In A Nightmare on Elm Street, after Rodโs been jammed up for Tinaโs murder, he doesnโt know not to fall asleep. So, when he does, Freddyโs able to twist a sheet into a noose and hang him, make it look like a suicide, which is pretty much an admission of guilt as far as the cops and parents are concerned.
Nancy knows better. So does Jade.
All night in her cell, each time her head started to nod forward into sleep, sheโd jerk awake, check the bars and cinderblocks for a hidden face, watch the drain in the middle of the floor for bladetips reaching up. And itโs not just Freddy to watch for in a place like this. Wishmaster could step into the passage between the two cells, use his drug dealer voice to ask her if sheโd like to walk through these solid bars to freedom, and if Jade was tired enough, she might not remember to word this wish with utmost care, and end up being pulled like taffy through the steel bars.
No thank you.
Itโs so hard to stay awake without a phone, though. Without a spear to stab trash with. Without Holmes sad-ranting about Terra Nova. Without a videotape playing. Without Fugazi leaking into her ears. Without Letha screaming to fill the night.
It had been glorious, though, hadnโt it? Andโthe way she stabbed her hand up, plucked that machete down from the heavens by the handle. If sheโs not a final girl, then there never was a final girl, and Jadeโs wrong about everything.
But no way is she wrong.
Jade stands, paces the meager length her cell affords, tries to grim her eyes down like a real convict but itโs hard to maintain while doing the pee-pee dance. There are no facilities in the two cells, just a chamberpot from, sheโs guessing, 1899. Henderson and Golding themselves probably took turns pissing into it.
So far, Jadeโs been granted access to the ladiesโ room up front. But that was only one trip, and that was a lunch tray ago, which included two boxes of apple juice.
More pressing, if itโs halfway through Thursday afternoon
โand sheโs pretty sure it isโthen that means the massacre is seriously looming.
โSheriff!โ Jade yells, and itโs like sheโs yelling into a megaphone while also being in that same megaphone. Before the first callโs even echoed away, sheโs saying it again, and again, louder and louder, until a key announces itself in the lock, giving her a chance to stop before the door opens.
Hardy saunters in, one side of his face printed with the ghost of a backwards โ4โ: he was asleep on his desk calendar.
โIโm thinking you need to charge me or let me go,โ Jade informs him, digging hard in her Law & Order dictionary.
Hardy breathes in deep, lets it out slow.
โHow was the bologna?โ he asks, then before Jade can get a comeback together, heโs already following up: โThereโs an old song by Tom T. Hall about getting hot bologna every day of his stay here in the greybar hotel.โ Hardy pats the cinderblock up high as if confirming its solidity. โHe comes to like it.โ
โWhat am I being charged with?โ Jade asks, trying to lock him in her glare.
Hardy chuckles, strings his keys out from his belt, hauls Jadeโs door open, grandly presenting the outer world to her.
Jade steps through, not trusting this even a little.
Hardy rubs his mouth so he can smile behind his hand.
โThis is for your own good,โ he finally says. โBeing locked up?โ
โYour dad let me see your bedroom.โ โWhat? He let you in the house?โ
โWhy wouldnโt he? But itโs official now, Jade, sorry. Youโre a runaway.โ
โIโm almost eighteen.โ
โWhich meansโฆ let me do the math here, let me do theโฆ does that mean youโre still seventeen, and subject to a whole different set of laws?โ
โIโm not running away,โ Jade tells him.
โTo say nothing of your attempt on Letha Mondragonโs life,โ Hardy goes on, moseying ahead of her to the front office.
โI was giving her something, not trying to hurt her,โ Jade grumbles.
โAnd if she hadnโt caught that something?โ โI knew she would.โ
โMore like youโre lucky she did,โ Hardy says, presenting the hall to her.
โBathroom?โ Jade has to ask as itโs sliding by. โIn a moment,โ Hardy tells her.
โCruel and unusual,โ Jade says.
โShit, donโt get me started,โ Hardy says back with a chuckle, offering her the perp chair on the other side of his desk and not taking a seat himself until Jade settles in. Her phone is plugged in on the edge of his desk, is pretty much the only thing she can see anymore.
โI really do need to pee,โ she says.
โIf youโd just used the thunder pot in there, we could avoid these little discussions,โ Hardy says, taking a fancy silver pen up from its holder, rolling it across the back of his knuckles. โButโkids these days, right? I mean that too, kids. You are still seventeen, little miss. And you were running away. I found your bags back in the trees. Much as this might seem personal, I do have a duty here.โ
โThen this isnโt aboutโฆ about anything I might have seen the other night?โ Jade asks, careful with her phrasing.
Hardy creaks back in his chair, studying the much-studied ceiling, it looks like.
โAnd what do you think you might have seen?โ he says. โYou want, I can get my recorder from Meg, you can give a statement. Or, noโyou can get it. Know right where it is, donโt you?โ
He angles his face down to hers, rubs his lips hard against each other like he just glossed them, is trying to spread it around, get it worked in proper.
โNothing,โ Jade finally says. โDidnโt see a thing, Sheriff.โ
Sheโs not sure whether she hopes thatโs the exact wording thirteen-year-old Clate Rodgers used once upon a time, or if lucking into that would be the worst possible mistake.
โSeen more deaths here in the last couple weeks than in the forty years previous,โ Hardy says, leaning forward now, his elbows finding the desk. โThen I find the local horror fan running around at night with a machete thatโs got a name scratched into the blade?โ
โJamie Lee Curtis.โ
โBlue Steel, yeah. Donโt think Bogeyโs in that one.โ Jade takes this, tries not to let it show.
โSheโs kind of a final girl in that one too, you know?โ she says, trying to keep it casual now. Just talking movies, not passing index card after index card of subtext back and forth, because pretty soon one of those index cards is going to have something to do with what she said to him the other day, about Melanie.
Hardy just watches her, probably waiting to see if sheโs going to go on about JLC being forever the final girl.
That would be too easy, though. And sheโs still got to pee. โSo thatโs what youโre jamming me up for?โ Jade says
instead. โA weapon? Thought I was running away.โ
โNot supposed to run with scissors,โ Hardy says. โThink that goes double for machetes, donโt you?โ
โYouโll be glad I gave it to her.โ
โBecause ofโฆ what were you saying?โ Hardy asks back with a patronizing shrug. โBear sketched it out for me a bit, yeah? Something aboutโฆ Scooby-Doo?โ
โItโs a Scooby-Doo build,โ Jade spits back, disgusted. โSomeone in a mask. Probably her dad, okay?โ
โHer beingโโ โLetha.โ
โ โSaturday,โ โ Hardy says, holding Jadeโs eyes.
