Jade Daniels slouchesโthatโs the only word for itโinto the staging area for Terra Nova on a twelve-degree night on the thirteenth of March, the Friday before spring break officially gets going for Proofrock.
In the left pocket of her thin custodian coveralls is a box-cutter, what her dad would probably call a โshitrockโ knife, and in her right is her fist. Under her overalls thereโs just a girl-cut Misfits t-shirt, probably technically too small if that matters, and her threadbare jeans, most of the holes in the thighs not from washing dishes at the pancake house or moving boxes in a shipping warehouseโProofrock isnโt big enough for either of those placesโbut from scraping at the fabric with her fingernails during seventh period, her state history class, which she calls Brainwashing 101. Her fingernails are black, of course, and her hair is supposed to be green, that was the plan one hundred percent, it was going to look killer, but Indian hair doesnโt take the dye like the box says โall hairโ should, so sheโs got a bobbed orange mop to deal with, which was what started the fight at her house thirty minutes ago, spitting her up here.
If her dad had just been able to watch her cross from the front door to the hall without saying anything, sheโd probably be in her bedroom right now, headphones clamped on, a bootleg slasher crackling on the screen of her thirteen-inch television set with the built-in VCR.
Her dad can never keep his mouth shut, though, especially six beers into a night thatโs probably going to take a whole case to get through.
โYou got to stop eating so many carrots, girl,โ he said with a halfway chuckle, punctuating it with a drink from his
bottle.
Jade stopped like she had to, like she guesses he must have wanted her to.
His name, Tab Daniels, is the one he earned in high school, because he threaded fishing line back and forth across the headliner glued to the roof of his Grand Prix, festooned it with fishing hooks, and then proceeded to hang enough pull tabs onto those barbed hooks that the headliner finally collapsed onto him one seventy-mile-per-hour night.
The wreck should have killed him, Jade knows. Or wishes. She was already on the way by then, so itโs not like it would have blipped her out of existence. All it would have blipped her to would be a less crappy version of her life, one where she lives with her mother, not her so-called father.
But of course, because sheโs doomed to grow up in the same house with her own personal boogeyman, the wreck just broke his bones, Freddyโd his face up, because, as he always tells anybody who doesnโt know to have already left the room, God smiles on drunks and Indians.
Jade would humbly disagree with that statement, being half as Indian as her dad and getting zero smiles from Above, pretty much. Case in point: her dadโs drinking buddy Rexall chuckling about her dadโs orange-hair joke, and tipping his chin up to Jade: โHey, I got a carrot she canโโ
Hating herself for it the whole while, Jade had actually bared her teeth at this, expecting her dad to backhand Rexall, living reject that he is. Or if not backhand him, at least give him an elbow in warning. At the very very least Tab Daniels could have whispered not so loud to his high school bud. Wait till sheโs gone, man. Anything would have been enough.
Heโd just chuckled in drunk appreciation, though.
Maybe if Jadeโs mom were still in the picture, then she could have thrown that maternal elbow, glared that glare, but whatever. Kimmy Danielsโs place is only three-quarters of a mile away from Jadeโs living room, but that might as
well be another galaxy. One not in Tab Danielsโs orbit anymoreโwhich is exactly the idea, Jade knows.
She also knows that stopping in the living room like she did was a mistake. She should have just kept booking, pushed on, shouldered through the smoke and the jokes, landed in her bedroom. Once youโre stopped, though, then starting again without a comeback, thatโs admitting defeat.
She fixed Rexall in her glare.
โMy dad was saying that about eating carrots because girls who want to be skinny try to eat only carrots, and the whites of their eyes will sometimes go orange, from overdoing it,โ she said, touching her hair to make the connection for Rexall. โIโm guessing you being such a shit-eater explains the color of your eyes?โ
Rexall surged up at this, clattering empties off the coffee table, but Jadeโs dad, his eyes never leaving Jade, did hold Rexall back this time.
Rexallโs name is because he used to deal, back in whatever his day was, and Jadeโs pretty sure it was exactly that: one single day.
Jadeโs dad chewed the inside of his cheek in that gross way he always does, that makes Jade see the knot of spongy scar tissue between his molars.
โGot her motherโs mouth,โ he said to Rexall.
โIf only,โ Rexall said back, and Jade had to blur her eyes to try to erase this from her head.
โThatโs right, justโโ she started, not even sure where she was going with this, but didnโt get to finish anyway because Tab was standing, stepping calmly across the coffee table, his eyes locked on Jadeโs the whole way.
โTry me,โ Jade said to him, her heart a quivering bowstring, her feet not giving an inch, even from the oily harshness of his breath, the ick of his body heat.
โThis were two hundred years agoโฆโ he said, not having to finish it because it was the same stupid thing he was always going on about: how he was born too late, how this
age, this era, he wasnโt built for it, he was a throwback, he would have been perfect back in the day, would have single-handedly scalped every settler who tried to push a plow through the dirt, or build a barn, tie a bonnet, whatever.
