Southern Gods - Southern Gods Part 26
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Southern Gods Part 26

Ingram cranked the throttle. Again, she sat heavily, and Andrez put his arm around her.

Ingram steered at the back of the boat, eyes restlessly searching the waters before them. He steered the boat in a big loop, heading southeast with the flow of the river. The flat-bottom, pushed by the current and the outboard, whipped past the shore and flew downriver, following the crows. Sarah and Andrez huddled closer, keeping their backs to the rain and wind and looking backward, upstream, watching their wake and Ingram.

Once, the boat lurched horribly and the outboard jumped in Ingram's grip, pitching drastically upward and to the right. Sarah's hands darted out and caught the sides of the boat.

"Log!" Ingram bellowed. "Under the surface!"

He righted the boat and pointed it back downriver. The rain increased and the wind pushed at their backs, even with their forward speed.

The buzzing of the engine lulled Sarah, dampening her senses, blotting out all other sounds. The boat rocked and yawed on the water in a hypnotic rhythm and she found herself becoming dazed, lost in a thousand yard stare at the far shore, just a black ink stroke on the horizon slanted with rain. Andrez pressed closer, and she could feel his shivering through the ponchos.

Finally, Ingram's swaddled fist lanced out, pointing, and he yelled, "There! The Hellion!"

They turned to look and spied a long, low-slung rectangular barge without the massive flats of cargo. One tall stack pushed smoke into the sky and bristled with antennae. Tires ringed the gunwales, and the boat itself had doors and windows lining the deck.

Ingram yelled, "They broadcast the signal from the boat!"

The buzzing of the motor lulled, and Ingram turned the boat around, pointing it into the current to stop their forward movement.

"This is about to get messy." He looked down at his wrapped fist.

Keeping his good hand on the throttle, he ripped the bandages from his maimed hand with his teeth and threw the splint into the river. He held up his hand and flexed it, twice. His skin was yellow and purple, bruises streaking the discolored flesh.

Ingram looked back at them.

"OK, folks. Here's how this is gonna go. I'm gonna aim our little boat somewhere we can tie on. There's tires ringing the barge, so we should be able to tie on almost anywhere, but it'd be nice if I could find a spot that will make boarding easier. I've been on lots of boats, mostly military, but it's been a while. Sarah, I want you to tie us on as fast and securely as you can, then I'm going to grab the duffle, throw it on the deck, and come right over you two. So once we're tied, make yourselves as small as you can. Once I'm on deck, I could be a bit busy before I can help you up. Got it?"

They nodded. Sarah began shivering uncontrollably. She couldn't tell if it was from the wind, or water, or the fear that overcame her.

"All right, Sarah, grab the rope and get ready."

She got on her knees in the front seat and faced forward. With white-knuckled hands, she gripped the boat's tie and grasped the rim of the flat-bottom.

Ingram wrenched the throttle again, revving the motor, and turned the boat to the side, pushing them in a sharp arc, dashing back downstream toward the waiting black hulk of the Hellion. As they approached, the low throb of the barge engines shook the small flat-bottom from the water up. The Hellion loomed closer, grimed with oil and mud and the white streaks of seagull excrement. The flat-bottom rocked in the wake of the barge.

Ingram steered them down the length of the barge, searching for a place to moor their smaller boat. The Hellion throbbed with the sound of the diesel engines deep within. Finally Ingram cut the motor, falling back toward a tire resting a few feet in front of the barge's wake.

He angled the flat-bottom inward. The Hellion filled Sarah's view. Her heart leapt in her chest, throbbing in time with the diesels. Her hands shook, and the stench of diesel fumes overwhelmed her.

"Grab on, goddamnit! Grab the tire!"

She grappled with the makeshift mooring. From upriver as they approached, the tires ringing the barge seemed small, like car tires. But up close, they were enormous.

Andrez lent a hand, holding on with all his might as she leaned far out over the prow of the flat-bottom and worked the rope around a tire. The movement of the boats made the exercise harder, and as they rocked in the water, the tire slammed against the hull of the Hellion, catching Sarah's hand there. She exclaimed wordlessly with the pain, giving a startled yawp.

