Part 8 (1/2)
This close, Emily could see that Simon no longer looked completely human. His skin was tinged red with lighter blotches here and there that made him look like an oddly colored cheetah. His chest rose and fell in rapid succession as though he had just run a marathon. Dark varicose veins, plump and seemingly close to bursting, crisscrossed his face just beneath the skin and the exposed flesh of his arms, pulsing obscenely. Despite the imminent impact, Simon's expression did not change.
”Sorry, Simon,” Emily whispered.
When there was less than five feet between them, Emily threw the steering wheel hard left. Instead of Simon, she aimed for the darker shadows where the alien hid, and she yelled in triumph as the lights finally illuminated the monstrosity.
It was balanced on six impossibly thin legs that hung like wilted, wet stems from an elongated corpse-pale body. An extended compound eye stretched around its bulbous head.
There was no mouth that Emily could see in the brief flash of time the thing was visible in her headlights, but she could see the three tentacles attached to Simon as they writhed and flexed their way back to three nodules extruding from just above the insect-like eye.
The Durango tore through two of the creature's fragile legs with a satisfying crack like snapping branches that she could hear even over the roar of the engine. Black liquid splattered across the winds.h.i.+eld as chunks of the creature's legs, the color of dried wheat stalks, bounced off the hood and spun off into the darkness on either side of her.
From the corner of her eye Emily saw the thing stagger sideways, illuminated by the bloodred paint of her taillights. She pulled hard on the steering wheel while stomping on the brake, swinging the SUV around to face the direction she had just come.
Emily cautiously edged the SUV toward the group. Emily could see the creature, Simon, and the kids he still held firmly under his arms. She had managed to smash through the creature's two front-left legs, tearing them from the body about two-thirds of the way up. More of the black liquid spewed from the open wounds, cascading to the ground as the creature silently writhed and bucked, sending a spray of its blood over the three figures beneath it.
The tentacles suddenly detached from Simon with three wet pops and a spray of liquid, rewinding back to the creature like a power cord on a vacuum before disappearing into the nodules on its head. Instantly Simon collapsed into an unmoving heap on the ground, the children spilling from his grasp next to him. Emily saw Rhiannon pick herself up and glance at her father's still form with a look of horrified despair, then at the towering wounded creature blocking the route to Emily, the SUV, and safety.
Emily could see the cogs working in the girl's brain. Could she risk it? Could she make it past the thing to Emily? No, Emily thought, run, just run.
Maybe the kid was psychic or maybe she was just smarter than Emily gave her credit for, but she grabbed her little brother's hand, pulled him to his feet, and began to run back toward the house, pulling her stumbling brother behind her, his free arm windmilling through the air as he struggled to keep up with his sister.
The thing could barely stand; its legs splayed out wide to counter the loss of the two front limbs as it teetered for a moment, regaining its balance. Emily was sure it was going to fall, but somehow it managed to stabilize itself. Its head swung from side to side in a weird caricature of Simon's earlier head movement; the single eye focused on Emily, then swung back to the fleeing kids. It was deciding which it had a better chance with, Emily thought.
It made its decision, and, with ridiculous agility for something that had just lost two of its six legs, spun around and began to limp after the children, its remaining oh-so-thin legs undulating across the ground in a wave of motion. Emily had no doubt that if the thing had its full set of legs still, it would have caught up with the fleeing kids in a matter of seconds. While it was certainly slower, it still moved with a swift rolling flow that reminded her of the graceful movements of the tai chi pract.i.tioners she sometimes saw in Central Park. There was no way the kids were going to make it to the house before the thing caught up with them, no way.
Emily gunned the engine and drove straight at the thing. Its head swiveled momentarily in her direction as she accelerated toward it, that single extended eye boring into her with a dark malevolence that far outstripped the expressionless features of the creature, sending her stomach into free fall.
It was closing on the kids fast. Ben's legs just couldn't move quickly enough, and Rhiannon was half dragging her brother as they raced toward the house. Rhiannon must have heard the monster's click-clacking footfalls closing on her because Emily saw her throw a glance back at the creature. Then her head whipped left and right as she searched desperately for somewhere else that would give her cover. She suddenly dashed to the left, almost pulling her brother's arm from the socket as she tugged him along after her. She was heading back toward the driveway. Did she think she could make it to the forest beyond it? Rhiannon might have made it on her own, but Ben was slowing her down; they would never make it to the trees before the creature caught up to them.
