her dress lay slack across her thighs.
My brain told me to walk away, but instead I sat next to Sarah Gillespie.
What's your reading? I asked. She looked up at me and smiled.
Oh, hi, she said. I'm reading zombies. She held out the book so I could see the cover.
A teenage girl sat against a gravestone, clutched.
a book to her chest while the living dead closed in on her.
Whoops, I woke the dead, I read.
Sarah nodded eagerly.
That's garbage. You actually like that.
Her face fell and I was instantly sorry.
I didn't mean it like that.
I gestured with both of my hands.
It's full of dead people.
I like dead people, Sarah blurted.
I mean, fake dead people.
It's stories and stuff.
You mean horror?
Yeah, that, Sarah said.
Spooky stuff's fun.
I flashed back to the night before.
The cow's head, the evil laughter, the disembodied shadow on the wall.
Ah, speak for yourself, I said.
You read a lot of books like that.
Again, Sarah's head bobbed up and down.
I love books like this.
Look, I have another one.
She dug in her purse and pulled out a slim volume.
The cover was black and boasted a hand in a black leather glove holding a knife.
"'Knight Proula,' said the title.
"'It was by the same author who had written,
"'whoops, I woke the dead.
"'The writer sounds like a real dweeb,' I teased.
"'Sarah gasped.
"'No, he's not.
"'He's a nice guy and a really good writer, too.
"'It's also kind of cute.
"'I met him at a convention one time.
"'It was super great.'
"'She showed me the author photo on the jacket,
"'and I shrugged.
"'I'm not one to judge people's looks,
"'but I had to admit I was jealous.
"'In order to hammed a hand to have to have a woman,
burger and ate it while Sarah read. We didn't talk, but I enjoyed her nearness, nevertheless.
When I was done, I paid up and got out.
See you later, I announced. I kind of hoped she'd asked me not to go.
Okay, bye. Damn.
Head hung, I left the diner and went back to the church.
Why do I do this to myself, I wondered. Why do I feel this way? It was wrong, it was sinful.
It was plainly sick, but it was also fact.
I couldn't control how I felt.
None of us can.
You can only control how we act.
Dejected, I threw myself into next week's mass.
If I worked hard enough, I thought, I'd forget about Sarah.
I wasn't the first lie I've ever told myself, and I'm sure it won't be the last.
That night, Peter Morton, the town drunk, stumbled along Railroad Avenue.
A tall, rail-thin man with bleary eyes and yellow teeth,
Peter was on his way back to Lucy's boarding house,
where he'd lived since his wife had kicked him out seven years before.
Peter was a good man, but he'd rather drink than do anything else.
Peter was lost in a fog of booze, but became aware of something, someone following him.
A tall, cadaverous figure walked in the shadows roughly fifty feet behind him.
He passed under a street lamp, but Peter swore that the light didn't touch it.
It remained black, void, as if ripped from the very night around it.
Peter blinked and rubbed his eyes, then turned around and started to stagger away.
It was nothing, he told himself, but cold fear gripped his heart, and suddenly the atmosphere
had changed, becoming cold, oppressive, dangerous.
Peter looked over his shoulder, but the figure was still there, only closer now.
Peter swallowed hard and began to lope like a wounded animal.
He looked back over his shoulder once more, but the figure was gone.
He faced forward and bumped into something.
He jumped back and almost tripped over his own feet.
The figure was somehow before him, towering over his head.
In an errant beam of moonlight, Peter could just make out his face.
Strong angular jaw, high aristocratic cheekbones, messy blonde hair.
wore a long piquet over a suit and tie, and an eerie chill radiated from it like cold from a block of ice.
Good evening, Mr. Morton, the man said in a high, unaccented voice.
The figure sounded pleased. More he sounded downright delighted.
Hi, Peter said.
Would you like a drink?
Peter blinked.
Yeah, he said with a nervous chuckle.
I always like a drink.
You like the warm buzz to you.
Well, yes, actually, Peter did.
That was the best part.
Sure as hell wasn't the taste.
What if you could feel like that all the time?
Peter thought, I like that, he finally says.
I can make it happen, the stranger offered.
In the dark he smiled, Peter was certain that he or it had fangs.
I can make your wildest dreams come true.
Peter tried to flee,
but the man grabbed him from behind
and dragged Peter's throat to his lips.
Peter felt a painful pinprick,
and then nothing else.
The last thing you remember
before losing consciousness
was the man's dark laughter.
Peter Morton was the first to meet John Carver,
but he would not be the last.
Part four.
I was having a bowl of cereal and reading the back of the box, trying to find all eight hidden four-leaf clovers when the phone rang.
Just past eight on a Tuesday morning, and not many people were hot to get in touch with a priest unless something was wrong,
so I had a feeling even before I picked up the phone that negativity was afoot.
Father? Stuck to Mathers at the clinic. Peter Morton's dying and he wants to see you.
I'll be there in 15 minutes, I said.
quickly dressing I left the church and walked the six blocks to the Pine Creek Medical Center
a tiny one-story building surrounded by leafy trees and well-manicured shrubbery.
I was mildly surprised that Peter Morton wanted to see me before shoving off this mortal coil.
He'd never been to church and, as far as I knew, wasn't even a Catholic.
I'd only been in town for six years, having taken over from old Father Malone,
so I didn't exactly know Peter's history.
Maybe he'd been a regular and fell off as his alcoholism got work.
Who knew?
Inside, I talked to a receptionist, and within a few minutes Dr. Mathers came out to greet me.
A short, bawling man with glasses.
Dr. Mathers wore a crisp white lab coat and tan slacks one size too big.
The cuff swished around his legs with every step he took and swallowed his brown loafers
hole.
Hmm, shoe leather.
I'm glad you could make it, he said with a nod,
like the business at hand was no more pressing than signing a contract.
I couldn't judge him for being so casual about death, since sickness and dying were his business.
It's hard to do something, even something awful, for a long time without becoming numb to it.
Dr. Mathers led me to a small, out-of-the-way room at the end of a long, quiet hallway.
The smell of disinfectant assaulted my nose, and the sound of moaning found my ears.
Someone somewhere was hurt or ill, and my heart went out to them.
The room was dim, sunlight falling through the slats,
in the drawn blinds. Peter Morton lay in bed, a blue cover pulled to his chest.
His arms were crossed and his breathing labored. He seemed smaller, thinner than he had been the last time
I'd seen him. His skin was sallow and his cheeks sunken. Someone found him passed out on the sidewalk
this morning, Dr. Mathers said in a low top. There were no wounds on him except for a little tear on his
neck and a bruise on his arm. "'What's wrong with him?' I asked in an equal whisper.
"'Anemia?' Dr. Mather's replied.
"'Oh, and tuberculosis.'
"'I looked at him.
"'T.B. People still get that?
"'Sometimes.'
"'Your man's head snapped up and his eyelids fluttered open.
"'He looked around the room, dazed,
"'and I went to him, taking his hand.
"'His skin was cold.
"'Hi, Peter,' I said.