Yeah.
More like heโd have been Fort Indian #1, always hanging around the gate for the next drink.
โMight have to take you over my knee anyway,โ he added, and this time, instead of continuing with this verbal sparring match, Jadeโs right fist was already coming up all on its own, her feet set like she needed them to be, her torso rotating, shoulder locked, all of it, her unathletic, untrained body swinging for the fences.
It should have worked, too. Tabโs head was turned for the last drink in his bottle, and sheโd never tried anything like this before, so he wasnโt special on-guard. He had been getting suckerpunched his whole stupid life, though, and had some radar as a result. Either that or God really was smiling on him.
Him, not his daughter.
He caught her fist in his open left hand easy as anything, pulled her face right to his, said, โYou do not want to do this with me, girl.โ
โNot with,โ Jade said right into his lips, โto,โ bringing her knee up into his balls like there was a rocket in her boot heel, and then, in the time it took him to keel over into the coffee table, clattering empty bottles away, Jade was running through the screen door, exploding out into the night, never mind that she wasnโt dressed for it.
The only reason she got her work coveralls at all was that they were hanging on the laundry line, skinned with frostโ nobody expected weather to have rolled in over the pass like it had. She didnโt put the coveralls on until the end of the block, though, and when she did she was watching the street the whole time, her eyes the only heat she had anymore.
โAlice,โ she says to herself now, shuffling through the open gate of the staging area for the Terra Nova construction going on twenty-four/seven across the lake.
Alice, the final girl from Friday the 13th, has sort-of orange hair, doesnโt she?
She does, Jade decides with a cruel smile, and that makes this dye-job not a disaster, but providence, fate. Homage. This is Friday the 13th, after all, the holiest of the holies. But sheโs pissed, she reminds herself. Thereโs no smiling when youโre the kind of pissed she is. All thatโs left to do now is turn up somewhere with hypothermia. What sheโll tell Sheriff Hardy is that her dad was partying like always and kicked her out just like last time.
All Jade has to do is tough it out. Go past shivering to something more blue-lipped and dry-eyed. Her loose plan had been to walk down the town pier to get that doneโitโs public, itโs dramatic, somebodyโll find her before sheโs all the way deadโbut then sheโd seen the flickering glow from the staging area, had no choice but to moth over.
The flickering glow is a fire, it turns out. Not a bonfire, butโฆ she has to smile when she gets what sheโs seeing: the grunts on the night shift have used the front-end loader to scoop up all the wood and trash from around the site, probably their last task before clocking out, and then they left all that trash in the big steel bucket, kept it lifted a foot or so off the ground, and dropped a flame in, probably on a shop towel they held on to until the last finger-burning instant.
Burningโs one way to get rid of a load of trash, Jade supposes. With Proofrock trying to dip down into single digits, maybe itโs the best way.
What gives Jade license to come right up to the fire with the rest of the grunts, by her reasoning at least, are her work coveralls, grimy from afternoons and weekends mopping floors and emptying trash and scrubbing toilets. Her nameโโJDโ for โJennifer Danielsโโsewn onto her chest
in cursive thread proves sheโs like them: not important enough to bother remembering, but the front office has to have something to call you when thereโs a spill needs taken care of.
โHowdy,โ she says all around, trying for no lingering eye-contact, no extra attention drawn to her. She immediately regrets howdy, is certain theyโre going to take that as insult, but itโs too late to reel it back in now, isnโt it?
The one with the yellow aviatorsโshooting glasses, right?
โnods once, leans over to spit into the fire.
The guy beside him with the mismatched gloves backhands Shooting Glasses in rebuke, nodding to Jade like canโt Shooting Glasses see thereโs a lady among them?
To show itโs no big deal, Jade leans over into the heat, her frozen face crackling, and spits all she can muster down into the swirling flames, her eyelashes curling back from the heat, it feels like.
The grunt with his faded green Carhartts tucked into his cowboy boots chuckles once in appreciation.
Jade wipes her lips with the back of her bare hand, can feel neither her lips nor the skin of her hand, is just using the brief action to case the place.
It looks the same from inside as it does through the ten-foot chain link: pallets and pallets of building material, ditch witches and scissor lifts, tired forklifts and crusty cement chutes, trucks parked wherever they were when dusk sifted in, brought the real chill with it. The heavy equipment like the front-end loaders and the bulldozers are all herded onto this side of the fenced-in area, the silhouette of the backhoe rising behind like a long-necked sauropod, the crane the undeniable king of them all, its feet planted halfway between this fire and the barge that ferries all this equipment back and forth across Indian Lake.
