Sock

"Try it on, Pete!" Jake urged. "I dare ya!" He elbowed Jimmy Watson to let him in on the private joke.

As for Pete, he seemed oblivious to the teasing. He held the cold, wet sock at eye level and examined it closely. They had found it in the gutter, saved from falling through the grate of the storm drain by a jumbled, twisted collection of weeds, mud, and cigarette butts. It could have been black or possibly dark brown. It was hard to tell through the thick, caked-on coating of dirt. There was a pattern on the sock. It looked like small squares, no, maybe there were circles.

The three boys had been walking single file along the curb enjoying the return of the sunshine. The winter had been the wettest in Pete's memory. It seemed as though the harsh back-to-back March storms would last forever, and when you're twelve, two weeks cooped up in the house is a very long time. That's two weeks of not riding your bike, two weeks of not playing ball in the park, two weeks of not even being able to shoot the breeze with your friends away from the prying ears of adults. But the sun had finally broken through--at least for a little while--giving the boys a chance to stretch their legs and go out of doors, the natural place for boys to be.

Pete tore his eyes from the sock and looked over at his friends. He still remembered the time Jake dared him to put a marble up his nose. It took the doctor an hour to get it out and he'd been on restriction for two weeks. Pete wasn't stupid. He wasn't going to stick this wet, you-don't-know-where-the-heck-it's-been sock on his foot.

But for some reason he couldn't put it down, either. There was just something about it, something special.... He could feel it in the tips of his fingers that gingerly held the smooth, silky material. In spite of the winter torrent that had left it wet and dirty, the sock felt warm, inviting. Pete grasped the sock and squeezed the remaining water out of it. A pincer bug frantically escaped from between his fingers and dropped to the ground.

Jake's eyes lit up in anticipation. He glanced conspiratorially at Jimmy. "You going to put it on?" he asked again. Pete was his friend, but let's face it, he wasn't too bright. He watched with expectancy as Pete shook the last of the water from the sock.

"Yeah, I'm going to put it on," he announced, "but not until my Mom washes it!" With a flourish he stuffed the sock into his sweatshirt pocket.

Jake looked disappointed, his moment of glee had eluded him, but he was pragmatic. With a shrug, he wondered if the kid was finally smarting up. "Come on," he said, suddenly bored with the whole thing, "let's go to my house and shoot a few hoops before dark."

The three boys headed up Stony Glen Drive, the storm drain and the sock forgotten. Pete had meant to throw it back into the gutter, but the invitation to play basketball had erased that thought from his adolescent mind. The sock lay forgotten in the depths of his pocket.

For Pete, basketball was a dirty game. When you're the shortest and the lamest, as Jake would point out, you try to make up for it by being the most aggressive, but being aggressive had its drawbacks--you spent a lot of time being knocked on your butt. And that's where he found himself several times during the next hour. Twice he had fallen into the flowerbed behind the hoop, and by the time he got home he was a mess.

"Don't you dare walk on my entry-way tile, Peter Thompson!" his mother yelled from the kitchen. She had heard him open the front door and caught him before he could place one grimy foot on the new tile his father had laid the previous summer. "You go around back and come in through the garage. And take off those clothes and put them in the hamper next to the washer."

Pete did as he was told and by the time he entered the house, he had stripped to his underwear. "I'm going to take a shower, Mom," he said, heading up the stairway that led to his room.

"Okay, sweetie," she replied. "Dinner will ready in about an hour. Daddy called. He has to work late again tonight. We'll eat and watch a little T.V., okay?"

"Okay, Mom," he yelled as he ran up the stairs.

It was another ordinary Sunday night at the Thompson house. His mother folded clothes from the dryer while Pete, attired in his flannel pajamas, struggled to complete his homework. Pete hated math more than anything, which was saying a lot since he didn't like school much at all. It took him an entire weekend to finish an assignment Jake Gellender finished on the bus coming home.

A little before 9:00 PM, Pete, frustrated by the mysteries of mathematics, retreated to his bedroom to seek solace in the latest Spiderman comic book before his mother made him turn off the light. Though his parents didn't approve of his reading material, Pete loved Spiderman more than anything. How he wished he had his powers, his bravery! Every night before he went to sleep, Pete prayed to God to let him someday be like Spidy.

Half way through the comic book, Pete heard his father come home, tired and complaining about the heat. The heating bill was a major bone of contention in the Thompson household. "Damn it, Flora!" his father complained as he turned down the thermostat. "You trying to turn this place into a sauna?"

A few minutes later his mother entered his room and plopped a large bundle of freshly washed clothes on top of his dresser. "I swear, Pete, I've never had a son who could dirty clothes like you," she said.

"I'm the only son you've ever had, Mom," he reminded her.

She turned and gave him that "don't sass me look" that quickly melted to a smile. She went to the bed and gave him a kiss on the cheek. "Your father will be up to tuck you in. You can read until then, but then its lights off, mister. Understand?"

"Sure, Mom," he replied.

Moments later his father poked his head into the room, still dressed in his work clothes. "How's it going, sport?" he asked.

"Fine, Dad," he replied with a smile. His father had called him sport for as long as he could remember. Sometimes he wondered if he'd forgotten his name.

"Did you finish your homework?"

"Yeah, I finished it."

His father sat beside him and gently took the comic book from Pete's hands. He placed it on the bed stand and kissed his son on the forehead. Pete could smell cigarette smoke on his breath. His father supposedly quit smoking months ago; his mother had insisted on it. Well, he didn't smoke around the house anymore, but like his mother turning up the heat once his father left for work, Pete was sure there was a pack of Marlboro Lights somewhere in his life.

"Time to go to sleep, sport. Okay?"

"Okay, Dad."

His father reached over and turned off the reading lamp, tousled his son's hair for good measure and left the room, leaving the hall light on until his son fell asleep. Pete hadn't been afraid of the dark since the fourth grade, but he never told his parents. The light in the hallway was a little bit of childhood Pete wasn't quite ready to let go of....

****

When Peter Thompson woke in the middle of the night he was cold. Actually, it was his feet that were cold. He looked over at his dresser sitting dimly across the room. The bottom right drawer was what his mother called "the extra sock drawer". It was where she kept all the orphaned socks that had either lost their partners to holes or had mysteriously disappeared from the dryer. Pete liked to imagine that the dryer was some sort of time machine that occasionally jettisoned one of his socks into the future. Pete's mother would never throw away a sock just because it had lost its mate. They all went into the extra sock drawer to be used on occasions just like this--cold feet in the middle of the night.

The problem was one of logistics. In order to get the socks, he would have to run across the cold hardwood floor to the dresser and back without freezing his toes off. He had performed this maneuver often in the past, each time scolding himself that he should have put on a pair before he went to sleep. But since his feet were never cold at bedtime, the socks always remained forgotten in their drawer.

It was no use fighting it. Cold feet always kept him awake; he needed the socks. He didn't dare turn on his light. His mother, who he swore never slept, would be on him like a hawk scolding him back to bed. Pete threw back his covers and dashed through the darkness to the dresser. He slid open the drawer, randomly grabbed two orphans, closed the drawer and dashed back to the inviting warmth of his bed. Mission accomplished, Spiderman!

Pete slipped on the socks and enjoyed the warmth that was slowly returning to his feet. He couldn't see them in the darkness, of course, but the sock on his right foot that grabbed his attention. He spent a few seconds analyzing the feeling. He felt as if it his foot was swathed in luxury, the most comfortable, heavenly feeling he had ever experienced in his young life.

Moments later, as he drifted off to sleep, he thought how wonderful it would be to have an entire suit of clothes made out of the sock's exquisite material...

...Sharon Buckley was looking at him, not just looking his direction while waiting for him to embarrass himself once again in math class, she was looking at him. Her cool blue eyes bored into his. The inviting mounds on her chest, which had started to appear during the fifth grade, rose and fell with every breath. In his dream, he felt light-headed, giddy. Sharon smiled radiantly, and from across the aisle and two seats back she did the most extraordinary thing; right there in math class, oblivious to everyone but him, she began slowly to unbutton her pink satin blouse...

Pete awoke, bathed in sweat, his head spinning. He looked over his still silent alarm clock. 6:40 AM, it said. He pulled back the covers and sat at the side of the bed trying to clear his thoughts. He didn't think he was sick, but when he stood his underpants seemed to stick to his body, pulling painfully against his skin. Had he wet himself in the middle of the night? No, that wasn't it. It was something else. A wisp of his dream tugged at him, and he remembered....

Feeling flush, Pete hurried to his bathroom and removed his clothes, hoping a hot shower would wash away the dream. He stood in front of the tub, naked except for his feet, and looked down. On his left foot was a brown dress sock, on his right....

Pete stared in amazement, his nakedness, his erotic dream, and the chill of the morning forgotten. On his right foot was the sock, the one from the storm drain. How? His mother must have found it, he supposed, tucked away in the bowels of his sweatshirt pocket. She had washed it and tucked it away with the other lonely souls. The sock was definitely black. He wiggled his toes and the small circles embedded on its silky surface rolled up and down like small white sea birds riding on crest of the ocean.

Pete turned on the shower and while he waited for the water to warm, sat on the toilet seat and removed his socks, first the brown one and then reluctantly, oh so very reluctantly, the other. When his right foot emerged into the cool morning air it started to cramp. Pete dropped the sock to the tile floor and gingerly rubbed his throbbing arch.

"Pete, are you all right?" his mother asked through the bathroom door. It wasn't like her son to get out of bed without being prodded.

Pete stared at the door, momentarily at a loss for words. He could hear the concern in her voice, but he felt strangely detached. "I'm fine, mom," he said at last. "I just woke up a little early, that's all."

His mother hesitated. Did she dare believe such a simple explanation? Perhaps he's starting to grow up, she told herself with a shrug. "Well, come down to breakfast when you're finished, honey," she said.

Pete continued to stare. "All right, mom," he said. He gave the sock one last glance and jumped into the shower. The warm water refreshed him, and washed away the night. Later, after he had finished dressing, he returned to the bathroom to toss his soiled clothes into the hamper where his mother would surely have them cleaned and neatly folded by the time he returned from school.

As he picked up the bundle, he felt his hand brush against the unmistakable fabric of the sock. He dropped the clothes and held the sock eye level. In the clear morning light he discovered that the sock's design were not circles at all. They were triangles. Perfect angles of remarkable beauty. Perfect, he thought. How so very perfect.

Throw the sock away, a thought warned him. After all, clean or not, you found the nasty thing in the gutter! Who knew who had worn it or where it had been? But instead of hiding it in the wastebasket along with his discarded math homework, Pete slid it hungrily on his right foot. He closed his eyes and sighed. "It is as it should be," he heard himself whisper.

Pete went to his dresser and quickly selected a matched pair of white socks and slipped them on his feet, protectively covering his beloved sock. Once in place he put on his Nikes and headed downstairs for breakfast with the growing feeling that this would be a special day.

Yes, a very special day.
****
"Peter Thompson?" Pete's math teacher, Mr. Biggs, called out. He was a funny looking man with a flat top haircut and a bow tie, a man stuck in some sort of time warp.

"Peter Thompson?" he asked again.

Pete was staring out the window, chin cupped in his hand, lost in his own world. When the rest of the class started to giggle, he looked around to see what the joke was. To his dismay, the joke was him.

"Are you with us today, Mr. Thompson, or have you gone off to some desert island?" Mr. Biggs asked.

"Yeah, more like Gilligan's Island!" Greg Miller cracked from the back of the room. "How's the professor, Pete?"

The entire class broke up laughing. Pete turned beet red. "I'm here, Mr. Biggs," he said quietly.

Mr. Biggs stared at him a moment longer and shook his head. "Andy Vincente?" he called out, continuing down the roster.

In spite of his morning revelation, it had all the makings of another depressing day at Westfield Middle School. But Pete was to soon discover that this day would be far from normal. It began with a surprise math quiz.

When Mr. Biggs announced the test, Pete's his heart sank. It wasn't as if he was dumb. If given enough paper and enough time, he could figure out his math problems, but fractions--they were just beyond him. He looked around the room nervously, sure that everyone could see his panic. His eyes eventually fell on the lovely but aloof Sharon Buckley, the object of his adolescent desire and the reinforcement that, so far, his life had been a dismal failure.

