Peerce loaded a 37mm CM 55 tear gas gun. Then Porker doled out flashlights and they all got out. “Christ!” Peerce complained. “Damn place smells worse than a Georgia hoghouse!”
“Graves,” Porker muttered.
Wade grazed his light over the mounds. “Someone’s been here in the last few hours. There were only two graves earlier.”
“Now there’s four.” Peerce demonstrated the ability to count.
“And look—” Wade shined his light over by the shovel. “Empty Kirin bottles. Jervis drinks Kirin.”
“Porker, you see that shovel?” White said.
“Yeah.”
“Get to work.”
Porker whitened. “Aw, Chief, come on. I don’t wanna—”
“Dig them up later,” Wade interrupted. “First we have to—”
“St. John” —now it was White’s turn to interrupt— “so far all I see is a couple of piles of dirt and some beer bottles. I don’t see no cult, and I don’t see no vampires.”
Peerce slapped the back of Wade’s head. “And what about the coffin, St. John? You said there’s a coffin out here.” Next he gave Wade’s ear a twist. Wade yelped.
Hands on hips, White asked, “Where’s Jervis Phillips?”
“Look, I only said he might be here,” Wade protested. “But I’m telling you, once you see the grove yourselves—”
“You mean this ain’t it?”
Wade smiled darkly. “I mean the
White bit into a cigar. “All right. Lead the way.”
Wade led the way, with pleasure, past the tires and junk, to the trail. “Watch your step, boys. This isn’t exactly the red carpet treatment.”
Porker moaned.
Peerce yelled “Christ!” repeatedly, as they all began to crunch over the rot soft possums.
“They’re all over the place!” White complained.
“This is nothing, Chief. Wait’ll you see the rest.”
They grimly followed the trail of carcasses. Porker asked “If Phillips is out here, what do we do?”
“What’choo think we do?” Peerce contributed.
“We kill him,” White said. “He’s a killer so we kill him.”
“Killing Jervis isn’t going to be easy,” Wade pointed out.
“Why?”
Wade smiled. “Because he’s already dead.”
“Goddamn it, St. John!” White flared. “I
“Well, yeah, sort of. Dead as in…the walking dead.”
Peerce slammed Wade against a tree, his ham fist hovering. “I’m beggin’ ya, Chief! Lemme pop him! He’s makin’ damn fools of all of us.”
Then Porker screamed.
He’d strayed to the end of the trail. White and Peerce rushed to see what he was screaming about. Wade, of course, already knew.
The grove’s perversions had thickened, even in the few hours since he and Lydia had been here. Agape, the three cops clung to each other as they stared into the impossible morass. The green fog was darker now, a milky stew. Dense, unearthly foliage glimmered in the low moonlight. Every branch, every swollen leaf, pod, and flower hung thickly with ropes of slime. Things like cattails sprouted tall from the lake of fog, bowed by the weight of strange fruit and pulsating seed sacks. In the middle of the clearing, atop the risen hillock, stood the bizarre oblong box.
“You hayseed motherfuckers believe me now?” Wade asked.
The slack jawed police made no response. Everything was shifting, growing in minute increments, joints of weeds and eldritch tree limbs lengthening in crunching movements as if in pain. Fist sized bugs crawled up sweating tree trunks, scoring the fleshlike bark. Clusters of faced mushrooms shuddered, breathing, and lumps of fungus glowed in the dark.
“P Porker,” White ordered.
“Yuh yuh yeah, Chief?”
“Get out there. Check it out.”
“Yuh yuh you gotta be crazy, Chief.”
“Get out there, you big creamcake!” White kicked Porker in his tremendous rump. “Check it out!”
“I wouldn’t send anyone out there,” Wade advised.
“Shut up! Peerce, get out there! This fat baby’s got no balls. Let’s see if you do!”
Peerce stood unsteadily, looking at the green fog, then back to White. He took a breath and stepped out.
“There’s things in that fog,” Wade warned.
“Things?” Peerce queried, looking back. He waded out. It was like a green swamp; the fog had risen to midthigh now. Black cane stalks swayed to and fro, acrawl with noxious bugs. From some of the plants hung fattened seedpods with drooling—and distressingly
Yes, they all could. The grove’s wildlife, no doubt, had taken note of them. Wade spotted ghost shapes of things roving beneath the surface—fog vermin. Scuttling parasites feasted on dead possum bellies, and waddling things like groundhogs, lacking heads, scampered about, raising trails of mist. But worst of all were the gilled snake things, which seemed to swim vigorously beneath the fogtop.
“Bring him back, you idiot,” Wade said. “Those things bite.”
White smirked, then yelped as one of the fat pinch faced spiders lowered itself on a line of snot. It tried to bite White on the nose. Wade batted it away, laughing.
Then Peerce began to howl.
He was jumping, struggling. One of the fog snakes had affixed its flat sucker mouth to Peerce’s crotch. He tore it off, along with his zipper, and then another snake latched onto his ass.
“Help me!” he pleaded.
“Porker! Get out there and help Peerce!”
“Fuh fuh fuck you, Chief,” Porker stammered.
“St. John! Get out there!”
“Eat my shorts, Chief. He’s your man,
Peerce tore off another eel, then tried to run back. Suddenly he tripped and sank completely beneath the fog, screaming.
Wade saw the fog churning. A hand surfaced. He grabbed it, pulled, and hauled Peerce back to the trail.
Green mist blew from Peerce’s nostrils. “Chief, those things were tryin’ to eat me!” White gave him a look that said,
“What is this place, St. John?” White asked grimly.
“I don’t know,” Wade said.
Porker pointed shakily. “And what’s that black box?”
Before Wade could hazard a guess, they heard a car.
“Turn your lights out!” Wade instructed. They huddled down. Across the dell, a car entered the morass. The