Jade spins away, stares out across the lake. Mr. Holmes is bucking the wind in his ultralight. โThis is where Iโm probably supposed to tell you to close the beaches,โ she says.
โThatโs from Jaws.โ
โThereโs gonna be kids in the water, I mean,โ Jade goes on.
โThey see worse on their videogames.โ โYou know what I mean.โ
โThat theyโre in danger.โ
Jade comes back around to him about this but Hardyโs already staring into her soul.
โBear also took me through what he says is probably your reasoning forโฆ for Saturday.โ
For the first time, Jade really hears that: โBear.โ
A bear was supposed to have killed Deacon Samuels.
โI know this is all very real to you,โ Hardy says, standing, taking a step over to the window, to what she guesses is his usual place, like heโs standing sentry over all of Fremont County.
โItโs bigger than me,โ Jade says. โThereโsโฆ those two kids in Marchโโ
โOf which kids we have to take your word about the second.โ
โThereโs Deacon Samuels.โ
โAnimal attack.โ โClate Rodgers.โ
โBoating accident.โ
โ โBoating accident,โโ Jade repeats before she can stop herself.
Does Hardyโs back straighten a little, though? Has he drawn some breath in that heโs not releasing?
โBut he had it coming,โ Jade fumbles in, standing now as well. โHeโs probably not even part of the cycle, actually. Just an add-on.โ
โThat a thing?โ Hardy says without looking around. โAdd-ons?โ
โThe slasher gets blamed for all of them, yeah,โ Jade says. โWinners write the history books, and the slasherโs never the winner.โ
โDoesnโt do much writing,โ Hardy adds.
โSigns all his kills in blood,โ Jade says right back.
Far out over the lake, Mr. Holmesโs ultralight is nearly skimming the water now.
โThatโs how he gets out of the wind,โ Hardy says, chucking his chin to Mr. Holmes. โWonder if the fish think his shadow is the mother of all eagles, that him swooping down like that is the end of the world?โ
He turns to her then, his face easy, says, โSomebody threw a trashcan through the front door of the high school, hear about that?โ
โSchoolโs out for summer,โ Jade singsongs.
โThing is,โ Hardy adds, โall the glass is out on the sidewalk. Not in by the trophy case.โ
โNot my concern,โ Jade says. โIโm not the custodian anymore.โ
โJust saying,โ Hardy says.
โJust listening,โ Jade says. โNot that I know why.โ Hardy shakes his head, impressed it seems.
โYour dad started out just like this, once upon a bad afternoon,โ he says. โSitting right in that chair when he was
eighteen. I told him he could eitherโโ โIโm not my father,โ Jade cuts in.
โYou donโt have to be, no,โ Hardy tells her. โYou should have seen him when he was a yardegg, though. Always underfoot. Everybody wanted him to play cowboys and Indians with, you know that?โ
Jadeโs just staring out through the window, trying not to move even one single muscle on her face. On her whole body.
โBecause he already was the skin,โ she finally says, obviously.
โBecause he was always carrying a shiner, a busted lip,โ Hardy says backโwhere he was leading her. โThing is, it would look like the cowboys had beaten him up.โ
โI supposed to care about this trip down memory lane?โ
โJust saying,โ Hardy says. โI told him before you were born, I told him he lays one hand on you, just passing down what heโd got, that Iโd be all over his ass.โ
Jade swallows, blinks, says, โI see Letha got to you too.
Good to know.โ โIโโ
โHeโs never hit me,โ Jade says, โyou saved me, Sheriff, thank you from the bottom of my heart.โ
Hardy just stands there, lets Jade stew in her own juices.
โSo whenโs dinner around here?โ she finally has to say just to move them ahead, out of this hole sheโs dug. โAnd what is it? More of that hot bologna?โ
Hardy doesnโt answer, is tracking Mr. Holmes now, it feels like. Heโs buzzing Terra Nova. Just a small angry fly, banking high against a gust only he can feel.
โThey hate it when he does that,โ Hardy says, tossing his chin across the water. โJust wait, my phoneโs about to ring.โ
โAnd he hates them right back,โ Jade says. โAll balances out, doesnโt it?โ
Hardy plunks down heavy in his seat, creaks it back again, regards Jade over his steepled fingers.
โSo you hoping youโre right about all this, and a lot of people die, or is it better if youโre wrong?โ he asks.
โPeople are already dying,โ Jade tells him. โDoesnโt matter what I do and donโt hope. Iโm not part of it, am just, like, calling it.โ
โGood answer, good answer,โ Hardy tells her. โBut hereโs mine. Iโm concerned that if youโre not locked up in back, here, then you find a way to ruin Saturday for everybody. Or at least for me and my deputies.โ
โSheriff, you canโtโโ
โI know, I know, charge you or set you free. Turn you over to Child Protective Services orโฆ or donโt. But Iโve got forty-eight hours to decide, too, donโt I? Donโt answer that. I do have forty-eight hours where I can know exactly where you are the whole time. And, the way I tally that up, that clock started last night on the pier. So your forty-eight hours will be up about ten oโclock Friday night, whichโll be well after working hours. Meaning you spend the weekend here, Jade. You miss all the festivities. Sorry.โ
โThis is bullshit.โ โSir?โ
โThis is bullshit, sir. You canโtโโ
โYouโre right, youโre right,โ Hardy says. โYour mom or dad comes down, sits where you are right now and pleads your case, Iโll probably have to listen, wonโt I?โ
Jade just stares out across the lake.
Mr. Holmes is barreling back to Proofrock now, is like a bobsled racer in the air, scraping down some frictionless channel, rocking back and forth from side to side, goggled eyes fixed on home.
โIf I was eighteenโโ she says, not sure where to go with that.
โThis is for your own good,โ Hardy tells her. โAnd for the good of the town.โ
โIโm not the killer here, Sheriff. Iโm no slasher.โ
โBut you do want him to ruin the big party, donโt you?โ
Jade tries her best to make her eyes go dull, film over. Itโs the only armor she has.
โDo I get a phone call at least?โ she asks, starting to reach for her phone, but then something keeps her fixed on theโฆ lake?
Growing up, staring out over the water, what sheโd always imagined was some monster of a fish spurting up through the glistening surface, snatching a bird or three, then splashing back down. Anything to break the boredom.
Not this, though.