But to his surprise, instead of her normal reaction to him, a general ignoring of his existence altogether, Sharon was looking back at him. Her bright blue eyes were wide, her mouth pursed as if she were about to speak to him from across the rows that separated their desks. The look on her face unsettled him, but before Pete could analyze it, Mr. Biggs announced that the test was about to begin.

Pete reluctantly tore his eyes away from Sharon and stared blankly at the quiz sheet, his worst fears confirmed. Fractions. "Great!" he muttered under his breath. "Another "F" for my father to yell at me about!"

"Ten minutes, people," Biggs announced. "Complete as many was you can, and remember neatness counts!"

Pete gawked at the series of utterly mysterious problems. For a while he could do nothing except twirl his pencil between his nervous fingers, feeling flustered and confused. But as he stared helplessly at the page something odd occurred: patterns began to emerge within the numbers. Pete's eyes widened, his mouth fell open in disbelief. Why hadn't he seen them before? If you took this number and this number and added them together....

Pete's pencil slipped through his fingers, clanging noisily on the desk. For the first time the fractions seemed understandable. No, that wasn't right. They were more than understandable; they were ridiculously simple! He picked up the pencil and even though he only had a little more than a minute left, he dashed through the test with ease.

The rest of the hour was equally unbelievable. Why was he wasting his time and intellect on this crap? And Mr. Biggs? He was nothing but an ignorant pig! Pete could tell at a glance that the man knew nothing about real mathematics, or about the things that held the fabric of the universe together. By the time the bell rang, Pete Thompson was seething. No wonder he hadn't been doing well in school!

He stood from his desk and stopped. Sharon Buckley was standing in front of him. She was hugging her schoolbooks and looking at him apprehensively.

"Hello, Peter," she said timidly. It was the first time Pete ever remembered her speaking to him.

"Hello, Sharon," he replied, feeling eerily confident. The stammer he assumed would come from his mouth hadn't materialized.

"Peter, I'm having a party at my house on Friday. I was wondering if you would come?"

Party? You're inviting me to a party? That was what he wanted to ask her, but instead, he found himself saying something very different. "I'm busy Friday, Sharon. Too bad you didn't invite me earlier."

Pete's mind screamed at him. "What are you saying, you idiot!"

“Oh I'm sorry, Peter, please forgive me!" Sharon said with panic in her voice. "I meant to invite you earlier, I truly did!"

Pete was shocked to see tears forming in her eyes. She was extremely distressed, almost on the verge of hysteria.

"You must come!" she implored. Her voice dropped to a whisper. "Must!" she repeated.

He looked at her through liberated eyes. How pathetic she was! Had he really been in love with this? Had she no pride? "I'll think about it, Sharon," he said with disdain. "I'll let you know."

"Oh thank you, Peter!" she said with relief "Thank you!"

That's right! Grovel, bitch, he said to himself. He gave her a contemptuous sneer and strolled confidently to his next class. As he passed his classmates congregated in the hallway, conversations stopped mid-sentence, lockers stood half opened, books dropped to the floor. They all stopped to watch him pass. The boys looked at him with sudden awe, and the girls--they had thoughts most had never even imagined before, visions of acts they only barely understood. There was something about Peter Thompson, something they could only whisper.

Pete's second period class was History. There, he led the class in a lively discussion, displaying an amazing knowledge of cultures that astounded his teacher, Mrs. Grasse. It was so wonderful to have a prodigy in her class! At the end of the hour she thanked Peter profusely and hoped he might be free later to discuss tomorrow's lesson.

Next, came gym. It was the first day of intramural basketball. Pete had regretted this day because he knew, as usual, he would be chosen last. The humiliation was almost too much to bear. But shortly after they lined up to play, Mr. Mangin suggested that Pete be named team captain, replacing a shocked Greg Miller. To Greg's dismay the other boys all agreed it was a good idea. The selection of Pete Thompson seemed a perfectly, logical choice, a choice no one would regret. Pete's performance, of course, was brilliant, playing the game with a perfect combination of ability, ferocity and finesse. Mr. Mangin went home that night positive that Pete Thompson would some day make it to the NBA.

After the game, Pete sat in front of his locker, enjoying the afterglow of his play. He spent a few minutes fielding the congratulations of the other boys, who were thrilled to be in the presence of a player of his ability. Eventually, they wandered off to the showers leaving Pete to his thoughts.

He removed his gym shoes and socks, revealing his beloved sock underneath. It was time to take it off, shower and get ready for the rest of this wonderful day. He examined the fabric closely. What he thought were triangles were not triangles at all. It was some sort of design, circles with lines through them. As he watched the design started to slowly move counterclockwise around the sock. Pete was mesmerized. The design gained speed, whirling against the sock's solid black background.

"How beautiful," he whispered.

It stopped as suddenly as it had begun. Pete stared for a moment longer, feeling let down, then reached to remove the sock.

"Don't!" a voice whispered in his mind. It was a harsh voice, evil. A voice that hinted of clogged sewers and a filthy death.

It would be ridiculous to shower with one sock on, Pete told himself, but when his trembling fingers touched the sock, pain streaked up his leg like a lightening bolt ending at his groin. Pete doubled over in agony, his watering eyes darting to the sock. He had only pulled it down an inch, but he didn't like what he saw. His ankle was raw as if he had been skinned. Veins stood out like the highways on a color road map.

"Pull me up, God damn it!" the voice demanded.

He opened his mouth but the scream he hoped would break the spell of pain refused to come. He could hear the other boys in the shower, talking loudly, laughing, ignorant of his anguish. Their voices sounded as if they were miles and miles away.

"Pull me up, fool! Now!"

With the last of his strength, Pete pulled up the sock. His leg felt as if it were on fire, but once the sock was in place, the pain vanished. Pete fell back to the bench, panting with relief when another sensation came, traveling up his ankle like the sun escaping from a storm cloud. Joy, euphoria, overtook him. It came in waves, erasing the memory of the pain, leaving him on the brink of ecstasy.

"I am meant to be!" he muttered to himself. "It was meant to be!"

"Hey, dickweed," a voice said.

Pete opened his eyes and saw Greg Miller staring at him. Greg was everything Pete Thompson was not. He had golden blond hair and striking blue eyes. His body was lean and muscled. He stood a full head taller than Pete, and played with the eighth graders on the Westfield Middle School basketball team.

"What's wrong, dickweed? Still stuck on Gilligan's Island?"

"Leave me alone, Greg," Pete said slowly. "I'm warning you!"

Greg waved his arms and looked around. "Oh! Oh! Someone protect me! The wimp is warning me!" He stopped and turned a complete circle. "Gee whiz, there's no one here to protect you, dickweed. It's just you and me."

Pete knew he should be scared out of his mind, but he felt strangely detached. As the bully ranted, he was amazed to see his right foot begin to rise--amazed because he was certain his brain was not giving the command.

It was the sock.

One moment, Greg Miller was standing in front of him, his face red with anger, the next moment Pete saw his leg lash out at Greg's crotch and kicked him ferociously. Greg gasped as if the air had been sucked out of him. He hit the ground and began to roll on the floor, his face a twisted mask of pain.

Pete watched him silently while calmly putting on his clothes. "The next time you will die," he said without a hint of emotion.

Greg looked up at Pete and saw something that he would remember the rest of his life. The whites of Pete's eyes had disappeared, replaced by black so total it was like staring into the depths of hell. For a second moment Greg was certain he would die. His bladder let go. He began to babble for mercy. But instead of killing him, Pete slowly stood and walked away, leaving Greg alone on the cold locker room floor.

The realization that he would live made the pain in Greg Miller's groin seem unimportant. He began to weep, and when the rest of the boys came out of the shower that was where they found him, lying in a pool of his own urine, refusing to talk to anyone.

There were now two Pete Thompsons. One walked to his science class reveling in his newly found greatness, while the other suffered from the growing realization that he was skidding down a path of evil. For a while he hoped that he could have the best of both worlds; be a whiz at math, play basketball with skill and courage, win the heart of Sharon Buckley, but he suspected it wouldn't be that simple. The sock wanted more, needed more than the simple yearnings of a twelve-year-old boy, and would do anything to get it. Pete knew that he was slowly losing control. Something in the sock he had so innocently found in the storm drain was taking over. And if he didn't do something about it soon, the old Pete would be gone forever.

What to do? What to do? Ah, that was the awful question. A question that had a ridiculously simple but dangerous answer--remove the sock. Did he dare? He remembered the agony in the locker room. What would happen if he summoned the courage to go all the way? If he ripped off the sock, would he also rip the flesh from his bones? Would freedom from the sock mean a life spent without his right foot?

"Oh, but you don't want to remove the sock, Pete!" the sock whispered in his ear. "I will show you things. I will help you achieve things you could never imagine! You will have it all, Pete. You will be the best! The brightest! The leader! The God!"

"NO!" Pete screamed out. He looked around, embarrassed. He was in his classroom, certain he was about to be laughed at again. But his classmates were not laughing. They were staring at him, adoring smiles frozen on their faces.

"Yes, Pete? Did I do something wrong?" his teacher, Mr. Doan, asked nervously. Anxiety was etched on his face. Anxiety and something else. Fear. "I did it just as you instructed, I swear. Do you know what you have done? It's gold son! Real gold! Do you know how many men have dreamt of this throughout the ages? Now, just tell me the last part of the formula and we'll be rich! Rich!"

But Pete wasn't listening. For a moment the spell that entwined him lifted. His head was fuzzy with a million thoughts, evil voices chattering in his brain. He looked into the anxious eyes of his classmates. Their gaze was full of love and admiration, but when Pete looked closer he saw something else: blank, cold loyalty. The eyes of the Nazis as they did the bidding of their fuehrer. The crazed mind of a serial killer. He saw the spirit of death and destruction. He saw the real face behind the sock.

With the last of courage and humanity left in him, Pete leaped from his seat and bolted from the room, running in blind panic down the echoing hallway, bursting out the side door of Westfield Middle School and into the cloudy day. Behind him he could hear Mr. Doan shouting for the rest of the formula. "Rich!" he babbled. "We'll be rich!"

Pete, the real Pete, didn't care about riches or power. For even with his faults, he knew deep inside his life was good; that he was loved, that he had place in that frightening adventure that is the future. But on this day felt as if his soul was being torn from his being. Death and madness was stalking him.

It was starting to rain lightly, but he didn't care. He ran and ran through the wet streets of the town hoping to find redemption.

"Go Back! Your destiny awaits you!" the sock echoed in his ears. Renewed agony flared up his leg.

Pete struggled to ignore the voice and the pain, but it was becoming harder and harder. If greatness was his destiny, why couldn't he just accept it? It would be so easy to give in for he had been chosen. Chosen by the sock. Given a chance never before offered to miserable mankind. He would become like God himself.

"Stop it Pete!" he screamed to himself. "Don't you listen! Don't you listen!"

He found himself near the city park and a desperate idea came to him. He knew what he had to do, if God granted him the courage to do it. The old Pete was dying and in a very short time would be gone forever. If he were to save himself, it had to be now. Lightening flashed as if to punctuate the point, and the rain turned into a howling downpour.

In the rear of the park, surrounded by a ten-foot high chain-link fence, was the entrance to Westfield's central storm sewer. It was here that the town's storm water was gathered before it was sent south of town to empty into the Green River. The huge drain was ten feet in diameter, and a raging current was being sucked into its dark depths.

Pete reached the fence and started to climb. Hail the size of marbles pelted his face. Half way up his feet betrayed him, and he slipped on the slick metal links. He fell to the ground with a grunt, but he was determined not to be defeated. He shot to his feet and with a single purpose climbed again, trying to blot all other thoughts from his mind. He had to be strong. He had to be brave and bold--like his beloved Spiderman.

But the sock refused to let him. As he climbed the fence he had a vision of a mathematical formula that could turn water into gasoline. As his leg went over the top he realized that he knew how to make nuclear waste inert. On the downward climb his mind designed an engine that could carry man to the stars and beyond.

"Stay strong, Pete! Don't listen! It lies! It lies!"

He fell to the ground panting--not out of physical exhaustion, but of mental overload--landing on the cement walkway that bordered the drain. Doubts ripped at him. Should he give in? He could use his knowledge to help mankind, he was certain!

"Power! You will have power!" the sock crowed.