The SUV was rattling and bouncing over the rough ground as Emily fought to keep the vehicle under control. Within seconds she was alongside the thing; the broken stumps of its reed-thin legs still spurted black liquid as it chased indefatigably after the kids. It was too close to the children now for her to try to get between it and them, and if she hit it, it could careen right on top of them. The best she could do was feint at it. She pulled the wheel to the left and swerved the Durango at the creature, pulling back just before she hit it, all the time hoping she would not inadvertently run over the kids. If she could just get enough room to get the SUV between them and it, she could buy them some time to get to the woods.
Emily saw something flash from the head of the creature and crack through the air like a whip. It was one of the tentacles the thing had used to control Simon. The tip of the tentacle fell just short of the back of Rhiannon's head, spraying liquid across the shoulders of the two stumbling children. The thing wasn't trying to kill them, Emily realized, it wanted to capture them. Use them like it had Simon. Maybe it thought it could use them as some bargaining chip to control Emily?
Wrong. She hit the accelerator of the Durango and swerved sharply into the path of the creature. It swerved away from her, momentarily slowing its pace, giving Emily the opening she needed. It was now or never. She wrenched the steering wheel hard left and forced the SUV between the advancing monster and the children. Pounding her foot down hard on the brake, the SUV fishtailed over the gra.s.s and came to a stop directly in front of the monster.
The creature tried to stop. Apparently realizing it wouldn't make it in time, it tried to use its remaining legs to vault over the SUV. Emily stared through the open window as the thing pa.s.sed overhead; its smooth underbelly flashed by and its trailing legs almost cleared the Durango. Then one slammed into the top rim of the pa.s.senger side door, sending Emily diving for cover and the thing cras.h.i.+ng to the ground on the opposite side of the SUV.
Emily raised herself up and stared out the pa.s.senger window. The creature had come to rest about eight feet away from the right side of the SUV; the leg that had crashed into it was bent and useless as the thing tried to push itself upright again.
The children had come to a stop and now stood about twenty feet from the crumpled monster. Ben's arms were thrown around his sister's waist as he clung to her; Rhiannon's arms held her brother close.
The creature began to crawl toward the two children, pulling and pus.h.i.+ng itself forward with its remaining legs. It looked like a broken gra.s.shopper, she thought as the creature's legs scissored back and forth in the dirt.
But it was still moving and the kids weren't.
”Run!” Emily yelled through the open window.
Pulling her brother behind her once again, Rhiannon began to sprint for the house. Emily pushed the gear stick into reverse and pulled the SUV back until she was sure she was where she wanted to be. Slipping the gear back into drive, she aimed directly at the crawling monstrosity and accelerated toward it.
Emily knew it must have sensed the onrus.h.i.+ng vehicle, must have known that she was going to send it back to whatever h.e.l.lhole of a planet it had come from, but the thing didn't even glimpse at her, it just kept crawling toward the kids.
As the SUV's four twenty-inch wheels rolled over the back of the creature, crus.h.i.+ng its miserable life, Emily saw a tentacle flick out from its head into the darkness...and both kids tumble to the ground.
The SUV had barely come to a stop and Emily was out, sprinting to where she had seen the children tumble into the darkness. She was vaguely aware of something black and sticky smeared from the front wheel well all the way along the driver's door. Somewhere in the back of her mind, she took deep satisfaction in knowing she had caused such grievous harm to the creature.
”Rhiannon? Ben? Where are you?” she yelled, her flashlight dancing through the darkness.
An almost silent whimpering came from just up ahead, and Emily flicked the beam of the flashlight to the source. Benjamin and Rhiannon were huddled together in the open mouth of an aluminum drainpipe used to direct flash floods along a culvert and away from the house. Rhiannon had the little boy pulled close to her, his head pressed to her chest as they cowered in the shadows.
They were both alive. Thank G.o.d. They were alive.
”Are you both okay?” she asked, her voice breathless. Ben's head swiveled to focus on Emily, his big eyes like two bright moons above dirty, tear-streaked cheeks. ”The bad thing hit me,” he said. Then, ”Where's Daddy?”