"'Farther?' he asked.
"'His voice was a low, dry hiss.
I'm here.
I saw him, Peter said, and licked his lips.
My brow crinkled in confusion.
Saw who?
Peter coughed deeply, his frail body shaking.
He's here, just like the Bible said.
Who? I asked again.
I had attended to many sick and dying people over the years
and was a fairly good judge of when someone was delusional and when they weren't.
Peter seemed lucid enough, so I wasn't sure whether or not to ascribe what he was saying to the ramblings of a dying man.
And someone attacked him.
Dr. Mathers mentioned a wound on his neck.
Perhaps someone had tried to cut his throat.
My mind went back to the happenings of the past couple of days.
Did someone try to cut his head off the way they'd done to Jean Donovan's cow?
Peter took a series of deep breaths, and for a moment, I thought he was going to pass before he could reply.
wetting his lips he fixed me with a clear and direct gaze that belied his deathly condition the devil he said dr mathers and i looked at each other and fits and starts peter told us his tale
who's walking home drunk when someone stepped out of the shadows ahead of him he was hazy on the details but he remembered
being grabbed and then falling to the ground dr mathers checked the bruise on his arm and hummed to himself
It could have been left by a finger.
He showed it to me, and I studied it for a moment.
Circular and purple, it did look like it could have come from someone grabbing him.
You should probably call Sheriff Hackett, I said.
But it was too late.
Peter died before the sheriff could arrive.
I was just finishing giving him the last rites when the law waddled into the room.
He stood over Peter's bedside and stared down at him, his hands on his hips.
There's a goddamn crime wave in this town, he said.
I'm sick of it.
He said he was attacked, I said, by the devil.
The devil needs to take his ass out of here.
Sheriff Haggitt said, I'm too old for this crap.
That's when he told me about his visit to Lucy's.
Since then he'd search for Jay Carver in the Vicarb database.
John Carver, 35, came from Fredericksburg, Virginia, and had no criminal history.
to speak of. In fact, he had almost no history at all. He was a historian and college professor
who specialized in colonial America. He'd authored several books on the subject, and that was all
anyone knew. Sheriff Hackett couldn't even find a picture of the map. I'm going by later,
see if I can talk to him, the old lawman said. If it's him, I said, he has help. No one man
alone could have turned that cross upside down.
Sheriff Hackett chewed his bottom lip thoughtfully.
I know, he said.
And let out a burdened sigh.
I'm ordinary an autopsy.
He nodded to Peter's body.
I want to know exactly what happened.
There's a bruise on his arm, Dr. Mathers said.
Looks like someone grabbed him.
Oh, and this.
He turned the corpse's head to expose the wound on his neck.
angry pink flesh rimmed a tiny slash.
I knew a little bit about knife wounds from my time volunteering at an inner city hospital.
This didn't look like one to me.
Knives sliced fresh clean, but this wound was ragged, torn.
All right, Sheriff Hackett said and sighed again.
We'll get to the bottom of this if it kills us.
And, as it turns out, it did kill us.
After leaving the hospital I returned to the church and started my day.
Her three confessions before lunch, one from a teenage girl who'd smoked weed with a boyfriend.
Ten-hour fathers, three Hail Marys.
One from an old man who smacked his wife.
Ten-ale-marries, ten-hour fathers.
And a nervous and overly religious woman who had a dirty dream last night.
Well, I didn't ask for the details, but she supplied them anyway.
A tall man with curly hair climbed through a window, mounted her, and kissed her little.
lips and throat. His hands explored her body and his tongue tasted her flesh. I liked it, she said,
and trembled with shame. What's wrong with me? You're human, I said. Temptation happens.
The sin isn't being tempted. The sin is giving in to temptation. I didn't comfort her much,
so I loaded her down with our father's, Hail Mary's, and forward passes so that she felt thoroughly
punished and therefore redeemed.
Later on, Mrs. Gillespie, Sarah's mother,
came in with a plate of food for me.
She'd invited me to dinner with her family and I politely declined,
not wanting to be around Sarah.
The sin, as I had said, is giving in to temptation,
but knowingly flirting with it, courting it, letting it in,
was pretty bad too.
That's how you fall.
I thanked her for her kindness and ate it after she left.
done i moved to the window and stared out at the street the sun was beginning to set and its final dying light soaked the world in rich hues of amber and sheriff hackett talked to john carver i wondered was something else going to happen to-night first jean's cows then the vandal in the church and now peter morton the night brimmed with danger and dread and my stomach churned with inexplicable fear something was indeed wrong in pine creek
and God help me
I had the feeling that it was only going to get worse
and as it turns out
I was right
After sundown
The county coroner came to Pine Creek Medical Center
To open up Peter Morton
The old drunk was laid out on a metal slab
In the basement morgue
A sheet pulled halfway up his sunken chest
His eyes were closed, his head lolling to one side
The coroner pulled on a pair of latex gloves
picked up a scalpel and made an incision into Peach's chest.
He was just beginning to peel back the flaps of skin to reveal Peter's insides
when the phone in the office rang.
Setting the scalpel down with a metallic clink,
he peeled the gloves off and went to answer the phone.
He was the state crime lab inquiring about another case.
Five minutes in, a loud metal crash rang out from the morgue,
startling the coroner so badly that he dropped the phone.
He told the lab,
on the other end to hold on, I went to see what had happened.
A metal slab lay on its side, its locked wheels spinning.
Medical instruments littered the floor and the sheet that had covered Peter's body lay in a heap.
But the body, well, the body was gone.
Just then the sound of bare feet slapping tiles came from behind him.
The coroner spun around in time to see the door to the corridor fall shut.
He raced to it, threw it open and ran out into the hall.
Ahead, someone disappeared around a corner.
The coroner ran after him, reaching the T-shaped junction barely a second later.
But impossibly, the body snatcher was gone.
Back in the office, spooked and shaken, he picked up the phone.
I have to call you back, he said, voice-breaking.
Something just happened.
hanging up be called Sheriff Hackett.
His goddamn crime wave was getting worse.
But five.
In the days after Peter Morton's body disappeared from the morgue,
strange things happened in Pine Creek.
An unnamed illness began to spread,
its symptoms closely resembling tuberculosis,
and several of the older and weaker residents succumbed.
Three of my parishioners died that week,
and a half-dozen others came down.
with what had come to be known as the Sixth Street flu after the first known victim, Elise Parker,
who lived and died on Sixth Street.
I visited my flock in their sickbeds and saw firsthand that the flu was no flu at all.
It started small, with fatigue, and quickly became severe.
Victims became lethargic, weak and dehydrated.
Some, but not all, complained of nightmares.
At first, Dr. Mathers thought it was TB, but determined that.
it was something else. It's close, he told me one day, but it's different. I just, I don't know.
I was visiting one of the parishioners who was actively dying at the medical center and had sought Mathers out
specifically to ask about the disease. What about the nightmares? I asked. What kind of symptom is that?
I'll admit that I was afraid and was reverting back to believing in God. As the saying goes,
there are no atheists in the foxholes, and in this time a crisis I needed something to hold on to.