Franny. Sarah ground her jaw and forced the rope around the tire.

Andrez snatched up the ends and quickly tied a knot. Ingram cut the motor, and suddenly the Hellion dragged the flat-bottom. The little boat pitched crazily, banging against the grimy side of the larger boat.

"Out of the way. I'm coming through."

Ingram dashed to the front of the boat, sword and pistol tucked into his belt. He threw the duffle bag onto the barge, climbed up the tire, and hauled himself over the wooden gunwale, flopping on the deck, hidden from where Sarah and Andrez rocked on the river.

Sarah saw his movement through a small porthole in the gunwale. For a long breathless silence, Sarah and Andrez stared at the lip of the barge, worried that a dead face would peek over the rail and stare down at them with lidless, white eyes.

Ingram's face appeared over the rail. He leaned forward, reached down, and extended his good hand. Sarah grasped it, and he yanked her forcefully out of the boat, up past the tire. She grabbed the gunwale and pulled herself the rest of the way.

"Deserted, looks like. A damned ghost ship."

She regained her feet on a narrow gangway leading to the stern of the barge.

Ingram lifted Andrez out of the boat and onto the deck.

"We need to be quick. Gotta search the whole boat, and there could be-"

"Dead."

"Yeah. The corpses. Take the pistol," Ingram said. "This sword is better for me. I'm a crappy shot with my left anyway." He pulled the gun from his waistband and handed it to Andrez. "Like I told Sarah, shoot 'em in the head. Put it in their face if you have to."

Andrez nodded.

"All right, I've never been on a boat like this before, so we're gonna move as fast as we can." Ingram shook his head and half-muttered, "I didn't think this bastard would be so damned big."

He slung the duffle over his shoulder.

"We move from stern to fore. Quickly. Last place we check will be the pilot's roost, there." He jabbed a finger at the cluster of antennae behind a stack. "There'll be someone in there, steering, but that might not be where they have Franny. But if we hit the roost first, they might have time to sound an alarm. Let's go."

Ingram held the sword loosely in his hand and walked on light feet. He balanced his weight, placed one foot in front of the other. She tried to imitate his movement, but her heart hammered in her chest and she could only think of Franny. She wanted to scream and rush from door to door, flinging them open. Her Franny was here somewhere. This foul boat. Twenty feet to the stern, they came to a door leading into the interior of the boat. Ingram tried the handle, shoving the door open.

Inside, there was only darkness. And the stench of the dead mixed with rotten fish.

Ingram shrugged the duffle from his shoulder and handed it backward, still keeping his eyes ahead. Then he looked back at Andrez and Sarah and mimed holding a flashlight.

He stepped inside. Sarah held her breath. Blood throbbed at her temples. Her legs felt weak, rubbery. She ripped at the duffle, hands shaking, while Andrez watched her. She handed him a flashlight, and he flipped it on. She turned on her own, and they moved through the door and into the interior of the Hellion, shining faint lights in the dark.

"Here. Wait a sec."

The room flooded with light. Three bulbs in mesh cages mounted on the bulkhead burned brightly, showing ranks of tables. A small galley. Foodstuffs were spilt on the floor, flour and spices making grainy sprays near the oven.

"Here. Blood."

It was black and crusty and covered the far half of the room. The walls were smeared in it. Painted with it. Looking at the bulkhead, Sarah could almost read the bloody story the smears told, like some strange violent language distilled down to an essence of bloodstrokes and hand prints. Like an illustration in the Quanoon.

Ingram turned around in a circle, cursing. He looked from the stern door to the one at the fore. "This is gonna be engineering, most likely." He pointed at the stern door. "We check that first, then we'll know no one's behind us. Right?"

Sarah nodded because she didn't trust herself to speak. Andrez spoke for her. "We must hurry, Bull. Now."

Bull went to the door, forced open the latch, and swung it open. He stepped through. They followed.