The day that barge was delivered by a convoy of semis and then assembled on-site, just before Thanksgiving break, it had been enough of an event that a lot of the elementary
school classes took a field trip to watch. And ever since that day, Proofrock hasnโt been able to look away. It never seems like that long, flat non-boat can carry one of these ten-ton tractors, but each time it just squats down in the water like it thinks it can, it thinks it can, and then, somehow, it does. Watching through the window during seventh period, Jade hates the way her heart swells, seeing the monstrous backhoe balanced on the nearly-submerged back of the barge again.
Does she want the backhoe to slide off, plummet down to Drown Town under the lake, or does she want the water to just rise and rise around its tall tires, nobody noticing until itโs too late?
Either will do.
At the other end of that ferry trip is Terra Nova, which Jade despises just on principle. Terra Nova is the rich development going up across the lake, in what used to be national forest before some fancy legal maneuvers carved a lip of it out for what the newspapers are calling the most gated community in all of IdahoโโSo exclusive there arenโt even roads around to it!โ If you want to get there, you either go by boat, balloon, or you swim, and balloons fare poorly with mountain winds, and the waterโs just shy of freezing most of the year, so.
What โTerra Novaโ means, all the articles are proud to reveal, is โNew World.โ What one of the incoming residents said, kind of famously, was that when there are no more frontiers, you have to make them yourself, donโt you?
Right now thereโs ten mansions going up over there at a pace so breakneck it looks almost like the houses are rising in time lapse.
What those entrepreneurs and moguls and magnates probably donโt know, though, is that if you walk the shore around to the east from Proofrock to Terra Nova, having to tippy-toe along the damโs spine at a certain point, the one clearing youโll stumble into will be the old summer camp,
long gone to seed: nine falling-down cabins against a chalky white bluff, one chapel with open sides so itโs pretty much just a low roof on pillars, like a church thatโs sinking, and a central meeting house nobodyโs met at since forever. Unless you count the ghosts of all the kids murdered on those grounds fifty years ago.
To everyone in Proofrock itโs โCamp Blood.โ Give Terra Nova a summer or two, Jade figures, and Camp Blood will be the Camp Blood Golf Course, each fairway named after one of the cabins.
Itโs sacrilege, she tells anyone whoโll listen, which is mostly just Mr. Holmes, her state history teacher. You donโt remake The Exorcist, you donโt sequel Rosemaryโs Baby, and you donโt be disrespectful about soil an actual slasher has walked across. Some things you just donโt touch. Not that anybody in town cares. Or: everybody likes the fifteen dollars an hour Terra Novaโs smooth-talking liaisons are paying anybody who wants to hire on for the day. Anybody like, say, Tab Daniels. Thus the surge of beer heโs been riding the last couple of months.
The transactionโs not what they think, though, thatโs the thing. Theyโre not selling their time, their labor, their sweat, theyโre selling Proofrock. Once Camelot starts sparkling right across Indian Lake, nothingโs ever going to be the sameโthis rant courtesy of Mr. Holmes. Before, all the swayed-in fences and cars with mismatched fenders on this side of the lake were just the way it was, the way it had always been. Now, with Terra Novaโs Porsches and Aston Martins and Maseratis and Range Rovers rolling through to park at the pier, Proofrockโs cars are going to start seeming like a rolling salvage yard. When people in Proofrock can direct their binoculars across the water to see how the rich and famous live, thatโs only going to make them suddenly aware of how theyโre not living, with their swayed-in fences, their roofs that should have been re-shingled two winters ago, their packed-dirt driveways, their last decadeโs
hemlines and shoulder pads, because fashion takes a while to make the climb to eight thousand feet.
As Mr. Holmes put it on one of his sad digressionsโitโs his last semester before retirementโTerra Nova wants to make the other side of the lake pretty and serene, nice and pristine. Itโs not quite so concerned about Proofrock, which before long is going to be just what gets left behind on the way to something better: cigarettes ground out under boot heels, quick pisses behind tires as tall as a house, little jigs and jags of angle iron pushed into the dirt along with layer after sedimentary layer of lonely washers and snapped-off bolts, which is why no way will Jade be staying here even one more minute than she has to after graduation. Thatโs a promise. Thereโs Idaho City, thereโs Boise, thereโs the whole rest of the world waiting for her. Anywhere but here.
But that, like the hypothermia, is all later.
Right now itโs just rubbing her hands together over the fire, never mind the sparks swirling up. If she flinches from them, sheโs a girl, she wonโt deserve to be here at this hour.
โYou all right there?โ Shooting Glasses asks.
โExcellent,โ Jade says back, giving him a sliver of a grin. โYou?โ
Instead of answering, Shooting Glasses tries to make subtle eye contact with the other grunts, except quarters are too close for โsubtle.โ
โI interrupting something?โ Jade says all around. Mismatched Gloves shrugs, which means yes.
โFeel like I just barged into a wake, I mean,โ Jade says, going from face to face.
โGood call,โ Cowboy Boots says while wiping at his nose.