Dr. Mathers shrugged one shoulder.
Well, that happens.
I'm not overly concerned with the nightmares.
It's the anemia that worries me.
Around this time, Sheriff Hackett drove out to Lucy's boarding house again.
Joe and Bill were sitting on the porch and drinking beer when they showed up.
Bill, who talked with Lucy almost as much as he did Joe, knew why the sheriff was there.
here for the new fellow bill asked ah sure am sheriff hackett says too late bill said he left last night took his bogs with him sheriff hackett looked deflated where'd he go bill shrugged hell if i know said something about new england ah shit bill hissed
Carver was his only suspect in the string of attacks that had preceded the coming of the Sixth Street flu.
If he lost track of him, it was over.
The case was slipped through his fingers and he'd lose the game.
How the hell can a man in 2019 have such little info?
No one knew anything about this guy, not even his goddamn social security number.
Sighing in frustration, he went in through the screen door and talked to Lucy,
who confirmed that John Carver had indeed gone.
"'Ah, damn it, Luce,' he said disappointedly.
"'Why didn't you say something?'
They were in the sun-washed kitchen where Lucy seemed to live.
When she wasn't cooking or baking,
she was sitting at the table on her laptop
or reading a trashy romance paperback
with shirtless men and bodice ripping women on the cover.
"'If I called you when it happened,
you'd bite my head off for waking you up.'
She poured a cup of coffee and took a sip.
"'You never did like mornings.'
Sheriff Hockey put his hands on his hip.
and shook his head. And it was true, he would have bitched and moaned if she'd woken him up at midnight.
Ah, this is just great. Only lead I got walked out the door and I can't find nothing else on him.
Did you see through him? Because I'm convinced this guy's a ghost.
Oh, he looks solid to me, Lucy said.
Back at the station, he phoned the state police and, swallowing his pride, put in a request for assistance.
All during this time, I was busy seeing to my parishioners, and the strange events of the previous week had receded to the back of my mind.
Something was deeply wrong here. I felt that in my bones.
But I all but forgot about Gene Donovan's cows and the head upon the altar.
Hell, I even forgot about the murder of Peter Morton.
From the moment I woke up in the morning to the moment I dropped exhausted into bed at night.
I was racing from home to home, family to family, like an old-timely doctor making house calls.
If I wasn't doing that, I was burying someone, visiting someone in the hospital,
or comforting old wives who'd heard too many of the dark rumours making the circuit
and believed that evil was afoot.
The people of Pine Creek changed during Week Zero, week of the plague.
They stopped talking to one another, stopped coming outside at night.
The small-town friendliness that had always characterized the village,
evaporated like a puddle on a hot day, and fear and paranoia took its place.
People wore medical masks and avoided one another, and diner and the roadhouse outside
of town, the two hubs of Pine Creek's once healthy social life, stood deserted after Sunday.
There was fear in the air, as oppressive as a cloud of smoke, and it crept into every
heart, every half, and every mind.
On Thursday evening, an old woman whose husband had died Friday and was buried Tuesday
swore to me that he was coming to her at night.
Lying in bed, weak with sickness, she smiled and said he floated in through the window.
The next day, she was gone.
She wasn't the only one with a strange story.
Tales of bizarre happenings, fed by the disappearance of Peter Morton's body,
swept through Pine Creek like the flu itself.
Several people told me directly that they'd seen things in the night.
Ghostly faces peering through windows,
unexplainable lights in the forest, friends and relatives who had passed in recent days.
One man swore he saw his brother walking up and down Elm Street in his burial suit, looking dazed.
Another herd pounding on the side of her house, like someone was beating their fist against the siding.
She said it moved too fast, too far and too high, even to the roof, to be a person.
Did I believe these stories?
Part of me did and part of me didn't.
Maybe I was in denial.
Maybe I was too afraid to confront reality.
I could never have imagined what was really.
happening, but even so there were too many stories, all with a stubborn and damnable consistency
to reject them out of hand. I threw myself into my work so that I wouldn't have to think
about it, but it was always there, festering like a cancer in the back of my mind. On Friday, Sarah
Gillespie called to say that her father was sick. Her voice was filled with panic and the raw
quality of it pierced me. Is he bad off? I asked. No, she said.
Well, he says he's not.
He doesn't want to go to the hospital, but he has the flu.
I just know it.
What should I do?
Where's your mother?
I asked.
She's here, but she thinks I'm overreacting.
Can you, can you?
She trailed off then, perhaps, realizing that she was talking to a priest and not a doctor.
What could I do?
Read him a bedtime story.
And then God smote them all, the end.
Can you help me?
I knew in an instant that I would.
I'd do anything for her.
Twenty minutes later, I stood in Mr. Gillespie's bedroom.
He was propped up in bed by a bank of pillows and wearing silky PJs.
He looked tired, but otherwise healthy.
I'm fine, father, he said.
Just a little drained as all.
Sarah was worried about you.
I didn't have to look behind me to know that she was standing widely at the door.
Mr. Gillespie's features softened and he looked over my shoulder.
Addressing his daughter, he said,
I'm fine, honey, I promise.
It's not hitting me as hard as everyone else.
I'm too strong for it.
He laughed, but it turned into a cough.
He hacked into his hand and then quickly hid it,
but not so quickly that I missed the sheen of blood on his fingers.
You really should go to the clinic, I advised.
I said nothing of the blood because I didn't want to upset Sarah,
But I looked into Mr. Gillespie's eyes and consciously communicated to him that I'd seen the blood and knew the problem was more serious than he was letting on.
I'm fine, he repeated.
I just need to rest.
The old man's mind was made up.
I tried to persuade him to go to the clinic, but he wouldn't hear of it, and there was nothing more I could do.
Sarah walked me to the front door.
I wish you would listen to me, she said.
He thinks I'm a baby.
No, he doesn't, I said.
He just thinks he knows best.
Oh, boomers do.
She sighed.
I'm really scared.
The flu's making everyone sick and people are dying.
The pain in her eyes broke me and I looked away.
What about you?
I asked, changing the subject.
How are you feeling?
She shrugged.
Okay, I guess.
No nightmares?
She opened her mouth to reply, but then her eyes seemed to cloud up.
over with thought. Well, kind of. My heart skipped a beat. What about? I pressed.
A shadow flickered across Sarah's face and she looked away. Nothing, she mumbled. Sarah,
I have to go, she blurted. Before I could stop her, she turned tail and ran up the stairs,
disappearing. A moment later, the slamming of her bedroom door resounded through the house.
I hesitated, wondering if I should go after her, but decided to respect her privacy.
Clearly she was having nightmares.
Was she afraid to admit it?
Or was she ashamed of what they were about?
I soon lost myself in seeing to my flock and had to put Sarah Gillespie on the back burner.
To someone else, however, she was front and centre.
As the sun set over Pine Creek, shops closed, people rushed home, and a sense.
siege-like atmosphere threaded its way through the houses hunkered like fortresses against the coming
night. Sarah Gillespie sat Indian-style on her bed and tried to lose herself in a romance paperback.
