In A Nightmare on Elm Street, Nancyโs dad is a homicide detective, so she has pretty much unfettered access to the whole station, can waltz in and treat all the uniformed cops like Tatum treats Dewey, and they just have to fumble their papers and let her pass by.
Jade is no Nancy.
Meg stops Jade at her big L-shaped desk, which is pretty much the reception desk, wonโt let her back into the hall that leads to Hardyโs office, to Records, to the Evidence closet, to the two holding cells, and to the only room Jade has access to, once every two weeks: Janitorial Supplies.
โCommunity service,โ Jade explains, trying hard to sound as unenthused as possible, like thereโs twenty other places sheโd rather be right now.
โCommunity what, dear?โ Meg asks, followed up by two quick bats of her fake eyelashes.
โForโฆ you know,โ Jade says, and rolls the left arm of her coveralls up to show her angry scar that, earlierโoopsโ sheโd drawn centipede legs coming off of, like suicide is a bug she can pass with a handshake.
Meg sucks air in through her teeth, has to look away fast. Jade can still hear her daughter Tiff throwing up in the tall grass. Like mother like daughter.
โHe said you might have some filing for me,โ Jade explains, using her pleasant voice.
โDuring working hours maybe,โ Meg explains right back with just as much false cheer.
โYouโre here.โ
โSpecial circumstances.โ
โI canโt go home right now,โ Jade says, covering the rest of that particular story with a โdonโt want to talk about itโ shrug, a purposeful breaking of eye contact that can only mean itโll crack her tough-girl faรงade if she has to go any further into this.
Meg bites her top lip in then rotates halfway around in her chair, tapping the plastic button of her pen on the front of her top teeth, which Jade takes as a strong reminder not to chew on any pens in this office.
โWhy is everyone here?โ Jadeโs not physically able to keep from asking after a few slower and slower tooth taps. โSomebody die, what?โ
Meg doesnโt twitch a single muscle on her face, just keeps looking around for a menial enough chore. One someone with zero clearance can do, someone with negative clearance, which is to say: this oneโs got sticky fingers, hungry eyes, and a bone to pick with authority. Only trust her as far as you can throw her, and keep in mind that you donโt have any arms.
โYou wore your other work clothes,โ Meg says, holding the back of her index finger under her nose so Jade gets the drift.
โLaundry day,โ Jade tells her. Or, challenges her with. โAre you presentable under them?โ
โWhat do youโ?โ
โDo you have other clothes on?โ
โWhatโs wrong with being a janitor?โ
โToo many pockets,โ Meg says, staring right into Jadeโs soul, โtoo roomy. An enterprising seventeen-year-old could smuggle a coatrack out in that.โ
Jade stands and slowly unzips, holding Megโs eyes the whole while. She steps out of the coveralls, rolls them into a ball, sets that ball on Megโs desk, careful not to disturb all the inboxes and trays and pencil holders.
What sheโs wearing nowโwhat Meg can see nowโis a shirt with a Raymond Pettibon gig poster silkscreen of a
bare-breasted dead woman named Janie, and Janieโs friend asking Jesus, also pictured, about why, if heโs Christ, why oh why wonโt he raise Janie?
Megโs lips tighten with disapproval.
โI can put them back on,โ Jade says, taking a seat, slouching down in it like the criminal she is, โbut who knows, I might steal all the staplers. Get a pretty good price for them on the street. Kids these days canโt get enough office supplies, Iโm sure Tiffโs told you.โ
โYou can stuff envelopes is what you can do,โ Meg says, standing with purpose, her posture prim and schoolmarmish.
โI live to serve,โ Jade says, and hauls her ashes up, follows Megโฆ all the long way to the next desk over?
โSo I can keep an eye on you,โ Meg informs her.
โWouldnโt have it any other way,โ Jade says, and starts to take a seat in the empty rolling chair but Megโs already rolling it away, replacing it with a battered stool.
โHelps with posture,โ Meg says, reaching around behind Jade like to straighten her up but not going so far into legally fraught territory as to actually touch the temporary employee.
Jade allows her posture to be improved, straddles the little stool, and takes the envelopes and flyers Meg provides, enduring her walk-through as well: proper method, desired results, blah, blah. The flyers are pale green, are for some referendum to restrict the airspace over Proofrock.
Hilarious.
โSorry, Sherlock,โ she says, and licks envelope number one, starts her stack of done-withs, pulls up the second flyer in desperate need of a careful crease.
For the first forty or so of them, Meg watches, harrumphing at Jadeโs more sloppy attempts, humming conditional approval over the better ones. The sun goes down and the overhead lights become more important. Phones ring and radios hiss, feet scuffle, and Jadeโs shoe-
polished hair, she has to admit, is letting off an acrid scent that she thinks might be either getting her high or dollying her up to some ledge sheโs meant to tumble off.