โIโm not Catholic,โ Jade says, pulling back with all of them from a long swirling exhalation of sparks, โbut isnโt there usually more drinking at a wake?โ
โYouโre thinking Irish,โ Mismatched Gloves says with a sort-of grin.
โLet me guess,โ Jade says. โYour nameโฆ McAllen?
McWhorter? Mc-something?โ
โThatโs Scottish,โ Shooting Glasses says, staring into the fire. โIrish is OโShaunessy, OโBrienโthink luck Oโ the Irish, thatโs how I remember it.โ
โWhich of them has leprechauns?โ Cowboy Boots asks.
โShh, shh, youโre Indian, man,โ Shooting Glasses tells him. โWeโre talking Europe stuff here, yeah?โ
โMe too,โ Jade says.
โYouโre a leprechaun?โ Mismatched Gloves asks, smiling now as well.
โIndian,โ Jade says, and, by way of formal introduction to Cowboy Boots, โBlackfoot, my dad tells me.โ
โIsnโt that Blackfeet?โ Shooting Glasses asks.
โMontana or Canada?โ Mismatched Gloves adds in.
Jade doesnโt tell them that, in elementary, until she caught the Montana return address on what turned out to be a Christmas check, sheโd always thought she was Shoshone, because those were the Indians her social studies class said were in Idaho. So, being in Idaho, thatโs what she must be. But then that return address, and that tribal seal by the addressโsheโd saved it, kept it hidden alongside her Candyman tape. Too, back in those days sheโd had the idea that, since she was starting out half Indian, that as she got bigger and tallerโgot more and more physical actual blood
โsomeday sheโd be full-blood like her dad.
โBlackfeet,โ she says back with faked authority. โWhat the fuck do you think I said?โ
โYeah,โ Mismatched Gloves says, holding his different-colored hands high and away, not touching this anymore, โshe sounds Blackfeet all right.โ
โAdopted,โ Cowboy Boots says about himself, by way of introduction. โCould be anything.โ
โWhat heโs saying is heโs a mutt,โ Mismatched Gloves says.
โMutt your ass,โ Cowboy Boots says back, and Jade files that away: on this job-site, โyour assโ is the add-on way of turning anything around. Her kind of place.
โSo who died?โ she says to whoeverโs answering.
โHe didnโt die,โ Cowboy Boots says, blinking something away.
โDepends on what you consider dead,โ Mismatched Gloves adds.
โGreyson Brust,โ Shooting Glasses says, being respectful with the name.
โHired on with us,โ Mismatched Gloves tells Jade, then shrugs an exaggerated shrug, like trying not to think of something.
โZero days since the last accident?โ Jade asks, aware of the eggshells sheโs walked onto here.
Shooting Glasses chuckles kind of humorlessly.
โPlace is cursed,โ Jade says, which gets all of their attention, a few more unsubtle glances among them. โProbably, I mean,โ she adds.
โSo where you headed?โ Cowboy Boots asks, trying to get Jadeโs eventual exit started.
Jade, not a poker player, accidentally sneaks a glance in the direction of the great void in the night Indian Lake is, shrugs.
โSheโs not going to,โ Mismatched Gloves says, watching Jade hard. โSheโs going from, right?โ
โKiller name,โ she says back to him, the answer to a question he hadnโt even been asking a little.
โSay what?โ Cowboy Boots says.
โGreyson Brust,โ Jade says, obviously. โThatโsโhe sounds like horror royalty, I mean. You can hear it, canโt you? โGreyson Brustโ is right up there with Harry Warden, with Billy Loomis, with John Wakefield, with Victor Crowley and Sammi Curr. Withโฆ Iโm gonna say itโฆ Jason Voorhees. Some names just have that killer ring, donโt they?โ
โYou good, there?โ Mismatched Gloves asks, and Jade looks down to where he means: the red blooming slow in the left pocket of her coveralls, from when she was flicking the utility knifeโs razor blade open and shut against her leg on the walk here.
โGot some red on me, yeah,โ she kind-of-quotes, shrugging his inspection off, all the tiny scars up and down her thighs and hips crawling over themselves to be seen. And then, because now nobodyโs saying anything and everythingโs awkward and starting to suck, Jade backs up a smidge from the fire, says, โBut youโre right, yeah. I have to be careful here. Shouldnโt be standing so close to open flames like these, I mean.โ
โYou wereโโ Cowboy Boots starts, then tries again: โI thought you were talking aboutโโ
โSlashers,โ Jade says with her best evil grin. โI was talking about slashers. Theyโre why I canโt catch fire here. Iโm a janitor, I mean, a custodian, and whatโs that but a caretaker, right? Iโm practically Proofrockโs caretaker when Iโm wearing this. And if I stand too close, catch a sleeve on fire, and the rest of me goes up, thenโฆโ
Jade has to gulp her smile down.
โIโm talking about Cropsy,โ she says, looking from face to face for even a hint of recognition. โSlashers from 1981, Alex.โ
โUm,โ Shooting Glasses says.