She likes scary stuff, but there was lots of scary stuff happening in town lately, so she chose
something not scary instead. Her mind kept wandering, however, to the dreams that she'd been having.
It started weeks ago, long before the flu, long before the deaths. In them a dark shadow came to a
window, floating and beckoning.
Come to me, Sarah.
Come to me.
She never saw his face, but he was a tall man with broad shoulders and an angular chin.
His face was always lost in darkness, but she was sure that she recognized him.
The dreams were super scary, but not because a guy was floating around and trying to get into a room.
He couldn't enter unless she invited him anyway.
No.
What was scary was this.
She wanted to open the wall.
window. She wanted to let him in, to see his face at long last, to hear his low, rattling voice
in her ear, to feel his body pressed against hers. Whoever he was, he exerted a strong and
terrifying pull on her, in every dream her resistance crumbled a little more. One day she would
throw the window open, and he'd take her into his arms. His kiss would be dark, his love, deadly.
No, she didn't want that, only she did.
She was so conflicted that her brain started to hurt.
She was just about to get up when she became aware of a soft sound.
Her forehead crinkled in confusion and she cocked her head to one side to listen.
It came again, and when she realized what it was, her heart blasted against her ribs.
Someone was knocking on her window.
her second story window
with a cry Sarah jumped to her feet
the curtain was open and there
beyond the sheen of light
frosting the window pane
was the man from her dreams
as if on cue the lights flickered and went off
plunging the room into darkness
the man came into sharp relief
bat lit against the moon
his face was sharp and narrow
his cheekbones high in his eyes blazing yellow
In the light of the moon
His pale skin glowed like that of a ghost
And his lips peeled back
From his long needlepoint fangs
In a hungry sneer
Sarah
He whispered in a low graveyard voice
Sarah my love
A cold lump of fear caught in Sarah's throat
And she fisted her hands to her chest
She was too scared to run
To cry out to even think
She did indeed recognise the man
But it was clear to her
out that he was no man at all. He was something else. Sarah, let me in. My bride, my love, let me in.
Sarah shook her head. Sarah. Your way, Sarah said through numb lips. The monster smiled and flicked his
tongue at her. Her voice burst from her in a loud throat-wrenching scream.
Go away, the monster vowed.
I will have you, Sarah.
And in that instant, he was gone as though he'd never been there.
And Sarah passed out.
Part six.
I was called to the Gillespie house at eight the next morning.
Not about Sarah's episode the night before, but about her father.
Mrs. Gillespie had found him dead in bed,
and in her panic I was the first one she found.
throwing on her coat against the foggy early morning chill I rushed out the door and down the sidewalk
on the way there I noticed how eerily silent pirate creek was nothing moved and aside from the
soft hiss of the wind in the trees and the chug and gurgle of the fountain in the town park
everything was silent the town was becoming a tomb at sarah's house i found mrs gillespie
in a state of inconsolable grief mr gillespie was slumped over in bed his head lollily
against his shoulder. I turned his head and laid eyes on the tiny tear in his neck which
characterized the sixth street flu. No one knew what it was. Dr. Mathers quipped that it was like a vampire
bite, but I didn't take that seriously. For one thing, vampires aren't real, and for another,
everyone knows they leave two little puncture marks, not a jagged tear.
I cared Mrs. Gillespie the best I could and sat her down in an armchair by the window,
and then called an ambulance.
It arrived 15 minutes late,
and too haggard-looking men in white,
took Mr. Gillespie away.
One of them told me that they'd been working all night,
taking away the dead and the dying.
The clinic was packed, they said,
and a lot of people had gotten frustrated and gone home,
presumably to die.
When Mr. Gillespie was gone,
I went in to see Sarah,
who was still asleep.
I sat by her bedside for a while.
A bar of sunshine falling through the window
cast her in heavenly brilliant.
but I was too preoccupied by the worsening situation to admire her beauty.
That wasn't important now.
My faithlessness wasn't important.
It all seemed so trivial in the face of such devastation.
Finally, after what felt like an eternity,
Sarah stirred and her eyelids fluttered open.
How are you feeling? I asked.
Fine, she muttered.
Your mother said you had a bad dream last night.
For a second she stared at me, uncle.
comprehendingly, then she shook her head. It wasn't a dream. It was real. The conviction in her
voice was total. What happened? I asked. She told me everything as I've related it myself,
and I listened in dark wonder. When she was finished, she added,
I know who it was, I pressed. Leaning over, she took a book from the nightstand, flipped it
over and showed it to me. It was,
Whoops, I woke the dead.
The book she'd been reading in the diner that day.
The author's photo was of a tall, broad-shouldered man with curly hair and light icy eyes.
He wore a suit and sat against a backdrop of palm fronds.
Him, I asked incredulously.
Sarah nodded. It was him. I know it was.
I studied the photo. When she showed it first to me back at the diner, I glanced at
it but didn't register the subject who wants to look at the face of a man the woman
and their attracted to thinks he's cute well if I had maybe I would have noted the
resemblance to the descriptions of Carver the name on the Carver was different which is
probably what threw me off instead of John Carver it was Jonathan Master
hmm must be a pen name if it was him at all as much as I wanted to believe her
and as much as she seemed to believe herself I simply could
couldn't accept her wild tale as facts. I mean, come on, a man floating outside her window,
fangs, vampires. She mentioned having nightmares over the past few days, maybe this was another
one of those and not real at all. An idea came to me, and I asked Sarah if I could borrow her
book. I left the house and hurried to the police station downtown. Inside, Deputy Norris sat
behind the counter, and an eerie silence rang through the building.
The squadron stood empty, the desks abandoned, and Norris noticed my surprise.
Everyone's sick, he explained.
Set me and the sheriff.
Is he in? I asked.
No, he's out.
I sat on a long bench along the wall and waited for him, my foot restlessly tapping on the floor.
After nearly half an hour, Sheriff Hackett pushed through the entrance and came in.
I jumped to my feet and walked over.
Sheriff, I said.
father he greeted curtly you got your work cut out for you today without preamble i showed him the book
is this john carver he took the book examine the author's photo and his eyebrows furrowed which told me
that the picture was in fact of john carver looks like him i guess that's not his name on the cover
though where'd you get this sarah gillespie i said i told him about sarah's dream and hacket listened
intently, wetting his lips with his tongue.
When I was finished, he slapped his hand with a book.
You believe that story?
He asked.
I started to reply, but stopped myself.
I am, don't know, I said honestly.
I don't know what to believe anymore.
I want to talk to her, he said.
While it went off to do that, I returned to the church.
As Sheriff Hackett predicted, I was extremely busy with funeral arrangements and grieving families.
It wasn't until close to sundown that I was able to break away for some peace and quiet in the rectory.
And it wasn't long before my phone rang.
Hello.
Father, it's me, Bill.
The old man's voice was excited, animated.
Hello, Bill, I said.
Father, you need to come here quick.