"No, Pete! You will have power, but it will be the power to enslave not help!"

Pete grabbed his head and screamed. "God damn it! Leave me alone!"

To his surprise the voices stilled, and for the first time since his midnight raid to the sock drawer, his mind was clear. He looked down at his Nikes. As his shaking hand reached for the shoestring, his right foot began to throb in anticipation. Visions of Sharon Buckley once again came into his head. She was doing things, such delicious things.... Oh, God!

"No!" he screamed, shaking his head clear once again.

He fumbled with the shoelace but managed to untie it. The shoe seemed to be shrinking on his foot, getting tighter and tighter as it protected its silken master from harm. Pete thought he would pass out from the pain. With great effort he moved his left foot behind his right and began to pry off the shoe at the heal. The shoe grew tighter still. Pete pushed at the shoe, his face turning crimson with the strain. Waves of agony rolled up his leg, but he refused to let go. One way or another it had to end here. At last the shoe relented, flying off his foot, skittering across the walkway and falling over the embankment and into the torrent below.

Pete looked down at the sock, his vision blurred by pain and the raindrops splattering on his face. The designs embroidered on its surface were spinning, spinning. He began to feel woozy as the sock wove its hypnotic spell. He grabbed drunkenly at the sock. When he touched it a bolt of electricity jumped up his arm leaving it numb.

Pete pulled back, tears of pain mixing with his rain-soaked cheeks. His mind began to drift again and he knew he would soon be gone forever. He fell back to the ground and gathered the last of his remaining strength. The sock teased him; alternating pulses of blinding agony and pure ecstasy, flying over his body in waves, back and forth until he thought he would go mad.

"Sharon!" he muttered.

The part of Peter Thompson, the one that knew his fate in life was to be bad at math and basketball, took charge one last time. Like a person jolted back from death, Pete shot up and with both hands grabbed at the sock, and with his last remaining ounce of strength, Pete tore off the sock and hurled it into the boiling water.

Pete collapsed on the walkway, and as he lost consciousness, his last thought was that his foot was on fire, blazing like a road flare, or the eternal furnace of hell....

The sock tumbled into the water like a power line blasted by lightening. Sparks flew and smoke rose. The air filled with the pungent smell of ozone. But after a few seconds it was over. The sock now heavy with moisture, sank below the surface and drifted toward the drain where it entered the watery cave and disappeared.


Pete's eyes fluttered open. It had stopped raining. The sky was dark with the coming evening. For a few seconds he didn't know where he was. He turned his head one way, then the other. He was soaking wet and there was something else-- "Your foot is gone," his mind told him. It must be true. He had no feeling done there, only cold and numbness, but he was afraid to look. When he finally summoned his courage, he saw his bare foot, pale and cold, but in one piece.

Pete moaned with relief and peered over the side of the churning drainage ditch. The sock was gone. Where? Was it gone forever? Or would it do its evil to someone else, somewhere else?

Pete managed to stand and looked down at his bare foot. How would he ever explain to his mother how he had lost one shoe? With a shrug he hobbled to the fence and began to climb. The wire mesh hurt, but next to the torture inflected by the sock, it was nothing. He slowly limped home, realizing with a smile that he could no longer remember how to add and subtract fractions much less the grand inventions that could save or enslave mankind. He wondered, would Sharon Buckley still want him at her party?

And with a sigh, he reminded himself that it really didn't matter.

She Stares

Joe Flick's right index finger searched down the page of the tattered history book until it finally found the paragraph he was searching for. "Here it is," he announced excitedly.

"'The legend of the Lady in White is an often told story in the history of Washington Township,'" he quoted. "'It is said that she died in a tragic automobile accident on Niles Canyon Road and every year on February 17, the anniversary of her death, she desperately tries to find a ride back to the safety of town.'"

Joe looked up and smiled. "You were right about the date, Matt!"

"All right!" Ernie Sanchez exclaimed, impressed by their timing.

"I'll tell you what we've got to do," Matthew Trant said, intently studying the book over Joe's shoulder. "We've got to keep our eyes on her."

"What you mean 'keep our eyes on her',?" Ernie asked.

"Sssh!" the librarian called to them. She had been watching the three young men ever since they entered the nearly deserted library. Looking for a history book, were they? On a Saturday afternoon? Like hell, they were! They were taggers more than likely, just waiting for her to turn her head so they could scribble all over her freshly-painted walls!

Matthew ignored the librarian's glare but did lower his voice. "It says here that the Lady in White always gets into the back seat of the car, but somewhere between the place the driver picks her up and the end of the canyon, she always disappears."

"So?" Ernie asked blankly.

"No one ever sees her disappear. It's the same story, over and over. It happens when you take your eyes off of her. So we don't, you see? Once we get her in the car, we watch her like a hawk, and we capture her!"

Joe smirked.

"What's so funny?" Matthew asked. "It's what we want, isn't it? Haven't we talked about this since we were kids?"

"You've been talking about it since we were kids," Joe pointed out. "Anyway, it sure sounds weird," Joe replied. "I mean, like sure, seeing a real ghost is one thing, and if we have the balls to do it, actually getting her into the car is another. But capturing her? You really think we're going to capture her? And if we do, what do you plan on doing with her?"

"Well, trying to get laid by a ghost is definitely out of the question," Ernie observed with a shiver.

"Come on, dummies!" Matthew insisted. "Think about it! Everyone who's picked her up has lost her. I'm not going to spend the rest of my life thinking about the ghost that got away."

"This sounds more like a fishing trip than a ghost hunt," Joe said dryly.

"Call it what you want, but if we do get lucky and find the Lady in White, I want to keep her as long as possible."

Matthew checked his watch. "It's about an hour before sunset. Let's get something to eat and make plans."

The Lady in White, also known as the White Lady or The White Witch is an irresistible legend but also an odd one. The three young men didn't realize it, but the tale of a young woman picked up on a rural road on the anniversary of her death, only to disappear in the shocked driver's back seat, was a story told in just about every state in the Union. It was the McDonalds of ghost stories, franchised to dozens of towns, told around countless campfires throughout the land. Yet, the Fremont, California, version of the story was apparently the real thing, because when Matthew Trant first heard the story, it was from someone who had actually seen her.

Matthew was just eight at the time, but he remembered it like it was yesterday. He was watching T.V. when his Uncle Bill came to his house on Mento Drive one rainy February night. He was white as a sheet, babbling to Matthew's father about a woman he and his friend Jimmy Seishas had picked up out on Niles Canyon Road.

"She was just standing out there dressed up in this frilly white dress like she was going to a party. It was colder than witch's tit out there, but she had no coat, no nothing. We pulled over to help. She said she needed to get home right away. She got in the back of Jimmy's Ford without so much as a shiver. We talked a bit, though she didn't seem too anxious to tell us how she got out there alone.

"I felt kinda embarrassed staring at her. I figured she'd refused some guy and he had dumped her. So I turned my attention to the road for a minute. When I looked
back... ."

"What?" Matthew's father asked, staring at his younger brother with disbelief.

"She was gone," Bill replied hoarsely.

"She got out of the car?"

"Hell, no! Jimmy's got a lead foot, you know that. No way she got out! She was just--gone... ."

Uncle Bill never talked about that night again, even years later when Matthew was in his teens. When Matthew would ask, he would just shake his head and refuse to acknowledge that the night had even happened.

But then last August Uncle Bill got transferred to Texas, and Matthew spent his uncle's last weekend in the Bay Area helping him load the U-Haul for the long trip back. Late Sunday afternoon, when everyone was tired out from the packing, Bill offered his underage nephew a beer and volunteered one last piece of information about the Lady in White.

He was standing at the rear doorway of the truck, leaning against its frame, looking thoughtfully at the sunset when he said it. "She stares," he said.

"Who stares, Uncle Bill?" Matthew asked from his resting place at the bottom of the ramp.

"The Lady in White. You remember, don't you? It's the one thing I can't forget from that night, Matty. The real reason I took my eyes off of her and turned forward was because she was staring at me, and I swear... ." He stopped for a second his lips quivering as if they were resisting releasing the words.

"Swear what, Uncle Bill?" Matthew asked.

"Her eyes. They were like glass marbles glowing in the night, getting bigger, looking into mine like she knew everything I'd ever done."

"Then she disappeared?"

"Yeah, she disappeared. So I guess I'll never know what she saw."

Matthew swore that the next time February rolled around, he'd go out and try to discover what the Lady in White was staring at, but as fate would have it, he almost missed the date.

It was his senior year at Mission High, and there were lots of things to do, lots of plans to be made. The prom was only two months away, and there was college to think about. Then there was his girlfriend, Haley, who took up a lot of his time and interest. It wasn't until one dull, winter Saturday when she was shopping for a prom dress, and he decided to spend the day with his friends that he remembered Uncle Bill's story about the Lady in White.

"Can we borrow your mother's Taurus?" Matthew asked Joe. They were sitting in the Burger King on Mowry Avenue tossing around ideas for the night ahead.

"I guess so, but why do you want to drive around in that? It's an old lady's car."

"It's a Ford. My Uncle Bill was in a Ford that night, an old white Galaxy 500. I saw it from the living room window."

"You're saying that the Lady in White prefers Fords?" Ernie asked incredulously.

"I don't know what she prefers," Matthew replied, ignoring the taunt. "I just want everything to be as close to the way it was when Uncle Bill found her."

"Sure, no problem," Joe said with a shrug. "Mom thinks my Mustang's a death-trap anyway."

"Good," Matthew nodded, munching on a french fry.

"One thing, though," Joe added. "I've got to drive."

"That's okay with me," Matthew replied. "I'm sitting in the back with her!"


Sunset comes early in February, especially when the Bay Area sky is overcast and the smell of rain is thick in the air. After topping off the Taurus, the three boys pulled out of the Chevron station and headed purposely up Mission Boulevard toward the mouth of the canyon.

Niles Canyon Road is a narrow gorge roughly six miles long that follows the path of Alameda Creek as it meanders its way into the San Francisco Bay. Train tracks also follow the path, crossing the road in several places over thick, graffiti-scared cement bridges.

The road is known primarily as alternate route commuters can take to enter the city of Fremont from the east. Few realize that the canyon has enjoyed a colorful past. In the mid-1800's it was infested with bandits who fed on travelers brave enough to navigate the chasm. Early in the twentieth century, the Essanay Film Manufacturing Company built a movie studio in the little town of Niles at the base of the road and used the canyon's rolling hills and rocky precipices to film hundreds of early westerns.

Today the creek is still a place for fishing, swimming and drinking beer, but sadly its place in history is mostly forgotten. It is, for the most part, just another overused country road, except for one thing: dark, windy Niles Canyon Road can be as dangerous as a snake, ready to strike anyone who takes it for granted. Over the years it has claimed more than its share of lives, including one of an unknown young woman who had the misfortune to become known as the Lady in White... .

"So where are we supposed to find her?" Joe Flick asked as they headed up Niles Canyon Road. The evening fog had already begun to settle over the hills, giving the verdant canyon a dark, jungle-like look.

"Uncle Bill never said, but if she's out here, we'll find her," Matthew replied with certainty. "I'm sure of it."

It was soon apparent that their night of searching would not be a smooth one. In spite of the light Saturday evening traffic, an accident midway in the canyon blocked the road for nearly an hour. Eventually, an ambulance passed, moving slowly west toward town.

"Its siren isn't on," Ernie said gravely. "I wonder what that means?"

"Maybe no one was hurt," Joe suggested.

"Maybe someone died," Matthew said ominously.

"Jesus, Matt, do you have to say that crap?" Ernie asked irritably.

"Traffic's moving," Joe said, pointing at the cars ahead of them.

Soon the Taurus slowly slipped around the turn. There, in a turnout near the bridge, were the crushed remains of a car hanging from the rear of a tow truck. A CHP officer waved them past with a flashlight. The orange light from a dozen road flares reflected off his yellow rain slicker, giving him an almost angelic glow.

"It's a Mustang, Joe," Ernie noted as they passed. "Same model as yours."

"I wonder what happened?" Matthew asked from the back seat.

"He must have run right into the cliff," Joe said, pointing out a smear of blue paint on the rocky wall.

The wreckage gave them pause, and silence filled the car as each young man considered the ramifications of their adventure. Was the Mustang a warning or just a coincidence? Was the Lady in White sending them a message?

