Jade comes to all at once and dives for her phone, frantically changing her school email password to, to.โฆ to โS@v1N!,โ sure, why not, doesnโt matter. Anybody who knows anything about horror or about her could crack it third try, but whatโs important is that itโs not what it was last night, this morning, whatever. Megโs browser at the sheriffโs office might have lodged that one in its memory, giving her access to Jadeโs sent box.
Close one.
Jade lies back, her heart pounding, and watches the sun climb the sheet thatโs her curtain, calms herself down beat by slower beat with the knowledge that on one side of Indian Lake or the other, maybe halfway around at Camp Blood, this same piercing light is sifting down over the slasher as well, his mask of a face probably looking over to the glowing horizon right now, his eyes still locked in shadow.
Jade canโt help but smile, and feel a certain spring in her step.
Two hours later sheโs using rubbing compound on the graffiti scratched into the main menโs bathroom in the high schoolโso she is setting foot there againโfour hours later sheโs across the hall at the SKANK STATION, applying eyeliner but also clocking the background of her reflection for if Rexallโs got an eye in the sky, and then six hours after daybreak sheโs clocking out for lunch. Her make-up is good, her ruined hair hidden under a different cap, andโโShit,โ she says, catching a wavering image of herself in the glass of the double doors sheโs about to push through.
Jade pulls her cap down lower, trying to get her hair under control, and knows full well sheโs stalling, that here in the middle of this unscary day, sheโs scared. Not of Letha Mondragon, but ofโฆ of talking to her?
What if she laughs about Jade telling her sheโs a final girl? What if she read that letter out loud to Cinn and Ginny over French toast this morning, the three of them laughing so hard they had to be excused from the breakfast table? Of course she wonโt have a taste for horror, final girls never do, that makes the horror coming for them even scarier, butโฆ what if the prospect of a slasher cycle happening right here in Proofrock doesnโt even track to her, just sounds like a weak attempt at a bad joke?
โSo sheโll feel sorry for me, then,โ Jade mumbles. Which isnโt exactly better than being laughed at. Itโs kind of worse, even.
Maybe she just shouldnโt go, right? If Lethaโs a real and true final girl, sheโll rise when itโs time to rise, sheโll fight the good fight for all of them. Well, either that or sheโll bounce down into the cellar to check out that weird noise, get gutted or decapped or bisected or flayed, and thenโ then Jade canโt be sure: would Ezekiel have to come up from Drown Town to put a cap on this slasher cycle? Can an evil preacher count as good when heโs stopping a masked killer from slicing a town open?
Jade shakes her head no, she canโt let it come to that. Meaning she has no choice but to try to talk Letha into being the final girl sheโs meant to be. Everybody has a function, everybody in a slasher cycle has a roleโisnโt that a line from the Bible, even? Not the over-the-top violent one Craven and Carpenter wrote, with all the massacres and gore, but the other violent one with all the massacres and gore. The one where revenge comes not in a hulking shape lurking at the edge of the light but as a series of plagues that starts out feeling random, come to feel a lot more like justice, like the scales rebalancing.
Same thing, different church.
Jade pats herself on the back for that and takes the alley behind the drugstore because alleys are where custodians lurk, because alleys are where the horror crowd holds its dark masses. And because Hardyโs white Bronco is at the bank.
Seventy-five yards ahead, Letha Mondragon is already on Melanieโs bench, the Umiak bobbing by the pier. Meaning this rich daughter of Terra Nova gets to take it out on her own, is trusted with a three-hundred-thousand-dollar cigarette boat.
Jade wonders if a girl like Lethaโs ever even had to clean a toilet. Probably to the filthy rich, toilets are disposable. Mario and Luigi are always standing by to switch a new one in after each use.
โYouโre still stallingโฆโ Jade tells herself.
She broaches a timid foot out into the gravel of the parking lot between her and the lake then steps in all the way, damn the torpedoes, whatever that means. The gravel holds her, lets her crunch across its warm back.
Letha is just sitting there staring across at, Jade guesses, her house coming together on the point over there? Itโll just be a summer crashpad for her, though, most likely. A place to decompress between semesters. A place to throw epic spring break parties if her dad and stepmom are in Bali that week, or can agree to be.
Unless of course Indian Lake comes to hold bad memories. Which is pretty much a foregone conclusion. Thereโs nothing to be done about it, though. Itโs just the way a good slasher cycle works: the first death or two are people way outside the final girlโs peripheryโa Dutch boy, a Dutch girlโbut then the shadow starts to fall closer and closer to home. Deacon Samuels, just a hop and a skip from where Letha sleeps. And itโll get much closer than that. Before itโs over, any cherished pets Letha has will definitely be history, andโฆ Theo Mondragon? Tiara? If itโs only one of them, then Tiara
is both the intruder into the family unit and probably the most disposable to Letha. Factor in the added benefit that her getting the blade can draw Letha and her father closer, facilitate some healing, and, well: Tiaraโs got Xโs for eyes, pretty much. Jade hates it for Lethaโyouโre supposed to have a momโbut itโs not like she makes the rules. She just happens to know them all.
She shouldnโt open with that right now, though. Coming in hard like that will scare Letha off. No, what you do with someone like Letha is lure her in like you do a bird in the backyard: with closer and closer pinches of a single piece of white bread.
And, though she wants to with every last fiber of her being, Jade doesnโt look back to see if Hardyโs behind the wheel of his Bronco yet, just sitting there watching one picturesque girl find a moment of repose on the bench he dotes over, another girl sulking in to shatter that peace forever.
Better than the alternative, Jade tells him. Anyway, wouldnโt it be even crueler to let Letha just keep bouncing through her skippy-drippy unicorn daydream of a perfect world, not tell her about the shadow creeping in behind her? โHey,โ she says, catching her hand on the backrest of the
bench.
Lethaโs eating from a baggie of baby carrots. Of course. โOh, good,โ she says, and makes a motion that means
sheโs scooting over, but sheโs already left room, would never have sat down in a way that didnโt invite company and conversation.
Jade takes her seat, tries to take a wind-reading to see if the harsh scent her hairโs still manufacturing is going to waft left or right.
Blame it on the coveralls. Blame it on work.
โNow we can shake hands,โ Letha says, extending hers after wiping the idea of carrots from it.
Jade takes her hand, says, โTown reject, nice to meet you.โ
Lethaโs dimples suck in and she shakes her head no about that, sets her bag of carrots down on her other side, says, โJade Daniels, the legend.โ
Jade has to blink, look into her lap. At the leg suddenly so close to hers.
โNice pants,โ she says.
Theyโre the ones A Bay of Blood was wrapped in, the ones that were supposed to just be an excuse for making a delivery. On Letha, rolled up to just under the knee like that, theyโre cute and baggy, of course. On Letha, theyโre killer.
โA friend gave them to me,โ Letha says, patting the top of Jadeโs hand. โAndโฆ I donโt mean this inโฆ in any negative way either,โ she adds. โReally it only casts a negative light on me, or where Iโm from, how Iโve lived. But, if I donโt say it
โyouโre the first Native American Iโve ever known, I think.โ
Jade breathes out, relaxes a touch. Somewhere in town behind them, thereโs the regular thunk of an axe into wood, because, at this elevation, winter is always coming.