What is it? I asked.
He hesitated.
Just hurry, please.
And the line went dead.
I looked at the phone a moment, then sat it down.
I glanced at the window where the light was fading.
A twist of fear pinched my guts and I swallowed hard.
Grabbing my bag, I filled it with crosses and holy water,
then slipped a crucifix around my neck.
My pow walked to the boarding house,
try my best to outrun the coming night.
I met no one on the way.
Hollow wind moaned through the streets,
and the only things moving were bits of trash.
At the boarding house, Joe answered the door.
His face pale and his eyes twinkling with fear.
He led me upstairs and into a bedroom, lit by the soft glow of a lamp.
Bill was waiting.
I entered, turned my head, and saw it.
My heart stopped.
Lucy lay in bed, her hands and feet lashed to the posts.
Her black face had turned the colour of spoiled milk and her eyes were yellow.
She tossed her head back and forth and pulled at the belt, holding her to the bed.
I walked tentatively to the footboard and she stopped to look at me she opened her mouth and issued a snake like hiss her teeth her fangs dear god i muttered
turned to joe and bill who stood together joe holding across and bill clutching a forgotten bible under one arm what's this oh we found her like this bill said she's under the cover
with the curtains drawn. She tried to kill Joe, so we tied her up. Lucy strained against her
bonds and snapped her jaw, trying in vain to bite me. I pressed my hand to my forehead and fought a sudden
dizzy spell. My mind was on the verge of collapse, and I sank into an armchair, my knees no longer
able to support me. Look, Bill said. He nodded to Joe, who approached Lucy with a cross.
A look of terror crossed her face, and she tried to get away, and any human shriek burst from
lungs and she whipped her head from side to side.
To say that my world came crashing down around me would be an understatement.
Everything I thought I knew about everything went up in smoke in a single second,
and I felt like my whole life had been a lie.
I realized what a fool I'd been to abandon my belief.
God was the only certainty, and I'd forsaken him from my own petty vanity.
I was going to be sick.
What do we do, Father?
Bill asked.
These men, these people in Pine Creek, all of them, were looking to me for guidance, and I didn't know how to give it to them.
I was a doctor of spiritual matters, the sheriff of the soul, yet I was in over my head.
In my defence, who wouldn't be?
This wasn't a simple sin that could be prayed away.
This was a cancer.
It was malignant.
It was evil.
Father, God the sheriff, I said nominally.
Full night had fallen.
Joe tried the police station, but there was no answer.
What now?
Bill asked.
I thought of Sarah and my heart skipped a beat.
We need to get out of here, I said.
Out of danger, I'd be able to think.
Everything would be fine.
What about Luce?
At the mention of her name, the vampire snapped her jaws once more.
I stared at her, mind working.
In movies, people stake vampires willy-nilly, but this wasn't a movie, and again, I had no idea what to do.
How does vampirism work? Was Lucy really dead, or temporarily possessed?
Was there a chance of her coming out of her current state and returning to a normal life?
I had none of those answers, and if I put a stake through our heart, it might very well be murder.
Leave her, I said, we'll come back.
After leaving the Gillespie house, Sheriff Hackett drove aimlessly through the dead village, his mind working.
John Carver, the man from the back of the book, had not left town, he decided.
He'd simply gone underground.
Where would a man who wanted to hide go in Pine Creek?
An abandoned building.
Ah, it was perfect.
There were five of them in Pine Creek, and Sheriff Hackett checked each and every one of them,
starting with the old mill on the river.
Aside from dust and rats, it was deserted.
He went from place to place looking for signs of habitation, but found nothing.
The last place he checked was the old Hargrove homestead in the hills outside of town.
It was a farm belonging to the Hartgrove family, who lost it to the bank three years ago.
The house was buttoned up tight.
Then there was the bar.
Red paint peeled from the splintered wards.
walls and the rusted roof reflected the light of the sun. The door should have been pat-logged,
but the lock was missing and the wood showed prime marks. Sheriff Hackett's heart sped up and he went
back to the car to fetch his shotgun. He racked it and returned to the bar. He took a deep breath
and nudged the door open with the barrel of the gun. Inside it was dark, too dark, as though
the windows had been blacked out. He stepped inside and tripped inside and tripped
wire strung across the floor. A second later a pitchfork shot out of the darkness like a missile,
its wickedly sharp prongs sparkling in the sunlight. Sheriff Hackett's eyes widened, but he had
no time to move or duck. And the pitchfork punched into Sheriff Hackett's chest and shoved him back.
Blood gushed out around the prongs and his face twisted in agony. His finger spasmodically
jerked the trigger of the shotgun and pellets tore into a wooden support column. He fell back
against the doorframe and spun around and dropped to his knees the pitchfork sticking from his chest
darkness came over him and he flopped onto his back dead and in the darkness john carver laughed
he took bill's car a matter of 1998 neon with bad brakes and a curious knock in the engine the lights
all come on automatically but most of the homes and buildings repassed were ominously dark
Several times during the ride
I was sure that I glimpsed figures moving in the shadows
and my stomach filled with dread.
When we reached the Gillespie house,
we parted in the driveway,
got out and hurried up the walk in a group.
We were all holding crosses and vials of holy water.
We knocked and Mrs. Gillespie led us in, looking confused.
Bag of bag, I said.
We are leaving.
Leaving, the older woman asked.
What do you mean?
Why?
I'll explain later.
Sarah appeared on the stairs.
Pack some things, I said.
We've got to get out of here.
With the faith of a child, the faith that I lacked,
Sarah nodded and rushed off.
Her mother led us into the kitchen,
intent on finishing the tea she was making.
I don't see where we have to leave, she said.
We're in great danger, I said.
Danger of what? she demanded.
We sat at the table and I explained,
as best I could, what was happening?
Sarah had come in with a duffel bag,
and when she heard the word vampire,
the color drained from her face.
When I was finished, Mrs. Gillespie looked at me like I was crazy.
That's the most absurd thing I've ever heard, she said.
I know it's crazy, I replied,
but it's all true. We have to get out of here.
He's right, Bill said.
Sorry with my own eyes.
Mrs. Gillespie sighed.
"'Please, Mother,' Sarah said.
"'I told you what I saw. We have to go.'
"'Just for the night,' I said.
The older woman threw her hands up.
"'Fine. Just let me pack.'
I turned then to Bill and Joe.
Pull the car up to the door. I want to make a quick getaway.
Notting Bill rushed off with Joe in tow.
Mrs. Gillespie got up, went to the stove,
and took the whistling tea kettle off the burner.
I'm not happy about this, she said over her shoulder.
I understand, I replied, but please hurry, we have to be quick.
Mrs. Gillespie poured the tea into a pitch and stuck it in the fridge.
She started to speak, but her words turned into a scream when the window over the sink exploded.
Sarah jumped and I instinctively stepped in front of her, putting myself between her and the danger.
Something hit the floor and rolled up to Mrs. Gillespie's foot.
A blood splattered, severed head.
Bill's blood splattered, severed head.