"Just keep driving," Matthew instructed from the back seat, cutting off their morbid thoughts.

The next two hours passed slowly. The boys continued their course from the mouth of the canyon to the little town of Sunol just beyond its eastern edge, then back. As the night grew deeper so did the fog, making the pavement slick and dangerous, but Joe drove the Taurus carefully. Fewer and fewer cars passed them now, and the road was soon enveloped in a quiet more in keeping with its country past.

During each pass up the narrow road, they were certain they saw things watching them from just beyond the range of their headlights. But when their worried eyes looked closer, the images disappeared, becoming a malformed rock, tree trunk or sometimes the eyes of one of the nocturnal animals waiting for that magical time during the dead of night when the road once again becomes their own.

At 9:50 P.M. they stopped at Big Daddy's coffee shop at the west end of the canyon for a break. Ernie Sanchez was nervous. He had gone along with their goofy plans because he was certain it was all just a bunch of bullshit. There wasn't any ghost out on that road waiting for them. It was just something to do. He looked at his two friends anxiously, hoping that one of the other two would call off this stupid escapade and suggest a movie or a game of pool, but his reprieve never came. Matthew was resolute, and Joe held onto his look of quiet determination.

They drank their coffee in silence. The joking around that had prevailed throughout the day was gone. A part of them knew that the time was near, and within minutes they were back in their car heading eastward once again. Searching. Searching for her. And less than five minutes after they made their turn-around in Sunol, they found her.

What does a ghost look like? If one were to believe the stories, they are nothing more than a wisp of smoke, there for a moment, then gone. But that was not what the three young men found standing alone in a narrow turnout. She looked very real.

She was young, barely out of her teens, and wore a look of worry on her face. Her long auburn hair hung in ringlets over her shoulder. Her dress was white and lacy with short sleeves, broken at the waist by a red sash. She wore black patent leather shoes that glistened in the Ford's headlights. In spite of the cold, she wore neither coat nor sweater.

"You think that's her?" Joe asked uncertainly, the crisp realness of her presence throwing him off guard.

"I suppose we're about to find out," Matthew replied, rolling down the back right window. "Pull up beside her, Joe."

Joe edged the Taurus to the shoulder of the road parallel to the young woman.

"Do you need some help, miss?" Matthew asked, leaning his head out the window.

The young woman looked at him as if noticing the car for the first time. Her brow furrowed with concern. "He, he left me here," she stuttered.

"Who left you?" Matthew asked.

"My beau," she replied. "We had an quarrel, and he left me here to fend for myself."

"Would you like a ride back to town?" Matthew asked.

She looked at him uncertainly, as if debating whether it was safer to get in the car or take her chances outside in the cold.

Matthew studied her closely. She certainly wasn't beautiful, but she definitely wasn't ugly either. She filled out the old-fashion dress nicely. Much to his disappointment, she didn't look like a ghost at all. Could finding this young woman out here be just an amazing coincidence?

"I suppose it will be all right," she finally said.

Matthew stepped out of the car and held the door open for her to get in.

"This is a most unusual motor car," she said, as she entered the car. "What is it?"

"It's a Ford," Matthew replied, sliding in beside her.

"A Ford?" she asked dubiously.

"Hi!" Joe said nervously from the front seat. Ernie sat bolt upright facing forward, too scared to even turn and look.

"These are my friends Joe Flick and Ernie Sanchez," Matthew said. "I'm Matt Trant. What's your name?"

"My name?" she asked as if trying to remember. "Why it's Clara, Clara Nichols."

"So where can we take you, Clara?" Matthew asked, waving for Joe to get under way.

"I've been staying in a rooming house in Niles, but I'm from a town across the San Francisco Bay, Redwood City. Have you heard of it?"

"Yes, of course," Matthew replied, watching her intently. "It's just across the bridge."

"Bridge?" she asked, her voice trailing off. Her face was filled with confusion, as if she had just remembered something most unpleasant. She looked out the window, then back at Matthew. Her brown eyes were glistening with tears. "Why do you look at me that way, sir?" she asked.

"What was that?" Matthew asked defensively.

"He used to look at me that way; like he owned me, like he could see right through me."

"Who was that, miss?" Matthew asked, trying to concentrate on her face.

"Chester," she replied. "Please turn away your gaze, sir."

"Why?"

There was a long pause before she spoke again. "So that I may return."

"Return where?"

"To where I wait. Wait so long in the cold and dark."

"What are you waiting for?" Matthew asked, shifting uncomfortably in his seat. It was suddenly colder in the car, in spite of the fact that he could hear the whirring of the car's heater. In the front seat his two friends were silent, as if they were holding their breath with anticipation.

She turned and looked at him fully. Tears were now cascading down her ashen cheeks. "Peace. I wait for peace to come and take me home. Please, sir. Let me go."

Matthew felt very bad. Guilty. He hadn't expected this, this overwhelming sense of despair. To catch a ghost seemed like the ultimate adventure, but now that he had her in his grip, caught in the web of his own blue eyes, he knew that it was a tragic adventure. Ghosts were things of sorrow, and this young woman deserved more than to be the object of a teenage prank.

But there was something else. Now that he had her, couldn't he help her in some way? Could he somehow give this young woman the peace she craved so desperately her soul was forced to wander this dark, desperate road throughout eternity?

"Maybe we can help you," he said, watching her.

"Help me?"

"Help you find the peace you are looking for."

"Oh," she said, her gaze returning to the window.

The car got colder still, and when the ghost of Clara Nichols turned its attention back to the teenage boy that had captured her tortured soul, she had changed.

She stared back.

Matthew shivered, and his uncle's words swept through his mind. "She stares!" he had warned. Signaling that the time had come for mortals to turn away, to let the apparition return to wherever it came from, and allow the paper-thin barrier between life and death to once again separate the now and the forever.

But Matthew did not turn away, and in spite of the bitter cold that now held the interior of the car in its icy grip, he was sweating, and he felt himself being pulled in by--her eyes! They had gotten bigger! Almost glowing now, like spinning saucers! Widening until they began to distort the sad face that had hailed them from the side of the road.

"Turn away, sir," she warned. Her voice had changed. It had gotten deeper, gravely, like an old woman who had drunk too much booze and smoked one too many cigarettes. "Or come with me... ."

There was a blinding flash of light and then blackness. Matthew blinked his eyes. The world had changed. The sound of the car's engine had deepened and the smell of cigarettes, liquor and mohair upholstery invaded his nostrils. The Taurus was gone. Joe and Ernie were gone. Matthew was still in the back seat of a Ford, but now it was the narrow seat of a very old car.

Light spilled through his back window. It was late afternoon, and in the front seat Clara Nichols was sitting alongside a man wearing a dark fedora who was maneuvering the automobile carefully down the narrow canyon road. Matthew could see the man's reflection in the small rearview mirror. He was a handsome man dressed in formal attire, sporting a thin, neatly trimmed mustache. He looked worried.

"What's wrong, Chester? You act like you've never seen a woman's breast before," Clara teased.

"For Christ's sakes, cover up, Clara," he said. "It's broad daylight!" But in spite of his words, Matthew could see his eyes fluttering toward the tempting form of Clara Nichols.

"That isn't what you said when you were having your way with me," she replied. "As I recall, you were bound and determined to get me buck naked."

As Matthew watched with utter fascination, Clara brought up her hand and teasingly pulled apart the top of her pretty white party dress, revealing a little more of her smooth white skin. "Let's go back to Sunol, Chester. Let's take a room in that seedy hotel and make love for the rest of the evening. Maybe we can do the things in those French postcards."

"Stop talking like a harlot, Clara!" Chester bristled. "This has gone too far, I'm afraid. I have a wife, you know, and a career to protect."

"Oh, so now you think of your little wife? Well, it wasn't so important an hour ago, was it, darling? Maybe your wife and I should have a little talk, Chester. What would you think about that?"

With a quick yank of the steering wheel, Chester pulled the Ford into a turnout, stopping it against the rocky side of a hill.

"If you want to be treated like the harlot you are, then that's the way it shall be, my dear."

Clara grinned wickedly, still not appreciating her lover's irritation. "That's my Chester," she said. "Will you take me here? In the car like before? Or shall we find a place out in Mother Nature?"

"I will teach you not to threaten me, Clara!" Chester seethed, ignoring her erotic invitation. "I want you to get out!"

"Out? Here?" Clara asked looking around, her face suddenly alive with anger. "But we're miles from town!"

"You heard me, woman!" Chester bellowed. "Out! Now! Maybe the walk will remind you of your place!" And with that he leaned over, threw open Clara's door and pushed her out, tossing her small handbag after her.

Clara landed indignantly on the dirt and gravel beside the car, her pretty white dress torn and soiled beyond repair. For a moment she was too stunned to speak. She looked at the stinging impressions of pebbles temporarily embedded in the flesh of her soft, delicate hands and slowly lifted herself from the ground with as much dignity as she could muster. She stood on wobbly legs and glared into the car.

"You son-of-a-bitch!" she screeched, shaking so hard she had to brace herself on the car's doorframe. "You think just because you get paid to dress up like a cowboy and parade around these hills, you can treat me like this? I will ruin you!" she said, shaking her fist. "I swear by God I will! I will not only tell your wife about our trysts, I will tell the studio! Then for good measure I will tell the newspapers, God help me! See what that does for your precious career!" And with that she slammed the door.

Chester was too stunned by her outburst to reply. He thought he knew this young woman who had given herself to him without the slightest pretense of resistance or morality. He thought he could control her and a walk back into town would remind her who was the boss. She dared to threaten him? The very thought of it was outrageous!

In a rage Chester threw the car into gear and left Clara standing beside the road in a cloud of dust. Matthew managed to turn and watch as the twitching form of Clara Nichols disappeared behind the curve. His heart was beating madly. Not only was he witnessing this awful scene, he was living it, too. It was as if he were inside these two mad beasts, feeling their passion, feeling their uncontrolled rage.

"How dare that slut speak to me that way!" Chester swore as he drove the car like a mad man, drifting from one lane to the other, muttering under his breath as he wildly aimed the car westward.

Matthew wished he could speak, but he knew Chester would not hear him. In this world Matthew was the outsider, the spirit, the one who was forced to relive a scene that should have been forever hidden in the past.

About a mile from where he left Clara, Chester abruptly stopped the Ford dead in the middle of the road. From the back seat Matthew could see the man's reflection in the mirror. His face was ashen and beads of perspiration were running freely from his face and onto his starched, white collar. He looked like a man about to have a coronary.

For a long moment neither Chester nor the Ford moved. Luckily, no other cars rounded the sharp curve just ahead. An eternity seemed to pass, but eventually Chester shoved the car into gear and made a slow, deliberate "U" turn.

"He's changed his mind!" Matthew hoped, as the Ford started back up the road. "He's going back to get her!"

But then Chester began to speak, and his words chilled Matthew's heart. They were said softly, in a low, guttural monotone that made the man sound as if he were in a devilish trance. "I'm going to kill her," Chester growled. "I'm going to kill her. I'm going to kill her... ."

Chester repeated the threat as if it were a mantra, leaving Matthew with no doubt as to what was about to take place. He now knew how Clara Nichols, aka The Lady in White, earned her union card as a ghost. Chester had murdered her.

The Ford headed eastward, rapidly picking up speed. In the back seat Matthew hung on as best he could, dearly wishing he were secured by a seat belt. All the while Chester kept talking, his manic chant now reduced to one deadly word: "Kill, kill, kill, kill... ."

The Ford finally found the turnout where Chester had left a highly pissed-off Clara Nichols. She was still standing there, looking as if she couldn't believe she had been left stranded a good three miles from town. For a split second the two former lovers made eye contact, and the spark of telepathic communication between them sent shivers through Matthew's body.

The turnout behind Clara had been blasted out of a solid mass of rock, but Chester aimed the car at her anyway, oblivious to the consequences. To Matthew's surprise Clara made no attempt to dodge the automobile. Instead, her hand emerged from her handbag revealing the white steel of a small handgun. With surprising calm she raised her arm and aimed the pistol at the Ford's windshield.