At the hundred and fourteen mark she nods forward, her forehead resting on the top of the desk for just a momentโs peace, but Meg clears her throat in a wake-up way and Jade startles, leans back into it.
โHow many hours is this so far?โ she asks.
โYou keep your own time,โ Meg says. โWeโll just hope it matches the time sheet I turn in to the sheriff.โ
โWonderful,โ Jade says, and accidentally-on-super-purpose rips the flyer sheโs trying so hard to fold just right.
โRecycling,โ Meg tells her, directing Jade to the bin across the room, by the copy machineโsame model as the libraryโs, probably the same purchase orderโand by the time Jade shuffles back she knows itโs not worth the pleasure of wasting paper if it means she has to get up each time to do it. Her back does feel better, though. Maybe stools arenโt as evil as sheโd always thought.
โWhat is that smell?โ Meg asks minutes or hours later, interrupting whichever reverie Jadeโs jellyfishing through. โDid you spill gas on yourโฆโ She jabs the rolled coveralls with the button of her pen.
โI donโt drive,โ Jade tells her, voice creaky at first. โAnd they donโt trust me with the lawnmowers.โ
โProbably a wise precaution,โ Meg says as if to herself, and turns to some task on her computer.
A hundred and thirty stuffed envelopes later, the fourth pile of them teetering in most dangerous fashion, Hardy steps in as if through the batwing doors of a saloon.
โMegan, I need you toโโ he starts, is stopped just as fast by Jadeโs presence.
โSheriff,โ she says, repaying the jumpscare he gave her last night.
โWhat you doing here?โ he asks.
โCommunity service?โ Jade asks right back.
โSheโs stuffing envelopes, sir,โ Meg says, looking up over her glasses to show Hardy that heโs making a nuisance of himself in the front office, when his job is obviously not the front office.
โI see, okay, okay,โ he says, rubbing his nose with the back of his hand, his six-hours-old five oโclock shadow raspy and loud against the stiff cuff of his shirt.
โIs everythingโฆ?โ Meg asks, completing the sentence with her eyes.
โStaties are here,โ Hardy says with a shrug, like he didnโt want the dead-Founder case anyway. To show how all right he is with it, he hangs his brown coat on the unstolen coatrack, puts his flat-brimmed official hat on top of that, and then swings his belt off, crashes it down on a lateral filing cabinet hard enough that Jade expects the service revolver to fire into her gut.
โYou donโt have to stay,โ Hardy says to Meg. โGonna be a long night.โ
โAnd miss all the excitement?โ Meg says back with a grin. โDonโt know what Iโd do without you,โ Hardy tells her,
and, passing by her desk, works something stubby and black up from his shirt pocket, deposits it in a wire-screen pencil holder on Megโs desk, tapping the lip of the pencil holder twice.
โIf anybody callsโโ Hardy starts, โRoute them through Dispatch,โ Meg finishes. โAnd then tell you who they are, of course.โ
โMy Girl Friday,โ Hardy says, sweeping past.
Jade has no idea what kind of pornographic pet name that might be, and doesnโt think she wants to know.
Hardy stops at the hall, loosening the brown tie sheโs only now realizing heโs got on.
โYou were supposed to start tomorrow,โ he tells her, his voice booming through the station.
โEarly bird gets the maggot,โ Jade says, flashing an evil smile.
โEat what you will, eat what you willโฆโ Hardy says in farewell, fading down the hall, still working on his tie.
โVery proper for a young lady,โ Meg tells Jade without having to look over to say it.
โIโm a woman, hear me roar,โ Jade says back, and licks the next envelope with as much attitude as she can pack into it, imagining her tongue lacerated by a thousand cuts, her teeth coating in blood.
An hour later Jadeโs on stack seven of infinity, and every time she looks up, her vision is stained pale green. The corner in the wall over by the copy machine is actually a giant fold in-process, and Jade, inside that white envelope, has checkboxes for eyes. The stool sheโs stuck on has a sticky surface some greater tongue has already licked. Meg is a greasy black hair thatโs fallen into the works to mess everything up, one Jade canโt quite pinch up or flick away.
She raises her hand and Meg calls on her. โYes?โ
โBathroom?โ
โComplete sentence, please?โ
โMay I visit the single stall womenโs restroom whose toilet I know better than I want to already?โ Jade says with full-on defeat. โThe one Iโve been scrubbing already for the pastโโ
Meg chaperones her down the hall.
โReceptionista and ladiesโ room attendant,โ Jade says. โThis is a full-service station, isnโt it?โ
โFeel free to wiggle out the window in there,โ Meg says. โItโs rusted open.โ
โThe night is an embryoโฆโ Jade says, leaning in. Washing her hands, she catches a flash of herself in the mirror. โNightmare Girl to the rescue,โ she says, โup up andโโ
Meg escorts her back to her station that feels like a cell, in the town thatโs definitely a prison.