โOkay, okay,โ she says, backing up in her head to figure out where to start for them. โSay youโre the main and only caretaker for Camp Blackfoot. The one from The Burning, I mean. Not the one from Camp Blood, which is a movie to them, a place to us around here, but forget that for now. Itโs justโitโs the same way Higgins Haven is in both Friday the 13th Part III and Twisted Nightmare, right?โ
โYouโre the janitor for this camp,โ Cowboy Boots fills in, playing along.
โIf Iโm Cropsy I am, yeah,โ Jade says, ignoring everything else. โAnd Iโve got my own cabin and everything. But these kids, these punks, they donโt really appreciate the way Iโve been โtaking careโ of things, so much. Remember, this is sleepaway camp. Itโs its own little closed system of punishment and reward.โ
โThink I know that camp,โ Shooting Glasses says. โYou went to camp?โ Mismatched Gloves says.
โI know the punishment part, I mean,โ Shooting Glasses says back to him.
โSo Iโm Cropsy, Iโm the janitor, the caretaker,โ Jade goes on, before they forget theyโre listening to her. โItโs my job to clean up all the blood in the showers. Itโs my job to tump the cut-off fingers out of the bottom of the canoe. Any deaths by wasp-nest or arrow or axe, I clean them up just the same. But then all these kids get it in their head that I need to be taught a lesson, so they elect to play a harmless little prank. Kind of a time-honored tradition of camp, right?โ โGot a jacket in the truck, you want one,โ Cowboy Boots says to Jade. Probably because of the way her jawโs chattering and the muscles around her eyes are jerking. But thatโs not cold, thatโs excitement. Usually Mr. Holmes will have cut her off by now, his big hand up between them, telling her heโs not letting her write any more papers on
horror movies, sorry.
But she can do them out loud, too.
โThe prank these kids dream up,โ she explains, her voice gearing down, really getting into this, โitโs that they sneak a probably-fake human skull into Cropsyโsโinto my bedroom while Iโm sleeping, leave it there with two little candles burning in the eye sockets, and then bang on the window to wake me up. You can guess what happens next. The prank worksโIโm scared, terrified, Iโve woken up to a nightmareโ my cabinโs on fire! Lesson learned, right? Wrong. In my half-asleep panic, I knock this skull over, the sheets catch fire, and then for some reason Iโve got a full can of gas in there
with me. Probably to keep it away from the kids. To keep them from hurting themselves with it in some stupid way.โ
โShit,โ Shooting Glasses says.
โNow fast-forward five years after that explosion,โ Jade says, like itโs a campfire theyโre gathered round. โI, Cropsy, I lived through that burningโฆ somehow. Kind of. Because Iโm all melty and cratered, I wear trench coats, and my hatโs always pulled down low because any sunlight practically hisses against my tender skin, my pizza knots of scar tissue
โthis is three years before Freddy, cool?โ
โGot some gloves too,โ Cowboy Boots offers, starting to pull his off.
โI donโt need a glove,โ Jade says, set up so perfect. โFirst person I kill, itโs with scissors.โ
โShould weโ?โ Shooting Glasses says to everybody but Jade.
โShh, shh,โ Mismatched Gloves tells him, getting into this.
Jade grins a not very secret grin. โBy the time I make it back to the lake Camp Blackfootโs on, thoughโthatโs Blackfootโthose scissors have gone magnum. Theyโre full-on hedge clippers now. Andโฆ why scissors, you think? Why hedge clippers? Thatโs what Iโm wanting to get at here. Maybe you can guess it. My history teacher couldnโt.โ
โThere somebody we can call?โ Shooting Glasses asks.
โThink back to that initial prank, right?โ Jade says, stopping at each face like an interrogation. โTwo candles burning like eyes in that skull? Now, say I just woke up, saw that in the very last part of what Iโm going to come to consider the good part of my life, wouldnโt my first impulse be to cover those eyes, to ruin those eyes, to stop this scary shit from happening? But, if I just had a letter opener, say, Iโm screwed. I have to either stick it in the left eye or the right eye, which doesnโt make the scare go away, it just turns it into a pirate. But, if Iโve got scissors like Schizoid from the year before, well. Then I can pop both eyes at once. Theyโre the perfect weapon for this terror Iโve woken
up to. But now itโs five years later and Iโm back at good old Camp Blackfoot, and thereโs just a metric shit-ton of killing that needs to get done. So I ditch the scissors. Hedge clippers, though, with them I can stay back at a safe distance, just chop-chop-chop.โ Jade mimes it for them, coming at each of their throats. They just watch her. โAnd anyway, hedge clippers, theyโve, one, never been used in a slasher before 1981, and, two, when held up so they kind of flash in the light, they kind of make you feel like youโre already dead.โ
โCan I give you, you know, a ride somewhere?โ Shooting Glasses asks.
