Not good. That barrier had to be leaking pretty badly. If it ever gave way …
And especially don?t go there.
They had to find Cody and get him out ASAP.
He thought about going for help, but that could take a while. How long for the two of them to find Cody? Five minutes tops. And another five to get him back to the ladder. The poor kid had waited long enough.
He splashed back to Weezy and showed her the pyramid.
“No one can lock us down here now.” He placed it in the center of the intersection. “And this will mark the spot we need to come back to.”
“We?re coming, Cody!” Jack called. “Stay right where you are and keep yelling „hello.? We?ll find you.” He looked at Weezy. “Okay. Let?s go get him.”
Weezy nodded and pointed to their left. “I think he?s that way.”
Jack agreed, so they set off in that direction.
They?d speed-walked maybe a hundred feet when they came to another intersection, this one a T with the leg running to their right. Cody?s voice seemed to be coming down the leg.
Jack pointed and started in that direction, then stopped. He looked back the way they?d come and saw only darkness.
“Hey, we could get lost.”
“I don?t get lost,” Weezy said. “And you won?t as long as you stay with me.”
True. Weezy never got lost. She?d wander all through the Pines and always find her way back.
But this was different.
“You?re sure? This isn?t like being in the Barrens. You can?t see the sky. No sun or stars to guide you. There?s not even any light.”
She tapped her forehead. “I don?t know how it works, but it?s all up here. I always remember the paths I take. I can always go back the way I came.”
That wasn?t all she remembered. Her photographic memory didn?t let her forget anything she?d ever read. He envied her that.
“Okay. I?m counting on you.”
They hurried on, their progress slowed by a pile of rocks and dirt where the ceiling had given way. They picked their way over that, then continued on.
“I?m worried about something else,” Weezy said. “What if it?s not Cody?”
“How can it be anyone else? He?s the only kid who?s disappeared.”
“But what if it?s not a kid? What if it?s some
“Oh, jeez. You?re not going to start, are you? What else could it be?”
“Well, we know there?s something out in the Pines, something that chases people—we know that from personal experience.”
“Okay, yeah. But that was a bear.”
“You?re calling it a bear, but we never got a clear look at it.”
“It was a
Had to be.
“But what if it was something else … something with the power to lure you to it by sounding like a frightened child?”
“Weez, it?s
Somewhere up ahead a child?s voice was repeating, “Hello? … Hello … Hello?”
“I know, I know. I just …”
They came to another four-way intersection and Weezy stopped, turning in a circle.
“You know what?” she said.
Jack wasn?t sure he wanted to hear this.
“What?”
“Remember the black cube the pyramid came in, and how it had that pattern of crisscrossing lines etched on its inside?”
“Sure. You made a tracing.”
“Well, I?ve always wondered what they represented. I mean they weren?t random. They formed a sort of grid. I?m beginning to believe it was a street map.”
“Of this place?”
She nodded. “Yeah. I?m not sure yet, but—hey!” She jumped as if she?d been bitten on the foot.
“What—?”
Jack aimed his flashlight down and saw water swirling around their sneakers. He hadn?t noticed because his feet were already wet.
“This is not good,” he said. “This is not good at all.”
“What?s going on?”
“The lake … it?s seeping through.”
Her voice rose an octave. “You call this
“Okay. It?s
“But Jack, have you noticed? We?ve been on a slight incline. That means the water?s already lots deeper back where we came from.”
“We?re coming, Cody!” Jack called, then turned to Weezy. “We?d better hurry.”
She said, “Thank you, Captain Obvious,” but her tone didn?t carry its usual edge.
She was worried. So was Jack.
Flashing their lights ahead of them, they broke into a trot. Recurrent areas of debris where the roof had collapsed slowed them, but they kept going.
They arrived at an intersection where the voice seemed to be coming more from their right, so they veered that way. But after maybe twenty feet …
“Eew!” Weezy said. “What?s that smell?”
Together they skidded to a halt as a rotten odor rammed into his nostrils. They each clapped a hand over nose and mouth. Not the same as the thing in the Pines last night.
“It smells like something died,” he said.
Weezy took a tentative step forward and pointed to a doorway on their left.
“I … I think it?s coming from in there.” She looked at Jack. “Go see what it is.”
Jack?s first instinct was to ask her why
If Cody had wound up in the lost town, then something else might have as well. What ever was stinking up the place probably hadn?t been able to get out and had starved to death. Cody was looking at the same fate if they didn?t get him out.
Jack shone his light through the doorway as he inched up to it, but saw nothing but bare floor and walls. When he reached it the smell hit him like a punch in the face. Holding his nose wasn?t good enough—-he could
Steeling himself he stepped inside and flashed his beam left—nothing—and right—
Jack stood frozen in shock at the mound of bones piled in the corner—old bones and new bones, a couple with bits of meat still clinging to them, animal bones and human bones, and oh yeah he was sure they were human because he?d seen pictures and had inspected the life-size plastic skeleton in the school?s biology lab and who could mistake those two skulls up front there for anything but human and they had tooth gouges and holes in the top just like the skull they?d found in the pyramid cage in the Pines.
13
Jack reeled backward, bumping into Weezy and almost knocking her down. “Jack!
What—?”
“Bones!” he gasped, trying to catch his breath. “A hundred—a million of them!