Clara didn't hesitate. She squeezed off two quick shots. The first hit the car on the passenger side, smashing through the glass. Matthew felt the bullet whiz past his head and out the rear of the car, wondering if in this ghost world a bullet could actually hit him. The possibility only added to his terror.

The second bullet hit Chester in the head.

From his angle, Matthew didn't see the bullet smash the actor's face, but he felt its effect. Blood exploded from the man's head, bathing Matthew's face and chest with warm liquid. Matthew tried to scream but couldn't. This ghost world denied him even that. Instead, he heard the deadening thump as the Ford hit Clara Nichols' body, gobbling up her and her party dress under its front tires like a hungry beast.

And directly ahead was the rocky face of Niles Canyon... .

In the old Ford the story of Clara Nichols was being told in real time, but back in the new Ford Taurus, where a terrified Joe Flick and Ernie Sanchez watched Matthew Trant's duel with a ghost, the whole thing lasted but seconds.

The ghost seemed to be swallowing their friend whole, sucking his soul out of him like some giant leech. Ernie almost pissed his pants in terror, but he couldn't just sit there while Matthew was taken away forever. The ghost of Clara Nichols was gone now, replaced by a howling beast with eyes the size of basketballs. The fine mist of Matthew's life source was drifting toward it like wind-driven fog, and the beast waited hungrily for its feast.

When Joe skidded the Taurus to a stop, Ernie grabbed at his seat belt. Without further thought, he lunged over the seat, his only plan to somehow break the connection between the ghost world and their own.

"Close your eyes, Matt!" Ernie pleaded as he leapt. "Close your God damn eyes!"

"She stares!" Matthew screamed, his face twisted in madness. "She stares!"

When Ernie finally landed between them, the ghost figure screamed with rage. No one had gone this far before. No one had had the courage, the audacity, and the stupidity to challenge its gaze. But the damage had been done. The delicate spiritual connection between this world and the next had been broken, gone until some other fool decided to cruise Niles Canyon Road on the February 17.

Matthew's hands shook openly as he clutched the cup of coffee at Big Daddy's and told them in halting sentences about his glimpse into a dead world filled with hate and murder. He owed his two friends an explanation, but the words were hard to come by. It was as if the ghost world defied translation.

When they were finished they stood in the parking lot, looking eastward toward the mouth of the canyon. It was there, with the cold night wind blowing around them and the evening stars poking though a clearing sky, that Matthew mustered a brief final statement.

"That was not The Lady in White, you know," he said, nodding toward the canyon. "Don't get me wrong. What I saw really happened. But that ghost was not Clara Nichols. It was something else that was using her tragedy for its purposes. Looking for an idiot like me, I suppose."

"I'll tell you this much. Whatever it is in that canyon, it's been there for a long time, hiding under its rocks, lying at the bottom of the creek. It's been many things. Scary things. It feeds on people. Feeds on their hate. It's caused quite a few car wrecks, I suppose. I think it's been there since the very beginning of... ."

"The beginning of what, Matt?" Joe asked.

Matthew looked at them and sighed. He didn't know the proper word. He suspected it was there, but it wasn't in English or any other language spoken by mortals. It was a word that was more feeling than sound.

"Fear," he said, looking at them strangely. And with that he moved to the Taurus' front door and got in.

Sometimes Time Pauses

She told him the answer to his problem was simple, if he would only look beyond his fears and face it.

"The door is unlocked," she explained, her gypsy eyes glistening in the candle-lit room. The air was thick with the aroma of incense. The walls were covered with smoke-stained tapestries with images of wild animals outlined in golden-brown threads. Their growling faces stared at him, daring him to act. He turned back to the gypsy. Her eyes were deep, dark pools. Who was she? Where did she come from?

"Find it, and turn the knob," she urged. "Take your chance!"

"Chance?" he asked, putting a hand to his throbbing temple. What could she be talking about?

"A second chance," she replied. "It is yours for the taking, if you want it. It is just beyond the door."

His eyes scanned the room once more. The only door he remembered was the one at the glass storefront he had stumbled through only minutes before. He had lived on this block for seven months and thought he knew it well, but he hadn't noticed this place before tonight. A fortuneteller? Where was the liquor store where he purchased his cheap wine and cigarettes?

His thoughts were muddled. Had he finally overdosed? Was he dead? He closed his eyes and tried to retrace his steps. He had entered the store, but instead of the familiar clerk, he had found this woman who had taken his hand in hers and guided him through a green velvet curtain into a back room. There she had taken the remaining money stuffed in his soiled pocket and told him things he hadn't had the guts to face in years: vile secrets from a life gone wrong.

Her words hurt, but he couldn't ignore them. She was right; he had thrown his life away. But that was the past, he told her lamely, and the past could not be taken back.

"You are wrong," she answered. "Sometimes, not too often, time pauses. It pauses at the door."

"What door?" he asked again his frustration mounting. "There is none."

"The door is within, it is without," she replied cryptically. "It is real, it is not real. It is a door of solid oak. It is a door made of air."

He stood to leave this craziness. He tore his eyes from hers, only to come to rest on her folded hands. Her long, deep-red fingernails curved in a downward arch. They seemed to glow in the darkened room, swirling in their cuticle barriers like pools of blood.

"Go!" she whispered, pointing a finger up at him.

He turned to escape through the heavy curtain hoping to find the liquor store that sold despair to those who had the money, and go out to the rain-streaked city street, back to the empty apartment, to resume the shambles of his life.

But when he parted the drape, he faced a door. It was dark and forbidding. Its surface was carved with half moons, stars and the incantations of ancient runes. Its knob was cut crystal.

"Open it!" her distant voice commanded. "Sometimes time pauses."

He put his fingers to his lips to stop a scream, and he forced his trembling hand to grip the sparkling knob. The door opened with a sigh.

"Step through!" she urged, her voice more distant till.

He turned to see her one last time, but she was gone. Everything was gone. "Why?" he asked the air around him, but there was no reply. He stepped through the door and fell....

He awoke as a child on a cold Minnesota morning, frost on his bedroom windowpane, and the smell of hot oatmeal drifting from the kitchen, his mother rattling the morning dishes.

"Wake up, Andrew Walter!" she called, using his first two names. She meant business. He had overslept again. He would have to play tag with the school bus, in an attempt to avoid the two-mile walk through the snow that would make him late once again.

He looked at his eleven-year-old face in his bathroom mirror and realized with a grin that shaving would not be necessary on this morning. There were no facial hair and no dead-end factory job awaiting him. There were no addictions to help him make it through another grueling day. On this snow-filled morning he looked at his fading freckles and realized he had been given something, something precious, something he had not even dared to wish before the gypsy had taken his hand and the cash from his pocket.

He was being given a second chance.

He sat on his bed and thought carefully. Could this be real? He held out his hand. A silver Boy Scout ring glistened from his finger. The scars were gone. The bailing machine had yet to etch its tattoo signature. The tracks of needles he used to kill the pain were still twenty years in the future. It was the perfect hand of a young man with a lifetime ahead of him.

A second chance. The words echoed in his brain.

"Andrew Walter Benson, you get in here right now!" his mother yelled. "You'll be late again!"

Yes, he would be late again. He would have to listen to Mrs. Sutcliff's admonitions in front of the snickering class. He would have to face the anger of his father when he returned late from the fields to face his errant son with yet another failing report card.

But there was one thing he knew on this cold morning. A second chance was being given; a second chance would be used. Used to the fullest.

He stood and grabbed at his folded school clothes lying neatly at the base of the bed. "Coming, mom!" he heard his preadolescent voice yell. "I'm going as fast as I can!"

The House

The dirt and gravel path meandered like an ancient riverbed from its humble beginning at the lip of the cracked asphalt highway. The acrid aroma of dried motor oil and tar wedded with the wispy fragrance of wild flowers and dandelions poking their colorful heads in the springtime fields. Lazy white cotton clouds floated listlessly in the azure sky as if the day offered no better place for them to go.

It was a beautiful day, a day made for oil paintings, for wicker picnic baskets on checkered red and white blankets spread under the solemn oaks that dotted the pencil-sharp horizon. It was a day better suited for young lovers then the drama that was about to unfold.

Cole Sinclair stood at the edge of the road, staring at the old wooden gate. The rusted metal hinges and fragile lock looked as if they would shatter with only the slightest provocation. It didn't look like the last checkpoint before hell, but that was exactly what it was.

He looked once more at his '71 Ford Pinto Runabout, sitting forlornly at the shoulder of the road. In spite of its reputation as a deathtrap, the Pinto had served Cole well. He had picked it up at an impound lot sale for five hundred bucks. Through the years it had puttered along, taking him from one sad resting place to another. He had slept in it many a night when the money was low and the fever of the road called him to move on again.

"You can still leave, you know," it seemed to be telling him. "Just jump back in and move on down the road. No one willed you back here. No magic spell commanded you to drive three hundred miles to this God-awful place. There's no need to prove anything to anyone, not me, not yourself."

But he knew deep in his heart this wasn't true. He knew that every action of his life for the last twenty years had led to this desperate moment: a last ditch attempt to erase the guilt that burned his soul with such brightness it felt as if he were going mad.

Cole took a deep breath and willed his foot to cross the barrier between the hardpan and the snake-like trail that led to the object of his obsession. He couldn't see the old house from here, of course. The low knot of a feeble hill kept it hidden from the highway, and unless you had grown up in this rolling farm country east of the San Francisco Bay, you wouldn't even know it was there. And that made the first step harder, and caused the tightness in his chest.

The gravel crunching under his feet was louder because of the quiet of the day. The only other sounds carried on the hint of a breeze flying over the tall green winter-fed grass was the private hiss of insects, and the rhythmic pounding of his heart. Cole reminded himself that there was nothing to fear. Not yet.

Though the late morning sun should have warmed him, Cole felt a chill. He thrust his hands deep into his pockets, and bowed his head against the jumble of emotions that rumbled in his mind. With each step up the road, he felt himself being propelled into the past, and that summer day twenty-seven years before....

The knoll loomed before him as the path cut through the green hills. Cole remembered them as they were on that fateful day, that day of betrayal; burnt brown in the scalding August sun, looking as if they might spontaneously burst into flames.

There was hope, Cole reflected. The house might have been torn down. Perhaps all he would find when his restless feet ended their journey was a crumbling foundation. But deep down Cole knew it wouldn't be so easy. The house was there, all right. Somehow it had stubbornly survived the years, mocking him for his cowardice, awaiting his return to its grasp.

The house revealed itself like a lover slowly removing her clothes. First he saw the widow's walk. Cole expected it to be missing or at least listing like a doomed schooner swept against the rocks, but it was as tall and straight as a soldier on parade. A proud weathervane rooster rotated lazily in the breeze. The rest of the house revealed itself not as a twisted, wretched memorial, but a vibrant restored celebration of wood, color and glass.

Cole gawked. The house was a crisp white with blue trim. New sturdy windows. The rotting front porch had been rebuilt, wide and elegant. A pretty sofa swing hung proudly from its beams on sparkling chrome chains. Even the air around the house celebrated its rebirth, smelling as fresh as newly laundered sheets drying in the warm springtime sun. His nightmare house was now someone's home.

Then Cole saw her. A straw sun-hat sat coyly on her head as she bent to tend a garden of rainbow-hued flowers. A trowel held with delicate confidence in her right hand was digging precise rows in the freshly turned soil.

She sensed him behind her and rose to look. Long, slender legs delightfully fell from denim shorts. Green, sparkling eyes appraised him. She bore a confident smile that reflected the rebirth of house itself. A smile that never considered that there was a cruel world, a raping world out there--a world that would love to hurt someone with green eyes and long legs.

"Hello," she said. "You startled me."

"Sorry," Cole managed to reply. He stopped a safe distance away. Safe for her; safe for him.

"No one comes that way, hardly," she said, pointing at the gravel trail. "At least not since I built the drive." She pointed to a fresh path of asphalt, as new and black as a virgin freeway. It has been cut around the knoll, moving in an arch to the front of the house.

"Didn't know it was there," Cole said shyly. "I used to come up here when I was a kid. That was the only way in. Sorry again for startling you," he quickly added.

"Well you did, but I suppose it's okay," she replied. "Anyone who manages to even find this forgotten place deserves the benefit of the doubt."

She extended her hand. "I'm Sherri," she said. "Sherri Palmer."