โBut also,โ Jade barrels on, having to remind herself to breathe, โscissors and hedge clippers, they kind of fit the name, donโt they? Think about it. โCropsy.โ If the name is at all descriptive, then it has to mean cropping things. Cutting them shorter than they were. Look it up in the dictionary when you get home. To โcropโ is to cut off the outer or upper parts. This is what I do as revenge to these campers, this summer. I crop the living shit out of them. In the woods. On a raft. In a mineshaftโฆ all things we have right here in Proofrock.โ
โWhat are you saying?โ Cowboy Boots says, looking around like to check if heโs the only one of them wondering this.
โIโm saying that this is why I say I should be careful here,โ Jade tells him, opening her hands to the fire. โIf I get too close to this and go up in flames, then Iโm going to come back in five years and carve through this town like, likeโbut I forgot to tell you all the other stuff. Shit. Did you know that on the set of The Burning, Tom Savini still had Betsy Palmerโs decapitated head from Friday the 13th, and the actors actually got to play with it like a volleyball? And, talking Friday, did you know it and Motherโs Day were filming across the lake from each other in 1979? Yeah, yeah, the crews would get together at night and drink beer, and
they, no way could they have known that the f-f-floodgates were about to open, likeโlike those elevator doors in The Shining, right? It must haveโit was, it had to beโcan you even imagineโโ
Jade hates it, but sheโs crying a little bit now. Maybe kind of a lot, really.
And now Shooting Glasses has her by the arm, his jacket off, around her shoulders.
He guides her away from the precious heat of the trashfire, delivers her into the passenger seat of a late-model dust-caked car thatโs out of place for a construction site.
โIโIโm f-fine,โ Jade finally manages to get out, trying to prove that itโs okay, she can stay, she can talk all night, she did all her slasher homework, she knows every answer, please, just ask, ask.
โIโm taking you toโโ Shooting Glasses says from the driverโs seat, grubbing the keys up from the passenger seatback pocket, which makes it feel like his fingertips are touching her back. โAre you really, like, running from something?โ
Jade considers this question for long enough that it becomes an answer.
โWhere can I take you, then?โ Shooting Glasses asks, cranking the engine.
โThis your car?โ Jade asks him back, wiping her face, finally breathing, and breathing too much now, too deep, like sheโs about to just collapse into a girl-shaped column of tears and wishes.
โItโs like Cody out there,โ Shooting Glasses says, nodding back to either Mismatched Gloves or Cowboy Boots. โWe adopted it.โ
Cowboy Boots, then.
โAdopted it your ass,โ Jade says, pausing for a slice of a moment to clock if he hears that sheโs talking like them. โAdopting a car meansโit means you s-s-stole it.โ
She hates shivering like this, showing weakness like this, having to have a body like this. But itโll pass, she knows. You only shiver for a bit, when your body still has hope it can get back to warm.
โIt was in the way of loading the barge last weekend,โ Shooting Glasses says with an easy shrug. โWe moved it in here to keep it from getting dinged up.โ
โThat d-doesnโt mean itโs y-y-yours.โ
โWeโll give it back whenever whoeverโs it is comes for it.โ โMaybe itโs m-mine,โ Jade says, her shoulders jerking in
spite of the jacket sheโs wrapped in.
In answer to that, Shooting Glasses plucks a glittery pink Deadwood shirt off the dash, holds it up.
Jade has to smile, caught. No way can a horror fan claim a shirt like that.
โNow where we going, final girl?โ Shooting Glasses says.
Jadeโs heart stops, being called that. It stops and then inflates like a balloon in her chest. But, โThatโs not me,โ she has to say, looking out the side of the car, through her own reflection. โF-final girls are virgโtheyโre p-p-pureโฆ theyโre not like me.โ
โQuestion stands.โ
โIโll show you,โ Jade says, and nods to the right, into downtown Proofrock, then says to Shooting Glasses, โN-now you.โ
โMe what?โ Shooting Glasses says, easing the car one tire at a time over the fence panel laid on its side that Jade guesses is a gate. Close enough. When he turns the headlights on, though, she reaches across, touches his arm, shakes her head no. He sucks the light back into the front of the car. It makes it feel like theyโre driving through church.
โIโd never even been here before,โ Shooting Glasses says about Proofrock, sleeping all around them.
โLucky,โ Jade says, a wave of shivers rolling up her back again, her lips set against this physical betrayal. โHere.โ
Shooting Glasses hand-over-hands the wheel to the left again, easing them past the drugstore, past the bank, and itโs not like church anymore. Now itโs like theyโre coasting through a painting: โQuaint Mountain Towns.โ โLakeside Pastoral.โ โWhat If 1965 Never Stopped Happening?โ
โYour turn,โ Jade tells Shooting Glasses. โI told youโI told you some stuff. Now you tell me some stuff. Thatโs how it works. Quid pro quo, Clarice.โ
Shooting Glasses shakes his head side to side slow, apparently impressed that, in spite of these early stages of hypothermia, the girlโs still got it.