โIndian dude backed his tow truck down that pier right there once,โ Jade says, proud.
โRelative of yours?โ Letha asks, her tone glad to have elicited this reply.
Jade is studying the Umiak now. A umiak is an Inuit whaling boat, according to her phoneโs dictionary. To better hunt the giant catfish thatโs supposed to drift past the windows down in Drown Town, maybe.
โI got your letter, yes,โ Letha says, signaling to Jade that the bullshitโs over.
Jade nods, is ready.
โIโโ Letha starts, doesnโt know where to go, how to finish. โStacey Graves,โ she finally gets out, batting her deer eyelashes. โThat was the paper you wanted me to read, right?โ
โAll of them can save your life,โ Jade mumbles.
โBut that little girl,โ Letha says. โWhat Iโmโwhy is she so important, I guess thatโs what Iโm asking.โ
โBecause whoeverโs doing this is probably dressing up like
โโ
โTo you, I mean. I read your letter six times, standing by the mailbox. By the end I was crying.โ
Jade has to press her lips together to keep from smiling like an idiot. If you cry writing it, maybe someone will cry reading it. Itโs more than she could have hoped for, is all she was wishing for.
โThat bargain bin in Idaho Fallsโฆโ Letha says, kind of shrugging with her voice.
Jade sneaks a look over at the carrots, can only see the top corner of the baggie. Itโs open, meaning the carrots are drying out right now. Proofrock is killing them.
โI read between the lines, I mean,โ Letha adds.
โMr. Holmes makes us double-space,โ Jade says, not following.
โTo what you were really saying,โ Letha says, her hand on top of Jadeโs again. โAndโit canโt be easy to ask for help, especially from a complete stranger. Itโs reallyโฆ itโs brave is what it is.โ
Jade sneaks a look up, hoping that Lethaโs face can decode this.
โWhen we first moved here, I didnโt know why,โ Letha goes on. โIt was my senior year, all my friends are back homeโbut I see now. Iโm here for you, Jade.โ
โIn that Iโm part of Proofrock and Terra Nova and Indian Lake,โ Jade says. โYeah. Final girls, they fight for everyone, andโโ
Letha starts to reach a hand up Jadeโs forearm to be even more consoling but Jade shifts away, unsure whatโs happening here.
โI just wrote that because you have to know,โ Jade tells her, the truth of that so obvious. โI canโif youโll let me, I can walk you through everything thatโs coming, I canโโ
โI can help, Jade,โ Letha says, which pretty much sets off every last one of Jadeโs alarms.
โNo, itโs me who can help you,โ she says. โIโve been watching these movies since, since junior highโโ
โTextbook,โ Letha says. โIt makes perfect sense.โ
โAnd itโs definitely you,โ Jade insists, trying to push through Lethaโs supportive tone. โAnybody whoโs seen any of them, even the bad ones, they can tell right off what you areโwho you are.โ
โA friend,โ Letha says, pouring her earnestness across, the palm of her hand warm on Jadeโs forearm now. Thereโs something so Sunday school about it that Jade can almost feel the black paint on her fingernails steaming away.
โSure, yeah,โ Jade says, halfway trying to take her arm back but not making a show of it, โfriends later, fine. We can
โyou and me, weโll come to the ten-year reunion for the sequel, howโs that sound? Thatโs when Ezekiel will finally be coming up from the lake. Weโll stand back-to-back in the middle of the gym floor, crepe paper floating down all around us in slow motion, andโand youโll have the sword from the trophy case, and Iโll have ripped the blade off the paper cutter in the main office, and weโll, weโllโโ
โDonโt hate me,โ Letha says, her eyes flicking up and to her right.
Jade canโt help but follow them over to the sudden grille of Hardyโs Bronco, maybe six feet from the bench. Its tires had to have announced it crunching in, but Jade must not have been checked in to her surroundings. Real good, horror girl. Shit.
As if on cue, like this has all been rehearsed, Hardy steps heavily down from the driverโs seat, the nightโs lack of sleep weighing on him, it looks like. He peels out of his chrome aviators, blinks against the new brightness, then fixes his eyes on Jade, studying her for the first time all over again, it feels like.
โWhat is this?โ Jade says to Letha, fight-or-flight kicking in.
Lethaโs non-answer is answer enough. That and Mr. Holmes, climbing down from the passenger side of the Bronco.
Jade stands, looks back and forth between them, then to Letha.
โYou, youโ?โ she manages to get out.
โI had to report it, Jade,โ Letha says, pushing her lower lip up like explaining how this is for the best, really.
Jade turns to run but one of her boots is already back to its natural state, so the dragging laces tie her feet up right when sheโs trying to find that hyperspace button. She faceplants, the heels of her hands instantly raw and dented from the gravel around the bench.
Letha is there to hold her by the shoulders, make sure sheโs okay.
โYou showed it to them?โ Jade says, hoping her voice isnโt shrieking like her head is.
โThem?โ Letha says with concern, looking up, taking stock.
โThem,โ Jade confirms.
Hardy is running the pad of his index finger along the top of the backrest of his daughterโs bench, looking at that instead of Jadeโs current indignity, and Mr. Holmes is just standing there, the end of his brown tie flapping in the wind, his flinty eyes fixed where they always are: across the lake.
โNo, no,โ Letha assures Jade. โI justโI read it to him over the phone, the sheriff, toโฆ to show. To prove. So he could help.โ
โBut the cops are always useless in cases like this!โ Jade says, struggling to stand.
โI know it feels like that,โ Letha says. โBut youโve lived alone with this for too long. How could I go out into the world knowing Iโd walked away fromโfrom someone asking for my help? Someone brave enough to ask for help?โ
โItโs not me whoโs gonna have to be brave!โ Jade says, her voice panicking.
โThis isnโt easy for any of us,โ Hardy says, wading into this.
โJennifer,โ Mr. Holmes says in what sounds like the most reluctant, apologetic greeting.
โJade,โ Jade corrects, on automatic. Itโs the call-and-response theyโve been flailing through since freshman year.
โMs. Mondragon here was only doing what she thought best,โ Hardy explains, his hat in his hands for some reason, even though heโs mostly bald and the sunโs shining.
โItโs just aโa personal letter and my old history papers,โ Jade says. โI donโt know what you thinkโโ
โJade,โ Letha says in a way that Jade has to look back over to her.
โTell them,โ she pleads. โI did,โ Letha says.
โShe did,โ Hardy confirms.
โThen we all know, right?โ Jade says. โGood, good, might as well have it all out in the open, why not. Not that thatโll change anything. Sheโs the final girl, yes, and thereโs a slasher around here somewhere, and, I donโt mean to speak bad of anybody, but after Deacon Samuels, itโs more than likely someone from over on the other side ofโโ
โUnder that,โ Letha says. โBefore all that.โ
โOkay, okay,โ Jade says to Hardy. โWhat you caught me printing the other night at the library.โ
โThe extra credit?โ Hardy says, scratching his head.
