"Terrific," Ajax complained. "More memory blackouts. Shit, I thought sure that would all stop once you got back home."
"But why on earth would I bring my horn-crankers?"
"Something in your subconscious," Ajax posited. "Or I should say something in your
Dean felt an itch of dread in his gut. This was getting serious. "Maybe you're right. Maybe I
"No maybes about it."
"Maybe I should call Daphne—"
Ajax's face went creased in a scowl. "That's the
"But-but," Dean stammered. "She'll be worried about me, she'll be—"
"Forget it," Ajax said. "Besides, she's probably at a
But before Dean could further object, Shirley's distant voice called out from downstairs: "Boys! Boys! Come right away! More children have disappeared!"
««—»»
The 54-inch Magnavox television screen filled the darkened parlor with throbs of color. The three of them stood aghast as the local news channel related the latest details of the crisis. "... as another name is added to the otherwise quiet town's staggering body count," a brunette in a smart burgundy coatdress spoke stoically into a microphone. Behind her, state police investigators milled about in the woods, making way for a pair of EMT's bearing a covered stretcher. "Veteran DeSmet Police Sergeant A.T. Lass was found dead early this morning in a wooded clearing off Auburn Street and 38th Avenue, the victim of what local medical officials can only describe as a ‘goring' by a wild, horned animal. Thus far, eight men and thirteen children have been found dead by the same brutal means."
"Jesus," Ajax muttered.
The brunette newscaster continued, "But what baffles investigators further is that nearly all of the dead children appear to have been abducted before meeting their death, which seems to connect some manner of
Shirley gripped Ajax' arm. "What a horrible thing! Those poor adorable little twins!"
Ajax put a consoling arm around the buxom housemaid. "We can only hope the police'll find them before—"
"Before it's too late," Dean finished. He changed channels, searching for more coverage, then found another quick clip on CNN: "—described as the worst tragedy to befall the unassuming town of DeSmet, South Dakota," a narrator was saying. First came a still photo of the Rundstedt Twins, smiling up toothlessly and wielding rattles from their cribs. Then a clip of the mother, pallid, tears streaming down her thin meth-tramp face: "My poor little babies! Please, bring back my babies!" and lastly a live cut to the most recent crime scene where the fine and upstanding Sergeant Lass had been found gored and crushed. A white van was parked before the trees, and men roamed about in windbreakers that read STATE POLICE FORENSICS UNIT on their backs. The narrator returned, "Today, police crime-scene examiners were dispatched to search for clues but, as bad luck would have it, tonight's impending thunderstorm will likely wash away any tangible evidence—"
Dean turned off the set, horrified himself by what was taking place in his hometown. His mind whirled with names, places, sights, and sounds which all melded together to form the picture of the DeSmet he'd always known. But now the picture was different, soiled and flecked with dirt.
Shirley, in her grief, didn't seem to notice the distance that Ajax' hand had traveled down her back. "It's like some evil spirit has infected our goodly town," she half-sobbed. "A devil. God in Heaven, who could
"Shirley, don't bother fixing dinner for us," Dean announced. "We're going out there, right now."
"We
"But, Dean!" Shirley gibbered away. "You can't! It's too dangerous!"
"We'll be fine, Shirley," Dean assured, drawing out the car keys. "I just want to check the place out before the storm rolls in. Come on, Ajax."
Ajax reluctantly withdrew his consoling arm from around Shirley.