Jade nods that, yes, this is her, this is what she does.
โWhere were you the last four years?โ she says to him, kind of accidentally out loud.
โI wasโโ he starts, then hears it like she means it, just purses his lips, peers ahead into the unheadlit darkness.
โThis is where you tell me about your buddy,โ Jade explains to him. โThe one that wasnโt a wake for back there. The one who didnโt die all the way or whatever.โ
โGreyson.โ
โDid he go live with a distant aunt to recover? Was her barn full of pitchforks, her hands full of s-sewing needles, her head full of bad ideas?โ
Shooting Glasses looks over to her about this.
โThatโs how it usually goes, I mean,โ Jade explains, trying to show she means no insult. โThe wronged party, victim of the prank, has to go somewhere long enough that everyone else can forget all about him, so it can be a s-s-surprise when heโs back.โ
โYou said this place was haunted,โ Shooting Glasses tells her.
โBy all the ghosts of who everybody used to want to be, before they died inside,โ Jade says.
โWhat were you doing out here?โ Shooting Glasses asks. โDid you know Friday the 13th, it was trying to cash in on
Halloween, yeah, sure, but then right at the very end it
forgot what it was doing, started thinking it was Carrie?โ โWhy do you talk about horror so much?โ
โSlashers,โ Jade corrects, is always correcting.
โI mean, and donโt take this the wrong way, but, have you considered that maybe youโre just hiding beโโ
โCanโt I just like horror because itโs great? Does there have to be some big explanation?โ
โIโm just, your leg, I think maybe thatโs blood. I think maybe I shouldโโ
Jade doesnโt hear the end because sheโs popped the door, is rolling out into the cold, canโt take any more of thisโher dad, this town, high school. Questions, glances, judgments. The sad way stupid Sheriff Hardy looks at her. The way Mr. Holmes is always asking her these exact same questions, every time she turns in a paper. Now even construction grunts she doesnโt know are treating her like sheโs in need of special-delicate handling.
Fuck that. Fuck all of them.
She falls on the heels of her hands and her knees, doesnโt let that stop her, is already running like a ragdoll down the town pier, that kind of running thatโs all untied boots, that you have to lift your chin for, because you know youโre going so fast. Halfway to the end of the pier, the stolen carโs brights blast on, throwing her shadow out ahead of her, where it plunges past the wooden planks, into the water.
Jade tries to stop but itโs slick, so, yeah, the perfect capper to the perfect night: she goes flailing over the end, just like every kid all summer long, except itโs not summer yet, and sheโs seventeen, and itโs cold-thirty in the dead-dead morning.
The last thing she thinks as sheโs slipping over the end is how stupid it is that that shaky light is steady for once, isnโt flickering out, and then sheโs holding her breath for the icy plunge, is trying to insulate herself with slashers that happen in the snow but can only come up with Cold Prey
and Cold Prey 2, and thatโs not going to be enough to keep her blood from freezing.
Instead of splashing into the lake or cracking through the thin sheet of ice that has to be there, she thunks into the bottom of the green canoe always tied there, BYOP-style: Bring Your Own Paddle.
The canoe rocks and founders, doesnโt quite roll.
Jade sits up holding the back of her head, the world blurry and getting blurrier, then, hearing footsteps coming for her, she lets the scratchy nylon rope loose, reaches out with one boot to push off into the darkness, the scrim of ice on the surface crackling around her in large, slow sheets. So she wonโt have to see Shooting Glasses standing there looking for her, she fetals down on her side in the bottom of the canoe, the gunwales to either side hiding her and her orange hair, her blue lips, her red left leg, her pitch-black heart.
And she hates it more than anything, but sheโs sobbing now.
No, she can never be a final girl.
Final girls are good, theyโre uncomplicated, they have these reserves of courage coiled up inside them, not layer after layer of shame, or guilt, or whatever this festering poison is.
Real final girls only want the horror to be over. They donโt stay up late praying to Craven and Carpenter to send one of their savage angels down, just for a weekend maybe. Just for one night. Just for one dance, please? One last dance?
Thatโs all Jade needs in the world, she knows.
Instead sheโs got Tab Daniels for a father, Proofrock for a prison, and high school for a torture chamber.
Kill em all, she says in her heart of hearts. Let God sort them out.
Or just leave them unsorted, floating facedown in the shallows. That works too.
Jade chuckles to herself through the tears, pats her chest pocket for the cigarette she doesnโt have, because these coveralls were just hanging on the line.