Mrs. Gillespie shrieked, and then the power flickered and went out.
A strong cold wind sprung up out of nowhere and blew through the window, rustling the curtains.
I turned to look just as a gaunt, pallid face appeared.
Sarah screamed and I took her in my arms.
Too long, spindly arms reached through and gripped the frame, and then a foot.
John Carver squeezed himself through the window, like a spider, threw a hole in the wall.
My blood turned to ice water, and the air left my lungs in a rush.
The vampire floated in like a bad dream, his back against the wall and his head skimming the ceiling.
He wore a long peacoat and black gloves, and his eyes flickered with infernal light.
He dropped to the floor, grabbed Mrs. Gillespie in a chokehold and flicked his thumb across her throat.
Blood gushed out and spilled over his arm.
Sarah screamed in horror and Mrs. Gilles strangled, her knees giving out and her eyes rolling back in her head.
He threw the woman aside and held out his hand.
"'Come to me, Sarah,' he hissed.
"'Come to me.'
Sarah clung to me, her tiny body shaking.
come to me my love come recovering myself i stepped forward and thrust the cross out at him he showed mild discomfort
but swatted it away from my hand i am too powerful for that preacher i was old when christ was young
he grabbed the front of my shirt spun me around and threw me i flew through the air screaming
and kicking my legs then crashed into the wall and fell to the floor in a heap
I watched him approach Sarah, hand extended.
She passed out and he took her in his arms like a groom with his bride.
I tried to yell for him to put her down, but only a groan came out.
Carva squeezed himself through the window again, and then he was gone.
Sarah was gone.
I don't know how long I laid there crying, but when I staggered outside later,
the street was full of vampires wandering like zombies through the night.
When they saw me they rushed me, arms out and mouths open.
I slammed the door and ran up the stairs, needing to hide but not knowing where.
I wound up passing the night in a linen closet, the holy water clutched in my hands like a magic talisman.
The vampires pounded on the doors and windows, their high screams and ghostly moans filling the night, but they never came in,
and they soon forgot about me and wandered off to find other victims.
Throughout the nights I heard isolated cries of fear, sporadic gunshots and other sounds of judgment.
I covered my ears but could not block out visions of what was happening in Pine Creek.
Murder, bloodletting, death.
The apocalypse had come and tonight demons ran free.
After what seemed like an eternity, I emerged into the sunlight.
No birds sang and no breeze still.
It was the day that Pine Creek officially passed away.
The final part.
Tired, headachey and dazed, I wandered the sunny streets of Pine Creek on an aimless ramble.
With my rumpled frock, messy collar and a thousand yards there,
I must have looked like a shell-shock refugee from a third world country.
Luckily for me there was no one around to sea.
The streets all stood empty, cars abandoned here and there and giving grim,
to the unnatural fate that had befallen the village. I spotted a few broken windows and
open doors. I could imagine vampires smashing through them to get to the people inside.
I came to a stop in the middle of the street and looked around, my eyes squinting against the hot glare of the sun.
Aside from the few blemishes, everything looked so normal. Even then, after seeing John Carver
with my own eyes, after seeing Lucy and the others crowding the moonlit street, I couldn't believe
it. Our minds are very adept at shutting down horrible truths. The human survival instinct is the
strongest thing on the face of the earth, and your brain will shut itself down before it'll allow you
to go insane. Or maybe I was insane. At one point it staggered onto the park and sat on a bench
across from the fountain. Water gurgled and splashed, and the coin is littering the bottom, tossed in for
good luck, shimmered beneath the surface. I tried to focus on them, but was thinking hard.
Living was hard.
Must have curled up and gone to sleep because the next thing I knew, it was waking up, groggy and sore.
The sun was higher, and from its position I figured that it must be afternoon.
My face was hot and my skin stung when I touched it.
I was able to think more clearly, and with that came cold fear.
Last night Carver took Sarah and carried her off to what fate God alone knew.
I had to find her.
I had to save her.
Where would I start? What would I do? I was a priest, not Rambo. I didn't know the first thing about rescue operations. The most logical answer to my first question was the police station. I went inside and after the hot brightness of the day, it was cool and dark, like a cave. There was no one at the desk or in the squad room. Chairs sat empty, waiting for butts that would never touch them again, and all of the computers were dark. I called out, but no one answered.
Past a heavy steel door I came to the station's holding tank.
The cells were windowless concrete boxes with solid doors and little slots.
I peered through each one and saw nothing.
Until I came to the last cell.
A man was curled up on the steel rack jutting from the wall.
I caught out to him but he didn't answer.
I tried him vain to wake him but he didn't so much as stir.
Whoever he was he slept heavy.
in the squadron I searched the desks until I found a ring of keys. I returned to the cell,
opened it and went in. The man's back was to me, his arms wrapped around his chest like he needed
a hug and had no one to give him one. I knew the feeling. Leaning over, I shook him when he rolled
over onto his back in a flash, and I screamed. His eyes shone sickly yellow and his sallow skin
stretched tight across his skull. He opened his mouth and hissed at me like a cat.
He had fangs.
Screaming, I ran from the cell and slammed through the door into the squadroom.
I looked over my shoulder, and the man was running after me.
I pushed myself faster and hit the exit door, going a good ten miles an hour.
It hit the brick wall and shattered with a startling sound.
I went round just in time to see the man bolt out of the building.
And then it happened.
He cleared the shade of the overhang above the steps, and the sunlight fell on him.
Instantly he began to smoke and sizzle like a fatty side of bacon.
An agonized wail erupted from his throat and he scurried back into the building.
Smouldering, he just stood there, watching me.
Half of his face was burnt beyond recognition, one eye was dark, but he didn't seem to feel it.
What are you? I asked breathlessly.
The vampire hissed.
I didn't think he could speak even if he wanted to.
That was the only vampir.
to ever wake up on me. I don't know why. After my heart stopping encounter at the police station,
I walked around Pine Creek, racking my brain for what to do. I had to save Sarah, but how?
I was totally at a loss, so went back to the Glesby House, hoping to find something, anything,
to help me in my quest. As it turns out, I did. In the kitchen, I found muddy clumps of
straw in the sink, on the counter and on the linoleum floor. There were also footpring.
carver's footprints.
I knelt down and picked up one of the dirt clumps.
Crumbled in my hand.
A farm.
He'd been to a farm recently.
Was that where he was hiding?
There were dozens of farms in the hills surrounding Pine Creek.
He could be in any one of them.
I had to find him anyway.
So standing, I set off on my mission.
Before going anywhere, I returned to the church,
or I filled a backpack with crosses, vials of holy,
water and Eucharist waifers. I broke one of my kitchen chairs and used a knife from the butchers
block to sharpen it. I grabbed a hammer from a toolbox in the garage and added those to the bag.
I didn't have a car, so I went back to the police station and fetched Deputy Norris's squad car
from the side of the building. I saw no signs of that vampire. Must have gone back to bed.
I thought of him and I shivered. Was he still in there? I mean, the man, I mean, the soul.
I never give much thought to things like vampires or even demons.