This is such a great plan for glomming onto information about whatever happened in Terra Nova, yes. But, on the sulky way past Megโs desk, Jade does at least clock that
wire-screen pencil holder that Hardy deposited something into: TRANSCRIPTIONS.
Well well well.
โThere anything else I can do instead?โ Jade whines to Meg.
โWhen youโre done with the referendums you can apply postage, yes,โ Meg says, her eyes holding on to Jadeโs, maybe to see her flinch.
โMore licking, yay,โ Jade says, and takes her stool.
For the next two stacks she imagines going fast enough that she sweats, fast enough that she can rub the tacky backside of the eventual stamps into her swampy armpits before applying them to the envelopes.
Get your entertainment where you can find it, right?
For now Jade has to make do with the grey smudges her stained fingers are still leaving on the pristine white envelopes, which she guesses will make the people of Proofrock aware these are hand-stuffed, not machine-.
Like that matters. Like any of this does.
This time when Jade lowers her forehead to the desktop for just a momentโs escape, she forgets that sheโs awake, so that when she comes to, sheโs all alone in the front office, like sheโs been sucked into some Freddyfied version of where she just was.
She looks to the doorway for a bleating lamb, to the other doorway for a bodybag sliding away, and then to the water cooler, to see if itโs just water in there.
It is. For now.
Jade taps her right foot on the ground, testing it. Not oatmeal. Same old floor.
Maybe this isnโt a dream. Meaningโฆ meaning Meg didnโt wake her this time? Jade dials her hearing up, can just make out Hardy in lecture mode in his office, Megโs attentive burble filling in the empty spaces, and some quiet stretches between the two of them thatโs probably some official on speakerphone.
When Jade tries to glide over to the Important Pencil Holder on Megโs desk, she finds, moments too late, that her legs are asleep, so itโs more of a stumbling lurch, one that dislodges an inbox of metal-case clipboards, sends them sailing over the edge.
Jade dive-falls, just keeps them from rattling to the floor.
She sets them gently back in their place, checks the hall again because Meg can appear at any moment, and then sheโs in Megโs chair, is fumbling for the digital recorder Hardy dropped in the pencil holder.
It smells like his breath, plugs into Megโs computer like it knows that socket, confirming for Jade whatever โGirl Fridayโ means. And now, of courseโof courseโHardyโs voice in his office is doing that rising thing that denotes the end of whatever session this is for him and Meg and the caller.
โShit shit shit,โ Jade whispers, and jabs a tab open in Megโs browser, dials her school email up and logs in, jacking the password up not just once but two times, the warning flashing that one more failed attempt and sheโll be locked out until tomorrow.
Making herself go slow, she enters the letters of โHaddonfieldโ backwards, replacing the vowels with symbols and numbers.
Her inbox pops on-screen.
She drags the only file off the digital recorder into a new message right as the door closes down the hall, Megโs shoes approaching at a painfully brisk clip. But the file isnโt loaded yet, is too big, shit shit shit.
Jade sends it anyway, which at least minimizes that guilty window, and, making herself wait long enough that the file might have had long enough to get sent, she guides the digital recorder out of its socketโXโing out the DEVICE REMOVED WITHOUT EJECTING error pop-upโsliding it over, over, overโฆ
She canโt lift her hand to get it over the metal lip of the wire-screen pencil holder, the TRANSCRIPTIONS to-do box. Not
without announcing what sheโs just been doing.
Is this it, then? Is this where she gets busted, hauled into the place she already is, her mask ripped off?
Not if it doesnโt have to be.
Not before she hears that recording, anyway.
Because she canโt give herself away by raising the hand she has turtled over the recorder, she leaves it there beside the pencil holder and slumps forward as if exhausted, trying hard to sell that this is just where her hand got to unintentionally, maโam, sir. Meg.
โAnd what are we doing here?โ Meg asks, suddenly just there.
Jade fake-flinches, โrousedโ from a cat-nap on the clock.
What her mouse hand has opened just on reflex is the last email from Mr. Holmes. Itโs still the top message in her inbox. And now that itโs open, it could have just been new.
โJust,โ Jade gulps, calling on her inner Billy, her inner Stu, finally saying, โMr. Holmes.โ She leans back, holds her hand out, presenting the email for Meg to see. โMy dad doesnโt believe in internet,โ she adds, cringing from having to play a card this needy.
Meg just scans the email. Itโs about certain liberties she took with the bibliography of her last make-up paper, the biggest of those liberties being that there wasnโt a bibliography.
โIโmโฆโ Jade starts, starts again, fully aware sheโs the only one speaking here: โAsk Sheriff Hardy. Itโs a late paper he wanted me to still submit.โ
โThe sheriff?โ
โMr. Holmes. For history class.โ
โWhich you already graduated from.โ โItโs complicated.โ
โThat part I do believe,โ Meg says, scooching in but not yet displacing Jade, a proximity Jade overplays her reaction to, jerking her left armโand handโsuch that that wire-
screen pencil holder goes tumbling off the edge of the desk, the digital recorder swan-diving in right after it.