A small open aired space. Still no one appeared. Just the thrum of engines and the smell of fish and muddy water and diesel fumes. Before them stood a door marked in black stencil, ENGINE ROOM. Ingram yanked open the latch.

As Sarah followed Andrez through, she was assaulted by sound. The dynamo that turned the massive screws that drove the Hellion was louder than the sound of creation. The bulwarks shook with the noise, and the vibrations shook Sarah through the floor. The room smelled of oil, and wet rodents, and something else.

Ingram found a switch and flipped it. More bright bulbs burning in mesh cages.

A single figure stood at the end of the room, facing the engine, the wall of gauges and valves. He was slight, and dressed as a child.

He turned, as though sensing their presence.

A tow-headed boy. Wearing jeans and a dirty shirt. His face, though gray, wore an expression of surprise, mouth caught in an O, his eyebrows high.

For an instant, Sarah was back in the orchard, among fallow fields and the whole world smelled of burning tires and rang with the caws of crows and the Alexander boy had gripped her too tight and pushed his erection hard against her and she'd shoved him away. She hadn't been mad, she hadn't been terrified as she was now. But she'd wanted him to stop. He did and that look of surprise crossed his face, just like this boy's here, when he saw Alice watching him with murderous eyes, holding the cudgel. He'd ran away, crying, and Sarah had felt so bad for him. She'd never seen him again. This boy, this boy before her, looked the same, surprised, and so similar he could be the same child. The Alexanders lived on the far side of Altheimer, by the river, she knew. And suddenly, she was sure of it, that this boy was an Alexander. Maybe even the son of her Alexander boy. Franny.

Ingram moved forward, raising the sword.

"Bull. Wait." Hearing her own voice, Sarah realized she sound shrill, on the verge of hysteria.

He stopped. "What?"

"I know him, I think."

He looked at her for a long while, too long, as the dead boy walked down the long room toward them. Bull dipped his head in acknowledgement and waved them back.

Andrez touched her lightly on the shoulder, his soft eyes searching her face. "Come, Sarah. We will wait for Bull out here."

She looked back at the boy. He was closer now, and in the light. His gray skin looked waxy, mask-like. The open O of his mouth was as black as the opening of a well, and his eyes were pure white. As she watched, his waxy skin shifted, as if something beneath the skin was moving. The mask of the boy's face reassembled itself into one of pure hatred.

Somehow the boy was even more pitiable now that some dark thing inhabited him, forced him to move.

They take. That's all they do, these petty gods. They take from us and give nothing back.

The realization did not give her the fire of outrage, the strength of the desperate. She felt only an overwhelming sadness.

She let Andrez pull her through the open door, and he held his pistol tightly, knuckles white, as they waited for Ingram.

There was a loud grunt and a bellow, and then Ingram was back, holding his hand. It dripped with blood.

"Mercy didn't work too well," he said. He tried to laugh but it failed in his throat, and he opened his hand to show them the ruin of it.

His smaller fingers were missing and the two stumps pumped blood. Ingram shrugged, raising his big shoulders and letting them fall. "Get the tape."

They wrapped his hand in gray hurricane tape, and Ingram stood and switched the sword to his left hand.

"We still have more boat to search."

They moved forward, back through the galley, and forced open the next door, exposing a musty barracks. The lights didn't work in there and Sarah, the stink of carrion filling her nose, desperately searched their duffel for a flashlight. When she found it, the beam was pitifully small in the darkness.

A bed held a graying, fly-swarmed corpse. And the light revealed another door on the port bulkhead.

The latch moved stiffly under Ingram's hand. Using his weight, he shoved down on the handle and shouldered it open.

Brightness from the room streamed out over them, casting a wedge of light into the ranks of bunk beds. The room was lit from grimy round porthole windows and the soft yellow glow of electronic equipment. Wires crisscrossed the small chamber floor in a morass. The cables fed through a porthole, leading to the fore of the boat. A table held a microphone and turntable, still spinning. Sarah's heart leapt in her chest. The music!