Were the living dead evil spirits inhabiting once living bodies, or was there a person still in there?
Either option sent a shiver down my spine.
The first day I searched four farms before the sun began to sink behind the earth.
At each of them I found vampires hidden in dark corners.
A man in a chicken coop, an old woman with her feet sticking out from under the sofa,
grey-faced kids sleeping in dirt cellars.
I didn't have the guts or the faith to kill any of them, so I let them be.
Before nightfall, I went back to the church, closed all the shutters, and hunkered down until morning.
I searched for Sarah and John Carver for nearly a week, and with each passing day my certainty that she was alive faded.
At night I hug myself and tried not to think of her dead, or worse, undead, but visions of her emaciated face plagued my dreams and haunted my day.
One night, a Thursday I think, I was jolted awake in my bed by the echoing clang of the church organ.
It rolled through the vaulted citadel like summer thunder and chilled my marrow.
I threw the blanket, swung my legs over the edge of the bed, and held my breath to listen.
A second passed, then ten.
Then the organ peeled once more.
At first the noise was jumbled in my tired mind, and I realized it was a song, a high-tonless voice.
voice began to sing, faint with distance. There is a power in the blood of the lamb. My art slammed against
my chest as I was drawn to my feet. I hadn't forgotten that Carver had come into the church once
before. He was not bound by the same laws his offspring seemed to follow. How or why I didn't know,
but I knew that he could come for me if he wanted, but I was glad he had. I put on a pair of
pants and my frock, not bothering to button it over my naked chest. I grabbed the make
shift stake from the nightstand, joveed it into the waistband of my pants, and went out to confront him.
The music rose, growing louder, closer, and the glow of candlelight, normally warm and comfortable
but now sinister, soaked the nave. I stopped at the last pew and looked toward the organ,
which sat on a raised platform. No one. Carver, I called. I know it's you, you bastard. Come out.
A dark chuckle echoed through the hall.
I walked down the aisle looking between the pews.
Finally, I reached the altar and turned around.
Carver was standing by the holy water font near the entrance.
One corner of his mouth turned up in a sharp grin.
A lump formed in my throat and I cast about for something to say.
Finally, I heard myself ask, rather timidly.
How did you get in here?
Well, Carver said.
I reached out my hand, turned the knob and walked in.
He didn't make it very hard for me.
You should be careful next time.
A locked door goes a long way and keeping one safe.
I swallowed again.
I felt naked, vulnerable.
This is a church, I said weekly.
A house of God, Carthus said with disdain.
Only God doesn't live here anymore.
I am God now.
He cupped his hand, dipped it into the font and slurped a mouthful of holy water.
He gave a refreshed sight like a man in a Pepsi commercial.
God is all around us, I said.
Indeed, Carver asked.
Then why pray tell me am I here?
Why can I simply warts into your church?
If God really lived here, I'd be outside with a rabble.
They're weak, you know, but I am not.
I am strong.
I go where I wish, and I take what I'm.
I wish to take.
He put a special emphasis on that last statement.
He was talking about Sarah.
Where is she?
I asked.
She's with me now, preacher,
Carver said.
He studied leisurely down the aisle like a man on a stroll through the park.
Her innocence and her purity attracted me.
You don't find very many women like her these days.
In fact, you could never find many women like her.
She's special and when I'm a woman.
met her, I knew that I had to have her. He spread his hands, so here I am. She belongs to me now.
She's my property, my dog, my whore, and you, her faithful shaman, will be my servant.
The smile look on his face, the evil set of his lips, and the hateful twinkle in his eye all stowed
the embers of my rage into a roaring inferno. My face flushed with heat and my hands bawled
into fists. I pictured Sarah, dead yet alive, the spark of her life's duffed out rudely, and I snapped,
screaming I threw myself at the vampire. He easily sidesteped me and shoved me to the ground.
I landed hard on my hands and knees, and he laughed. His fangs were out, if he had ever been
in, and he flicked his tongue. You have to do better than that, preacher. I staggered to my feet and
charged him again. He laughed and swatted me.
aside like a bothersome fly. I crashed shoulder first into a pew and pain streaked up my arm.
Carver grabbed me by the back of my frock and dragged me to my feet. He snaked one arm around my neck
from behind and pressed his lips to my ear. "'You're weak,' he whispered, just like your god.
Surprising myself, I ran my elbow into his stomach and he was caught off guard. I spun and threw
a punch that connected with his chin. His head whipped to one side.
and I speared him. We fell back into a pew in a heap of limbs and I grabbed him around the throat.
I was lost in a frenzy of wrath and I thought I was going to choke him. But he had other plans.
Grabbing me under the shoulders, he propelled himself from the floor and at once we were airborne,
soaring high above the church. My heart rocketed into my throat and I clung to him like a stubborn monkey in a tree.
He tried to shake me loose to drop me on the heart, unforgiving pews below.
but I refused to let go.
My thrashing knocked him off course, and we hit one of the walls,
then fell five or so feet to the floor.
I tried to get up, but he grabbed me and sank his nails into my arm,
and I wrenched a handful of his curly hair.
We rolled across the floor, hitting and kicking one another.
At one point he was on top, and I went for his jugular.
My teeth closed on it, and I wrenched my head back.
Cold and doughy flesh ripped from his neck,
and tepid blood gushed out.
he uttered a cry of shock and alarm and shoved me back.
I came loose, and he brought his fist down on my nose.
It burst like an overripe tomato when he struggled to his feet.
On my hands and knees, panting and covered in a mixture of my blood and his,
I was an animal.
My only thought, if a thought can be called, was for vengeance.
Carver leaned against the wall, clutching at his throat and looking horrified.
I got up, poured the stake from my waistband,
and lunched at him.
He sank into his side and his entire body jerked.
He threw his head back and laid out an alien whale that rang through the church.
Outside the vampires surrounding the church picked it up like wolves in a bad Dracula movie.
Carver shot out his arm and hit me hard in the side of the head.
I was thrown off balance and he rushed me.
I had a side table and he bent me over it, making the candles teeter and sway.
His eyes blazed with fury and his nails dug into the side.
flesh of my throats.
You've worn out my patience, preacher.
Now you die.
He opened his mouth
to reveal his facts.
Instinct took over.
Or maybe it was God.
I grabbed one of the candles.
I touched it to his peacoat,
and it went instantly up.
His hiss of triumph turned into a screech of pain.
He unhanded me and wheeled crazily around,
the flames racing up his coat and licking his flesh.
He bumped into one of the pews, went down, and then sprang back to his feet again, completely
engulfed now. Suddenly he took to the air and the stained glass window, overlooking the nave,
exploded. Before I knew it, he was gone, and I was alone in the church. I sat down to the floor
aching and sobbing, and stayed there until dawn. Carver didn't come back. I kept up my search,
hoping against hope that he'd been lying about Sarah.
Hope springs eternal and it will lead to more gymnastics than a WWE match, only of the mental
kind instead of the physical.
I had to hope because I couldn't accept the truth, even though I knew it in my heart.