Cole stepped forward and took her hand. It was cool, self-assured, without a hint of nervousness. "Cole Sinclair," he returned.

There was an awkward silence. Cole supposed he should announce his intentions, but what could he say? The truth might invite disaster.

"I grew up in Bird's Landing, but I've been living away for a long time," he said carefully. "This old place has a special meaning for me. Thought that since I was in the neighborhood, I'd come by and--"

"See if the memories are still there," Sherri completed.

Cole smiled winningly. It was the same smile that melted the hearts of the few women he had allowed brief access to his heart. "Yeah, I guess so," he said.

"Come, Mr. Sinclair," she said, offering her version of the smile. "I've been working in the garden all morning. I think I deserve a break. Come sit on the porch and have some lemonade with me, and let's see if the memories show themselves."

She quickly disappeared into the house, the new screen door banging. It was a comforting sound, a sound that echoed of family and lazy summer afternoons. But Cole made no move toward the porch. He eyed the house once again, suspicions swirling about him. It was smaller than he remembered it. He recalled it as huge, looming, alien. It was known as the Rebero place, after the Portuguese family that built it a century before. The Reberos and their progeny were long gone. Only the house remained--with its memories, with its secrets.

The door opened, and Sherri Palmer emerged with a bright red tray she placed on a small table behind the porch railing. She poured a glass from a ceramic pitcher and handed it to Cole.

"Come. Sit," she said, pointing toward the sofa swing. "I don't bite."

Cole ignored the swing and sat warily on the top step feeling the house might reach out and grab him. He tried to focus on his glass. Refreshing ice tinkled within its green-yellow depths. He drank deeply, letting the sweet nectar wash down his throat.

"Good," he said between gulps.

"Guess so," Sherri replied with amusement. "Drink up, Mr. Sinclair. There's plenty more."

"Didn't realize I was so thirsty," he said, holding out his glass. Sherrie filled it again. It was halfway gone before he lowered it, feeling a bit embarrassed for his gluttony.

"So, I suspect there's a story behind your visit here," Sherri said. "Tell me now, what is it?"

Cole regarded the lovely woman before him. He had no intention of telling his tale to anyone. The embarrassment, the humiliation was just too much, but the lemonade had satisfied more than his thirst. His shame was suddenly broken, and he found himself speaking of that day for the first time in years. The words were hard at first barely sputtering the story of two boys, ten years old, out on a day's lark....

-2-

Reed Moreno and Cole Sinclair were more than best friends; they were like brothers. They lived across the street from each other, and from the time they learned to walk they were nearly inseparable. Together they shared a mutual love of the outdoors and spent their spare time exploring the wind-blown hills and rambling streams that surrounded their town.

It was in the summer of 1969 that they turned their curiosities to the Rebero place. Two miles from their home, it was a place of childhood legend; stories handed down from one generation to another. With each retelling the stories grew wilder. The old house was haunted, it was said. A place of murder, death, of unspeakable madness.

"It's just a bunch of bullshit, Cole," his father told him when he asked about it. Jim Sinclair was working on their old Fordson tractor, a dirty wrench in his hand, his overalls stained with grease. "The Rebero's just went bust, plain and simple. Get that nonsense out of your head."

But his boyish temptation to believe in the unknown could not be refused, so he and Reed made a pact to go there, to discover for themselves if the stories of the Rebero house were true.

On a bright day in August they finally wheeled their bikes down the pot-holed road that led to the isolated ranch. They told no one of their plans--fearful a parent would interfere, certain that the spell of adventure they had woven between them would be broken if anyone else tagged along. This was something they would do together, a tale to brag about for years to come.

The dirt and gravel path looked very much the same as it would years later when Cole Sinclair would take his solitary steps into the unknown. The two boys stopped at the gate and looked toward the burnt brown hills with anticipation.

Cole felt a twitch in his stomach, an intoxicating blend of fear and excitement. "It's up there," he said, pointing nervously past the road.

Reed didn't reply. He straddled his bike, the toes of his worn sneakers touching the ground. His jaw was tight, his face set. "Let's go," he said, pushing himself off.

Cole followed, pumping hard up the steady incline. Before long the top of the house became visible behind the hill that protected it from the Delta winds. The widow's walk was bent and crooked. The lonely spike of a missing weather vane pierced the sky like a lightening rod. When the boys finally rounded the last corner and the house came into view, they stopped.

The whitewash had long faded and the neglected porch sagged with age. Most of the windows were cracked or broken, victims of vandal's rocks and stray gusts of wind. A torn screen door banged forlornly in the breeze.

"Really think it's haunted?" Cole asked.

He looked to Reed to bolster his flagging nerve, but Reed ignored him. He was closely examining the dreary remainders of a family's failed dream.

"Probably not," Reed replied with a distracted smile. "But even if it's not, we won't tell that to the others. Let them come see for themselves"

Cole nodded. He knew that just the act of coming here, of entering this place of legends was an accomplishment. Whether there were ghosts or not really didn't matter. The older kids would respect their daring and the younger ones would look at them slack-jawed, awed by their bravery.

"We got to bring something back," Reed said. "Proof we've been here."

"What kind of proof?" Cole asked.

"Billy Cutshaw told me that old man Rebero hung himself in the attic."

Cole looked at a broken window near the roof. "Even if he did, the body's long gone."

"Billy told me that his cousin went up there once. He said the rope was still there. Had blood on it."

"That's a bunch of bull," Cole replied. Or at least he hoped it was a bunch of bull. The thought of a bloodstained rope was something he didn't even want to think about. Deep in the summer heat a chill spread through him, and his knees turned weak.

"Maybe it is, maybe it isn't" Reed replied, still staring at the house. "Let's go see."

Cole wanted to say no, to insist it really was a bunch of bull. The cops would have taken a rope as evidence any dummy would know that! Maybe they'd better return to town and play catch or maybe watch a little T.V. But his words of reason refused to come. They froze in his throat like ice cubes in a glittering aluminum tray.

Reed parked his bike, and Cole found himself following along stiffly, his logic forgotten. They stood before the four broken stairs that led to the dilapidated porch with anticipation.

"Here's the plan," Reed said, turning toward Cole. "We go in, take a quick look around and head for the attic."

"Do we gotta go up there?" Cole asked nervously. "There ain't no rope."

"We gotta make sure," Reed replied, his voice confident. "It's one thing to come up here to this haunted ol' place, but if we came back with the bloody rope, well, that would be something!"

Cole knew his friend was right. The rope would assure them a place in Bird's Landing history; hollowed names to be passed down as long as boys roamed its dusty streets with dreams of adventure. But at what price? They hadn't even entered the house, and Cole felt like he was going to piss in his pants.

Cole sighed. There was no way in hell he was going to turn yellow on Reed. He'd go all right, even though he'd probably have nightmares for weeks to come. "Go ahead," Cole he weakly. "I'll be right behind you."

The sagging front steps sang a ragged chorus as they climbed the stairs. The screen door was barely attached. It was just a matter of time before a gust of delta wind sent it sailing into the seedy front yard. Reed opened it carefully and pushed on the cracked wooden door behind it. It swung open in classic haunted house fashion: a loud, ominous creak.

"Ready?" Reed asked his friend with an excited grin. If he noticed Cole's panic, he chose to ignore it.

Cole nodded grimly.

The house had the musty smell of moldy wood and dried urine. Peeling wallpaper hung mournfully from warped, cobwebbed walls. The floor, once beautiful stained oak, was littered with debris. Reed produced a flashlight from his rear pocket, but in spite of its steady beam, the house remained veiled in a shadow. The two boys explored the downstairs. Cole walked on careful, quiet feet, his stomach a thick knot of tension. Every turn presented new danger, every dark corner held a potential spasm of horror.

Reed took no such precautions. He casually picked up and examined any piece of trash that grabbed his interest. One Old Crow bottle was still half-full. Reed unscrewed the cap and put it up to his nose.

"Yech!" he said, tossing the bottle to the floor. He looked at Cole sheepishly. "Nothing good down here. Let's see what's upstairs."

Cole gulped hard. "You really think we should?" he said breathlessly.

Reed smiled as if noticing his friend's fright for the first time. "It's just an old house, Cole. You don't really believe that stuff about ghosts, do ya?"

"Well, yes," Cole admitted.

Reed chuckled. "Even if there are ghosts, everyone knows they only come out at night."

Cole wasn't so sure about that, but it did make him feel better. He looked around, trying to imagine the house at night. The very thought made his legs buckle. "Okay, he said with resignation. "Let's do it and get out of here."

They climbed the stairs, Reed chattering all the way. "Gosh I hope that rope's up there," he said. "Wouldn't that be something? Can't you just see everyone's faces if we brought it back to town?"

Cole didn't reply. Words would only eat up his dwindling reserve of bravery.

The steps ended in a landing at the edge of a hall. At the end of the hall, highlighted by the light of a cracked window, the boys could see the final short stairway that led to the attic. Again Cole followed Reed. They passed an open doorway. The room beyond was empty except for wind-blown leaves and a dirty, worn mattress thrown on the littered floor. The walls were filled with drawings scribbled in thick black ink, hasty outlines of tigers, wolves and creatures unknown.

They reached the base of the final stairway. Looking up, they saw a closed door. One look and Cole knew. He'd had enough. "No, Reed," he said weakly. "Let's not go up there."

Reed ignored him, climbing fixedly up the steps. He reached the door and pushed it with his hand. It slid open in eerie silence.

Reed stared into the attic. "Shit," Cole heard him swear.

Cole swallowed his fear and clambered up to stand beside his friend. He peered over Reed's shoulder and sighed with relief. Pallid sunlight, filtered through broken rafter vents, revealed a musty, pyramid-shaped room. An empty room.

"Shit," Reed repeated.

"Gee, too bad, let's go," Cole said without a hint of embarrassment.

Once again Reed ignored him. He stepped into the attic and looked around. "Some asshole got here before us," he said bitterly. "Some stinking asshole stole our rope!"

"Forget it, Reed," Cole pleaded. "This place gives me the creeps. Let's get the heck out of here!"

"Just hang on a sec--" Reed began, waving Cole off. He tilted his head as if listening to some far off conversation. "Do you feel it?" he asked.

Cole frowned. "Feel what?"

"It's like--electricity."

"There ain't no electricity in this old house," Cole began, but he stopped. He could feel something. Cole tilted his head, too. Soon he felt a warm, tingling wave, passing through his body. It seemed to be coming from the center of the attic. And it was getting stronger.

Cole stuck out his trembling hand. It felt as if it was immersed in electrically charged water. The more he stretched his arm, the more the sensation increased, getting stronger until the tips of his fingers actually began to feel uncomfortably hot. Cole blinked and remembered his friend. He looked over at his friend, whose eyes were wild with fear. "Reed," he managed to mumble. "Oh, God, Reed....

-3-

"Mr. Sinclair?"

Cole looked up at Sherri Palmer feeling as if he had been sucked back through a time tunnel. Her face was a blur. That was when he realized his eyes were filled with tears.

"I tried to save him," Cole said, his voice choked with emotion. "The house--it wouldn't let me!"

"What happened?" Sherri asked.

Cole bowed his head. "They found me lying on the ground out here," he said, pointing out at the yard. "There was a nasty bruise on my head. Thank God Reed's older brother had put two and two together. When we didn't show up for dinner, he came looking for us."

"And Reed, what happened to him?"

"He was gone, just gone," Cole replied. "They never found him. Not a trace. It was like the house swallowed him up whole."

To Cole's surprise, Sherri laughed. "Surely not my house," she said.

Cole's dark eyes narrowed. "You don't believe me, do you? I suppose I can't blame you. No one else did. At first they thought Reed had just run off, and I was covering for him. But when he never came back, they started to suspect me. Thought I did something to him. I tried to explain, but they didn't believe me. They never believed me."

Sherri lowered her eyes to her lap as if ashamed of her laughter. "It's not that I don't believe you," she said. "Something did happen here, of course. It's just that this house has been such a comfort to me. My sanctuary. I have never felt or seen anything out of the ordinary in the three years I've lived here. Ever since my husband died....”

Cole regarded her carefully. So, he wasn't the only one haunted by sorrow, he reflected.

"Maybe what got Reed was satisfied somehow," he said. "Maybe it left, moved on to ruin someone else's life."

"Maybe," Sherri echoed.