โIโm sure Mr. Holmes has already told you I was lying about that,โ Jade continues, โbecause why wouldnโt he. Not like I can get detention anymore. That wasnโt a late paper for history. Mr. Holmes is retiring, doesnโt want to read any more of my bullshit. Which is fine, whatever, really. ButโI had to tell Letha what was coming. I was trying to protect her. Itโs no crime to try to keep someone safe. I can pay back for the paper, and Connie might not even careโโ
โConnieโs known you do your schoolwork afterhours there for three years,โ Mr. Holmes says, pursing his lips after
saying it, and holding Jadeโs eyes.
Jade opens her mouth to keep going, finds thereโs nowhere to go.
Soโฆ so Connie the Librarianโs always known Jadeโs hiding just on the other side of the audiobooks aisle after lights out?
And then Jade sees what everybody else here has already seen: now that high schoolโs over and she canโt tell Mr. Holmes all her slasher theories, sheโs trying to find someone else to latch onto, impress with her slasher Q.
โNo, no,โ Jade says, backing away from all three of them, which is just going to land her in the lake. โThat Dutch boy she found in the water, heโhim and his girlfriend, andโฆ they were the blood sacrifice, see? They were the first ones, the proof, the promise of more to come, the appetizer that comes before the meal. Thatโs how it always works. They trespassed, were somewhere they werenโt supposed to be, so they paid the price, the ultimate price. Thatโs how it goes, sorry. Thenโthat Founder, Deacon Samuels. Heโthis proves that this is really happening, canโt you see?โ
Hardyโs fingers worry the brim of his hat. Finally he looks up, says, โAre you saying the bearโโ
โIt wasnโt a bear, Sheriff,โ Jade tells him, tells all of them. โBears donโt have revenge arcs. The bearโs just being framed, but nobodyโs going to believe that untilโโ
โA party,โ Letha offers, meaning sheโs read at least one of the papers.
Jade holds Lethaโs eyes, nods slowly, asks her back, leading her so slowly, so carefully, โAndโฆ whatโs the big party here every year?โ
When Letha doesnโt answer, Jade turns to Hardy, to Mr.
Holmes, says, โSheโs not from here, she wouldnโt know.โ โIndependence Day?โ Hardy says with a shrug.
Jade fingershoots that correct, says, โEven in the form of a question.โ
โJuly Fourth?โ Letha says all around.
โYouโll see,โ Jade tells her.
At which point Mr. Holmes wades into this debate, directing himself to Jade: โAnd so it was this, this slasher that killed that herd of elk over in Sheepโs Head, then?โ
โSheepโs Head?โ Letha says.
โItโs what the old-timers call that meadow,โ Mr. Holmes says with a shrug, like that isnโt the important piece of what he was saying.
โI told him he shouldnโt have showed that to you all,โ Hardy says. โItโs exactly the kind of thing that can add fuel to an overactive imagination.โ
โNo need to use names, Sheriff,โ Jade says, pointing at her own temple, the overactive imagination in question.
โIndependence Day,โ Letha repeats softer, which makes it somehow louder.
โI know you thought you were helping,โ Jade tells her, flabbergasted to the point of no return here. โBut, and you couldnโt have known this, authority figuresโcops, teachers, parentsโitโs not possible for them to believe, not until itโs too late. But your impulse to get help, to fight back, to stop this, thatโs what we can take from this, thatโs what we can weaponize, thatโs what we canโโ
โBut we can stop it,โ Letha says.
โYou can, yeah,โ Jade tells her back.
โThatโs why I called Sheriff Hardy,โ Letha says, again with that apologetic tone.
Jade turns to Hardy about this.
โI pulled in Mr. Holmes because Iโโ he says, fumbling a bit, which isnโt his usual way. โI know he was your favorite teacher. Is, is your favorite teacher.โ
Jade levels her imploring eyes over onto Mr. Holmes.
He shrugs, toes at the gravel with his loafer, says, โI confirmed that youโre crazy for this subgenre of movie. For these type of horror movies. Theseโฆ slashers.โ
โThanks?โ Jade says.
โJustโฆ and this is on me,โ Mr. Holmes says, spreading his fingers to touch his own chest, indict himself. โI never saw it like Ms. Mondragon isโฆ I knew you didnโt want to write about history, but I never suspected it might be your own history you didnโt want to talk about. So all the papers on horrorโโ
โAbout slashers.โ
โComplete with boogeymen,โ Mr. Holmes adds.
โHe shouldnโt have fostered that kind of speculation, heโs saying,โ Hardy says, his tone getting across that heโs sort of speaking for Mr. Holmes here, saying what Holmes canโt say himself.
Still, โI think you mean โfoment,โ Angus,โ Mr. Holmes snaps back to Hardy.
โThatโs Sheriff,โ Hardy says.
Mr. Holmes shrugs, and Jade can tell heโs here against his will, somewhat.
Not that that helps her even one little bit.
โThis isnโt about me,โ she tells all three of them, her tone ramping up into a plea, which she full-on despises. โThis is about that dead kid in the water, this is about the Founder who got killed with that fancy golf clubโโ
โWith?โ Hardy asks.
โAlongside,โ Jade corrects, brushing the clarification off. โThis is about who might have gone to the dollar store specifically to buy a long black wig, and why they needed to look like that, and how theyโre, I donโt know, pretending to walk on the waterโmaybe theyโre tying Jesus lizards to their feetโwe donโt know yet!โ
โBut, in your estimation, someone is dressing up like the Lake Witch and playacting a horror movie,โ Mr. Holmes clarifies.
โA slasher,โ Jade clarifies right back.
โTo use your chosen subject matter,โ Letha says, taking Jadeโs hand from the side, โyes, as Mr. Holmes was saying, this is about the boogeyman, one hundred percent.โ
Jade jerks away, holds her hand in her other hand as if itโs burned. She tries to smile these accusations off, to make a display of how preposterous all this is getting, but knows full well her smile has to look mechanical and scary to them, like if Michael Myers ever tried a grin on in the dayroom for Loomis. So she gives up, knows she canโt convince all three of them. Butโฆ maybe just one? The important one? She turns to Letha, says, โListen, if you care about your family, about Terra Nova, I need you toโโ
โI read between the lines, Jade,โ Letha repeats slower, like thatโs going to make Jade finally hear what sheโs saying. โYou were dressing it up as best you could, trying to hide, even hiding it from yourself, butโhere, Iโve got it highlighted.โ She extracts Jadeโs printed-out letter from the back pocket of the pants that used to be Jadeโs, holds it up, flips to the page she wants, and: โ โA doctorโs appointment I couldnโt do in Proofrock.โ โ
The silence after is as wide as the lake.
โThat wasโโ Jade starts, starts over: โMy mom, she didnโt want Doc Wilsonโโ
โBecause he was local?โ Letha asks.
