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Chapter no 10

My Heart Is a Chainsaw

Itโ€™s not Rexall who fires Jade for leaving graffiti when she was supposed to be erasing itโ€”thatโ€™s Hardyโ€™s jobโ€”but sheโ€™s pretty sure heโ€™s the one who ratted her out, either as payback for stealing his glory at graduation or because she never does slow-motion shirt changes under any of his spycams.

Itโ€™s kind of too bad, though. The no more money thing, sureโ€”that means no more phone, next billing cycleโ€”but she also had big plans for one of Rexallโ€™s illicit recordings being instrumental in unmasking the slasher, or at least documenting a kill in grainy black and white.

But thatโ€™s Lethaโ€™s job, Jade reminds herself, staring across the lake while Hardy straightens his desk calendar and drones on about destruction of county property, broken trust, no more second chances, adult responsibilities, civic pride, misuse of cleaning tools checked out to her name, abuse of key privileges, Henderson Hawk school spirit or the lack thereof, and somewhere in there she unfocuses her eyes as much as humanly possible, wide enough to just float in some muted state of mind through the whole rest of her Sunday, wash up on the shore of Monday pushing slasher after slasher into her VCR, trying to find a line back to herself. She drifts off ten minutes into each, though. She tries to convince herself itโ€™s about finding the right movie for her mood, but how can none of them be right, when theyโ€™ve all been right before?

Then, โ€œTuesday?โ€ she says, looking around. With no school and no job, the days donโ€™t really matter anymore, do they? She hides her head under her pillow, sleeps until noon, then sleeps some more. Well, stays in bed anyway, staring at the

ceiling, wishing for a glass of water to ungum her mouth but not wanting it quite badly enough to actually go get it. Because, she hisses to Hardy, sheโ€™s not a go-getter, right? Everybody knows that. Sheโ€™s a coaster, a rider, and where do people who go with the flow always end up? The drain, yes.

Specifically, that one in Janet Leighโ€™s black-and-white shower.

Itโ€™s a good enough comeback that Jadeโ€™s finally able to sit up and take stock.

Her dad should be at Terra Nova for the day, and her mom

โ€”why is she even thinking about her? Itโ€™s because of the debacle Saturday was, right? It is. Itโ€™s because she had to see her mom through Lethaโ€™s eyes, sort of: as the future Jade. As if. No way will Jade end up hereโ€”no way does she ever shack up with some version of her dad, no way could she endure that same question her mom must get fifty times a day: โ€œButโ€ฆ isnโ€™t this the dollar store? How can this cost two dollars?โ€

One thing Mr. Holmes told the class one wistful seventh period was that nobody ever makes it past twenty with the same hopes and dreams and certainties they once thought so dear and vital and true at seventeen. Nobody except me, Jade had assured herself, but sheโ€™d also had to wonder if that was even a partially original thoughtโ€”if every other student in history class that day wasnโ€™t thinking the exact same thing.

It doesnโ€™t matter. Come the very last day of July sheโ€™s eighteen, will be out of the house. Hopefully Boise is ahead of her somewhere, but Boise, she knows, takes bus fare, and bus fares cost money, and now thereโ€™s no more paychecks coming in, shit.

With that, Jade canโ€™t seem to muster the will to untangle from her sheets. Sheโ€™s most definitely circling that Psycho drain, is just sitting there ticking off the things sheโ€™s not: a custodian; a high school graduate; a final girl; welcome at

the big Independence Day party; any help to anybody at all, even herself.

It makes sense, she supposes. Has there ever even been an Indian in a slasher? In Friday the 13th Ned wears a war bonnet and claps whoops from his mouth, does his high-knee dance, but heโ€™s still the same idiot he was before. In Halloween 5, thereโ€™s another war bonnet, but itโ€™s just skating past in the background. There is that one Indian dude in Sweet Sixteen, Jade supposes. Or, two, counting his grandfather. Along that same line, though: outside of Leprechaun 6, has there even been a black final girl before? Usually in slashers, the black girls are the friendsโ€”Scream 2, I Still Know What You Did Last Summer. And that theyโ€™re in part 2โ€™s means theyโ€™re a response, a bandaid.

She thumbs through her videotapes for something else that can count, that Letha could use as model, as guide, but thereโ€™s nothing.

Which is why she needs me, Jade reminds herself. Not that that compels Letha to listen.

This is the part in the movie where Jadeโ€™s supposed to rally, she knows. Sheโ€™s not supposed to mope, sheโ€™s supposed to be gearing up, pouring black powder into lightbulbs, hammering nails into the business end of a bat, that kind of stuff.

But thereโ€™s no camera on her, she knows. And there never was.

It doesnโ€™t mean sheโ€™s wrong about whatโ€™s coming, whatโ€™s already happening, but it does mean that now she can sit back guilt-free and just watch it all happen from her I-told-you-so place, right? Maybe thatโ€™s why she couldnโ€™t get into any of her slasher tapes earlier. In comparison to the one sheโ€™s in, theyโ€™re kind of pale.

But she will be goddamned if Hardy can keep her out of the water on Saturday. Sheโ€™s gonna be there front-row, shoving popcorn in, maybe wearing a clear poncho and goggles against all the blood.

Just, what to do until then, right? When it was going to be her and Letha working together, the week couldnโ€™t be long enough for all the slasher ground they had to cover. Now, without that, and with no litter to stab, no hours to log, it looks to stretch forever.

โ€œMeddling kids,โ€ yeah. More like a bothersome ex-janitor with big ideas.

Jade guesses she could always go in, try to complete her community service, but if Meg was watching her close before, now Jadeโ€™s going to be under a microscope. Granted, thatโ€™s better than Rexallโ€™s hidden fisheyes, but still, itโ€™s not the kind of attention she really wants.

To try to be part of the day, Jade makes a bologna sandwich with mustardโ€”her dadโ€™s fancy mustard, thatโ€™s supposed to be only hisโ€”eats it in her underwear in the kitchen, being sure to avoid all the reflections of herself in the oven window, the stolen napkin dispenser, the chrome faucet. Not everybody can be Julie James or Sarah Darling, at least not without a personal trainer, a nutritionist, and an airbrush. Sure, the Indian maidens on all the truckstop blankets are always swivel-hipped, stacked like a Disney princess, but Jade figures she must be from a different tribe.