โSheriff!โ Jade doesnโt just say, but shrieks, just like the stupidest most bouncy cheerleader.
Hardy stands fast, his chair crashing back behind him, and heโs fast enough to see the very end of it: Mr. Holmesโs ultralight, not skimming the lake anymore, but skipping on it. Once, twice, and on the third time it sticks, Mr. Holmesโs small body crashing through one purple wing and floating through the air, floating, then cartwheeling across the hard-hard water.
Hardyโs gone faster than a sixty-one-year-old man should be able to be gone, actual papers drifting in the air behind him. Because thatโs the last member of his old pirate band out there sinking in the lake, Jade knows.
โGo, sir,โ she says, quietly pocketing her phone and the charger then touching the glass of the window with her fingertips, which is her version of a prayer for Mr. Holmes: the longer she keeps her fingers there and perfectly still, the better chance he has.
By degrees, then, she realizes sheโsโฆ alone? unmonitored?
She turns in wonder and Megโs standing in the door, waiting to be seen.
โIโm to deposit you back in 1A,โ she informs Jade. โBut Mr. Holmesโโ
โThe sheriff is on it, dear.โ โI canโtโโ
โYou have to, Iโm sorry.โ
Jade shakes her head in disappointment, regret, and sneaks one last look out the window on her way out of the office, for Hardyโs airboat, the throttle pulled back to 11.
Not yet.
โCan we just wait and see if heโ?โ
โI have to call emergency services, I have to callโโ
โOkay, okay,โ Jade says, and slips past Meg into the hall.
โWe all told him to be careful in that death machine,โ Meg says behind Jade, as if sheโs talking to herself, is actually flustered for once. In the front office, at least two phones are ringing, meaning Jade wasnโt the only one to witness the crash.
โOh, oh,โ Jade says. โThe sheriffโI have to pee, and I canโt, not in thatโSheriff said I could use this one again.โ
โI donโt have time for this, Jennifer.โ โPlease.โ
โYou can hold it.โ
โIโve been holding it.โ โJustโโ
โCould you, in that thing?โ
โFine,โ Meg says, and holds the door to the bathroom open.
Jade steps in, Meg of course not letting the door shut, and Jade makes a production of the complicated mechanics of her coveralls, pretty certain Meg is fully aware of what she said last week, about the window in this bathroom being rusted open.
But then the cowbell above the front door jangles and Lonnieโs trying to get his words out, is trying to tell someone, anyone, what he just saw out on the water, but he keeps sticking, canโt get it all the way out, andโ
Jade pulls the stall door closed, loudly runs the slide bolt home, and then every iota of her awareness is focused on the line of shadow she can see through the crack of space between the stall door and the stall. That line is the leading
edge of the door Meg is holding open. And the sound is her toe tapping.
Both fade, the tapping first, turning into quick footsteps, then the shadow, slowly blurring as the door sighs in, so she can hustle up front, talk Lonnie down.
Jade zips up much faster than she unzipped, steps out, and is up and through the window before Megโs even told Lonnie that the sheriffโs on it, that this is being handled, thank you.
Itโs trees and trees behind the sheriffโs office.
Jade crashes through them holding her arms in front of her face, and wonders if thatโs another part of why slashers are so into masks: to avoid scratches. Five minutes later, when she canโt hold it anymore, she has to step behind a tree, pop a squat. Because she wasnโt lying about needing to pee in the worst way.
Five minutes after that sheโs standing on the shore over by Banner Tompkinsโs, her right hand opening and closing. All the boats that could scramble are out on the lake where Mr. Holmes went down, meaningโฆ meaning what? Why do they still need to be out there? Jadeโs heart sinks, then rises back into her throat, her eyebrows doing that stupid V thing she hates.
โNo,โ she says, a hundred seventh periods reeling through her head, โnot him too, please, heโs not part of it,โ and then claps her hand over her mouth when, just to make the nightmare complete, thereโs a mewling sort of animalish creak over to her right, on shore.
Slowly, still holding her hand over her mouth, she cranks her head over.
Itโsโitโsโฆ
Jade canโt breathe anymore, maybe canโt breathe ever again.
Itโs a shadow on four legs, tumbling after a shopping bag, a small shadow, aโ
Not a dog, not a cat.
Jade feels a smile spread across her face by degrees: itโs a bear cub.
Itโs just playing.
Jade shakes her head, impressed with the world for knowing just how to give her a heart attack.
When the shopping bag snags on something in the gravel, the bear cubโs moving too fast, slides past, reaching back to try to bite it, its effort the cutest thing ever, pretty much. Even to a horror chick.
โGo,โ Jade says to the little bear. โGo find your mom, snuggle up close. Thereโs a scary bear out there somewhere, the kind that eats little guys like you.โ
The bear cub stills, having heard her voice, Jade guesses, and she starts to step out past the trees, maybe snap a picture of this, but then she stops herself.
Sheโs a fugitive now, isnโt she?
She steps back into the deeper shadows, feeling for dry branches before giving her foot any real weight.
She still has a good line on the lake, though. On the part of the lake she needs to be watching. One of the boatsโ lights are just coming on, in anticipation of dusk, and Jade shakes her head no, runs through Idaho state history dates in her head, on the idea they can somehow help Mr. Holmes: Nez Perce in the north, Shoshone in the south; Lewis and Clark, 1805; Oregon Trail, 1846 through 1969โno, 1869, shit; gold in the hills, 1860s; Henderson-Golding, 1869; Chief Joseph, 1877; becomes a state in 1890.
โI know them all, sir,โ she whispers.
The lights out there just keep on, though, and none of the boats are buzzing back to Proofrock yet, and that canโt be good, can it? Keeping to the trees and watching for baby bearsโfor anything, anyoneโJade slips through town, her lips pressed together in an attempt to keep her eyes from crying for Mr. Holmes.
Stupid idiot, she tells herself. Senior citizen high school
teacher flying a sky go-cart just so he can smoke cigarettes
his wife wonโt know about? What the hell did he expect? Except she already knows the answer to that: to get away. And, yes, okay already, she does it with slashers a little just the same, so what. And for Hardy an airboat is what he uses to get away, isnโt it?
Before she can stop herself, then, sheโs answering for her dad, too: beer, and reliving high school. For her mom, though? What does her mom use to check out?
โDollar store customers,โ Jade mumbles, trying for a smart-ass grin but probably easing more into the โconstipated grimaceโ category.