โNo,โ Jade says, taking a step back, casing all three faces of her little make-do jury, here. โI was justโI was telling you where I found Bay of Blood! Every slasher has an origin story. Jason, Freddy, Michael, Chucky, but every slasher movie has an origin story too. The first time you saw it. Where you found it. Thatโs all I wasโthat wasnโt about me, that was about Bay of Blood.โ
Jade looks to each of them in turn again, waiting for the obviousness of this to register. For any of them to hear the logic of it.
โ โMy mom was having a conversation with herself in the car about will she, wonโt she,โ โ Letha reads this time, since thatโs a lot to recite.
Jade just stares at her.
โWhat are you saying?โ she says at last. โThis isโI was at a random gas station, I happened to look into the bargain binโโ
โYou were at your most vulnerable, your most broken,โ Letha says, about to cry. โAnd you reached out for the first thing you saw, held it as close as you could, like armor. Like it could protect you. And it has, hasnโt it?โ
โA Bay of Blood?โ
โSlashers,โ Mr. Holmes says.
โSheโs kind of been hiding in bad behavior too,โ Hardyโs compelled to add.
โWhatโwhatโโ Jade says, her thoughts swirling, only some of her words finding her mouth. โWhat are you saying? My mom did something to me?โ
โYour dad,โ Letha says, barely loud enough to register. โMy dad?โ Jade blurts out.
โHappens more than it should,โ Letha says. โAnd among Native Americans, the percentage is evenโโ
โYou think heโs why I was at the doctor in Idaho Falls?โ Jade asks all of them, polling this jury now.
Yes, none of them say out loud.
Jade closes her eyes in pain, slams her fingers into her gunky hair and pulls, turns around on her combat heels, giving them her back, andโshe doesnโt want to do this, doesnโt want to have to deploy the nuclear option, but what else is there?
โYouโre a father, Sheriff,โ she says, no louder than necessary. โWould you have ever done this to your daughter? To Melanie?โ
โJennifer,โ Mr. Holmes says sharply.
โJade,โ Jade spins back around to hiss at him. โAnd arenโt you always the one saying read between the lines, sir? Try this on, then. All thisโฆ all these accusations, all this textual evidence, whatever. Whoโs to say I didnโt pack that in intentionally? Why would a girl like Letha ever give me the time of day if she wasnโt feeling sorry for me? Maybe I wrote
it like that to tug on her heartstrings, make her worry about me. Whatever it takes to get her here, talk her into my harebrained scheme about slashers and final girls.โ
Mr. Holmes just stares at her about this.
โWhat was your mom arguing with herself about in the car that day?โ he says at last, super calmly. โDonโt think, just answer.โ
โWhat was sheโ?โ
โ โWill she, wonโt she?โ โ
โWill she leave my loser dad, wonโt she leave my loser dad,โ Jade says without missing even one single beat.
Before Mr. Holmes can press her on this, she spins around again, glares out across the glinting water, arms crossed.
โApologize to the sheriff,โ Mr. Holmes says.
Jade lowers her head, closes her eyes, says, โSorry, Sheriff. That was out of bounds.โ
โYou were scared,โ Hardy says back, and Jade closes her eyes harder, because she knows not to take this bait. If she nods yes to this, then the next question will be Scared of what? The truth? And if she says she wasnโt scared, then what she did to Hardy was just cruel.
Thereโs no way to win. Same as ever.
Why she even gets her hopes up anymore, who knows. โWeโre just trying to help,โ Letha says.
Jade opens her eyes to the brightness and tears spill down both cheeks. Tears she fucking hates.
Instead of wiping them away, she slashes her right hand back in the direction of Mr. Holmes, because she can smell his nicotine on the air. He slips the butt between her waiting fingers.
โItโs not your fault,โ Letha says again, still right there.
โNo,โ Jade says again, breathing smoke out, finally turning around so they can see her wet face, see what theyโre doing to her here. โItโs not what you think. Fathers donโt do that to daughters, not even fathers as sucky as mine, as Indian as mine. I would say youโve seen too many Lifetime movies,
but if youโve seen too many movies, what does that mean about me and my slashers?โ
After maybe three seconds, Letha has to smile about this. Jade grins with her, takes another long drag, handing the cigarette back to Mr. Holmes before exhaling.
โJust saying,โ Hardy says, getting his own cigarette going, having to lean down into his cupped hand the way cowboys in westerns always do, โit would explain an awful lot. Yourโ all this gothic stuff, the way you dress, your attitude, the trouble youโre alwaysโโ
โThatโs just me,โ Jade tells him, blowing her smoke out now, as underline. โHorrorโs not a symptom, itโs a love affair.โ
โAre you sayingโ?โ Letha starts, and Jade finishes for her: โIโd be like this anyway, yeah.โ
Itโs only when she looks up to Mr. Holmes that she hears what Letha tricked her into saying. Itโs the same story you hear about drunks on a traffic stop, arguing how they canโt even say the alphabet backwards when theyโre sober. Meaning what Jade just said to all three of them was: Even if my dad hadnโt done that to me when I was eleven, I still would have fallen hard for horror.
And trying to backpedal would just be protesting too much, she knows.
โAsk my mom, then,โ she says, just plucking the idea straight from the air without running it through the fire first.
โKimmy?โ Hardy asks.
โSheโs at work,โ Jade says, pointing with her lips down Main, to the dollar store.
All three of them look, and in that moment Jade knows she can run, that none of them can catch her, untied laces or no. As full of hatred as she is now, she could probably even run on top of the water, because no way would Ezekiel let her pollute his lake.
But her mom is her ace.
โSheโs got no reason to lie for him,โ Jade adds, to sell it. โTell me Iโm lying.โ
Hardy just keeps looking up Main.
โSheโs got a point,โ Mr. Holmes says. โThe mom would know.โ
โItโs a small house,โ Jade says. โAnd it was back then too.
You hear everything.โ
โI donโt like this,โ Hardy says, coming around to the three of them. โShe canโshe can warn him. Kimmy, I mean. She can warn Tab.โ
โTab?โ Letha says.
Nobody answers her.
โJust because heโs Indian doesnโt mean he can turn to smoke,โ Jade says. โIf anything, heโd turn into a puddle of beer. But there wonโt be anything to warn him about. Just false accusations.โ
โIf it matters, I donโt think they talk anymore,โ Mr. Holmes adds, just to Hardy.
โAll you have to do is admit it for the process to start,โ Letha says, like reading from a pamphlet.
โI know youโre trying to help,โ Jade says, studying the gravel between her boots now, โand I thank you, really. Iโm a stranger, Iโm nobody, Iโm the town reject, the weird girl, the walking suicide, the Indian who shouldnโt even be alive, and youโreโyou are who you are, what you are. But youโve got this all wrong, trust me.โ
โThere are tests,โ Letha says. โKits, the hospital canโโ
โTest if Iโm a virgin?โ Jade scoffs. โDo you really think anybody in this town suspects that the custodian with different hair color every week has been able to keep her legs closed all these years? That sheโs even tried to?โ
Neither Hardy nor Holmes can push back against this.
โI asked around,โ Letha says at last, like a card she didnโt want to have to play. โYouโve never dated, never had a boyfr
โโ
โMaybe Iโm not into guys,โ Jade cuts in.