Ingram stood over the turntable and, with one hand, swept the electronic gear from the surface onto the floor in a barrage of sparks and smoke. The room filled with the stink of ozone and burning rubber.

Andrez moved into the room further, walking toward the door in the far wall. Passing the table, the priest looked to his side and jumped, jerking away from the corner hidden by the table.

Sarah moved around the table and saw what-who-was there.

Elizabeth Rheinhart huddled in the corner, hair white. Any remnant of sanity had been driven from her. She gibbered silently, her glazed eyes roaming the corners of the room, her bleeding fingers tracing bloody doodles on the wall.

Stepping forward, Andrez moved to Elizabeth and put his hands on the woman's shoulders, as if to comfort her.

She whipped around and sprang from her crouched position, fastening bleeding hands on the priest's neck. He bowled over, crashing into Sarah and sending her reeling into the wall, banging her head on the porthole's rim. Elizabeth ripped violently at the little man, fists flying. Her hands fell with such a preternatural speed Sarah, head spinning from the blow against the wall, had trouble following her mother's movements. She saw, through what felt like gauze, her mother leaning forward and biting into the priest's cheek while Andrez's hands beat a frantic tattoo on her face, her head, desperately trying to fend her off.

Behind Elizabeth, the wreckage of Sarah's mother, she perceived Ingram moving glacially, his sword coming up. Sarah threw herself in front of the man, even as her mother ripped at the priest. Ingram swept Sarah away with his wounded arm, pushing her once again against the wall. He grabbed a handful of her mother's hair and yanked her viciously off Andrez. Throwing her as easily as he would a rag-doll, he tossed her across the table that had held the microphone and electronic gear.

Sarah's chest heaved.

"Mother!" Her voice boomed in the close confines of the radio room. It had a strength she didn't feel.

"If there's anything left of you in there, stop! Listen!"

The thing that had been her mother paused, cocked her head like some sort of predatory bird, and blinked slowly, her mouth dripping with Andrez's blood.

"You bargained away Franny, Momma. For that, I can never forgive you. But if you stop now and help us get her back, maybe-"

"Maybe?" Elizabeth voice was like gravel, harsh and hoarse. But even then, recognizable. Full of contempt.

"It takes the end of the world for my miserable daughter to show real strength. Or offer me forgiveness."

"You could go to your grave without this terrible thing on your soul-"

Elizabeth chuckled, a harsh phlegmy sound. "My soul? Have you been listening to this little priest?" She pointed a clawed finger at the Andrez. Sarah's mother's face curled into a smile. A smile full of sharp teeth. "Have you? Did he not tell you?"

She laughed again. Slowly, she turned her bloody claw and tapped her chest. "There is only this. Only this! The flesh! Nothing else. Why do you think they war over us, the godlings? Because the living is all there is! They must infest us to assure their own survival. And I'm not ready to leave this husk."

Giving a bloody grin, Elizabeth vaulted onto the table as if to defy gravity and landed with her legs spread wide, arms out like a wrinkled and desiccated wrestler. Her tongue flicked in and out of her mouth, snakelike. Then, cackling, she leaped over Ingram's grasp and landed on top of Andrez. His limbs jerked like a marionette with its strings cut.

Sarah's arm acted of its own accord, lancing out and hitting her mother with the flashlight. Batteries, glass, and metal flew in all directions. Elizabeth whipped her grisly head around and fixed her eyes on Sarah.

Something in Elizabeth changed. Her skin darkened and her face began to elongate. She jumped backward, away from Andrez, then climbed the wall and hung upside down from the ceiling.

She was becoming a wolf. A hideous black thing, with snout and hands, nude of fur but obsidian and oily, thick with muscle. And deadly teeth. An image of the obsidian child that screamed obscenities and fled into the streets of Podgorica, a world away in Montenegro, flashed in Sarah's mind.

"He is coming." The new shape of her mouth made the words indistinct. "You can't stop him. The world devourer. The lover of destruction. Coming. I will be his whore. His wife." Her tongue flicked in and out. "His servant."