There was a long silence between them. A soft breeze swirled chattering leaves around the driveway. A wind chime at the far end of the porch tinkled a random song. Cole could smell spring around him, almost hear the new life pushing through the soil of the fertile, rolling hills.

"So, Mr. Sinclair," Sherri said. "Would you like to see inside?"

The thought of entering the house, no matter how beautiful, how safe it seemed, gave Cole the sudden urge to urinate. The porch was far enough for him, thank you. "But you've gone this far," a voice within him urged. "End it, Cole. End it once and for all."

"I do need to use the rest room," he said reluctantly. "I don't know about the rest of the house, but I suppose I could go that far."

Sherri stood and held out her hand. "Rest room it is, Cole Sinclair. And after that, well, we'll see."

Cole stared at her outstretched hand. It looked warm, inviting. He took the hand and stood.

Sherri smiled reassuringly. She was about his age, he guessed, a beautiful woman with a shadow of sorrow hiding behind her green eyes. His fear melted, and he found himself following her into the place of nightmares.

She chattered all the way, pointing out the antiques she had culled from antique shops and yard sales, the rarity of the embossed wallpaper. She told him of the complexity of adapting modern plumbing to a house that once had an out-house planted in the backyard.

Cole listened politely, trying to ignore the beads of sweat that gathered on his furrowed brow. His bladder complained sharply, and he hoped he would reach the bathroom in time.

At last they were there. The bathroom, like the rest of the house, had been meticulously remodeled. The doorknob was made of cut crystal that sparkled in the diffused light of the opaque outside window. The floor was a mosaic of white, black and pink tile that highlighted pretty flowered wallpaper. An enormous, claw-legged bathtub sat majestically along the far wall. The toilet was an antique, with a gravity-fed tank and pull-chain mounted on the wall.

Sherri left him. Cole closed the door and locked it. He stood over the sparkling clean toilet bowl and unzipped his faded Levis. The flow began. He sighed with relief and allowed himself the luxury of thinking more closely about Sherri Palmer. She was cute, he reminded himself. Cute and a widow.

Cole chuckled. "What are you thinking about?" he chastised himself. "You come here to face your worst nightmare, and now you're thinking about getting laid?"

His thoughts were interrupted by a quiet knock on the door. "Mr. Sinclair?" Sherri asked softly.

"Y-yes," Cole said, embarrassed that she could hear him doing his business.

"Excuse me for interrupting, but there is something I must tell you."

"Ah, can you wait a sec? I'm almost done."

"No, it can't wait," she said sternly.

Cole was taken aback by the harshness of her voice. Had he done something wrong? "What is it?" he asked.

"I know the truth," she said.

"The truth?" Cole repeated, perplexed. "I don't understand. He suddenly wished he wasn't standing there with his dick in his hand.

"I know what happened here that day," Sherri replied. "I know what happened to your friend, Reed. I know the truth. I know it all....”

Cole stopped urinating, and at that moment he wondered if he would ever piss again. What could she know? he asked himself. A panic began to rise within him, a panic that had carefully guarded a secret. A vile, dirty, secret.

Cole gulped hard. It was a joke, of course, he told himself. A sick, stupid joke.

"It's not a joke," Sherri said from behind the closed door.

Cole felt a chill ripple through him. Sherri Palmer had read his mind.

"None of this is a joke, Mr. Cole Sinclair," she continued. "Not then, not now. The house gets hungry, and when it's hungry, it must be fed. Nothing can stop it from this imperative. Over the years it's enjoyed many meals. First it was the fools who built this house on tainted ground. Those who thought they could break this land like a wild mustang. They paid the price in madness and death.

"Over the years there have been others: vagabonds, migrant workers, society's castoffs searching for free shelter. Later there were teenagers from the city looking for a secluded place to drink and have sex. Then it was me.

"We've been waiting for you, Cole. All of us. Especially your good friend, Reed. Just one, big happy family waiting for you to come home. Waiting for you to own-up."

"No," Cole whispered.

As the word left his lips, the room darkened. The inviting spring light defused by the beaded bathroom window turned a sickly gray. Cole jarred himself from his misery and frantically zipped up his pants. His trembling hand fumbled for the wall switch, but he couldn't find it. The wall switch was gone, and with it, so was the pretty flowered wallpaper. The wall had stripped down to rotted wood slates that gaped at him like jagged teeth.

Somewhere above him a moaning wind swept through the house. The pain of a hundred migraines bolted like lightening through Cole Sinclair's mind. He shut his eyes and was propelled back in time, back into the horror once again....


"Do you feel it, Cole?" Reed gasped, his eyes the size of saucers. He was standing in the middle of the empty attic. Sunlight filtered through uneven cracks in the roof and ceiling creating a cascade of light across his frightened face.

"Yes," Cole said woodenly from the doorway. He definitely felt it: the power, the hate.

A moan rattled through the attic, a deep clenching sigh as if a sleeping monster deep within the bowels of the house had awakened from a hungry sleep. The roof shuddered and the walls bulged with its breath. Reed's face, so full of the wonder just moments before, was now etched by a dawning terror.

"Cole!" he whispered.

Cole stayed at the doorway, unwilling to enter the room. "Come on, Reed!" he said, waiving him at him. "Let's get the hell out of here!"

"I, I can't move," Reed replied frantically. "Something's holding my legs."

"It's just fear!" Cole said. "Try, Reed. Try. We've go to get out of here before it's too late!"

Reed looked at Cole across the abyss of the attic, tears streaming down his face. "I can't!" he said. "I can't!"

Reed's panic unnerved Cole even more than the haunting itself. Reed had always been the rock of their relationship, his practical, brave nature an inspiration to the more excitable Cole. Reed's unrestrained fear was sending him a message: they were both in deep peril.

Reed held out his hand. "Help me, Cole! Come here and help me."

Cole wanted to help, desperately wanted to help, but found he couldn't. Terror had seized his heart. Goose flesh rippled through his trembling body. He could only stare at his friend, his pale face waving back in forth in a dismayed "no".

"This is its center, Cole!" Reed raved. "Its rotten soul. It wants us. It means to have us. It will have us! Help me, Cole. Help us. Together we can beat it!"

Reed's arms were wildly flailing about, as if they had become unhinged from his shoulders. Cole couldn't help himself. He turned and ran. As he flew down the stairs, he heard Reed speak his last words. "We were friends!" he wailed. "God damn it, Cole! We were friends! Friends....”

-4-

Cole Sinclair looked desolately at the doorknob. Its once inviting sparkle was gone, replaced by a black so deep it made him dizzy to gaze into it. It was a metaphor of his life, Cole reflected: dark, empty, and alone.

"I'm fucked," he mumbled. And what's more, he deserved it. Deserved it in spades. For Sherri Palmer had spoken the truth through the bathroom door. He had betrayed his friend. He had lived while Reed Moreno died, and for that he had to atone. Atone with his life, now, while he still had the nerve and the dignity to do what was right.

"We were friends," Reed said to him that day. The words screamed across the years, burned into his soul.

Cole forced himself to grab the knob. It felt warm and clammy as if it might melt in his hand, but it turned, and as it did a sort of eerie calm descended upon him. The decision had been made, and for the first time in years, he felt an uneasy peace.

Cole gulped hard and stepped into the hall. Sherri Palmer's yuppie remodeling job had vanished. The Rebero house had reverted to its former decayed glory.

Its killing glory.


The heavy smell of rain, mixed with the rot of termite infested wood filled Cole's nostrils. A bitter winter breeze swept past his unsure legs. It was as if he had been in the bathroom for months instead of minutes. Far above him loose shingles flapped crazily in a howling wind. The old house creaked on its sagging foundation like a dying elephant ready to fall.

Cole walked uncertainly down the darkened hall. His sense of direction betrayed him. He felt lost, confused. He could feel the house's hunger, its greed pressing on him like a weight. "Come and get me, motherfucker," he taunted. "If that's what you mean to do, come and get me now."

Cole listened as the wind echoed through the tortured hallways, and the rain beat on the time-weakened walls. And there was something else, something distant, something terrible. Somewhere within the walls that imprisoned him he could hear the desperate, muffled cries of those who been captured here. Then, just as he accepted his certain doom, he heard a familiar voice drifting among the others, a voice that had haunted Cole's dreams for an eternity. It was the young, sweet voice of Reed Moreno.

"Cole," Reed said. "You have come at last."

Cole turned and blinked hard. Reed was standing less than ten feet away, a golden highlight against the blackness.

"You're an angel," Cole said, his voice breaking. A voice flush with sorrow, repentance. "Oh, dear God you're a sweet angel."

Reed smiled. "I'm not an angel, Cole," he said. "Not yet, at least."

"Reed," Cole sobbed. "I wish I could take back what I did that day. You have a right to hate me. I was a coward. I've always been a coward."

Reed stepped forward as the house held its breath in greedy anticipation.

"There is no need for guilt, Cole," Reed said. "What happened was meant to be, that's all."

"But I ran, Reed," Cole said through his tears. "I could have helped you, but I ran....”

"You ran because it was your fate to run. The house chose me, Cole, not you."

The house rumbled as if disturbed by Reed's words of comfort. Boards ripped from the ceiling and plummeted to the floor like a toy thrown by a child in a tantrum. A last, solitary window shattered, sending shards of glass tinkling like demented bells.

Cole grimaced. "What is this place, Reed?" he asked with a shudder.

"It's a rift in the fabric between heaven and hell," Reed said. "It's like a volcano that ejects misery and death instead of rocks and lava.

"Cole, if you want repentance, the time has come. We've been waiting for you, Cole, all of us trapped here. I told them that someday you would come again and release us so that we might have our rightful peace."

"Release you?" Cole asked incredulously. "What can I possibly do?"

"Fulfill your destiny, Cole," Reed replied.

"But how?"

Reed smiled. "Something simple, something hard. Its name is fire. Destroy the house, burn its evil core once and for all. Set us free."

The house revolted. Behind Cole, the door to Sherri Palmer's bathroom exploded from its hinges, blasted against the outer hall, and splintered into pieces. Razor-sharp projectiles boomed outward like missiles. One grazed Cole's face as he fell sprawling to the floor, escaping decapitation by inches. Blood oozed from a gash across his cheek. Plaster flew from jagged craters left in the walls.

Cole waited then scrambled to his knees, his heart pounding, ready for the next assault. He turned frantically, his eyes searching for Reed, but to his dismay his friend had once again disappeared. Cole's heart sank, for not only was he now very alone, he discovered he was no longer in the hallway. He had been transported to the very heart of his nightmare, the attic.

Above him the storm howled, slapping the roof shingles up and down in a manic applause. The attic was filled with a spectral light that was nowhere and everywhere all at the same time.

Cole heard a creaking noise and looked up. Old man Robero's hangman's noose was dangling from the center rafter. Blood was caked onto it as if it had torn into the flesh of its last victim. The rope swayed hypnotically from side to side.

"Don't be afraid, Cole," Reed's voice whispered in his ear. "The house plays tricks. Don't believe it. Don't give in. Your fate is with life, not death. Your time has come, Cole! Stand and be true!"

The tingling sensation began just as it had so many years before as the house tried to lull him into submission. Reed's words filled him with renewed hope, but Cole knew that this was not the time to be standing still. If he had any chance of succeeding, he would first have to escape the house's grasp.

Cole tore his fearful eyes from the rope and bolted before the soothing current could turn lethal. He reached the attic door wondering if fate would help him once again. Ignoring the darkness, he hurled down the stairs, almost sprawling on the narrow landing. He lurched to his feet and stumbled down the hallway toward the main stairway.

As he swept past the doorway on his right, he saw a sight that would fuel his nightmares for months. It was only a glimpse, little more than a snapshot of two horned demons coupling on the filthy floor. One looked up as he passed. A thick, viscous string of saliva fell from its snout. It looked at Cole and smiled.

The stairs were undulating like a snake chasing down its prey. Cole didn't think; thinking would have only paralyzed him. He started down, gripping the twisting railing for support. The stairway growled under his weight. The boards of the steps ripped loose. Rusted nails snapped at his feet like fangs. Several dug into the tender flesh of his right foot making him howl with pain. Cole tap-danced his way down the stairs, thinking crazily about tetanus shots.