How do you tell a little boy his father is most likely dead? She couldn't be sure if Simon was, but she wasn't about to go over there right then and find out. So she chose to ignore the question, instead offering her hand to the children. ”Why don't you two get out of there and we'll go back to the car, 'kay?”
Emily pulled them one by one from the mouth of the drainpipe. Ben flinched a little as she pulled him to the gra.s.s beside her, but Thor instantly began licking the boy's face, which seemed to brighten him up a little.
”Did the”-she searched for the right word-”the bad thing hurt you, Ben? Let me see.” She gently took the quivering boy by the shoulder and turned him around, lifting the back of his s.h.i.+rt. She could see a small bruise just below his right shoulder blade, a small red b.u.mp at its center, barely visible in the light of her flashlight. It wasn't anything serious. She pulled the boy's s.h.i.+rt back down and tucked it back into his pants.
”You'll be fine, kiddo. We have to get back to your house now and pick up the stuff we left there.”
”I don't-” he began to object.
”It's okay, dweeb,” his sister interjected, her voice rattling from her throat as she choked back tears. ”We have to go with Emily and help her.”
”Don't call me that,” the boy snapped back. The insult from his older sister seemed to pull him back to reality. ”You're the dweeb.”
”Am not.”
”Are too.”
Emily took a hand of each of the children and walked them back to the waiting SUV, leading them to the pa.s.senger side so there was no chance they would see the dead creature, then bundled them inside. Thor jumped in with them and sat between the two kids, who had lapsed back into a stunned silence.
Emily climbed into the driver's seat, glimpsing back at the shadowy outline of the dead alien, its limbs sticking up like huge broken twigs from the ground, a faint steam rising still from its spilled fluids.
Beyond the creature's remains, Emily could see the outline of Simon's body. He was lying in the same crumpled position as when the creature had released him. One arm rested across his stomach, the other was draped across his face, his legs splayed on the wet gra.s.s. She stared at his still form. She knew she should get out and check whether he was still alive, but she knew already that Simon had been dead long before she'd found the kids.
Her hands were trembling as she gripped the steering wheel of the Durango, pulled slowly away, and swung the vehicle around toward the gravel road leading away from the house.
Simon had said he was taking another shorter route to get to the Jeffersons'. Emily scanned the trees ahead of her for any hint of a turnoff as she slowly advanced along the same road they had left along earlier; the darkness was repulsed by the SUV's high beams. She had been too focused on keeping the big vehicle on the road when they had first traveled this road, speeding away from the creature. Now she saw the turnoff, a gravel path leading into the woods to her left. She turned on to it and accelerated gently up to twenty, still nervous and unsure of her driving ability but more concerned with the way the hand tremors had turned into a case of the full-on shakes.
The children sat quietly in the backseat; Rhiannon stared directly ahead and Ben cuddled up to Thor. The dog's head rested in the boy's lap.
Shock. Disbelief. Horror. Each time Emily glanced in the mirror above her head, she would see a new emotion on one of the children's faces. If things had been normal and something of this emotional magnitude had occurred, there would be people to turn to, experts to help. Someone would know how to deal with the turmoil these kids were about to experience. Emily had no idea how to handle their feelings. G.o.d! She was only now beginning to get a grip on her own. What was she expected to do? She couldn't stop, couldn't hole up with them and try and explain what had happened. A storm was coming. A storm unlike any other ever experienced on this world. What was she supposed to do?
The trees disappeared, and Emily found herself b.u.mping over a graveled road that followed the contour of the ridgeline; in the distance she could see the glow of the lights she had left on in the house to help guide them back.
She focused on those lights as they grew closer and brighter; this must have been how sailors felt. Lost on the sea, with only the stars to guide them until they found the light of some distant port to lead them back to safety.
She had to prioritize. There had been more orbs hanging from that tree, unopened; each one would contain one more of the creature she had just killed. They could be out there now, waiting, watching. Commander Mulligan had said they had twenty-four hours maximum before the storm caught up with them if they stayed here. The choice was obvious, she supposed, she had to get the kids out now and run. Right now. Run to anywhere that was not here.