Sitting at the sagging table in the kitchen, the sandwich on her right thigh, she leans her head back, stops chewing, wonders what it would be like to choke alone in the house like thisโ€”what regrets reel through your head?โ€”and then jerks hard when the screen door rattles. By the time the front door swings open, Jadeโ€™s rolled off the chair, is crouched by the fridge, sandwich in-hand, eyes wide.

Rexall belches into the living room. Sheโ€™d know that burp anywhere.

โ€œDude,โ€ her dad says about it, his keys jingling into his pocket.

โ€œThatโ€™s nothing,โ€ a third voice slurs, one Jade doesnโ€™t know.

Fucking great. Her dadโ€™s not at Terra Nova for fifteen an hour, and Rexall, with nobody to supervise anymore, isnโ€™t working either. Itโ€™s a drinking day. Another โ€œhigh school never endedโ€ day. Perfect. Wonderful. And the side door out of the kitchen involves the hallway, which is one of two directions these three can take, as the bathroomโ€™s that way.

The other way they can take is right here, into the kitchen. Jadeโ€™s heart hammers in her chest. Not only is she only wearing a bra and panties, but these arenโ€™t even good ones,

are even particularly bad ones.

And the voices are getting closer. Meaning they didnโ€™t swing by to crash on the couch for an hour or two, watch one of her dadโ€™s old westerns. This is a pit-stop, a refuel. They wonโ€™t be staying in the living room, are definitely coming this way.

But, which way?

Or, which of them is going to find Jade crouched in her underwear by the fridge, holding half a bologna and mustard sandwich, her eyes wide, pasty black hair everywhere?

Shit. Shit shit shit.

Jade takes stock again, clocking both doors, and thenโ€ฆ no, she canโ€™t.

The back door?

When footsteps start both crunching up the hall and resounding on the hollow part of the living room floor that leads to her, thereโ€™s no choice: still crouched, she scurries for the back door, twists the weak deadbolt over and falls out as quietly as she can, pulling the door shut softly behind her.

Voices in the kitchen now.

Two beers cracking open, then a third.

Andโ€”no, no, no: the door handle Jadeโ€™s still gripping, it twists under her hand.

She swings with it when the door opens, is dangling over the open space past the cement block under the door, is

trying to flatten herself to the side of the house, and then has to hold that trembling position while one of them pisses a pale yellow line out into the grass already burned by a thousand other pees.

Jade risks a look up through the back doorโ€™s window andโ€ฆ Clate Rodgers? Would Hardy let her have her mop back if she called in, whispered that his daughterโ€™s killer was back in town again? Or does Hardyโ€™s skin crawl all on its own every time Clate steps over the county line?

When Clate finally dribbles down, grunts through his shake-off, and hauls the door back over, Jade lets go, falls into the sharp weeds that grow by the house, and makes herself as small as possible, hopes nobody across the wayโ€™s looking out their window.

Two seconds later, footsteps still crunching in the kitchen, the window over the sink opening to blow cigarette smoke from, Jade sees her salvation billowing on the laundry line: the coveralls Hardy didnโ€™t think to ask her to surrender. Unlike Michael Myers, she wonโ€™t even have to kill a mechanic to step into them.

Pulling them on in the shade of the house, she falls down like a boneless thing when a little brown bird explodes up from the leg. Itโ€™s so close to Jadeโ€™s face she feels the air from its beating wings, her hand coming up hours too late to protect her eyes. She pats down the arms for if this was a flock, then pulls the coveralls the rest of the way on and creeps around to the front, lifts her dadโ€™s backup muck boots from the bed of his truck, which she bets Hardy would just love to hear about.

A block down, almost to the lake, she realizes sheโ€™s still holding the bologna sandwich. She takes a bite but her dadโ€™s mustard is too sharp, too warm. She tosses the sandwich in front of her, steps purposefully on it, mashing it into the concrete, and then shimmies through the gym door of the high school, which Hardy explained was strictly off limits to her. Forever.

Like he didnโ€™t know that was an invitation?

Jade goes through Lost and Found for mismatched socks, a confiscated t-shirtโ€”green, a seventies Corvette dramatic on the chestโ€”then does her make-up as best she can in the usual mirror, but only after roundly flipping Rexall off.

โ€œGo ahead, turn me in,โ€ Jade tells him, enunciating clearly in case heโ€™s having to lip-read. โ€œIโ€™ll just ask Hardy how he thinks you knew I was here.โ€

She puts her eyeliner on thick as hell.

The next three hours she spends stalking the halls, playing Slaughter High. At least in her head. But she finally ends up being John Bender, escaped from detention in the library, using terrible form to shoot some hoops in the gym.

And then itโ€™s Mr. Holmesโ€™s old history classroom.

Itโ€™s empty now. Empty of him. His corny posters, the part of the chalkboard he had marked off for that dayโ€™s bullshit quote. The drawers of his desk are all stray paper clips and leftover staples.

Jade sort of wants to cry.

โ€œFuck you,โ€ she says instead, and leaves not by the door she used to get in but by throwing a trashcan through the glass of the front doors, ducking through that crashed-open hole.

This is graduation, she tells herself, crunching through the glass like the four misfits on the cover of her The Craft videotape. All the ceremony she needs.

Itโ€™s night now. Pretty soon the streets of Proofrock will roll up, dousing all the lights. Jade cocks a hip out, glares down the empty streets. Sheโ€™s not worried about dying and going to hell for all her sins. Sheโ€™s not worried because sheโ€™s been living in hell for seventeen years already.

She pushes through the darkness, her hands deep in the pockets of her coveralls.

It was worth it, she decides all at once. Getting fired. Getting fired for memorializing this slasher cycle on the bathroom stall.

Somebody had to, right?

Anyway, โ€œThe Lake Witch Slayingsโ€ is a killer name for whatโ€™s going on, and whatโ€™s still going on. She has to smile about that, which makes herโ€ฆ yes: there is a pack of cigarettes in the chest pocket of the coveralls. Fucking salvation. Thank you, tiny brown sleeve birds.