โShit, shit, sorry,โ Jade says, standing so that Megโs rolling chair rattles back against a file cabinet.
โThis is why we should all stay at our own stations,โ Meg tsk-tsks, collecting the scattered objects as if theyโre nothing. She holds up the recorder, though, says, โIf this doesnโt workโฆโ
Jade nods, playing guilty. For just and only that, nothing else.
โGo on then,โ Meg says about the still-open email on her screen. โI donโt want to stand in the way of academic progress. Reply. Iโm sure teachers in the summer live for messages from students. Especially retired teachers.โ
Jade positions her fingers at the keyboard version of ten and two, makes her email as short as she can: Just finished it this morning, will send it tomorrow by noon. doc or pdf?
She sends it with a flourish, like tapping the final ivory key of a piano performance, and in getting that fancy, she manages to accidentally open the file already attached higher in that thread. For a bad moment sheโs sure Hardyโs mumbled voice is going to come through Megโs speakers, but then the computerโs two-bytes are just rubbing together in their digital way to open the word processor around this document.
โHe wants hard copy too?โ Meg asks, probably because, being Tiffโs mom, she knows Mr. Holmes prefers paper over digital. Probably so he can stand outside and smoke while grading.
โDo you mind?โ Jade asks.
Meg motions for Jade to continue being the burden she already is, so Jade hits print, andโshit shit shit, thatโs right. This is one of her lists, could be either giallos in order of descending title length or โActors Whose First Role Was in a Slasherโ!
Neither are her best side, sheโs pretty sure.
The printer spools up high, higher, and then starts spitting out not a single page, which would be the stack of giallos, but the three- or four-pager, with Tom Hanks and George Clooney, Jennifer Aniston and Daphne Zuniga probably so prominent that no way can Meg not say something about them.
Meg, reading a memo, wanders over, plucks the stack-so-far up, and gives it a cursory scan.
โJohnny Depp?โ she says to Jade.
โNightmare on My Street,โ Jade mumbles, sucking her top lip in.
Meg breathes in deep, blows it out slow, and walks the pages over to Jade, says, โUsing office supplies costs fifteen minutes on your time card.โ
โThank you,โ Jade says, and logs out of the computer much more carefully, spins around in her chair like a real long-time county employee, her coveralls magically in her lap already.
โAnd he is cute, Iโll give him that,โ Meg calls after her. Jade looks back, He? evidently painted on her face.
โJohnny Depp,โ Meg says, complete with playful eyebrows. โI used to have a poster of him on my wall.โ
โBrad Pitt was in Cutting Class,โ Jade throws out there.
Meg considers this, finally seems to decide sheโs not sure theyโre each in the same conversation, so ends it with, โItโs between you and him of course. Mr. Holmes, I mean.โ
โAnd the school district,โ Jade adds, rolling her list of slasher debuts into a tube and popping it on the end, which is Megโs cue to usher her the rest of the way out of the front office, apparently.
โHas it been twelve hours already?โ Jade play-asks, electing to push the door open before her rather than have her face smushed into it.
โJust wait,โ Meg says, sweeping the problem Jade is from her office. โWhen youโre my age, youโd pay anything to have these hours back.โ
Jade chocks her coveralls under her arm with the roll of pages, and, maybe fifteen steps from the building, all her attention pouring into her phone, waiting for this sound file to load from her email, she hears the single worst possible sound to hear: a lamb, bleating from the darkness to her immediate right.
Jade gasps and gulps in the same instant somehow, which sends her coughing, ends with her bent over, hands on her knees so she can dry-heave.
The bleat comes again, maybe a touch slower this time, as if aware of the response itโs provoking.
Her eyes adjusting to the night now, Jade can just make out a shape stepping forward out of the gathered shadows, and, because she is who she is and knows what she knows, sheโd bet her last breathโwhich she just coughed up, pretty muchโthat that shadowy figureโs about to go bandy-legged, its arms stretching out farther and farther from its sides, until the knives-for-fingers on the right hand can scratch into a wall, a tree, her throat, it doesnโt matter.
โWhoah, whoah,โ this Freddy says, though.
Bit by bit, Jade assembles this voice into one sheโs known since kindergarten.
โBanner?โ she says. Banner Tompkins?
He steps forward, flipping the hourglass in his hand, whichโฆ isnโt an hourglass at all. Itโs a deer-call, one of those little cans with some air-driven mechanism inside that bleats out a deer call when you turn it over.
Andโand Banner, heโs got a rifle slung over his shoulder, warpaint under his eyes, hunting pants tucked into his boots.
โJade,โ he says back, and then they both look up when the world goes halogen-white: two pickups screeching in, the lead truck hiking a front tire up onto the grass. The beds of both trucks are lined with more hunters.
โWhat?โ Jade says, just in general.
โBye now,โ Banner says, and touches the brim of his straw cowboy hat, vaults up into the bed of the lead truck, which is already peeling out.