โItโs not aboutโโ Letha says, trying to start this whole line over. โItโs perfectly natural for you to want to defend him, itโs theโฆ itโs like you consider yourself an accomplice just because you were involved. But your involvement wasnโt complicit, wasnโt voluntary, it never is, it canโt be, you donโt even know you can say no to a parent. Parents are good, parents are shining and right, theyโre the gods of our world, so whatever they do can never be wrong. It must be your feelings that are wrong. Their mask is that theyโre parents. Some of them are more, though. Some of them are monsters. But now, all these years laterโโ
โ โOurโ?โ Jade says.
All eyes shift to Letha.
โWe all think our parents are perfect,โ she says, blinking a touch faster than she has been, a tell Jade logs. โThey feed us, clothe us, keep us safeโโ
โBring in another mother when the originalโsโฆ?โ Jade says, leaving that blank for Letha to fill in: Just what happened to your mother, final girl?
Lethaโs own face becomes a mask then. Nothing changes about it exactly, just, now sheโs hiding behind it. But she canโt be owning up to all this yet either, Jade knows. Thereโs a time and a place for everything. Both bibles agree on that. โFamily Dollar,โ Jade says, letting the pressure off. โHer
breakโs in ten, so we might want to get there.โ
Itโs a lie, of course, but the best kind, in that itโs the last question Hardy will ask, standing at the register of the dollar store in an official capacity.
โWeโll take myโโ he says, reaching back to pat his hood while clamping his hat on, but Jadeโs already brushing past. Letha falls in, and then Jade hears Hardy and Mr. Holmes crunching through the gravel as well, and suddenly itโs like the four of them are doing some epic walk down to the OK Corral, Jadeโs eyes slits to shoot arrows through, Hardy clamping his hat on tighter, Lethaโs hair bouncing with her every step, and Mr. Holmesโs tie trying and failing to blow
back over his right shoulder, his eyes both grim and, at the same time, amused, too aware of the absurdity of all this.
Jade does okay with the walk until all the eyes on Main could be clocking them through the plate glass windows. Like every time sheโs ever been the center of attention, her legs go robot, so that sheโs now having to give precise mechanical instructions to her hips, her knees, her ankles and feet, even to her arms that donโt know how to swing anymore. How does Michael do it, his Panaglide walk? Heโs so inexorable, completely unstoppable, never wavering, always taking the most efficient line.
Jade decides that the reason he can do itโwalkโand she canโt, not without practically having a seizure from all the brain activity required, is that he has that singular focus: the next babysitter. Whereas what Jade has isโฆ itโs all the usual shit she drags with her, that she doesnโt want to think about, but now thereโs even more tin cans dragging behind her: Lethaโs sincere but misdirected pity, Hardyโs shrugging suspicion that Letha might be right, and Mr. Holmesโs not even remotely wanting to be here, just wanting to please be retired. And, worse, a complete blindside, does Jade feel responsible here? For all the lives this slasher can take, and how many more it can take if she doesnโt get Letha prepped right?
Thatโs the part thatโs not tracking for her: she should be thrilled about the prospect of necks being opened, limbs being hacked, guts spilling their steamy delights.
Proofrock deserves it.
But Letha doesnโt, she decides. And, who knows, right? Maybe every final girl in the history of final girls has had a horror chick whispering to her from just off-screen. Maybe this isnโt a deviation but the usual build. Just one nobody ever knows about until theyโre smack-dab in the beating heart of it.
Jade nods, likes that.
Itโs best sheโs behind the curtain, too. Unless the play sheโs in can be about robots, in which case her arms and legs have already got that down.
Thinking about what she must look like, walking like this, doesnโt help at all, either.
Andโand the pressure building around them, around all of Proofrock. Itโs like theyโre trying to cross from one side of an inflating balloon to the other. But Jade knows the pressure-relief valve: the front door of Family Dollar.
She flails her arm ahead to haul it open, stop this moment from lasting any longer, please, butโฆ Hardy has his meaty paw on her shoulder, is keeping her from pushing through, into the store?
โExcuse me?โ Jade says, spinning away from his hand, probably making it more dramatic than it needs to be.
โStay here with your favorite history teacher,โ Hardy grumbles, not a hint of give to his voice, and then heโs barreling through the door alone, on a mission, only reaching back at the last moment to hold his cigarette up for whoever wants it.
In solidarity or at least an attempt at it after her betrayal, Letha slides in before the door can close, nodding to Jade on the way like sheโs going to make sure this is all legit, that she isnโt going to let Jade fall through the cracks.
But the cracks are where bugs like me live, Jade wants to tell her back, and then have roaches spill from her mouth and eyes. Instead she brings Hardyโs cigarette up in frustration, draws deep on it, and turns her head to the side to blow a clean, pissed-off line of smoke. When Mr. Holmes is just standing there awkward and unsure, she offers him a drag.
โItโs not against the rules now,โ she says about the cigarette. โYouโre not a teacher, Iโm not a student.โ
He looks away, down Main and across the lake.
โYou really hate it, donโt you?โ Jade says to him. โTerra Nova, I mean.โ
He shrugs a noncommittal shrug.
โWhatโs the history there, teach?โ Jade asks. โNo history.โ
โThereโs always history,โ Jade says back. โA certain somebody might have impressed that upon my just-forming psyche once upon a freshman year. Nothing just pops into existence. Everything comes from somewhere. Itโs all got a story. Just a matter of if weโre committed enough to dig it up.โ
Mr. Holmes shakes his head in amusement, genuinely impressed for once, it seems.
โWonโt say you were my best student over all these years,โ he tells her, measuring his words. โBut you are the one Iโm going to remember.โ
โVoted most likely to die in a horror movie, right?โ
โAnd I apologize for notโfor not realizing what you were really saying, Jennifer.โ
โJade.โ
โI should have, I mean. I could have helped stop all this fromโโ
โHistory needs documentation to be history,โ Jade cites back at him, her eyes flashing. โDocuments, testimony, artifactsโthe holy trinity. Otherwise itโs just a pretty story. Compelling but empty, thatโs what you said, isnโt it?โ
โWe havenโt questioned him yet,โ Mr. Holmes says right back, licking his lips at the end in what Jade thinks could be anticipation, which she reads as him wanting to protect her from the โhimโ in question: her dad. It almost makes her feel something, but she canโt allow that.