Jade fires up in the alley behind the drugstore. Through the smoke she can just see the Umiak bobbing at the pier, dwarfing Hardyโ€™s little airboat, two of the Founders in town, it looks like. Theyโ€™re stepping off the pier like just ferried across, anyway. Letha and Tiara are up at the boat cockpit, whatever itโ€™s called, Tiara even wearing a captainโ€™s hat like sheโ€™s in a Playboy spread. But Jade only has eyes for these two Founders. Is this the closest sheโ€™s actually been to them? Itโ€™s hard to look away. The way they moveโ€”โ€œfiftyโ€ doesnโ€™t mean the same thing at their tax bracket as it does in Proofrock. Thereโ€™s actual spring in their step, and theyโ€™re yoga-limber, almost svelte, even, like they didnโ€™t just step down from a cigarette boat but up from the pages of a magazine.

Jade leans against the back of the drugstore, takes the most slit-eyed, noirish drag she can, and watches them walk to the Porsche, the Range Rover.

Neither of them are Theo Mondragon, she can tell, heโ€™s got those football shoulders, those dodgy hips. Soโ€ฆ itโ€™s Mars Baker, right? The other oneโ€™s either Ross Pangborne or Lewellyn Singleton, she canโ€™t really tell those two apart so well at distance. Theyโ€™re supposed to be grieving for Deacon Samuels, thatโ€™s got to be why theyโ€™ve converged on Terra Nova, but theyโ€™re not stooped with grief, theyโ€™re not dragging, theyโ€™re not sad and broken. That bounce in their long strides, really, itโ€™s almost like theyโ€™re thrilled it wasnโ€™t them.

โ€œBut it will be,โ€ Jade says to them, and blows smoke out, spins away fast, trying not to let herself get caught up in their shine, their polish, their remove from real actual life.

Walking purposefully away from the road out of town to pay a visit to Camp Blood gets her going alongside the Terra Nova staging area again. She checks both ways and then, on impulse, why not, she steps in through the laid-over fence panel, walks fast in among the big equipment, the dozers and front-end loaders. Another time she might climb those big tires, sit in the cracked vinyl seats, pretend sheโ€™s Godzillaโ€™ing down Main on a righteous rampage.

She has adult responsibilities now, though, doesnโ€™t she, Sheriff? Civic pride, all that bullshit. To prove it she drops her cigarette, grinds it out under her boot like a proper citizen, and keeps stepping, trying the door of one of the storage shedsโ€”padlockedโ€”then cutting across a pile of junk to a more likely shed, just on the chance she can get eyes on whatever bladed weapon or chainsaw is probably going to be in play on Saturday. Halfway across the pile of junk, though, headlights stab on right beside her. She freezes, telling herself that if she can be still enough, then sheโ€™s just another broken pallet, just another torn-off pull of shrink wrap.

But then the driverโ€™s door opens, and she realizes two things at once. The first is that this isnโ€™t Hardyโ€™s Bronco or some rent-a-cop the Founders have hired to patrol their lot. If it were, a dummy light would be pinning her in place right now, or at least a Maglite.

The second realization is that sheโ€™s been in this particular car before.

โ€œUm, need some help?โ€ Shooting Glasses asks. Heโ€™s the timid silhouette standing up behind the blinding glare.

โ€œThis where yโ€™all keep the explosives?โ€ Jade asks back, shielding her eyes as best she can. โ€œOr, no. The candlesticks, the lead pipes, the daggers?โ€

โ€œWho you looking to kill this time?โ€ Shooting Glasses asks.

This time. Because โ€œlast timeโ€ was herself.

โ€œEverybody?โ€ she says, clambering down and out as best she can, without quite puncturing an ankle, or falling into a

needle bath.

โ€œThink theyโ€™d notice if you did?โ€ Shooting Glasses asks, reaching in to dial the lights down to just the orange ones.

โ€œDead & Buried, 1981,โ€ Jade says by way of an answer. โ€œWhole town of dead people who donโ€™t know theyโ€™re dead. It happens.โ€

Shooting Glasses makes a show of aiming his finger down to the door panel and punching the unlock button.

Jade steps around to the passenger side, says, โ€œThereโ€™s this other movie called Children Shouldnโ€™t Play with Dead Things. If thereโ€™d been a sequel, it might should have been โ€˜Children Shouldnโ€™t Get into Cars They Know Are Stolen.โ€™โ€

Shooting Glasses folds in behind the wheel, says, โ€œAnother of your slashers?โ€

โ€œI wish,โ€ Jade says, settling in. โ€œThe director did go on to make Black Christmas, though, so maybe thereโ€™s some genealogy there, if you squint right.โ€

โ€œEverything eighties with you, isnโ€™t it?โ€

โ€œThose are both dirty seventies,โ€ Jade tells him, tracking the dim headlights prowling along the staging areaโ€™s fence line. โ€œBut the eighties were great, thatโ€™s why. Theyโ€”โ€

Shooting Glasses interrupts by starting the already-started car, which results in metal screeching, parts grinding, andโ€” more importantโ€”the brake lights of that car trolling by.

โ€œThat was pleasant,โ€ Jade says to Shooting Glasses without looking at him. Just waiting for that car to move along, move along.

โ€œItโ€™s so quiet I canโ€™t ever tell if itโ€™s going or not,โ€ Shooting Glasses says about the car.

โ€œBut the eighties,โ€ Jade continues, since someone finally asked, โ€œtheyโ€™re when the slasher was at its purest. Which is to say its dirtiest, its cheapest. Low production values, throwaway dialogue, nobody actors, recycled premisesโ€”all about making that quick buck. But thatโ€™s what makes it the Golden Age, when Jason was born, Freddy was born, Chucky wasโ€”well, when Chucky was bought, anyway. But every

Friday there would be either a new slasher or two, or thereโ€™d be the same ones from a few months ago, with new titles. It must have been amazing. And I was born too late for it.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s what Codyโ€™s always saying,โ€ Shooting Glasses says, nodding to the taillights finally weaving away into Proofrock.

โ€œCody?โ€ Jade has to ask, then, โ€œOh, yeah. The anyflavor Indian?โ€

โ€œHe says he was born too late too. That if heโ€™d been born a hundred years ago, things would be different for him.โ€

โ€œGood for him,โ€ Jade says. โ€œDonโ€™t think itโ€™d work for me, though.โ€

Shooting Glasses cuts his eyes over to her about this.