She hates herself more than a little for giving that voice, and slips through the staging areaโs fence for a third time. Thereโs bodies lumbering back and forth, calling orders and stacking things, rounding out the dayโs work, but theyโre on the other side of the lot, the active side. Over here on the dead side, Jadeโs alone.
She chooses the least-used storage shed, the one with pallets teetering in front of the door so she has to slide sideways to get in, and with her phone light she inspects her new home. Itโs just junk sheathed in cobwebs. But some of the junk has a crackly-stiff tarp over it, who knows why. Jade peels the tarp, folds it into a sleeping pad of sorts, and nestles into it, not letting herself sniffle, not letting herself think of the way Mr. Holmes would look up when she was late again, and then pretend to count her tardy. Except those tardies never quite added up to detention, did they?
Goddamn him.
But at least thereโs no windows in here. And, really? Itโs a shed, sure, but thatโs a skip and jump from a shack in the woods. All she needs now is Pamela Voorheesโ head in a tableau of flickering candles on an upturned spool. Or, you know: her fatherโs. If youโre gonna dream, right?
Anyway, at least now she knows Mr. Holmes wasnโt working with Hardy to drive the Terra Novans away. He had the hatred, though, didnโt he? He needed the revenge, had
the investment in the community, and thereโs probably some personal history Jade canโt even guess at.
โUnless I was right all along,โ Jade says to herself, sitting up in the darkness. Maybe Mr. Holmesโs plane wreck was staged, is supposed to remove him from suspicion. Maybe this is just another cog of their plan, part of the setup for Saturdayโs Grand Guignol, Proofrockโs version of Demons.
โYou wish,โ Jade says into the tarp.
Except it might explain why Hardy let her keep the sandwiches in her cargo pockets, that are pretty well flattened in their baggies now: because he knew she was going to run, and figured she might need some calories to get her through to Saturdayโs big party in the water. Becauseโฆ because he needs her there? They both do? To, what, frame her?
Jade has to call bullshit on that.
Though, at the same time, was it really any accident that she got that pink phone right when it could convince her all of this was real? And, aside from her, who else in Proofrock would know the slasher any better than Mr. Holmes, who took Lethaโs final girl crash course over the last four years?
Jade doesnโt know which version of Mr. Holmes she wants to believe in, the one who died out on the water, or the one with a score to settle, and a blade to settle it with. Andโฆ and she doesnโt even know what color this tarp is, does she? It canโt be โdust-colored,โ even though thatโs what it keeps sighing up, coating her with.
Whatever.
She zones out not by listing giallos in her head like usual but by pretending she can hear the kids playing on the park thatโs going to be here someday. By imagining what it would have been like to have had a park like this when she was young enough for it to matter. But she would have still ended up sitting alone in a swing at three in the morning, smoking a cigarette, wouldnโt she have?
โRun, little bear,โ she says again, into the dusty crunchiness of the tarp.
She wakes with the shift change at four in the morning but nobody opens the door to toss any cutters or pry rods in on top of her, and nobody needs the tarp to cover the equipment, and Shooting Glassesโs radar doesnโt lead him to her a second time. Sheโs not sure what exactly sheโd say to him if he did open the door, though. Probably bluster and lie, hide that sheโs homeless nowโhomeless, jobless, and escaped from jail, sort of.
Before dawnโโJust before dawn,โ she tells herself, patting herself for that tape, which is also still thereโJade is gnawing on the second sandwich (either the first was appetizer or this oneโs dessert) and moving through the dark trees for the dam, to tightrope across one more time. If sheโd thought ahead sheโd have a pair of binoculars and more cigarettes. If sheโd thought even more ahead she would have just braved the dark, bunked in Camp Blood with the rest of the ghosts, and her stolen axe. Then sheโd already be most of the way over to Terra Nova. Not that there would have been any electrical sockets to charge a phone with at the abandoned camp. Not that there were in the shed, either.
Thatโs got to be the first thing at Terra Nova, then. Sneak in, find an unmonitored plug to juice back up, then scope the place out, get a line on Theo Mondragon.
Is she just stacking tasks in front of actually having to find him out, though?
Her big fear is that once she settles in to watch for the day, itโs just going to be business as usual: yacht people doing yacht things, construction grunts grunting over construction, nature blasting out serene and pristine all around, Theo Mondragon walking the deck or the dock, having important phone conversations.
If so, thenโฆ what? Whoโs left that it could even be?
Jade walks and thinks, thinks and walks, and, even though thereโs warning signs and the chance of being spotted, still, she hops up onto the concrete spine of the dam, to balance across. But not before sparking a cigarette up to keep her feet steady and sure. Thereโs no fence, no handrail, just nearly two hundred feet to plummet down on her left if she slips. And then about halfway across thereโs the control booth to shimmy around.
At least having to be sure about each foot placement, having to track each trailing boot lace, it keeps her from dwelling too much on Mr. Holmes. She focuses hard on each next step, dials down and tries hard to think about what sheโs not thinking about, as, in a slasher, thatโs usually key.
What she comes up with is Cry_Wolf and All the Boys Love
Mandy Lane, which means admitting the worst of all possibilities: Letha herself. What if the final girl is finding all these bodies specifically because she knows where sheโs left them? Would that not be the best cover? What if Letha fought tooth and nail not to move out to the sticks of Idaho, and blames everyone in Terra Nova for her losing her friends, her social life, her favorite boyfriend?
Jade would allow thisโฆ except for Letha herself. Letha who made a hard phone call to Hardy to try to save the horror chick, the sad girl, theโthe Ragman of Indian Lake, yes. Trick or Treat, 1986, Alex. Ragmanโs peers hate him, are always crapping on him, but so what, heโs got metal, faster harder thrashier, and he finally wishes hard enough that he gets the slasher he so thought he needed.
And it tries to kill him too. Figures.
But no, not Letha, not the final girl. There was a moment when the slasher was getting turned on its head like that, but that momentโs over and done with. And Letha is pure, anywayโtoo pure. Sheโs not going to be the so-called final girl Leslie Vernonโs dreaming about, swinging her own panties over her head. No, Lethaโs bookish, sheโs virginal or
close enough and sheโs got the long limbs of a girl meant to run through the syrupy colors of a Dario Argento sequence. Only, where sheโs running, itโs right through the Golden Age, what sheโs vaulting over, itโs the Scream Boom of the late nineties, and where sheโs coming down to make her stand, itโs here, itโs Proofrock.
Sheโs a killer, yes, but not until pushed. Not until having her good-girl veneer carved painfully away.