Instead she breathes in, says, โYou havenโt asked why this princess of Terra Nova is all bent out of shape by the possibility of a father going Chester the Molester over here in Proofrock. Or, in our case, all Rexall theโฆ theโโ
โGuinea pig,โ Mr. Holmes fills in. โItโs an Italian slur. What they used to call him in high school, because of his weight.โ
โItโs not his Italian-ness that makes my skin crawl. Itโs his
Krugness.โ
โAre you talking your Nightmare on Elm Street or that one, theโฆ Last House on the Left?โ
โGood old Springfield Slasher his wisecracking self,โ Jade says, surprised Mr. Holmes has kept all those titles in his head. โFred, Freddy, the Mr. Rogers of Elm Street. He was the one into kids.โ
โBut the other one was a rapist, right?โ
โNot a lot of nice bad guys in horror, no.โ
โAnd you say you recognize Rexall for being like that,โ Mr. Holmes says with a shrug. โMust we then ask why your senses are dialed in in that particular way?โ
โI canโt say anything to make you believe, can I?โ
โTo get me to disbelieve?โ Mr. Holmes asks back. โMs. Mondragon in there makes a good case, a strong and telling textual analysis. All the symptoms and characteristics are there, Jennifer.โ
โNot everything with spots is a leopard,โ Jade says. โNow where did I hear that particular nugget?โ
โI wouldnโt be here if I didnโt care.โ
โRather be flying,โ Jade says. โI understand.โ
Mr. Holmes snickers, caught. Says, like finally giving up, giving in, โWhen I was a kid, we had a fort over there.โ
He tosses his chin across Indian Lake, to Terra Nova.
Jade takes another drag and holds it, not wanting to wreck this moment.
โWe built this raft, had a pirate flag and everything,โ Mr. Holmes goes on. โWeโd meet on this side at the new pierโit was new thenโweโd meet at midnight, have candles and everything, our parents asleep, and weโd paddle across to our secret clubhouse.โ
โSo theyโre messing with your childhood by building their fancy houses, thatโs it?โ Jade says, turning her head again to exhale.
โClubhouse was long gone by the time Theo Mondragon and hisโฆ his lords of what counts as industry got there,โ Mr. Holmes says. โI mean, childhood, sure, thatโs gone before you even realize itโs slipping away, blink and youโve got a mortgage. But the fort was long gone as well. Burned.โ
โThe fire,โ Jade says, ashing between them discreetly, just tapping the cigarette with her index finger the way people in movies do. And in real life.
โHow about this?โ Mr. Holmes says, looking up to catch her eye, let her know this is for-real, not just their usual parrying and thrusting. โIโll trade you. Honesty for honesty. Nobody knows this anymore exceptโโ
He hooks his head behind them again, meaning Family Dollar. Meaning Sheriff Hardy.
โHe was in your pirate club?โ Jade asks.
โThat fire wasโฆโ Mr. Holmes says, his mouth and neck contorting to finally be saying this out loud after all these years, โit was us. Our campfire that night. Burned for nine days. Two campers from Kansas died. One firefighter from hereโhis uncle.โ
Jade widens her eyes, seriously impressed.
โYou old scallywag,โ she says. โSo, by slasher logic, which is, you know, the logic, then one of the Founders, these lords of industry, should have been a Proofrocker fifty years ago, and a pirate too. Thatโs probably how they all heard about that virgin shore over thereโno, no. One of their dads, right?โ
Mr. Holmes shakes his head, says, โYou never stop, do you?โ
โThat doesnโt sound like a no.โ
โYour turn now,โ Mr. Holmes says, reaching across to take the cigarette from her, guide it shakily up to his own mouth. He cashes it, grinds the butt under the sole of his loafer longer than he needs to to rub the cherry out, but about the right amount of time to memorialize the monumental
confession he just made.
โMy turn to what? Turn in another paper?โ
โYou can play dumb with him,โ Mr. Holmes says. โYou can play dumb with everyone, doesnโt matter to me. But I know, Jennifer. Youโre not dumb.โ
โThanks, I guess?โ
โI told you some painful truth, now you tell me some.โ โQuid pro quo,โ Jade says with a snicker.
โLatin,โ Mr. Holmes says. โYou never fail to surprise, Jennifer.โ
โOr disappoint,โ Jade adds. โAnd itโs Jade, thanks.โ โItโs your turn, I mean.โ
โI havenโt started any fires visible from space.โ
โOn the walk over, it hit me,โ Mr. Holmes says. โThe one horror genre you never broached in your papers and essays and creative pieces. How it was no accident that you avoided it.โ
โI do slashers, you know that. All kinds of subgenres I havenโt written about. I meanโexorcisms are boring, just confirm western religion, and vampires and werewolves have so much lore theyโre practically fantasy, no matter how many throats they rip open, and haunted houses are just stand-ins forโโ
โIโm talking about rape-revenge, Jennifer.โ โThatโs not my name.โ
โWhyโd you never delve into that subgenre?โ
Jade lets her eyes unfocus so she can burn through what heโs asking: rape-revenge is where a raped woman is left for dead but climbs back to life to take brutal revenge on her attackers, often using poetic justice, and usually a lot of primal screaming.
โOkay, soโฆ if rape-revenge is going to be slasher-adjacent,โ she says, figuring this out as she goes, โthen youโre saying the rape is the prank, right?โ
โYou tell me.โ
โAnd youโre saying that this woman, she becomes the spirit of vengeance personified,โ Jade says. โAll thatโs
missing isโฆ is a maskโโ
โShe doesnโt need one,โ Mr. Holmes says. โSheโs supposed to be dead. And the rapists werenโt exactly interested in her face anyway. Or maybe their violence gave her a mask? The bruises, the black eyes, the fat lip.โ
โOkay, okay,โ Jade says. โBut this is usually the same weekend, too, right? Raped on a Friday, killing all through Saturday and Sunday? Thereโs no five or ten years where the pranksters can forget their crime even happened.โ
โThey forgot her the moment they were done with her,โ Mr. Holmes says, seemingly ready for whatever Jade might have. Meaning his silence earlier was really thinking. Preparing. Scallywag indeed.
โOkay, Iโll give you that,โ Jade says, though she knows this is a trap.
โBut if you elect to exclude it from being one of your slashers,โ Mr. Holmes goes on, โif you say itโs from a different shelf altogether, then youโre saying that the crime itself doesnโt warrant revenge, arenโt you? That rape gets a pass. That sexual violation isnโt beholden to the scales of justice youโre always talking about, is somehow outside its purview.โ
Jade just stares at a bird prying something from a sewer grate.
โEither that or youโre acknowledging that a minor canโt take that revenge,โ Mr. Holmes adds, quieter. Because this is where he was going all along.
Jade kind of hates him right now.
It doesnโt mean he gets to win, though.
โThe reason rape-revenge isnโt a slasher is that the slasher and the final girl would have to be the same person,โ she says, pushing off the front of Family Dollar with her butt. โProblem with that is that the final girl and the spirit of vengeance are forever locked in opposition, not the same jumpsuit. Thatโdโthatโd be like Batman peeling his cowl off and being the Joker. Would that even work?โ
Mr. Holmes is just watching her.
Jade shakes her head, says, โBut really, is there anything I could say right now that might make you believe sheโs wrong?โ
โShe being her,โ Mr. Holmes says, tilting his head back to the store, to Letha.
โShe not able not to be her,โ Jade says with a snort.
โThere is one thing,โ Mr. Holmes says after a long consideration. โYou were asking about documents or PDFs in my inbox? Well, when I got my degree in education, the final hurdle I had to clear to get my diploma was my orals. The out-loud part of the test.โ
โI was listening in class, I promise, but I canโt remember all the dates.โ
โJust one question. No dates.โ
โSo youโre holding my diploma hostage,โ Jade says after thinking this through.