โ€œSome boys from town would play a trick on me,โ€ she says like the most obvious thing, โ€œtheyโ€™d throw me out on the water, and Iโ€™d run away into legend.โ€

โ€œDonโ€™t take this wrong,โ€ Shooting Glasses says, โ€œbut I donโ€™t think Iโ€™ve ever talked to anyone like you.โ€

โ€œYโ€™all almost done building Camelot over there?โ€ Jade asks back, throwing her chin across the water.

Shooting Glasses backs the car up, repoints it so theyโ€™re looking through the lake side of the staging areaโ€™s chain link fence. Past it, thereโ€™s the lights of Terra Nova.

โ€œFoundation problems now,โ€ he says.

โ€œItโ€™s rocky over there,โ€ Jade tells him. โ€œThatโ€™s why the cemetery is on this side, yeah? Only thing over there are old mine shafts. My history teacher says itโ€™s all pockmarked with caves, too. Andโ€โ€”Jade closes her eyes to get it just rightโ€”โ€œhe says that, before the lake, when Drown Town wasnโ€™t drowned, that at night you could see the sparks from the pickaxes over there. Everybody trying to strike it rich.โ€

โ€œDid they?โ€

โ€œWhat do you think?โ€

Shooting Glasses pulls a Dr Pepper can up to spit into, being sure to break the saliva string off before guiding the can back to the cupholder.

โ€œI like how your eyes squint right when youโ€™re spitting,โ€ Jade tells him. โ€œItโ€™s like you know how gross that is.โ€

Shooting Glasses turns the parking lights off, stranding them in the darkness. But it does make the fence go away, which is pretty cool.

โ€œSo why do you want to kill everybody?โ€ he asks. โ€œSome more than others,โ€ Jade tells him.

โ€œNo names, no names.โ€ โ€œSaid the car thief.โ€

Shooting Glasses grins a guilty grin.

โ€œYou know that kid they pulled from the lake last week?โ€ Jade says, patting the dashboard lovingly. โ€œBet his prints are somewhere in here. Hers too.โ€

โ€œHer who?โ€

โ€œHis girlfriend,โ€ Jade says. โ€œSheโ€™s dead out there too.

Probably sunk, down in Drown Town.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s the old town that the reservoirโ€”โ€ โ€œLake,โ€ Jade says. โ€œYeah.โ€

โ€œI heard one of them over there talking about it,โ€ Shooting Glasses says. โ€œTheโ€”that astronaut one?โ€

โ€œMars Baker? Heโ€™s the lawyer one, I think.โ€

โ€œHe said heโ€™s going to take a remote-control submarine down there, get some video.โ€

Jade looks into her lap, both amused and disappointed.

โ€œSome things should probably just stay buried,โ€ she says. โ€œYou saying you wouldnโ€™t watch that video?โ€

โ€œIโ€™d watch it until that girlfriendโ€™s decomposed face bobbed into the cameraโ€™s eye, yeah.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s from Jaws,โ€ Shooting Glasses says, checking her eyes to be sure heโ€™s right.

โ€œGood enough for Spielberg, good enough for me,โ€ Jade says back.

Shooting Glasses just sits there. Which is to say, heโ€™s not leaving, not sloping off to whisper to his buds about how weird this girl is with all her throwback references, all the horror, all the gore. Jadeโ€™s face heats up, and, praying her

voice wonโ€™t crack, and only saying it after sheโ€™s gone over it and over it in her head, she says, โ€œI could like you, I think.โ€ When Shooting Glasses looks over for more, the Dr Pepper can to his lower lip, she adds in quick, โ€œAs somebody to talk to, I mean.โ€

โ€œWhere was I your last four years?โ€ he sort of quotes.

โ€œWhyโ€™d you come over, shine your headlights like that?โ€ Jade asks. โ€œDid you know it was me?โ€

โ€œThereโ€™s supposed to be a bear around. Bears like trash.โ€ โ€œThis one likes human innards, supposedly.โ€

โ€œSupposedly?โ€

โ€œItโ€™s all setup, distraction, red herrings.โ€

โ€œThought there were just trout up this high.โ€ Jade has to grin a tolerant grin about this.

โ€œIโ€™m not supposed to be there on Saturday, even,โ€ she says all wistfully, changing direction.

โ€œIndependence Day? The movie on the lake thing they do?โ€

โ€œWe do.โ€

โ€œYou do.โ€

Jade can feel Shooting Glassesโ€™s eyes on her again. โ€œLot of people are going to, you know,โ€ she says, looking up to see how he takes this: โ€œDie.โ€

โ€œSaid the girl looking for murder weapons in the junk pile.โ€ โ€œNo, youโ€™re right,โ€ Jade has to admit. โ€œIโ€™m definitely a

suspect, the reddest herring.โ€ โ€œBetter than being a trout.โ€

Jade hits his arm with the back of her hand and he rolls with it into his door, making a show of keeping his spit can level.

โ€œYou told that old sheriff about this big wilderness massacre only you know about?โ€ he asks.

โ€œDoesnโ€™t believe me.โ€

โ€œBecause of your hair, yourโ€ฆ history.โ€ โ€œAmong other bullshit reasons.โ€

โ€œYour taste in movies?โ€ Shooting Glasses guesses.

โ€œMy good taste in movies,โ€ Jade says, flashing her eyes at him and also, for a snapshot of an instant, seeing the two of them through the windshield: two kids playfighting, making eyes behind the feeble jabs.

And she doesnโ€™t even know his real name.

Shooting Glasses holds his hands up in surrender.

โ€œBut if itโ€™s not you,โ€ he says, running with this just to keep her talking, it feels like, โ€œthen who? Is it thatโ€ฆ who were you talking about? That janitor who caught fire? Cropsy?โ€

โ€œCropsyโ€™s strictly Staten Island,โ€ Jade says. โ€œThatโ€™s New York City.โ€

โ€œJason, Freddy, that other one?โ€

โ€œMichael,โ€ Jade fills in, shaking her head no. โ€œI alreadyโ€”โ€ โ€œNo, the one who eats people.โ€

โ€œLeatherface. Bzzzt, not a slasher, sorry. Itโ€™s not about revenge with him, justโ€”thereโ€™s nobody to get revenge against. Whoโ€™s he supposed to come after, the Texas economy that forced his family into cannibalism?โ€

โ€œOther one who eats people, I mean,โ€ Shooting Glasses says.