Once sheโs drifted far enough out that the light from the pier canโt reach her, she sits up, takes stock, and keeps monologuing even though the trashfire is just a flickering speck of light on shore: โDid you know that kid the shark eats in Jaws, his nameโs โVoorheesโ too?โ she asks the construction grunts, all three of them so ready to smile with wonder at this. โYeah, yeah, Voorhees kids should maybe stay out of the water, think? But thatโs not even what I meant to say, okay, sorry. I was justโwhen Jason comes up out of the water in mossy slow motion for Alice, floating there in her safe canoe, roll-the-credits music already cueing up, thatโs Fridayโs Carrie moment right there, thatโs the stinger that would set the mold for the Golden Age of the slasher, the eighties, and, andโฆ the way he comes up and hugs her from behind, itโs not because he means her any violence, any harm, itโs just that heโsโheโs a little kid, goddamnit, heโs a helpless messed-up little kid and heโs fucking drowning, heโs terrified, heโs holding on to whatever he can, right? Heโs scared, and sheโsโฆ sheโs supposed to protect him, save him, keep him safe.โ
Jade lowers her face, because the air at her chest has to
be warmer. Her lungs feel like theyโre iced over, filling with something solid and permanent.
This isnโt just going to be hypothermia, Sheriff Hardy, Mr.
Holmes.
Sheโs Alice at the end of Friday the 13th now, she knows, when Fridayโs starting to be Saturday, sheโs Alice and sheโs floating out on the lake in her canoe, waiting for the magic to happen, trying to stay out there long enough that Jason notices her up at the surface, starts rising, risingโ
โHere I am,โ Jade says, loopy with cold now, smiling because it doesnโt hurt anymore, and just to give Jason some color to find her, some of what he likes, she holds her
left wrist out, uses her right hand to flick the razor from the utility knife like a sharp little tongue, and she cuts longways and deep like opening a fountain, doesnโt scratch some side-to-side plea-for-help gash.
Her blood pours steaming from the fishbelly part of her left forearm and she studies it, says, โHere I am, IโmโIโmโฆโ What stops her is how fascinating her blood is, pooled on the surface of the gelid lake. Sheโs seventy percent certain a misshapen face is looking up at her from the murk, its mouthful of gravestone teeth trying to grin. She smiles back, looks all around in farewell, to Proofrock where she grew up, to Terra Nova where sheโs never been, to Camp
Blood, where her heart is.
โMomma Iโm coming home,โ she says with that Ozzy lilt, and she knows no arms are coming up from behind her for her big finale, for the slasher version of a death roll, which is really just a hug, but she closes her eyes all the same, pretends.
SLASHER 101
And then there was one. Of me, I mean, Mr. Holmes, one Jade Daniels to take
you by the hand and walk you up and down the video rental aisles of slasherland to make up for what I missed from the Freddy Glove Incident at freshman
detention, which wasn’t even really my fault, and that Freddy glove has PLASTIC blades anyway. It’s almost October though, and horror is my religion. Can I not
celebrate orthodoxly and honor my church’s holy days?
But I need to explain SLASHERS to you now, in under 2 pages.
It’s easy to think that the slasher started with Halloween, previously called The Babysitter Murders, or that it got a face when Friday the 13th III put a
certain Black Christmas hockey mask on, but still, a lot fans and true believers will go back to Psycho and Peeping Tom. However though if you ask yourself
“Who was the first masked killer?” then you can go all the long way back to Phantom of the Opera, which you might remember seeing on a high school outing probably.
What’s first and almost first isn’t as important as what’s INSIDE the slasher though, sir. And that is REVENGE plain and simple.
To explain, years ago there was some prank or crime that hurt someone and then the slasher comes back to dispense his violent brand of justice, and he’s not listening to excuses or apologies because there’s not one single one that
could ever be even halfway enough, his mission is carving and he’s not stopping until he’s stopped.
So in the case of Jason Voorhees and Freddy Krueger, what made them into a slasher is that Jason DROWNS through massive and obviously wrong neglect,
and Freddy is EXECUTED by a mob illegally, and the counselors who allowed this drowning and the parents who became this mob never get punished, just get to keep on keeping on, and it’s that unfairness that powers the slasher. As for
Michael Myers, his Ahab Dr. Loomis says he’s evil, but he’s been MADE evil, Mr.
Holmes. The crime done to him is that his sister his BABYSITTER should have been watching him closer not stripping down and sexing it up. Michael could
have been run over in the street. He could have choked on candy. He could have found a knife and got all stabby.
Only one of those three ended up happening, Mr. Holmes. It would have been a pretty short movie otherwise.
As for Ghostface from Scream, sure Billy aka Ghostface says it’s scarier when there isn’t a motive, but that doesn’t mean he doesn’t have one, sir. Final Girl
Sidney’s mom had an affair with his dad, breaking his family up, so a year later all the revenge starts up.
So what I’m saying is that in the slasher, wrongs are always punished. The
crew that did the Bad Prank years ago gets the just dessert they deserve, with a bloody cherry on top, and when they least expect it, making it all better, which should convert you to my side of the movie aisle and the water’s fine over here, Mr. Holmes, really. A little bloody maybe, but all the dead people are people who were asking for it. Which is my argument in a gory nutshell.