โWho?โ Jade says then, because her first question was so effective.
She steps out of the way for the trucks to barrel past, and the grim faces of all these high school graduates and their dads sitting across from each other in the beds, the butts of their rifles riding their knees, long barrels tilting into the sky
โtheyโre soldiers, arenโt they? This is some kind of war.
Against what? The deer?
The last face Jade sees is Lee Scanlonโs. Heโs looking back, his free hand clamped tight on the tailgate, his lips pressed together, his eyes for all the world pleading with her, as if heโs being abducted, just needs someone to say something about it.
Jade tracks the taillights until they make a turn just short of the highway, to the right. Where thereโs only logging roads that all bottleneck at the Old Bridge, two miles down the creek. The bridge that only leads toโฆ
Caribou-Targhee National Forest, on the other side of the lake.
โJaws,โ Jade says at last, like making a late identification of those two trucks. This is that comic relief scene in Jaws, where all the boats are vying for space in the water so can they be the ones to haul the killer shark back to Amity Island.
Itโs not so funny in real life, though. That look in Lee Scanlonโs eyes for the half-second Jade saw him, it was fear, one hundred percent. Not that thereโs any sharks up here in the mountains. And not like any motley crew of villagers ever actually kills the slasherโlooking at you, Halloween 4.
Jade remembers that massacred herd of elk over in Sheepโs Head Meadow on the other side of the lake, though. And elk are way tougher than people are.
For a moment she considers ducking back into the sheriffโs office to have Meg pass word on to Hardy that strange things are afoot at this particular Circle K. Things that could get people hurt.
But, too, a slasherโs gonna do what itโs gonna do, right? You canโt stop wheels this big and timeless from turning, from grinding over who they need to grind over. All you can do is keep your eye on the sky, for if one of those wheels is rolling at you.
Jade thumbs her earbuds in right then left, wobbles her head to make sure the cableโs free enough, and Hardyโs already droning through them at a steady mumble.
โโthe one who looked like a young George Peppard, that one? Orโs he too old for you, Megan?โ
Jade sneaks a look behind her to be sure sheโs alone. With Hardy whispering right in her ear, she doesnโt feel very alone. She does most definitely clock Hardyโs use of past tense, though. Whoever he talked about looked, not โlooks.โ Ding ding ding, give the man a headstone, heโs dead.
No clue on โGeorge Peppard,โ though she likes the way Hardy rides that last syllable. It makes her want to say it herself, except of course heโs not waiting for her, is just droning on. Fast-fast, she pauses his dictation, image-searches โGeorge Peppard,โ and, holy shit, Hardy was right: that is one of the Founders, right down to the rakish smile, the hair, the softness at the edges that means money.
Deacon Samuels.
To be sure-sure, Jade searches him up as well, tabs back and forth from Peppard, and, yep, itโs like she did the same search twice.
Point for Hardy.
โThank you, sir,โ she says to him, and unpauses his voice. โHe didnโt exactly have permission, no, strike that, strike that, delete. I mean, Iโd given him a warning already, that better? Yeah, looked like someone was shooting a Roman candle over there, just poof, poof, poof, these orange fizzing
balls arcing up from the old camp, sizzling down into the lake.โ
โThat was you, then,โ Jade says to Deacon Samuels, looking up as if she can see all the way to Camp Blood from here. But, if the Terra Novans are the ones using the old campground as a place to shoot fireworks off now, then where are the kids from Proofrock supposed to hook up, drink? More important for Jade: whereโs she supposed to hide out for a night or two when she needs a place?
โBut it wasnโt fireworks,โ Hardyโs going on, talking quieter now, as if heโs hiding under the monkey bars at recess. โHe wasโget thisโhe had a bucket of gas right there by him, in this little tee box where heโd cut the grass down so it wouldnโt wrap the head of his driver up on the way down. A tee box is like, shitโsorry, sorry. Itโs like a batterโs box had a baby with a putting green? That help? Anyway, what he was doingโฆ I got to get the order down here, else his assโll blow up instead ofโbut Iโm getting to that.
โSo he had good expensive balls down in that gas, Dixon Fires, no joke, and then he had a lit candle maybe four feet awayโabout as far as he could reach while keeping his feet planted, same position every time, so he could know what to adjust. You know what Iโm talking about, Don plays, youโve seen him swing into that net he sets up in his front yard. Anyway, what Samuels would do is dunk the head of his driver into that bucket of gasโand, no lying, it was a Maruman, Megan, hand-crafted out of Japan, by families who probably, I donโt know, make samurai swords? And these are just as deadly. One of them would pay for two of my trucks, for half of my house probably, and heโs dipping the head in gasoline! And, if anybody asks, that driverโs in Evidence now. But letโs hope nobody asks. You know how tags fall off sometimes, stuff gets lost. Small town, donโt have the manpower to keep up with everything. Itโs still a good club, I mean, might get me ten yards farther, out of the rough for good. Weโre about the same height, me and
Samuels. Or, we were. But Iโm getting ahead of myself, sorry, sorry.