โ€œHannibal Lecter,โ€ Jade fills in. โ€œBzzt, not a slasher either, but partial credit because he also wears a face of human skin. He just likes how people taste, right? Anybody else before we move on? Terminator, Alien, Fatal Attraction?โ€

โ€œYou can do this all night, canโ€™t you?โ€

โ€œWhat I was saying,โ€ Jade tries to continue, โ€œis that I already explained all this slasher stuff to who needs to know the most.โ€

โ€œDid he buy into it?โ€

โ€œShe.โ€ Jade shakes her head no, sadly, Letha didnโ€™t. โ€œWait, though. I think itโ€™s gonna be someone dressing up like our local legend, Stacey Graves.โ€

โ€œGood name,โ€ Shooting Glasses says, having to rush the Dr Pepper can in to wrangle a grainy line of spit that wonโ€™t break.

โ€œSpeaking of good namesโ€ฆโ€ Jade says, looking past his current situation with the can to his yellow-tinted eyes.

He gets it, smiles, says when he can, โ€œGreyson?โ€

โ€œGreyson Brust,โ€ Jade completes, showing off that she still has that rattling around in her head. โ€œI never heard the end of that story.โ€

โ€œI told you the beginning?โ€ โ€œNever heard any of it.โ€

โ€œBecause youโ€ฆ jumped out of the car?โ€

โ€œHad to,โ€ Jade tells him. โ€œYou were about to spill, and I couldnโ€™t know this particular backstory yet.โ€

โ€œBecause it matters?โ€

โ€œAt this stage we donโ€™t know what matters.โ€

โ€œBut you think what happened to Greyson does?โ€

โ€œI think youโ€™re stalling,โ€ Jade says. โ€œWhat happened to him? There any reason not to tell me?โ€

Shooting Glasses looks down into the crusty mouth of his Dr Pepper can, kind of shrugs, says, โ€œSort of?โ€

โ€œMeaning?โ€

โ€œMeaning that one way to look at it is thatโ€”itโ€™s that we sold him, I guess.โ€

โ€œHow much?โ€

โ€œEight hundred each. That church guy, he counted it out in cash. We had to sign the accident report the way he wrote it up.โ€

โ€œChurch guy?โ€ Jade has to ask. โ€œOld-timey preacher, white hair and crazy eyes, big-ass hands, name rhymes with Bezekiel?โ€

โ€œWhat? No, noโ€”theโ€ฆ his name. That one the bearโ€”โ€ โ€œDeacon Samuels,โ€ Jade fills in. โ€œThe church of the flipped

house.โ€

โ€œHe paid us off. Now if we say anything, itโ€™s like perjury.โ€ โ€œNot sure thatโ€™s really how it works.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s how heโ€™ll make it work.โ€ โ€œHe told you this?โ€

โ€œDidnโ€™t have to.โ€

โ€œBut heโ€™s dead now.โ€

โ€œAnd my signatureโ€™s still on that report,โ€ Shooting Glasses says, leaning forward to rest his chin on the top of the padded steering wheel.

โ€œSo the reportโ€™s a lie, I take it.โ€

โ€œIt wasnโ€™t supposed to matter,โ€ Shooting Glasses says. โ€œWe thought he was gonna be dead on the ambulance ride, I mean. But Greysonโ€”โ€

โ€œI really do like that name.โ€

โ€œYou can have it,โ€ Shooting Glasses says, leaning back and looking out his window, his face right there in the reflection for Jade. โ€œHeโ€™s pretty much done with it.โ€

โ€œThis is the part where you tell me,โ€ Jade tells him. โ€œWhat, am I hypnotized?โ€ Shooting Glasses asks.

โ€œIโ€™ll trade,โ€ Jade hears herself tell him back.

He looks over to her, says after a beat, โ€œTrade what?โ€

โ€œNot what youโ€™re thinking,โ€ she says, sure to hold his eyes for that. โ€œEver sinceโ€ฆ since we first met. That night. Youโ€™ve been wondering why I did it.โ€

โ€œYou donโ€™t have to tell me,โ€ he says. โ€œItโ€™sโ€”I know thereโ€™s never just one reason, I mean.โ€

โ€œTry me.โ€

He considers this, considers it some more, then nods to himself, spits again, taking his time with it, and starts: โ€œHe could have been any one of us, right? Greyson, I mean. It wasโ€”we were leveling that lot on the point where the big house is going in. The dragon one.โ€

โ€œMondragon.โ€

โ€œMondragon, yeah. One where thatโ€”I meanโ€”โ€

โ€œWhere the hot girlโ€™s gonna live and take long naked showers,โ€ Jade says for him.

The dimple in his cheek gives away how right she is.

โ€œYou can pour the concrete so the topโ€™s level,โ€ Shooting Glasses continues, doing his hand left to right in case โ€œflatโ€ is a new concept to her. โ€œThe base, not so much. It doesnโ€™t have to be so flat, I mean. But you do want to dig down to

pour. Bedrock works best, and like you were saying, itโ€™s shallow as shit over there.โ€

โ€œThe bedrock you mean,โ€ Jade says. โ€œYeah, whatโ€”?โ€

โ€œThe lake is deepest over there, because that side of the valleyโ€™s steeper than over here. Forget about it, sorry.โ€

She Theo Mondragons her hand for him to go on, and he does: โ€œI wasnโ€™t running the backhoe, Telly was. Just scraping back and forth with the boom. Heโ€™d loosen a big rock then push it out of the way. One or two of them caught the slope, went all the way down to the lake. It was like a game. Anyway, we had this leaf blower, I guess. It was so one of us could blast it around after Tellyโ€™d scraped an area pretty clean. So we could know what there was still left to do.โ€

โ€œWhereโ€™d you plug it in, this leaf blower?โ€ โ€œIt was gas.โ€

Jade nods, chides herself for stopping him again. โ€œAnyway,โ€ he says, โ€œGreyson had his safety glasses on,

would step in right after Telly lifted out, and heโ€™dโ€”โ€ In the confines of the cab, Shooting Glasses mimes sweeping a great windy nozzle back and forth at foot-level, like herding mice with air. Jade almost has to grin, the pictureโ€™s so clear. โ€œI was standing right beside his dumb ass, right? But I had my eyes closed, because Grey was spraying my legs. It was hilarious to him, I guess. He was always screwing around, was an accident waiting to happen. But I had to like close my eyes from it, all that little shit blasting up. Then my pants legs just went still. That was the first way I knew something had happened. At first I thought heโ€™d maybe run out of gas.โ€

โ€œAnd this is in the daytime?โ€ Jade asks, hardly believing any slasher could be so brazen as to take someone with the sun shining down on them, people all around.