Somehow he made it to the ground floor, but he was still far from safety. Sherri had led him only a short way to the bathroom, but the downstairs he remembered had disappeared. He appeared to be trapped in the very bowels of the house, and there seemed no hope of escape.

Cole despaired, his mind twitched. Had he come all this way just to lose now? Would he be trapped in this nothingness between life and death forever? But though he feared the worst, he realized that the spectral gloom that surrounded him wasn't total. There was something, something dim and elusive, glowing on the tormented floor. He wiped the blood from his face and dared to look. There, on the floor, appeared to be the delicate scarlet footprints of a small child. Each tiny toe looked as if it had been dipped in shimmering blood, trailing off into the darkness.

Cole's eyes widened with hope even as his soul filled with sorrow. Whose precious, lost child made these prints? And what awful tragedy happened here? Cole shook away his morbid thoughts, and he began to follow this unlikely trail. Help for this forgotten soul depended on his freedom. The faint pleas of conflicting voices continued in his ears. Some called out his name and urged him on his desperate mission. Others screamed out in the fear, demanding he yield to the will of the house.

Outside, the storm raged. Water, or at least Cole hoped it was water, seeped from above him. Heavy, sticky droplets fell on his hair and face. Cole brushed them aside and continued on, wondering how much more of this he could take before his sanity left him forever.

The house upped the ante. On his right the outlines of glowing faces appeared, pressing out from the tattered walls like demented cookie molds. All were etched in bitter agony. Cole tried to ignore the faces, reminding himself they were nothing more than another trick sent by the house to kill his resolve. He bowed his head and concentrated on the footsteps leading him ever onward through the twisting labyrinth.

Eventually, the blackness lightened. The trail appeared to be giving way to an evil dawn. With each step Cole felt closer to freedom. The house, too, sensed he might escape its grasp. Behind him there was a bloody roar. Cole stopped, momentarily unable to move. Then he saw it. Charging up the twisted hall came a howling apparition, hurtling from the arterial depths of the house to halt his desperate flight.

The shape was roughly human, a demon swathed in robes of bloody scarlet and cobalt blue. A large hood hid all features except cold yellow-rimmed, nictitating eyes that glowed like satanic beacons. Its arms were extended, its gnarled fingers twitched sending coronas of arcing gold-blue sparks from the end of its long, splintered fingernails. It was lunging for him.

Cole screamed and scrambled forward. The smell of spent electricity mixed with the sweet fragrance of the hills. One more turn! One more turn and he would be free! But as his eyes began to fill with the blessed sight of freedom, he felt a solid tackle grip his legs. He had been caught.

Cole fell to the floor, hitting his head with a thud. Stars spun in his eyes. He felt numb as if he had been jabbed by a stun gun. He managed to turn and look. Bright laser eyes mocked him, long fangs sprang from a bulging mouth, hot sulfur breath enveloped him.

The apparition inched greedily up his body. Cole pumped his legs frantically, trying desperately to escape. Just when he thought all was lost, his injured right foot miraculously yanked free, leaving his blood-soaked running shoe in the creature's grip. Oblivious to the pain, Cole cocked his foot and with all his strength smashed it into the creature's face.

The phantom roared, not out of pain but of outrage. No one, no one, had resisted before. Once within its grasp no one had the will to do anything except piss in their pants and submit. And to make it worse, the phantom's roar had betrayed it, loosening its vice-like grip just enough for Cole to wrench himself free.

Cole took to his feet, careened off one wall, turned to his left and saw the front door looming ahead like a celestial gate. He literally flew through the tattered screen door and fell sprawling on the splintered wooden deck. Blood gushed from his torn cheek, his foot throbbed, but Cole got up again and staggered down the steps to the safety of the front yard. He collapsed to his knees feeling weak and beyond care. Would the creature follow? No, he thought not. It was as much a prisoner of the house as its victims.

Cole looked around, amazed by what he saw. Sherri Palmer's invitation to use her remodeled bathroom had occurred only minutes before on a cloudless spring morning. Now it was night and cold rain was pelting his face. How could it be?

Now was not the time to ponder. Reed had given him a mission, and he knew that if he were to live the rest of his life in peace, he had to complete it. Fire. How does one burn down a haunted house in the middle of a rainstorm? Cole had a cigarette lighter stuffed from in his dirty front pocket, but how could he use it?

He struggled to his feet, wiping his muddy hands on his pants. He stumbled around in a daze searching for anything that could be used as a fuel. Rain fell in an unrelenting stream. Everything was soaked. There was nothing to burn. He ventured timidly onto the porch keeping well clear of the front door and the terror that lay within. The porch was empty except for a few wind-scattered leaves.

From the inside, he decided. If he had a chance, the house would have to be burned from its dry inside. But how could he do it? How could he go back there without going mad?

Cole's eyes filled with tears, his shoulders sagged. He felt panic welling within him. He couldn't do it! He wasn't strong enough. He didn't have the nerve. God damn it, he wasn't man enough! He stumbled down the creaking front stairs, turned and faced the house. A bolt of lightening lit its crumbling whitewashed facade. Cold broken windows stared at him, mocking his cowardice.

"Sorry I'm such a loser, Reed!" he cried. "I'm sorry I can't help you!"

He stopped, his eyes suddenly wide as a wild, crazy thought burned into his mind. Could it work, he wondered. Cole Sinclair turned and ran into the night....

-5-

Innocent rain fell on the rolling California hills, unaware of the evil that lurked there. The house stood silently, disturbed only by an occasional clap of thunder, its cache of souls held firmly within. It had stood there like a festering sore for a hundred years and might well stand for a hundred more. No one dared tear it down.
Once, a young, aggressive builder by the name of John Palmer took an option on the land and planned a track of luxury homes for Bay Area yuppies on the move. One Saturday he brought his young wife, Sherri, to see his project. On the rise above the little valley he held his wife's hand and told her how they would level the old house to construct the road that would wind its way into the hills.

"But it's a beautiful old place," Sherri said.

John nodded. "It's had its day, Sherri and it's in the way."

Sherri dropped his hand and gaily ran ahead of him. She turned and looked at her husband, her summer dress blowing tantalizingly in the breeze, a wink of youthful lust in her eye. "Let's look inside," Sherri said coyly. "You never know what might happen."

No one ever saw them again...

...and the house still stood like a wooden Venus fly trap, and the wind still howled around it, and the victims still entered its poisonous folds never to return to the light of day. Until Cole Sinclair.


Off in the distance there was a crash as Pinto tore through the old wooden gate. Cole ran to the edge of road not knowing if the faded yellow car would still be there. He had lost all track of time and suspected time had lost track of him. Months could have passed as easily as hours since that fine spring morning that marked the beginning of this nightmare. His faithful Pinto might very well be gone, towed away to a wrecking yard, now nothing more than a tight ball of rusted metal. But to his relief the car was still there, waiting patiently to take Cole on its final ride.

The Pinto bucked up the gravel road, its nearly bald tires spinning crazily in the soft, rain-soaked ground. Cole gripped the steering wheel grimly knowing that success or failure was now in the hands of God and the Ford Motor Company.

He rounded the last curve. The house was just ahead glowing in the darkness. He swirled the Pinto through the mud so its rear end faced the porch. Cole rolled down both windows, pushed the car into reverse, gulped hard and gunned the ancient engine to a scream.

Cole looked into the cracked rear view mirror. The porch was directly behind him, beckoning like a gaping tongue. He popped the clutch, and the old car lurched back. When it encountered the first step, it paused only slightly before bouncing up the four steps to the porch.

The house's front door disintegrated as the Pinto plowed through it. Splinters of half-rotted wood flew off like an exploding Super Nova. Yellow paint scraped in long, claw-like scratches from the car's rear fenders. The Pinto slowed, but Cole knew he wouldn't have to go very far; just enough for the Pinto to reveal the fatal engineering flaw that had banned it from the highways of America.

The wheels spun madly, inching the little car farther into the entryway. Its flimsy rear bumper collapsed under the impact. The large rear glass window shattered. Underneath, its flimsy gas tank buckled until it finally burst.

Gasoline spilled from a four-inch break, filling the entryway with its pungent odor. At the same time there was a loud ping as the Pinto's engine hurled shards of metal through its insides. The car sputtered once then died.

Cole looked around fearfully. The aroma of gas was stronger now. He had to get out of the car. Once the vapors hit the hot undercarriage, there would be an explosion. He had rolled down the front windows to insure his escape, but he hadn't anticipated that the Pinto would come to rest smack in the middle of the doorway's oak jam. The massive pieces of wood, fashioned in a time when solidity was a virtue, mocked him like the iron bars of a jail.

"Shit," Cole said. He was trapped.

From behind him came a voice, "Cole?" it called.

Cole recognized the voice. It was Sherri Palmer. But when he looked into the mirror, it was not the pretty, inviting Sherri he remembered. It was her rotted corpse.

"Join us, Cole," she said as she approached the rear of the car. "Come and live with us--forever."

Though shaking with fear, Cole told himself not to panic. He leaned into the rear seat. The car was as messy as his life. Heaps of discarded Big Mac wrappers and old beer cans were strewn across the seat and floor. He fumbled around, searching for something that kept him company when he spent cold nights sleeping in the car. As he searched, Sherri drifted closer, her decayed skull smiling as if unaware of its condition.

Cole found it. Cold and black in his hand, the tire iron was like a gift from God. He turned, cocked his arm, and rammed the windshield, thankful for the long horizontal crack that already wandered across its surface. On the forth blow, the glass shattered. He braced himself against the seat, lifted his legs and kicked out the window.

Cole scrambled across the dashboard and onto the cold, yellow hood. The smell of gas made his head swim, but miraculously there had been no ignition. Cole rolled off the hood and onto the porch. He stood and faced the car. Fumbling into his pocket, he found the lighter. "Come on," he said, cupping it in his hand. He desperately flipped the ignition wheel. "Come on you son-of-a-bitch!" The lighter wouldn't work, not even a spark.

On the other side of the car, Sherri Palmer howled and began to climb over the wreckage toward him. "It won't work, Cole," she screamed. "The house is hungry once more. And it will feed."

Cole fought with the lighter striking it again and again, but still there was nothing.

Then Reed Moreno spoke to him one last time, whispering into his ear. "Run, Cole," he said. "Run now. The rest is up to God."

Cole dropped the lighter and ran. The gasoline was seeping across the porch, falling through the cracks, but a single long ribbon of fuel trickled across the splintered front steps, soaking into the dirt even as Cole stumbled off the porch. He ran a few more feet and collapsed to the ground, his mind and body spent.

For so many years the house had protected itself, even healing itself like some demented cancer. Nothing could touch it; nothing could deliver it serious harm--not age, not man. But when the first trickle of gas seeped into the heart of the Montezuma hills, another power took over. A power that had waited patiently for a chance to correct a grievous wrong.

Lightning does not fall from the sky. It leaps from the ground, arcing its charge of molten electricity to the heavens. That was what Cole saw when he turned his head to look. And as the spark made its celestial trip, it ignited the small puddle of gas.

Blue frame leapt up the steps like a tidal wave rushing toward the Pinto. It arrived just as Sherri Palmer stood on its dented hood. The explosion blew the corpse apart, sending chunks of spoiled flesh and bone in an arc across the porch. Cole scrambled back from the heat, holding up his hand to protect his eyes from the brilliance of the flame.

The house burned; burned fast. It was totally engulfed within minutes. Cole could hear sirens in the distance, fireman to the rescue, but he was glad in his heart for there would be no rescue of the Rebero house and the horror within it. It was gone for good.

Cole managed to stand. He staggered around the side of the house, the flames glowing in his eyes. He stopped outside what was once the house's room. His eyes widened. They were all in there, those who died. Oblivious to the holocaust that surrounded them, they were sitting around a long table, untouched by the flames, eating a grand, last feast. Sherri was there sitting next to her husband, a small child playing joyfully on her lap. Next to her at the head of the table was Reed Moreno: young, strong, ready to take life's final journey into the unknown.

For the first time since it all began, Cole felt at peace. Tears filled his eyes; tears of both sorrow and joy. Cole couldn't roll back the clock, but God had finally granted him a chance at life. And as he looked with awe and relief at Reed and his friends, they all turned in unison. They looked at him with joy on their faces and raised then glasses in a hearty toast.

It was over.