โThat would be unethical,โ Mr. Holmes says, pushing away from Family Dollar now as well, and stepping out to study the street, his hands behind him, which means heโs back in teacher mode. โBut you have been petitioning for me to allow you to make up for your eight weeksโ absence.โ
โI meant with more papers.โ โAbout slashers.โ
โThis a trick?โ โItโs a gift.โ
Jade breathes in, shakes her head no about thisโitโs not a trick, itโs a trapโbutโฆ just one question, and she graduates?
โShoot,โ she says.
โYouโve got to be honest.โ
โSwear on my fatherโs life?โ
Mr. Holmes chuckles, asks the question: โWill she or wonโt she what? Your mom, I mean. Down in Idaho Falls that day, when you found that videotape in the clearance bin.โ
โA Bay of Blood,โ Jade fills in.
โThatโs not the answer Iโm looking for,โ Mr. Holmes says.
Jade looks at him with just her eyes, weighing this all out in her head, full-on hating being in this corner, in this discussion, in this day, and then, before she can make something up, โsell him a bill of goodsโ as he wrote in the margin of one of her papers once, the glass door of Family Dollar opens all at once, spilling Hardy and Letha and a long sigh of air-conditioning.
โSo?โ Jade says to Hardy and Letha. โI some posterchild victim in an afterschool special, or was I just born bad?โ
โItโs never that simple,โ Letha says, and thatโs all the answer Jade needs.
Hardy puts his sunglasses back on one leg at a time, says, โAccording to your mother, and sheโs promised to get me the papers on it, that doctorโs visit in Idaho Falls wasnโt forโฆ what we were thinking, based on your letter to Ms. Mondragon. You were there for a private reason, yes, but that private reason was getting your stomach pumped, wasnโt it?โ
Jade swallows, the sound loud in her ears.
โGetting your stomach pumped isnโt a pleasant thing,โ she says.
โThis isnโt over,โ Mr. Holmes says to Jade, just for Jadeโ meaning her one-answer out-loud test is still coming, and probably when she least expects it, so he can feel like heโs getting a real answer.
โNot supposed to be pleasant,โ Hardy goes on, about the stomach-pumping thing, his eyes boring into Jadeโs. โIt was, thereโd be no reason not to eat a whole bottle of aspirin.โ
โIt was cherry flavored,โ Jade mutters. โSo it was an accident?โ Letha asks.
Jade swallows, the sound loud in her ears, and holds her suicide-wrist up like a badge. โYou all thought this was my first time, didnโt you?โ she says with the most superior, judgmental sneer she can muster.
Lethaโs eyes are shiny wet, about to spill over with concern, Mr. Holmes is just staring in through the front door of Family Dollar, probably wishing he were two hundred feet up in the air right now, and Hardyโs got his eyes behind chrome lenses, meaning he could be anywhere. A thousand miles away already. Skimming across Indian Lake, the hull of his airboat only touching water every thirty feet or so.
So this is what winning feels like, Jade tells herself.
Minus the jubilation and accomplishment and impulse to cry tears of joy, she guesses itโs pretty much what she expected. Give her ten, twenty minutes of scrubbing cusswords from bathroom stalls and itโll just be part of the background hum, the usual suckage of Proofrock.
And no, this lunch hour hasnโt gone exactly as planned.
Right now Lethaโs supposed to be slackjawed on the bench, one hundred percent believing that this slasher is real, that all of Indian Lake is in jeopardy, and that sheโs the one pre-ordained to stop it all. Instead sheโs standing there with her arms crossed, her right hand over her mouth, her eyebrows up in worry. About Jade.
But itโs not Lethaโs fault, either. Jade should have anticipated this, shouldnโt she have? Lethaโs a good-enough personโa pure-enough final girlโthat if thereโs even the possibility that what she thinks about Jade is true, then she has to try to right it. Balancing the world and avenging injustices is what the slasher does, after all, always and only. Yes, the slasher is the governor on unfairness, but the final girl is the governorโs governor, the one who puts a cap on the cycle once it threatens to bleed beyond its own initial scope, go full-on franchise. Which is to say: the final girl is all about justice as well, is all about righting wrong wherever wrongโs encountered. Even if itโs between the lines in a letter, if you squint just right.
โThis isnโt over,โ Letha says, somehow holding both Jadeโs hands like theyโre about to drift out onto a dance floor.
โYouโre right about that,โ Jade says, trying to make Important Eyes, except a crusty clump of black bangs is poking into her right pupil, it feels like. She bats it away, turns to sulk off but then stops, makes herself say it, to all of them: โThank you. I know youโre trying to help. But, really, I just like horror. Not everything has some dark reason behind it. And I donโt even do pranks anymore.โ
โExcept trying to convince us thereโs a slasher on the loose,โ Mr. Holmes canโt help but say.
โThatโs no joke,โ Jade says right back to him.
โIโll give her a ride back,โ Hardy announces, breaking the tension, his cop hand already around Jadeโs left upper arm, so he can steer her.
Jade lets it happen, only looking back once to Letha, whoโs watching her retreat, her eyes all about how she could have done more, she should have done more, it doesnโt have to end like this.
But itโs only just getting started, Jade assures her, then shakes free of Hardy, pulls ahead, hauling the passenger door of his Bronco open before he can.
โIโm working at the high school this afternoon,โ Jade tells him once heโs easing them from the parking lot.
Hardy stops the left turn he was making, hauls the wheel over the other way.
โJade, never mind what your mom told us. If your dad has everโโ
โLetha Mondragonโs the one with the overactive imagination,โ Jade tells him, using his own words against him. โSome mother hen complex where she wants to take care of all of us. And Iโm the least likely chicklet to survive, so that means Iโm the first she has to save.โ
Hardy sighs, says, โI think what you mean there is โhatchling,โ maybe?โ
Jade slumps down in the seat, chocking her knees against the warm dash.
โAnd sheโs right,โ Hardy goes on. โThis isnโt over.โ
โI was justโโ
โIโve got some questions, I mean.โ
Jade looks over to him but heโs watching the road with every last ounce of his remaining attention, as if he hasnโt driven this stretch of Main ten thousand times. He switches hands on the wheel, nods to himself that itโs finally right in his head, and says, โYou knew about the Maruman at the old camp, meaning either you were there when or right after it happened, or you somehow got hold of Megโs transcription.โ
Jade doesnโt say anything.
โAnd if you were over there,โ Hardy goes on, reaching into the backseat to plop something on the console between them, โI know what you were wearing.โ
Itโs her dadโs muddy boots from the porch.
โI would shoot myself in the face before touching his boots,โ Jade says, elbowing them away to prove how gross they are to her.
โHistory of suicide attempts, yes,โ Hardy says.
Jade opens her mouth to ask him why doesnโt he just haul her dad in, since theyโre his boots? But that would just be setting a red herring up, wouldnโt it? Because no way could it really be Tab Daniels. Slashers, in their own way, are as pure as final girls.