Shooting Glasses nods like thatโ€™s not the interesting part. โ€œHeโ€™d fallen through,โ€ he says. โ€œI guessโ€”I guess we were on top of a cave? I donโ€™t know how Tellyโ€™s backhoe hadnโ€™t

crumbled it all in already. But Greyson, man, the leaf blower was still there, wedged across the crack like heโ€™d tried to hold on to it. It was still running. But he was gone, man. Fucking fell his ass all the way in, whatever.โ€

โ€œOne of you go down there for him?โ€

Shooting Glasses winces, having to be there again.

โ€œWe dropped a flashlight down to him,โ€ he says. โ€œFifteen feet? Probably not even that. It wasnโ€™t a big-ass cavern or anything. Just a little hollowed-out place, maybe fifteen by fifteen. Your history teacherโ€™s right about it being all caves over there. Like fucking Swiss cheese.โ€

The reason thereโ€™s pockets of air in Swiss cheese, Jade knows but doesnโ€™t say, is that thereโ€™s corruption in there, eating all around itself.

โ€œBut you got him out,โ€ Jade prompts. Shooting Glasses nods.

โ€œHow?โ€

Shooting Glasses huffs air through his nose in a sick laugh. โ€œWe had to loop him like a goddamn pig,โ€ he says, wiping his lips with the back of his sleeve. โ€œHe keptโ€”he kept running away from the light weโ€™d shine down. Like, running on all fours, like heโ€™d forgot he was even a person.โ€

โ€œHead injury?โ€

โ€œFinally we shined all our lights into this one kind of corner he kept running to. So he had to cross under the hole to get out of the light, right? We dropped a cargo net on him, and when he tried to fight out of it, it tangled him up. He fought it the whole way, was making theseโ€ฆ these like noises, I donโ€™t know.โ€

โ€œHad he been bitten?โ€

โ€œWhat? No. I donโ€™t know, shit. By what? He couldnโ€™t breathe, though. Like, hypoโ€”no. What do they call it?โ€

โ€œHyperventilating.โ€

โ€œYeah, that. Rabbit-breathing, the kind where your heartโ€™s about to explode. And he was all curled up, kind of spasmy, his fingers crooked but not really broken. I donโ€™t think they

were broken. You donโ€™t remember the day the ambulance came?โ€

Jade shakes her head no, she doesnโ€™t. โ€œWhen was this exactly?โ€ she asks.

Shooting Glasses shrugs, says like dredging it up, โ€œIt was before youโ€ฆ that night, I mean.โ€

โ€œRight before I cut my wrist out on the water?โ€ โ€œThe weekend before?โ€

โ€œYou found this car the morning after?โ€

He looks across at her like how could she know this? โ€œFinish,โ€ she tells him.

โ€œWhat?โ€

โ€œGreyson Brust. Whereโ€™d Deacon Samuels hide him?โ€ โ€œHide?โ€

โ€œStash, store, house,โ€ Jade clarifies, not sure how else to say it.

โ€œThatโ€”the old peopleโ€™s home over onโ€”โ€ โ€œPleasant Valley Assisted Living.โ€

โ€œWhen we went to see him thatโ€ฆ that night, heโ€”god. He was still walking on all fours, right? Like he was thinking like a bug or something.โ€

โ€œThat night?โ€

โ€œNight we were burning the trash? You gave us that big lecture onโ€ฆ whatever?โ€

โ€œSlashers.โ€

โ€œHeโ€™d like stop when you talked to him, but it wasnโ€™t the words he was hearing. I donโ€™t know what the hell he was hearing.โ€

โ€œGreyson Brust,โ€ Jade says, trying that name on again in all its glory.

Did heโ€”did he get bit by something or someone in that cave, get infected, and now was sneaking out his window at Pleasant Valley every night, killing elk and people the same? Was this a supernatural slasher, even though itโ€™s so long after the Golden Age that it might as well be Bronze? Jadeโ€™s heart thumps with possibility.

โ€œYou think itโ€™s him?โ€ Shooting Glasses asks.

โ€œI need to look at his feet,โ€ Jade says. โ€œDid you have to sign the visitor log thing to see him, do you remember?โ€

โ€œNot anymore.โ€

Jade lets her thoughts keep rollingโ€”Greyson Brust howling at the moon, his maw bloody, fingers sharp and violentโ€”but then: โ€œBeep, beep,โ€ she says, backing up. โ€œWhat? Thought you said he was walking on all fours when you went to see him that night?โ€

โ€œThat night, yeah,โ€ Shooting Glasses says. โ€œIn March. He passed in April.โ€

โ€œWhat from?โ€

Shooting Glasses shrugs like Does it really even matter? Jade supposes it doesnโ€™t.

โ€œEight hundred dollars,โ€ Shooting Glasses says again. โ€œThatโ€™s what we sold him for. Eight hundred fucking dollars each.โ€

โ€œWhat did Deacon Samuels say?โ€ โ€œAbout Greyson?โ€

โ€œAbout all of it.โ€

He kind of squinches his face up, says, โ€œHe told us not to tell that other guy.โ€

โ€œTheo Mondragon.โ€

โ€œIt was the foundation for his house,โ€ Shooting Glasses says, his tone suggesting this is obvious to him, anyway. โ€œMr. Samuels, heโ€”he said every house has a story, right? That itโ€™s not always important that everybody know every little part of it. What you donโ€™t know, it doesnโ€™t matter so much.โ€

โ€œWhat happened to the cave?โ€ Jade says.

Shooting Glasses pulls the parking lights back on, washing the galvanized chain-link diamond lattice in front of them pale yellow. โ€œWe already had the rig and the framing out there to pour the foundation later in the week,โ€ he says. โ€œIt was easy. We justโ€”โ€ he mimes directing a crusty-grey tube into a crack in the ground, cement slurping down. The exact

same motion Greyson Brust must have been doing with the leaf blower. Except now they were blowing stone.