โAnyway, heโd fish down in that gas bucket with the head of his driver, and heโd come up with a dripping ball balanced right perfect on it, deadcenter on that logo, and then, no lie, heโd dribble it up and down just like a paddle ball, just like Tiger, except with a driver, not a sand wedge, which has that flat landing pad on top, not a humped back. Something to see, believe you me. When I puttered over there the first time, it about hypnotized me, that. I thought I was maybe in a commercial. That he was about to make me famous.
โThen though, heโd get that little Dixon going good and bounce it hard once, so itโd go up a touch over head-height, and heโd use that time to pass the head of that driver through the flame of the candle, and it would poof orange but wouldnโt break his rhythm enough that he couldnโt catch the ball when it came down.
โStill with me on this? Now the head of that Marumanโs lit, sparking, and the ball catches fire too, is just going up and down, up and down. That first time I was over there, I expected to keep sneaking looks over at cabin five like always, you know, your dad probably told you about that, but anyway, shit, sorry, then I couldnโt stop myself smiling over his little trick. You know heโs on the cover of golfing magazines, right, this Deacon Samuels? Well, itโs not because of his real estate. Some people just have it. Or, had it, yeah.
โAnyway, just like Tiger then, heโd dribble, dribble, becoming like one with the ballโChevy Chase, you know that movie? Forget it. Before your time as well. But Samuels would bounce, bounce, his knees starting to go up and down with the ball, like, and then heโd draw the Maruman back and heโd slash it forward with the prettiest stroke youโve ever seen, I promise, making that perfect little knock, and heโd hold the follow-through too, hold it in a way that told me heโd played some baseball as a kid, wasnโt only a golfer.
โAnd that ball, Meg, hot damn. Thereโd be a crush of sparks each time he did it, each time he slapped it with the head of that driver, and then it would launch up out of that, arc high out over the lake like a meteor, and then plunk down into Ezekielโs Cold Box with all the other balls heโd already been hitting.
โI couldnโt ticket him up for something that beautiful, Meg. Or for burying treasure like a whole bucket of Dixon Fires out there eitherโoh, shit, just hearing that, a Dixon Fire is on fire. But donโt include that in the write-up. Just what we need. โSheriff shows favoritism to rich residents on other side of lake, can evidently be bought,โ no thanks. I did warn him, though. And, if he let me hit any balls into the lake, then, well. Letโs just say he didnโt and leave it at that?โ
Jade turns the corner by the drugstore, her shadow leaking out ahead of her from one of the two streetlights the bank had installed next door to protect its ATM. Because Proofrock is full-to-bursting with kid John Connors, yeah. Important, too, thereโs no golf course in all of Pleasant Valley. Even if there was, though, what Jade doesnโt know about golf would still fill all of Indian Lake. All the same, though, her heart does kind of swell, watching those flaming balls arc out over the dark water and hang, hang.
Which is exactly how easy it would be to fall in love with rich people. With Terra Nova.
Mr. Holmes is right, one hundred percent.
And heโs lucky one of those golf ball meteors never burned through the silk of his wings while he was up there, Jade supposes. But, not like heโs not flying with a lit cigarette, either. And, now that Jade thinks about it, just who was it who called these fireworks in, and who in maybe-return for that warning asked for that airspace referendum?
She nods in solidarity with Mr. Holmes, bumps the dictation back twenty seconds and adjusts her left earbud, doesnโt want to miss a word.
โAny the hell way, you can take it to the fucking bank that thatโs what Samuels was doing over there when he got his ass killed. The bucket was there, still sloshing with unleaded. The club was there in the tall grass, waiting to get tagged and bagged. The candle heโd been using was burned down, somehow managed not to light the whole damn valley up. No witnesses, of course. But it was that Mondragon girl that found him, you know the oneโoldest of them all? Black? Looks like a model from a magazine?โ
Jade makes a fist, shakes it. Of course Letha found the next victim. Final girls have an unerring sense, are forever stumbling on eviscerated bodies, decapitated heads. Each one is a stepping stone to who sheโs about to become.
โShe says she went out there when the fireballs stopped happening. She made the two girls she was sitting on the dock withโฆ letโs see, I wrote them down. Yeah, the Baker twins, I guess the Bakers left them there for the week or something. Or maybe Samuels trucked them in when he breezed into town, they donโt tell me anything. But, so the Mondragon girl, she madeโฆ yeah, โCinnโ and โGinger,โ thatโs it, those Baker girls, she made them stay there while she went to see if Samuels had blown himself up, was flopping in the lake trying to douse the flames. She didnโt say โflopping,โ though, maybe make a note of that. And I take it โCinn,โ which she spelled for me, is for โCinnamon.โ Itโs not like theyโre real witnesses.