Finally, I found them in a barn.
I was driving past when I glimpsed a flicker of light from a hay bale.
I pulled a U-turn, followed the dirt driveway past the house and part next to the hay-pile.
I got out and brushed some of it aside.
What I'd seen was the rear bumper of a car, Sheriff Hackett's car. My hackles raised.
Why was it here? And who put it here? I checked the house first and found the family asleep
in the attic, father, mother and two children. The children bothered me. Children are innocent,
pure, and to see two of them like that, it was too much for me. In a fit of rage and disgust,
I ripped the curtain from a window and the sunlight.
streamed in. The vampires began to smoke and thrash, mules and hisses rising from their dead
throats. They scrambled into darkened corners, but the little girl was too slow. As I watched
the skin melted from her bones in her skeleton charred, then crumbled to dust. The smell was powerful
and made me sick. I rushed outside to vomit. The last place I looked was the barn. Cross in front
of me, I eased the door open. I don't know what possessed me to look down, maybe God, but I spotted
an open bear trap on the floor. Now I knew I had the right place. Leaving the door wide open so that
the sunlight spilled in. I walked around the musky space and found three more traps. And then,
in the hayloff, I found the coffin. It sat in the corner, oak and gleaming and so out of place
that it made my head spin.
Beside it was an oblong steamer trunk
like Sheriff Hackett had seen at Lucy's boarding house.
My heart sank.
In my soul I already knew who was inside.
Ignoring it, I went to the coffin
and lifted the lid.
John Carver lay within,
his hands folded on his chest and his eyes closed.
His face was lumpy with scar tissue in places
and a good portion of his hair was missing.
It had only been in.
two days since the fire, but he looked as if he'd already begun to heal.
In another week or so, it would be like it had never happened at all.
Fresh blood coated his chin, and his nails were long and jagged.
They'd almost ripped out my throat, I mused.
I could probably cut diamond, too.
His peacote was gone, presumably destroyed in the fire,
and in its place he wore a Victorian-style waistcoat over a white shirt.
His tie stuffed into his vest was covered in SpongeBob Carrier.
well I guess he was a fan a mix of emotions flooded my chest hate pity revulsion but no fear not anymore
I swung the bag around took out the sharpened chair leg in the hammer and knelt beside the coffin
I placed the stake over his heart and lifted the hammer all at once his head whipped in my direction and his eyes caught me in their glowing thrall
all. I'm impressed, he said. His lips did not move and his voice seemed to come from the
center of my head. Where is she? I asked out loud. Does it matter, preacher? She is mine.
A lump whirled in my throat and tears blurred my vision. Bastard, I muttered. Visions of
Sarah darts through my head. Her sweet, lovely face transformed into a grotesque parody of humanity.
Her teeth long, her eyes yellow, her flesh rotting.
Carver laughed at me.
He laughed.
Letting out a cry of rage and frustration, I brought the hammer down.
The stake drove deep into the monster's heart, and his eyes widened in shock.
He opened his mouth, and his long forked tongue flickered obscenely.
I brought the hammer down again and again, sobbing now.
Carver made no sound as he died, but he frowned.
I pantically clawed at the stake in an attempt to remove it.
The fight slowly went out of him,
and in minutes he turned to dust.
I sat against the coffin and wept into my hands.
Don't know how long I was there,
but it was almost sundown when I gathered the courage to open the steamer trunk.
As I'd feared, Sarah was inside,
clad in a white dress and wearing a crown of garland.
Her cheeks were ruddy and her skin pale.
Her hands rested atop her chest,
and blood smeared her lips.
Even in undearth, she was achingly beautiful.
I took her hand in mine, and the chill of her dead flesh soaked into my bones.
I couldn't bring myself to stake her.
I could stake anyone else, but not her.
So I left.
I left her there.
I didn't free her the way I would eventually free the others.
I don't know if this all remains once undeth is achieved,
but I do know that these people were my friends,
my family, my flock.
I owe it to them,
they'll all get the last rights.
I've staked a hundred or more of them now.
I've also learned a lot about them over the past year.
There are three types of vampires.
The Carver class, as I call it.
The working class and the ferrils.
The working class who were bitten directly by a member of the Carver class
can speak and possibly pass as human when need be.
Well, the ferriles are those bidden by the world,
working class. They're mindless spitting animals who's only thought it's for blood.
The Carver class, the Counts and Barons of the vampire world. They're the originals.
They've been here probably forever and have outgrown most of the tropes you associate with
the vampires if they ever possess them at all. They can walk on holy ground, touch crosses,
and eat garlic dipped in holy water if they got hungry. The only thing that could kill them
is a state of the heart and the light of the sun. How old was
carver where did he come from i don't know i learned what little i know from peter morton or rather
the demon inhabiting peter morton's corpse i captured it and tied it up and i pumped it for information
asked if peter was in there and it laughed in my face he's in hell the thing said he has the d t's for
ever and ever i don't know if it was telling the truth or not that was the second vampire i state
I got easier over time, but I don't know if I can stake Sarah.
Part of me wants to torch the whole town, and I'm seriously thinking about it now.
It'd be easier that way, for me and the world.
At first light, I drove the girl to the campsite she and her friends had pitched the night before.
I was still driving Billy Norris' squad car.
As far as anyone knows, I said, the town just withered up and died.
There are missing persons cases and bank foreclosures.
Those are starting up, and it's going to be harder to hide what happened here.
We found their van where they'd left it, but the campsite was destroyed and the boys were missing,
probably with the others, waiting for nightfall.
The girl sat behind the steering wheel of the van and favoured me with a concerned look.
What are you going to do? she asked.
I don't know, I said. I just don't know anymore.
As I watched her pull off without her friends, I made up my mind.
For the last year I'd been so concerned with freeing the people of Pine Creek from their curse,
especially Sarah, that I'd lost sight of what matters.
My obligation was to the living, not to the dead.
And the longer I allowed Pine Creek to stand, the more people would be hurt.
I drove back into town and gathered up enough gas to burn half of Manhattan to the ground.
I walked through the village, dousing every single.
everything I could reach, every house, every store, every tree.
I started a dozen fires, and the buildings went up quickly.
By the time I reached the highest hill overlooking Pine Creek, the town had turned into a raging inferno.
I made the sign of the cross and gave the last rites one final time.
With that, my obligation to Pine Creek was over.
Getting into the squad car, I drove away from that cursed place and never, ever looked back.
but sometimes I wonder if Sarah somehow survived
if maybe she's out there following me
part of me hopes she's at rest now
but another part a more selfish part
hopes that she'll find me one day
I miss her so much
and if she ever does come
I might just go with her into the night
and so once again
we reach the end of tonight's podcast
my thanks as always to the
authors of those wonderful stories and to you for taking the time to listen now i'd ask one small
favor of you wherever you get your podcast from please write a few nice words and leave a five-star
review as it really helps the podcast that's it for this week but i'll be back again same time
same place and i do so hope you'll join me once more until next time sweet dreams and bye-bye