โ€œYou filled it?โ€ Jade says.

โ€œYou canโ€™t lay a foundation over that kind of hollowed out space,โ€ Shooting Glasses says.

โ€œIt could be him, then,โ€ Jade says.

โ€œGreyson?โ€ Shooting Glasses says. โ€œTold you, heโ€™sโ€”โ€ โ€œDead, yeah,โ€ Jade says. What she doesnโ€™t say, at least

out loud, is Theo. Because she doesnโ€™t want to mess this up. But it is him who was wronged, here, whose house is now built on a shaky foundation. It is him who had a score to settle with Deacon Samuels. Yeah, โ€œGreyson Brustโ€ is pretty killer for a slasher name. But โ€œTheo Mondragonโ€ definitely has that ring, too, doesnโ€™t it? And, if itโ€™s himโ€”when itโ€™s him

โ€”thereโ€™s that added twist of the boogeyman being the final girlโ€™s own father, which is perfect for a mystery slasher, no Golden Age supernatural shit necessary.

Itโ€™s not as grand, is even kind of grubby, but itโ€™s pretty perfect, too. Especially since Jade had been right about him from the get-go. It hadnโ€™t just been paranoia. He wouldnโ€™t be the first Black slasherโ€”Candyman, Jimmy Bones, Machete Joeโ€”but heโ€™d be one of hardly any, anyway.

โ€œYou gonna breathe?โ€ Shooting Glasses asks from his side of the car, which is approximately fourteen miles away at the moment. And Jade isnโ€™t sure she can breathe right now, really. Sheโ€™s spent the last couple of days feeling sorry for herself, not sure what to do now that Letha wonโ€™t accept sheโ€™s the final girl. But this washes all of that away, doesnโ€™t it?

Saturdayโ€™s three days away now, leaving her one day for reconnaissance, one day to sneak over to Terra Nova, get a sight line on Theo Mondragon, see if heโ€™s sharpening a blade or not, and one day to show that blade to Letha somehow.

It feels good to be back on track.

It sucked getting banned from Saturdayโ€™s big party on the water, yeah, and she felt like a traitor, not being able to sit all the way through any of her slashers, but thatโ€™s just because sheโ€™s in an actual hand-to-God slasher. Not at the front, but not in the final tally yet, either. Just hanging around in the between-parts, which is right where she wants to be. With all her viewing, all her self-assigned homework, all sheโ€™s ever seen with slashers is the main part of the story, right? The part everybody knows, the final cut. But now sheโ€™s moving through the hidden parts, the connective tissue. The real guts, the actual terra nova.

โ€œWatch a few movies, take a few notes,โ€ she says in her best Stu.

โ€œYou okay?โ€ Shooting Glasses asks.

Itโ€™s the same thing he asked her last time, right before she bailed. And now sheโ€™s got her finger on the door handle again.

โ€œI didnโ€™t do it because I wanted to die,โ€ Jade says, the rise of scar tissue on her left wrist practically glowing in the sleeve of her coveralls. Theyโ€™re watching ghost-versions of each other in the windshield now. Ghost versions that can waver away with one wrong breath. โ€œI did it because I wanted to be part of the movie. Part of all of them. What was the day that it happened, you remember?โ€

โ€œFriday, we were just off work.โ€ โ€œDate, I mean.โ€

โ€œMarch?โ€

โ€œThe number.โ€

Shooting Glasses squints, trying to dredge it up, finally gloms onto it, says, โ€œFriday the thirteenth, yeah. Radio kept talking about it.โ€

Jade nods once, says, โ€œJason was supposed to rise up behind me, pull me across to Crystal Lake. Things make more sense there.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s that old camp?โ€

Shooting Glasses chin-points across the water.

โ€œPretty much,โ€ Jade says.

โ€œBut everybody dies in those moviesโ€ฆโ€ he says, pulling the headlights on now, blasting white out across the water.

โ€œBut they really live first,โ€ Jade says, popping her door open to fade into the night. โ€œNow, remember what I told you, be somewhere else this Saturday, cool?โ€

โ€œWhat about you?โ€

Jade presses her lips together and stands from the car, is about to shut the door on this, which feels one hundred percent like the perfect gesture, like what would happen in a movie, but then she flinches halfway around instead.

Itโ€™s not Hardy standing thereโ€”since the library, sheโ€™s been spookyโ€”but a long sustained scream.

Itโ€™s not close, but itโ€™s close enough.

Shooting Glasses stands from his side of the car.

โ€œTheyโ€™re playing my music,โ€ Jade says to him, and leaves her door open, is already running for the pier, Shooting Glassesโ€™s work boots pounding in after her. Behind the drugstore she smacks into her dad and Rexall, hustling the other way, eyes wide, Rexall still carrying a beer bottle, her dadโ€™s jeans wet, maybeโ€ฆ all of him wet?

The impact knocks Jade down but her dad doesnโ€™t stop, is already gone.

โ€œWhoโ€”?โ€ Shooting Glasses asks. She shrugs his helping hands away, wipes her dadโ€™s gross wetness off and gets up herself.

โ€œTown drunks,โ€ she says, casting a single disparaging look after them.

Shooting Glasses turns to look as well, like thereโ€™s anything to seeโ€”Indians really can turn to smokeโ€”and Jadeโ€™s already running again, is the first Proofrocker to get to the pier, though porch and window lights are glowing on up and down the shore.

Jade leans onto her knees breathing hard, taking in everything she can.

The Umiak is still there, too big to even really bob, and the screamingโ€”yes. Yes yes yes.

Itโ€™s Letha, not at the steering wheel anymore, but the back of the big white boat. Tiaraโ€™s trying to hug her away from whateverโ€™s below them in the water but Lethaโ€™s pushing her away, canโ€™t suffer contact right now. Itโ€™s like sheโ€™s trying to crawl inside herself, shut the world out.

Jade nods, gets it. In one of her papers for Mr. Holmes, she explained that the final girl goes from innocence and obliviousness into a series of staged confrontations with mortality, menace, dangerโ€”a funhouse of worse and worse horrorโ€”until she finally curls into herself to hide. But thatโ€™s really a chrysalis. One she claws out of as an angel of death. For Letha so far, itโ€™s been the Dutch boy in the lake, his skin sloughing off in her hands, and then Deacon Samuels, turned inside out at Camp Blood, Letha probably stepping

into him before even realizing whatโ€™s happened. โ€œDonโ€™t forget the elk,โ€ Jade mumbles.