โWhat?โ Hardy asks, letting his foot off the gas so Jade can say whatever she was about to.
Jade shakes her head no, nothing.
โAnyway, thatโs not even the worst of it,โ he goes on, stopping in the hug-n-go lane of the high school with her for the second time this month. โYou said there was a Dutch boy and a girlfriend. When we only know about the boy, whose dental work is actually turning out to be European, at least in the forensic report that just hit my inbox two hours ago. Leading me to think you have some knowledge that we donโt.โ
โThey travel in pairs,โ Jade tells him. โCommon knowledge. Casey and Steve in Scream. Barry and Claudette
inโโ
โ โTheyโ beingโฆ the Dutch?โ
โI only said that because he was blond. Like on the paint cans.โ
โSo you were there.โ
โI was at the party, yeah. Can I not go to parties with my ex-classmates?โ
Hardy doesnโt like her answers, but neither can he take them out at the knees, Jade knows.
โThen Iโm sure you know we made a list of everybody who was at the Tompkins place that night,โ he says. โI donโt recall your name being on that.โ
โI left early.โ
โBut stayed until the end, too? To see the color of that dead kidโs hair?โ
โWas on my way out.โ
โIโm sure the Koenig girl or one of the others can confirm this.โ
โTiffโs recall of that night might beโฆ blurry.โ
Hardy shakes his head, impressedโhe must know Tiffany K was sloshedโbut still, โSo either you were at the party or youโฆโ he leads off, using his fingers to pick words from the air, it looks like, โor you have unlawful knowledge about the events that led to that kid being there. Same as the golf club.โ
โWould you believe a bus ran over my evidence, or is that too much like the dog eating my homework?โ
โExcuse me?โ
โThird option, I mean,โ Jade says, opening her door, hanging a leg out for solid ground.
โI donโtโโ
โIโve watched too many horror movies,โ Jade says. โIโm just making shit up left and right, because my dad did some unspeakable shit to me.โ
Hardy just sits there, brake pressed in, eyes hidden behind chrome lenses.
โAre you saying that Mondragon girl was right about him?โ he finally asks.
โIโm saying somethingโs coming for us, Sheriff,โ Jade says, stepping all the way down now. โI donโt know why, I donโt know who, but I do know when.โ
โJuly Fourth,โ Hardy recites. โSpeaking of that.โ
This stops Jade. Then she connects the necessary dots.
โYou can beef up security all you want,โ she says. โIt wonโtโโ
โIn hindsight, your letter is a credible threat to the proceedings that night,โ Hardy says, using the official phrasing. โIf you show up and try to self-fulfill your little prophecy, then itโll look like I was negligent, just some country bumpkin law enforcement officer not paying enough attention.โ
โButโโ
โWhat Iโm saying,โ Hardy says, speaking over her, holding her eyes for this, โis that your presence will not be needed that night, Ms. Daniels. Rex Allen and Francie will escort you out if you try.โ
โBut you canโt. Iโve been waiting for this for my wholeโโ
โItโs for the best,โ Hardy says, challenging her to tell him otherwise.
Iโve been waiting all my life, she wants to say, but canโt.
All she can do is stand there on the front sidewalk of her exโhigh school, her world crumbling around her, all of it just falling away. Hardy tips his hat bye to her and eases away, and Jade canโt even think of anything sharp or cutting to say. Sheโs numb.
โWent ahead and clocked you in,โ Rexall says in passing, carrying a crumbling pipe over his shoulder, both ends seeping unmentionable sludge. โThank me later, yeah?โ
Jade doesnโt have any clever comeback for him either, a silence heโs probably taking for acceptance of this dealโ timecard-action for later, to-be-ascertained actionโฆ
Thatโs all distant to Jade now. Happening to some other girl.
Thirty minutes later sheโs trudged back inside, is scrubbing profane words from bathroom stalls. By midafternoon, using her county razorblade, the metal wall by the urinals her dark blue canvas, sheโs carving her own profanity, each letter a foot tall and deep, going down to bare metal.
THE LAKE WITCH SLAYINGS.
Thatโs definitely what theyโre going to call it the morning after, when all the bodies are floating facedown in the water, blood blooming out from their sides like wings.
Itโs going to be glorious.
SLASHER 101
What’s lucky is that you can go on teacher vacation for MY WHOLE JUNIOR YEAR but when you come back all the same rules of the slasher genre still keep
applying, and we can now finish your education, sir. Or should I say Night Flier. That’s not a slasher but it’s still from the horror mind of Stephen King, who has a high bodycount in his books and movies but his Freddy Krueger is Pennywise the Clown and his Chucky is Gage and his final girl is Carrie and his Jason Voorhees is a dog, but none of them are really slashers. Really if you want some truth then if you compare Mr. King with a little old lady then she’s probably done more to
give the slasher legs and arms and a secret face than the acknowledged king. That’s right I’m talking about Agatha Christie and the next important slasher ingredient, which is the Reveal.
But first a reveal of my own if you don’t overmind. Since this is the 2nd week of class only that means this 2 pager in your extra credit box is me putting money in the bank. Because Halloween is going to be here before we know it.
So, the Reveal in the slasher is when all will be said out loud and made clear as to Who’s been doing all this and Why and also How. So when I’m mentioning Mrs. Christie above what I mean from the one book of hers I mostly read titled And Then There Were None which has nearly as many titles through the years as A Bay of Blood, where people are dying and who’s doing it, who’s doing it, then at the end, SURPRISE! It was this one dude all along, and here’s why, and he’s showing his secret true face at the end.
Or if Scooby Doo is more your thing then that’s the very same thing, sir. I know he’s a hippie dog to you but he also faces ghosts and werewolves who all pull their masks off at the end and explain WHY they were doing all this, which made great money sense at the time to them even if it was a LOT of trouble, on par with some of the Joker’s schemes.
But in the slasher where there’s real necks getting the axe, how that works is, okay, pretend all the people who have been killed in the movie get to be alive
again for five minutes in a living room and then the slasher comes in and
explains to them why he did what he did to them and they all look at each and nod and say that, Yeah, they probably did sort of deserve this. It sucks that it had to hurt so bad and it was pretty scary and they really had other plans and
their families are going to be sad and who’s going to feed their dog now, but they should have thought of that before doing whatever Bad Thing they did to someone who couldn’t protect himself or herself at that point, and for sure wasn’t even close to asking for it any way whatsoever. At which point any good slasher will unlimber his machete and kill them all over again, just paint that living room red.
However note that this is only for slasher movies of the mystery variety like
Scream and not the supernatural variety like A Nightmare on Elm Street. Scream at the end has Billy Loomis giving a lecture REVEALING why he’s been doing this, while Nightmare has Freddy giving his lecture through the whole franchise with quips, because while Tina does pull his face off, showing his animatronic skull, Freddy’s really only more of himself without it, which isn’t really a Reveal, just a magnification.
Though if we’re talking Agatha Christie like this then we need to talk about fish and fishing, Mr. Holmes. Specifically, Red Herrings. Coming soon to an extra credit box near you.