โAnyway, the Mondragon girl beats feet over there, itโs only fifteen minutes if you hug the shore, even in the dark, andโฆ sheโs probably going to need some therapy, Megan. Good thing her dad can afford it, right? Samuels, he wasโฆ I donโt want to paint the picture in your headโฆ letโs just say that that bodybag I keep tucked in the boat, that I might or might not ice down for beers for the Fourth? It wouldnโt do the trick. Had to ask the Mondragon wife, Queenie or whatever, to go into the kitchen of that big yacht, fetch us back some sandwich-size ziplock bags. It was while I was
standing around waiting for them, taking a trip down memory lane, cabin five kind of pulsing in my vision, when I saw what was right before my goddamn eyes, Megan.
โA bear print, clear as day and twice as big, I tell you. Because the mud was wet, there were even claws scratched into the ground two or three inches past the pads of the feet. A big-ass boar, I mean, and, judging by Samuelsโs, um, condition, a pretty unhappy one. Rex Allen tried to make a joke about Smokey the Bear just doing his job, open flame and all, but I shut that down quick, got on the horn to the ranger station.
โTime their man got hereโIโm talking about Seth Mullins here, thatโs two Lโsโtheyโd decided to let me in on the little secret that theyโve had a trash grizzly causing problems over towards the Wyoming line. These are those bears that start to like human food a little too much. And, know what? Right there in Samuelsโs golf bag was a paper sack of some sort of pastries. Smelled them before I saw them, you know how I am when thereโs a donut in the room.
โAnyway, I know it can get kind of stale around these parts, that a little mystery might juice things up nice-like, but all we ended up with, aside from a man getting stuffed in sandwich bags, was about five minutes of mystery, or however long it took me to walk from the remains over to the bear print.
โOnly other tracks for the staties to find with their fancy degrees and thousand-dollar equipment were ours, and then the Mondragon girl left some bare feet tracks I guess, thatโs โbareโ as in no shoes, not โbearโ as inโฆ you get it. So, not counting all the tracks we could account for, and taking into account the one track from a bear we now knew was a problem case for the federal Forest Serviceโpolice work really isnโt that hard, is it, Meggie? Hard partโsโโ
Jade pulls the earbuds down, has to lean over sheโs breathing so deep.
So Banner Tompkins and Lee Scanlon and the rest of them are out after a rogue bear, then. A killer bear. A verified monster. โGrizzly, 1976, Alex,โ she manages to dredge up, spit out. โSometimes called a slasher with a bear, but really just Jaws on land, minus Quint.โ Which is minus everything.
Still.
If it had been a Proofrocker getting portioned up for the freezer here, Jade would know that the prank that woke this slasher was some crime twenty years ago, maybe even Melanie Hardyโs drowning, which would probably put Jadeโs dad on the victim list, which would be just fine, thank you.
What does it mean that an untouchable Founder had been killed, though? And, not just killed, but killed in a way that a bear could be framed? How long had it taken whoever was doing this to lure a bear in to cover their tracks?
More important, why? Is this some townie with a chip on his shoulder about who was pulling good hours at the construction site, who wasnโt? Is Terra Nova messing up the back porch vista a certain someone had been counting on staring into for retirement? If soโif either of thoseโthen why now instead of months ago? Had it been last night because whoever it was knew Deacon Samuels would be out there alone, since heโd been alone out there before?
โWho are you?โ Jade says to Indian Lake.
Itโs a good reflective moment, and sheโs milking it for all the drama itโs worth when her phone rings in her hand and she fumbles it away, drops her coveralls, tangles her feet in them and falls, her pages unrolling every which way at once, her elbow scraping on the asphalt so she can answer the phone with a sharp โWhat already?โ
At first, nothing. Then, timidly, โUm, I think I know you from, from the ladiesโ rโโ
โYou got the package,โ Jade says, rolling over onto her back, the wash of stars opening up above her. โYou found theโtheโฆ you found them both. The kid in the lake. The FounโDeacon Samuels. You know itโs really happening.โ
Again, silence.
โDo you need those pants back?โ Letha Mondragon asks in a way that Jade can see her mouth, kind of smiling.
โThereโs so much I need to tell you,โ Jade says. โIโll be yourโฆ whatโs that Pinocchio dude called, with the love letters?โ
โCyrano de Bergerac?โ
โLike, together, my knowledge, what I know, mixed with yourโฆ your everything.โ
โWhat are you saying?โ
โSomethingโs coming is what Iโm saying. Itโs already here is what Iโm saying. Youโve seen it yourself, the proof anyway.โ
Letha doesnโt respond to this.
Jade goes on: โI didnโt know it was going to cross the lake forโฆ for Terra Nova, though. Iโm sorry.โ
โI have so many questions.โ
โIโm the girl made of answers.โ
โThe bench,โ Letha Mondragon says, and it takes Jade a moment to reel through all the benches in Proofrock, finally settle on the only one that could be considered the main one: Melanie Hardyโs memorial bench by the water, just up from the pier. To Letha, arriving by Umiak every morning for school last semester, itโs probably the only bench.