โ€œWhat is that?โ€ Shooting Glasses is asking beside her, stepping forward to see better.

Jade clamps onto his forearm, holds him back.

โ€œThis isnโ€™t for us,โ€ she says, nodding up to Letha, โ€œitโ€™s for her.โ€

Letha falls back so the short railingโ€™s hiding her. And now Proofrockers are arriving in robes and curlers, with shotguns, with fire pokers, with glasses of scotch they forgot to leave behind.

โ€œNow heโ€™ll believe you?โ€ Shooting Glasses says to Jade, about the thick red blood churning in the water, under the Umiakโ€™s harsh lights. โ€œThe sheriff?โ€

Jade can only shake her head slowly, no.

Somewhere up on deck, Tiara, in her joke of a captainโ€™s hat, finally thinks to turn the propellers off. The Umiak sighs back into the pier, the one taut line going slack, and then Jade gets it: her dad and his idiot friends, still in high school, the three of them bobbing under the pier, waiting for the ski

ropes theyโ€™ve tied to the boat to tighten, pull them up onto the surface of the water.

It was worth all the nights in jail, supposedly.

Until now. Until they tried to hook onto a much bigger boat, one with a whole rack of propellers back there to suck them in. Still, if it hadnโ€™t had that one line moored, it might have worked, right?

Would Letha have forgotten to cast off, though? Would Tiara? Had they ever forgotten just one single line? When they only had one line tied in the first place? Andโ€”why had they even tied-off at all, if they were just dropping a couple of Founders off?

โ€œWho is it?โ€ Shooting Glasses asks.

โ€œWho was it,โ€ Jade corrects, backing the two of them out of this gathering crowd. โ€œPretty sure it was a guy name of Clate Rodgeโ€”โ€

She stops when she clocks a bulky shadow coming in from just behind them, where nobody should have been, where thereโ€™s nothing, justโ€ฆ just the memorial bench?

โ€œNo,โ€ Jade says, her whole body going cold. Not because sheโ€™s not supposed to be the one seeing some Scoobyโ€™d up Stacey Graves, but becauseโ€ฆ because thereโ€™s no stringy black wig, no rotted gown. Just a wall of khaki.

She grabs on to Shooting Glasses again, to keep from falling down.

Sheriff Hardy must have been sitting there all along, smoking the nightโ€™s last cigarette on his daughterโ€™s memorial bench, like every night.

โ€œWho you say it is, there?โ€ he asks over-innocently, his eyes flicking up to Jadeโ€™s for a moment then away before she can register anything.

โ€œN-nobody,โ€ she mutters.

He rubs his cigarette out between his fingers, deposits the butt in his chest pocket, then pats it like telling it to stay put.

โ€œWhat the hell was that about?โ€ Shooting Glasses asks once Hardyโ€™s stepped onto the pier.

โ€œA Bay of Blood,โ€ Jade says, chest heaving, mind reeling, face numb, and because theyโ€™re off to the side now, she knows Shooting Glasses has to be able to see what sheโ€™s talking about: Clate Rodgersโ€™s frothy blood lapping up against Hardyโ€™s hull, some of the chunks adhering to the fiberglass. Not quite as high as the little airboatโ€™s name, Melanie, but when Hardy passes by, the water laps up a few inches, baptizes those eight letters in whatโ€™s left of the boy who was with her the day she drowned.

SLASHER 101

 

Okay, before we talk Red Herrings in the slasher even though it’s official turkey season not fish season, first, it’s ALWAYS slasher season, as there’s plenty of

Blood Rage around the dinner table of Home Sweet Home, especially from the ThanksKilling turkey itself, but second, HELLO, MR. HOLMES! I never thought I’d miss 7th period I mean. And since I’ve already done my time, this time I can just say it out right that cutting the fingers off my VERY FAKE glove, or, it was a real glove but not my fingers inside just green slime aka nightmare fuel aka Freddy blood, I should really get a science award for that, not suspension. Ever heard of

a senior prank? I’m a senior. That was my prank. And it’s not my fault Tiff did her big faint routine and broke her phone. Probably it was broke already and she just wanted someone to blame for it.

Enter me, sir. I always did it. And her mom already bought her a new and better phone anyway.

But nevermind all that. Something’s fishy here, isn’t it? It’s the Red Herring in the slasher movie. The origin of this is how when you’re running from dogs that are trailing you by smell you can put a dead fish on your trail and that like blows the dogs’ noses up pretty much. For Agatha Christie the Red Herring was the

person all signs and clues SAID was doing all that killing, but really that’s just Mrs. Christie being a magician and shaking this hand so you don’t watch the other one.

Wes Craven does the same magic trick in A Nightmare on Elm Street, where Rod is the obvious killer to all the cops and parents. At least until Freddy kills him, which is usually the way it goes for stinky fish on the trail. And what’s weird is that for the 1st time in slasher history ever probably, in Friday the 13th: A New Beginning, which is part V, meaning “5,” halfway to “X,” Jason Voorhees HIMSELF is kind of the Red Herring. Everyone thinks the killer is him, when surprise, it’s far less exciting. Even Randy in Scream SAYS he himself is the obvious right suspect for Casey Becker and Steve, his tastes all being in the horror aisle of the video store, but this is AFTER Billy and Stu have already fake set Billy up into

Red Herringhood.

What to notice here is the magic trick happening before your eyes, sir. Agatha or Wes are just shaking this hand around to distract your nose if you were a dog,

but it’s all so this real and actual blood soaked party can creep past into non-suspicionhood. And while sometimes the way they be fair is to say “LOOK, he’s doing all of this, can’t you see?” we’ve been burned so many times by exactly this that we know that can’t be true, so we keep on looking the other way.

What the slasher does I mean is turn us ALL into the cops and parents who 100 percent know it’s Rod who killed his girlfriend Tina, who KNOW it’s Jason in V, and that’s when it has us right where it wants us, since cops and parents are less than useless in the slasher.

So are we, I mean, except as carving dummies, which isn’t like carving a turkey, except for the end result, I guess.

Enjoy your meal, Mr. Holmes.

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