Jade pads up to the control booth window, canโt see through the dark glass, shimmies around anyway, and then hears the door shut behind her and has to run, run, no balance, all forward momentum, the sky all around her.
She crashes to her knees on the other side breathing hard but smiling big.
This is why she loves coming around the lake this way instead of walking two miles down for the bridge: itโs always a close call, is always the best rush.
And, where sheโs landed, sheโs pretty sure, is in the last act, the third-reel bodydump. Somewhere out there Lethaโs probably screaming about a corpse unfolding from the ceiling, and another crammed into a cabinet.
It puts a pep in Jadeโs step, just on the off-chance she can see that from far way.
She keeps to the top of the chalky bluff above Camp Blood
โno choice: itโs not like you can get to Camp Blood without looping around almost all the way to Terra Nova. Two or three minutes later she can see the yacht at its usual mooring, and then the Umiak in its shadow, no longer in floating impound. Since itโs the first boat anybody takes, Jade assumes the rest of the boats are in their garages, even though all the Founders are, for once, because one of their own fell, here.
The long flat barge the construction crew drinks their coffee on, crossing before sunup each morning, is already back at Proofrock, Jade imagines, taking up ten or twelve
berths, Terra Nova just renting out that whole quarter-mile of the shore.
And the houses over here, goddamn.
Somebodyโs mixed some Miracle-Gro into those frames, those roofs, those driveways, all that landscaping. It reminds Jade more of a cartoon than a gated community: the outlines of the houses were there all along, all they needed was some great hand to tip a bag of ink over into the chimney, to let color leach down all the lines, find all the corners, fill in all the windows.
All ten are ready by August first, she has to imagine, and then realizes sheโs just standing there skylining herself like an idiot, practically asking to be called out, asked what sheโs doing over here.
Jade lowers herself slowly, tries to bore her eyes all the way across the lake to see if Hardyโs glassing for her, but Proofrockโs just shapes and shadows. Are students gathered at the flagpole in front of the high school already, for Mr. Holmes?
Jade closes her eyes, isnโt going to think about that.
โNot everybody gets to live,โ she says to herself, confident that, at fifty yards, her whisper will dissipate before cranking anyoneโs head around.
Not that there is anybody.
Does that meanโฆ has the crew moved on to doing the interiors of the houses now? It makes sense the insides of the houses would be last on the to-do list. You donโt hang sheetrock until that sheetrockโs protected from the elements.
Still: no one?
Jade pats her pocket for the second sandwich she knows is just as gone as the first. Itโs less actually looking for it, more showing the world that sheโs hungry, that it can deliver her some nuggets or a burrito or fishsticks if it wants. She wonโt tell anybody.
In lieu of food, she lights another cigarette, her fourth from last, and then smokes it lying on her back, waving the smoke to tatters, hoping none of the smell wisps down between the houses. But surely some of the crew burns em if they got em.
A harsh clack! rolls her over, gets her studying downhill again.
It could have come from anywhere. Shit.
Is this what a stakeout is? If so, isnโt there supposed to be coffee and pistachios? But itโs not like Jade can just stroll in and start asking questions, either.
She rests her chin on her crossed hands, situates her frontside against the dirt and grass, and tells herself stories about the houses, how theyโre not mansions but cabins, how this is Packanack Lodge from Friday the 13th Part 2, just down from the originalโs โCamp Blood,โ ha.
Sheโs Jason, looking through the one eyehole of her pillowcase. Watching the skinny-dipping, seeing seductive shapes through the gauzy curtains. Half the counselors piling into a car and a truck to caravan down to the local honky-tonk, the other half either already dead or in the process-of.
Over here is where all the bodies are buried, right? Mr. Holmes was always telling them. Before there was a lake dividing one side of the valley from the other, people who caught a bullet to the gut or a pickaxe to the head would usually end up over here, stuffed into a seam, a crevice, a crack. Which would have worked fine if not for the buzzards. According to Mr. Holmes, when Henderson-Golding was booming, that was the sheriffโs main job: watch for buzzards.
Jade rolls over, cases the sky, the sunโs position, decides she must have either slept or got Fire in the Skyโd.
Probably noon already, or one, shit.
Sheโs like the police officer assigned to protect the final girlโs house: dozing off on the job. Then, Clack!
โWhat is The Nail Gun Massacre, Alex,โ she mumbles. Itโs where she knows that clack from.
Jade sits up and scooches forward, looking at Terra Nova all over again, this time with eyes pre-shaped for โnailgun.โ What she sees instead pretty much stops her heart, and answers every one of her wishes.
Itโs a tall male figure, moving like the Prowler from one nearly-complete house to the next one, never mind the daylight, or that itโs not 1981. At first Jade thinks heโs wearing a military helmet like the actual Prowler, or a motorcycle helmet covered in electric tape, like Bubba in Nail Gun, but itโs justโฆ a black golf cap turned around backwards? Strapped down over that cap is a full-face gas mask with two stubby, close-to-the-face filters coming down, angled away from each other, giving his head a kind of oblong, giant-mouse shape.
โNo,โ Jade says, even shaking her head like to prove it.
Because this canโt be real and actual, can it? Can it?
Heโs carrying that heavy nailgun as easily as a pistol, too. This is really happening. Itโs really been happening.
โMakes sense, makes sense,โ Jade tells herself about the nailgun, her voice jittery. Inโin High Tension, the chase runs through some road construction, so they come out with a huge and just massively dangerous concrete saw, which spins so much faster than any chainsaw. It stands to reason that this Prowler down there would pick up whateverโs handy. Well, handy and deadly. But itโs all deadly in the wrong hands, with the right intent.
Jade should be happy, too, she knows. This is proof, this is what sheโs always wanted. She fumbles her phone up to take a snapshot for Hardy, but by the time she gets her phone up from her coverallsโ complicated pocket, Terra Novaโs still again, exactly like this Prowler had been a figment of her overactive, blood-soaked wishful thinking.
If sheโd been making him up, though, then, first, heโd have had motorcycle boots on, most likelyโthose ratchet-buckles are so cool, so metalโand, second, thereโd be a reason for the gas mask past just its essential scariness. In My Bloody Valentine, the gas mask is because this is a mining operation, and in the actual Prowler, the sheriff with the covered face is supposed to be a soldier who had probably had to deal with mustard gas on the battlefield or something.