โOut in the open, good, good,โ Jade says. โYou donโt know if you can trust me yet. Youโve got to be careful, I might be the one doing all this. Shit, I should have thought of that.โ
โMy dad saysโโ
โParents in slashers are either drunks or they want to put bars on your bedroom windows. Sometimes both.โ
Letha breathes in and out, is maybe about to cry, here.
Jade is looking across the lake at the yacht, back at its mooring.
โIt wasnโt a bear,โ Jade says at last. โI think you know that, donโt you?โ
โSomebody pinched the candle out,โ Letha says, quieter, like this is just for Jade.
โIt didnโt just blow out?โ Jade asks back.
Letha doesnโt answer, and in that silence Jade stands and spins around, silently cussing at herself: whose side is she on here? Not her own, evidently.
โNever mind,โ she adds.
โOkay,โ Letha says back timidly.
Jade takes a step closer to the water, then another step, is standing in it up to her shins now, her printed-out pages floating around her.
โThat candle being out could mean itโs somebody from over here,โ she says, quiet as well now. โWeโve all been trained on not burning down the national forest since kindergarten.โ
โThenโโ
โBut nobody over there would want to burn down their new house, either,โ Jade says. โAndโฆ did the sheriff ask if you were wearing shoes when youโyouโฆ?โ
โHe didnโt ask,โ Letha says with barely enough air to activate her larynx.
โWe canโt do this over the phone,โ Jade tells her. โThree oโclock?โ
Jade counters with lunch, which she can sacrifice for this.
A thousand lunches, even. All the lunches she has left. โWhich light is yours?โ she asks then.
In reply, one of the thirty or so glowing windows over there blackens, then comes back.
โNoon,โ Letha says, confirming it.
Jade nods, hangs up without a goodbye, holding the warm face of the phone to her chest, her feet not even cold in the water. She tells the Mr. Holmes in her head that sheโs not falling in love with Terra Nova, sir, donโt worry.
Not all of it, anyway.
SLASHER 101
So okay I know I said this sequel or part 2 of my 2 parter extra credit paper would get here, and here it is, after what I guess we can call the Interview Project Meat Grinder. But if “Soul Crusher” works better then cool. I am still barely a sophomore though anyway, so there’s that. And it’s lucky I am too,
since whoever it was that made a Leatherface mask for themselves out of edible panties from the truck stop and then ran down the hall doing boogity boogity hands at everybody didn’t escape down the sophomore hall, but the JUNIOR hall, meaning it was most definitely and undoubtedly for sure a junior. And I might
add that all so called evidence should be edible.
But part 2 — masks and cameras, which means going to Italy.
While Psycho was getting its success and formula ripped off all during the 60s, which I’m sure you remember first hand, there was another tradition
cooking in the red sauce over in Italy’s boot heel, or maybe the leg part, this isn’t Geography. I’m talking about the Giallo, sir, which is a word that means
yellow and a name that means “trashy movie with a bodycount.” As you can tell, a Giallo is like a proto slasher. It is to the slasher what dinosaurs are to birds.
Why the Giallo is super important is that it’s where the camera technique was born that’s basically what Carpenter would do in 1978 for Halloween. Killers in Giallos don’t wear masks I mean, sir. Or, they do wear masks, but they’re HAND masks. What’s a hand mask you ask? That would be aโฆ GLOVE. Killers in Giallos all wear these black gloves. Those gloves are like that Father Death robe in
Scream. They hide gender and race and body type and marriage status and tattoos and finger count and also knuckle hairiness, Pamela Voorhees, ha ha. But the camera in the Giallo is always looking down AT those gloves doing their
bloody work. And because everything is limited to what those killer eyes can see, black gloves are all the disguise that’s needed to keep an identity hidden as setup for the Reveal.
So to conclude already so soon, what was black gloves in the groovy 60s became through John Carpenter’s director camera MASK eyeholes to look
through in the 70s, which is what we in Slasher Studies call “SlasherCam,” which for example is Billy’s starting out Point of View in Black Christmas or the shark’s in Jaws, which isn’t just a monster movie but also a slasher, wink wink.
Never mind that that’s Debra Hill’s hands on the actual knife in that
Halloween opening, not Kid Michael’s. What you need to pay attention to instead is what those hands are wearing, which proves my point that John Carpenter knew the tradition he was using, the Italian bodycount movie, the Giallo. Those gloves, sir, are WHITE. This is Carpenter saying that, yes, he knows from whence all this bloody business comes, but he’s doing the INVERSION of that, he’s one-upping it all, sir. This isn’t the only reason Halloween is and was great and
forever will be, but this is a 2 page part 2 so I can only talk about the first 5 minutes. But I’ll “BE RIGHT BACKโฆ ” don’t worry.