Jade takes the best scent reading she can, identifies no foreign smellsโno mustard gas, no horseradishโand finds herself both wanting this slasher to step out again, prove he was real, and also wanting him to have been all in her head. Sheโs caught between those for, by her best guessโฆ two hours? Has any slasher ever moved this slow? Granted, movies probably compress events that would take a lot longer, but two hours is long enough for her to spin all kinds of excuses for whoever that was down there to have been wearing a gas mask, carrying that nailgun, and wearing that black hoodie in July. Which isnโt the way to be ready, to be
vigilant.
Then, finally: Clack!
Adrenaline floods all through her again, sharpening her senses. By the time itโs washing out of her system, sheโs back to trying to make it all make sense. If this slasher were trying to nail someone running across the room, thereโd be a barrage of clacks! This guyโs more deliberate, though, isnโt he? That game where two people hide on opposite sides of the same wall, each waiting for the other to burst out?
Evidently heโs the more patient one.
Exceptโฆ except this is too early, isnโt it? This is supposed to be tomorrow night. Jade wants to stand, wave her arms for everybody to slow down, that theyโre blowing their wad ahead of time, arenโt going to have any left when it counts.
She doesnโt know how far a nail from a nailgun can tumble through the air, though.
She looks up to the flurry of motion to her distant rightโ the yacht.
Itโs Tiara Mondragon. Sheโs in her black bikini, her sunhat and shades on, a book tucked under her arm.
Completely unaware.
She sashays down to theโto whatever the tower part of a yacht is called, kind of two-thirds of the way back. She disappears into it. Moments later she emerges on a higher, closer-to-the-sun deck, drink in hand.
Call Hardy! Call 911! Jade tries to brainwave across, straining so hard her head nearly Scanners.
But, call him to say what, exactly? That someone over hereโs wearing a gas mask all suspiciously? That their gait is all slashery? Thatโgaspโthereโs a super-dangerous nailgun over here?
All the same, Jade gets her own phone ready, exceptโฆ she did really need to plug in last night. All the charge she got from Hardy is gone, shit. Jade shakes her phone like she can get the battery juice to an important place long enough for just one call, but that works about as well as it usually does.
Itโs all up to Tiara to save them now. Tiara whoโs just settling down onto the towel she must have spread while Jade was having a panic attack about her battery. On the deck Tiara was just on, though, one of the Foundersโ Lewellyn Singletonโis walking and reading a newspaper, his robe cinched loose. At the back of the yacht the two girls, Cinnamon and Ginger, mirror images of each other, are tossing bits of something over the railing into the water and giggling, and that short one whose headโs barely taller than the railing must be Galatea Pangborne.
None of them know. Yet. Including Letha.
โWhere are you?โ Jade whispers to her. More important, where is this slasher prowling around? Is he, even? Do slashers take naps too?
โFuck it,โ Jade says, and stands.
Nothing happens. No nails whizz in, bury themselves in her gut.
โWell, letโs get this party started,โ she announces, and walks downhill with long deliberate strides, all her pockets zipped, her lips set in a firm line. By the time sheโs twenty yards from the closest house, past the last of the trees the Founders arenโt going to let anyone cut down, her lips feel more squiggly, more Charlie Brown. And she can feel his cartoon parentheses around her eyes, too.
Thing is, sheโs close enough now she canโt see every exit, every entrance, and sheโs only eighty percent certainโ okay, seventyโthat this is the same house she saw the slasher walking away from. Meaning it could be one heโs back inside.
Jade nods to herself for strength all the same, reminds herself that she knows this genre, and regrips her hand around her phone, blasts across the last of that open space, certain that if she turns around, that gas mask is going to be right there, and gaining.
She makes the door, itโs thankfully unlockedโshe hadnโt even considered that it might not beโand she opens it both quietly and as quickly as she can, guiding it shut behind her. The hall sheโs in is dark, but thereโs a light glowing in theโฆ kitchen, it turns out. She pats her pockets for the charging cable she suddenly canโt find, but knows that, because this is a slasher, any plug she finds in here isnโt going to bring her phone back to life, isnโt going to connect
her to anyone who can help.
Instead of using it as a communication device, then, Jade holds her phone like itโs the handle for her macheteโthe one she gave awayโkeeping it directly in front of her. She tunes in for footsteps, for breathing, for crawling, but sheโs
really and actually alone, as best as she can tell, and as already suggested by the slasher striding purposefully away from this house. But itโs these kinds of situations jumpscares are made from, she knows.
Moving room by room she clears the first floor, then has the choice of either going upstairs like Sidney says stupid girls in horror movies are always doing, or going downstairs, into the basement, which sheโs now insisting will just be that: a basement. Not a cellar, and definitely please not some Evil Dead fruit cellar, because thereโs only so much her mind can take.
โShit shit shit,โ she mutters, looking up then down, up then down. And then she sees it: one golden-tinted nail standing up from the frame around the door to the basement.
Her face goes cold, her breathing deep.
She swallows, the sound a thunderous gush in her ears, and, keeping her right foot ahead like that matters, shuffles alongside the stairs, eases the basement door open, the whole while picturing a network of tunnels connecting basement to basement across Terra Nova, so they can scurry from home to home during the winter months.
Except, she reminds herself, itโs rocky over here. Too rocky.
Meaning, of course, that if the basements do end up connecting, itโs going to be by burrowing dead people, left-behind murder victims from the nineteenth century contorting around rocks, gathering in caves, turning their faces up to the hateful sounds above them.
โShut up, shut up,โ Jade hisses to her brain, and takes the first timid step down, deciding at the last moment not to turn the staircase light on, as that would only announce her presence, which might then lead to her bloody absence. Which, to everyone across the lake, would be good riddance, the best riddance.
At the blind turn halfway down the stairs, Jadeโs ninety-nine percent sure anybody down there will be able to hear her heart pounding. When sheโs finally down there, she has no choice but to feel on the wall for the light switch. Either that or pull out her trusty Jame Gumb night vision goggles.
The lights come on and instantly sheโs blinded, is falling away, swinging her dead phone in front of her like that would do anything. Finally, after all these years, she understands Laurie Strode: you cringe, you fall, you shriek and you cry. Never because you want to, not because you intend to, but because itโs scary shit. The bodyโs gonna do what the bodyโs gonna do, and screams arenโt at all voluntary.
When she can see again at last, thereโs no furniture, just an endless tile floor, already-textured wallsโthe whole basementโs finished out already. Up near the ceiling thereโs those short wide windows that mean this isnโt completely underground, but itโs enough underground to be that clammy kind of cool, and kind of muffled.
Any nails fired down here are probably not nails she heard.
Proof of that turns out to be on the wall behind her. Going from waist-high and up into the ceiling, maybe twelve feet in total, is a zipper line of nails, set close enough to be a stairway for an acrobatic mouse. Meaning, since they start in the corner, that the target was running the other way.
Jade listens hard for creaking above her head, peers as deep into the high windows as she can for gas mask eyes clocking her, and, though sheโs still not sure this is the best of all ideas, goes the direction the nails are telling her to go.
For reasons she canโt explain even to herself, sheโs still being sure to lead with her right foot. Everything that made sense when she was watching slashers doesnโt seem to matter just one whole hell of a lot while walking through a slasher, does it?
Worse, โItโs July fucking third,โ she says aloud, like calling foul.
None of this is even supposed to be happening yet.
How many final rounds does Scream 4 have, though, right? Maybe, since the slasherโs been going for nearly four decades, the only way to still surprise is by breaking its own rules.
Itโs definitely working. Jade has no idea whatโs coming.
The next breadcrumb for her eyes is golden again, and nail-shaped again, and in a doorframe again. Either a closet or a bathroom. Or, this is a basementโmaybe storage, then? Water heater, furnace?
โH-hello?โ she asks. No response.
She taps on the door with her phone, runs through a mental list of whoโs not behind the doorโeveryone she knows is in Proofrock, and everyone she just saw on the yacht is, you know, on the yacht.
โIโm coming in!โ Jade announces as clear as she can, and, using her left hand on the knob, she swings the door out and hustles back into something like a defensive stance, spinning instantly around because how it always works is that the slasherโs right behind you when you least expect it.
Sheโs still alone.
Trusting neither the space before her nor behind her, she turns back to the door she just opened.
It is a bathroom, what she guesses is a โhalf-bathโ over here in Camelot. For all she knows, her dad carted the tub down for somebody more expert to install.
Thereโs a body in that tub, too.
His legs are cocked out over the edge, his arms thrown out to the side, and his eyes are open, but theyโre not seeing anything anymore.
โCody,โ Jade whispers, in pain. Cowboy Boots.
Heโs still wearing them, along with a golden nail between the eyes, a ribbon of blood unfurling down from it and curling across his face, tucking itself into his mouth at last instead of pooling in the hollow of his neck.
Jade spins around again but itโs still just her in the basement.
Which is when the lights black out. She nearly falls down from it.
All she can hear now is her breath. Itโs coming in hitches, in gasps, then not at all because sheโs listening.
โCody,โ she says at last, โCodyCodyCody,โ but heโs not answering. Which is surely for the absolute best, thank you thank you, Indians have to stick together. But still.
She was never Jame Gumb, she realizes. Sheโs Clarice, feeling her way with wide-spread fingers.
The lights fizz back on.
Jade cringes back, sure thatโs just step one of her getting rushed.
Butโฆ she finally sees it: the light switch she flipped up. Thereโs a motion sensor under it, to save energy. The lights go off when it thinks the room is empty.
Jade spins back to Cody. Still there. Still dead.
Jade leans against the wall opposite the bathroom door and slides down.
โIโm sorry,โ she says into the bathroom. โIโI donโt know why, man. Youโre not even part of all this, are you? You werenโt, I mean. Until now.โ
Was it just because he was there? Is this target practice for tomorrow night? Cleaning house before the big party? What could he have done to have deserved a nail in the forehead, though?
โNothing,โ Jade tells him.
Oh. Unless itโs that he talked to her back in March? Which would matter to the slasher why? Does her knowing the genre and predicting the day and trying to pull Letha into all
of this somehow mess things up for the slasher? And, how can she even be thinking rational thoughts, this close to a dead body? Just as important: itโs Lethaโs job to find Cody, not Jadeโs. This could be screwing the whole process up.
โBut I was never here,โ Jade says out loud, and stands, resetting the room as best she can: pulling the bathroom door shut, policing the tile for any mud sheโs tracked in, and, back at the stairs, flipping the light switch to down.
The next moment is when she realizes that lights in the high basement windows suddenly not glowing are like a flashing sign for the slasher. But itโs daytime yet, probably not even four in the afternoon. Whoeverโs playing slasher out there would have to be watching these windows specifically to catch them going dark.
And, anyway: why stake out a room youโve already killed in, right? Thatโs no way to hit a bodycount.
โSorry,โ Jade says one last time to Cody, and then slouches upstairs.
After watching through the window of the back door for what feels like twenty minutesโno one, nothingโJade steps out, walks the same exact path the slasher did, going from this house to the next one over.
This time the first floor and the basement are empty, and the side door into the garage is yawning wide, the garage past it open. No nails in any doorframes, no blood misted on any walls.
Same for the second floor.
Jade steps into what she thinks will probably be a study in a month or two and positions herself just inside the broad window, enough so she can see out, not quite enough where sheโs a distinct form in the glass. Just an irregular continuation of the wall, she hopes. A half-assed drapeโ tarp or something.
From here she can see the yacht so much closer.
Tiaraโs swishing her hips along the railing, disappearing through a door. Nobodyโs reading a newspaper anymore,
nobodyโs dropping flower petals into the lake.
Does this mean theyโve all been nailgunned in the forehead?
And then, finally, a flurry of fast motion.
Itโs Shooting Glasses. Heโs scrambling down a roof two houses down, is Jesse Pinkmanโing into whatโs going to be the front yard, and already rolling that impact away because itโs the least thing he has to worry about. Jade watches the window he must have dove through but itโs the front door of the house that swings open instead.
The Prowler, the killer, the slasher.
His chest is heaving, his face unchanging, still gas-masked, the nailgun heavy and deadly by his thigh.
Shooting Glasses looks back, shakes his head no, holding his hands up like to ward off flying nails, and heโs saying something over and over but it doesnโt matter.
His killer steps down off the porch, is already leveling the nailgun.
โNo, no!โ Jade hears herself screaming, the flat of her hand slapping the glass of the window sheโs up against.
The slasher stops, turns around, settles his tinted eyes in her general direction but hopefully sheโs behind a glare, hopefully those tinted lenses arenโt binoculars.
Jade backs a step up and the slasher has to give his attention back to Shooting Glasses when Shooting Glasses is up and running again. He falls twice on his way to the pier but makes it there fast enough. The slasher just steadily approaches behind the whole time, until thereโs nowhere for Shooting Glasses to go but into the lake, not so much a dive as a desperate jump, or a failure by the water to hold him up when he tries to run across it.
Right as he goes under, nails stitch the water all around him.
The Prowler wades in up to his knees, quilting the whole area with nails until his cartridge runs dry.
He looks at the gun and tosses it aside, lets it kerplunk down.
Now heโs looking up, to the yacht.
Letha is up against the rail, calling down. Not shrieking, not screaming, not crying, not asking what or why.
โTโs napping!โ she whisper-yells, just loud enough Jade can make it out.
Below her, knee-deep in Indian Lake, Theo Mondragon peels out of the gas mask and hoodie.
โDid you get them all?โ Letha calls down, apparently forgetting her injunction against waking Tiara.
Theo Mondragon shakes his head no as if disappointed with himself, then holds his forearm up as if for inspection.
โDo wasps bite or sting?โ Letha calls down, leaning far out over the rail, completely unconcerned about gravity.
Theo Mondragon looks at his forearm, probably at a welt Jade canโt see from this distance, and exaggerates his shrug.
โYou should be careful!โ Letha says, but is kind of thrilled too, Jade can tell.
Her dad was rooting out a wasp nest or two. Thus the mask, the hoodie. Just, he redefined โwaspโ to include Cowboy Boots, and Shooting Glasses.
Mismatched Gloves?
Jade looks behind her, half-expecting him to be sitting in the corner with a bellyful of nails, his fingers moving over them like accordion buttons.
Why? Why would Theo Mondragon be going after his own workers?
It doesnโt make sense. They canโt be in the justice cycle, shouldnโt be slasher vics at all.
But Clate Rodgers wasnโt exactly supposed to have been, either. And Mr. Holmes was supposed to have been around to write the sad history of this all down.
And, really, if sheโs counting people who donโt deserve it, the Dutch kids were sort of extra too, Jade figures.
Deacon Samuels may be the only actual targeted victim.
Unless Theo Mondragon saw Jade through the glass, that is. Unless sheโs about to be the next clean-up on aisle 9 of this wilderness re-enactment of Intruder.
Her insides clench, her airways constrict.
At least it wonโt be nails, when it comes. The nailgunโs wet and buried.
And, like Nancy Thompson in A Nightmare on Elm Street, her chances go way the hell up if she can just keep from falling asleep. Just, thereโs still the night to get through. And then tomorrow. If there is one of those.
โHere!โ Letha calls down to her dad. What sheโs waving in her handโofferingโis a tube of something. After-bite cream, lotion, Jade canโt tell.
Letha makes to lob it down once, twice, so Theo Mondragon can get in sync, and then she lets it drop, plummet end over tiny end. Theo Mondragon snags it from the air like the athlete he had to have been at one point.
He nods thanks, already applying the cream, and then Mars Baker is leaning out over the railing on the deck below her. With an over-under shotgun heโs just now swinging shut. Letha leans out and over even farther to see him but heโs not looking up at her, just down to Theo Mondragon.
โThis is what you should have had,โ he says, snapping the shotgun up so he can track a duck flapping low across the water. He fake shoots it, doing the recoil and everything.
โWhatโs for dinner?โ Theo calls up to them, as if he wasnโt just on a killing spree.
โNot duck!โ Tiara answers.
โDuck, duck, right,โ Jade says to herself, lowering herself down below the level of the window so Theo Mondragon wonโt accidentally clock her on his walk up the pier.
He hooks the gas mask on a rack, twists his hoodie around his neck after this hard dayโs work, and saunters up into the yacht like nothingโs wrong with the world. Nothing at all.
Moments after heโs gone and nobodyโs at the rail, Shooting Glassesโs body doesnโt bob up to the surface, perforated fifty times over, blood staining the water.
Probably because heโs nailed to the bed of the lake.
SLASHER 101
Okay, for My Bloody Valentine’s or just even only for Valentine but also to make up for my perfect gag for the year book crew, which if you didn’t see it but only missed my presence, was 6 FAKE hypodermic needles superglued to my forearm Dream Warriors style, with each one labeled Algebra and English and P.E. and the rest, including of course HISTORY, but to make up for the quiz that day, I’ll
pay you back and more with a little insight into how there’s not enough slow motion in the whole world really for when the final girl finally stops running and turns around to fight this unkillable killer, and also WHY he’s so nice slash mean to her. Emphasis on the “slash” there.
First you have to imagine what’s in her head. She’s been watching her friends and family and pets all get killed, and THEN she has to run down whatever hall it is they’ve all been put in in various and many jack in the box contraptions.
At some point this final girl has to realize that this is all about her, don’t you think? That her friends and family and pets would all still be alive if this slasher had only STARTED with her instead of cutting his way closer and closer to her. So she feels guilty like maybe she’s sort of the killer herself, like this bodycount is maybe HER bodycount.
What I’m saying here, sir, is that she’s been groomed to become her secret
and best self. The slasher COULD have started with her easy. The slasher doesn’t HAVE to start at the outside edges but CAN just walk right into the center, apply blade, deed done, go home now, story over.
But that wouldn’t be enough. Not even close.
The slasher cycle is a dance, see? Imagine a dance floor in a high school gym, the lights are down, crinkled paper everywhere, spiked punch, fancy handed
down jackets and dresses, shoes it’s impossible to even walk in, I know you’ve chaperoned some. Now who the slasher WANTS to dance with is this one quiet
girl way on the other side of the gym floor, but he can’t cross to her yet, instead he has to work his way across TO her, dancing with this person and then that
person, the back of his hand sometimes touching the final girl’s sleeve during a slow song, their eyes locking like fate, but he’s waiting for the last dance, sir.
The slow (MOTION) one. That’s the one that matters. You don’t go home with
who you dance your 3rd dance with. You go home with who you’re holding hands with when the music’s over.
But it’s not love, don’t let me get you thinking that. And it’s not hate either.
It’s deeper than both of those.
My theory or thesis from many viewings and more knowing is that the slasher has the kind of eyes that can recognize which girls have a final girl hiding inside them, which is why he targets them LAST. But is it really to kill them? I don’t think so, sir. I think the slasher’s life of revenge is a life of pain and misery, and the slasher knows that no ordinary person can end that. Only a very very certain kind of girl can. Only a final girl. But not in her current state or form. No, the slasher first has to help her TRANSFORM, which involves killing all her friends
and family and pets, everybody except Dewey pretty much, because Dewey’s basically unkillable.
So that super slow motion moment at the end when this bookish reserved quiet girl finally stops in all the swirling madness and blood and tears, turns
around with a machete or a chainsaw or just even only her hands like Constance from Just Before Dawn, and she’s screaming with rage, this is why slashers really wear masks, sir.
It’s so you won’t see them smile.