Striving to postpone the thought of discomfort, he lifted his head and looked around, assessing the scene. To one side of him sat the partially mangled mountain bike; to the other, lay the severed head of the deer.
Tim stiffened at his proximity to it, but relaxed again when his brain processed the extent of the damage. Dead or not, the train had finished the animal for sure.
The train continued to move past him, the deafening keen of its wheels like an incessant scream for attention. He knew it was only a matter of time before people from the surrounding houses came to investigate.
No one would believe what he’d been through tonight. How could they? No doubt the train’s operator was furious, probably thinking that he’d been attempting some kind of dumb stunt. In fact, now that he thought about it, Tim realized the man was probably already on a cell phone or radio, calling the police. With his luck, they’d assume Tim fabricated the whole chase story simply to draw focus off his failed train-dodge. Someone might even suggest he’d positioned the deer carcass on the tracks himself, like some morbid joke. It was certainly a more plausible explanation than the story Tim had to tell.
All this after being rejected by Mallory.
Talk about a crappy evening.
And what about tomorrow? He was pretty sure if he wasn’t in jail for what had happened with the train, someone would eventually find Brad—or one of his friends; or maybe all three of them—dead in the woods, and he’d be the main suspect in their murders. He’d left his coat at the scene, and his fingerprints covered the bottle that had slashed Brad. Tim wasn’t sure how bad he’d been cut, but there had been a lot of blood, some of which had splattered on Tim’s clothes. And don’t forget the kid who got nailed by the rock, he reminded himself. They’ll probably pin that on you, too.
When he finally raised himself from the pavement, he saw the last of the train’s cars approaching.
With great effort, he pushed himself to his feet, wincing at the growing aches and pains now alive throughout his body. Thankfully, he hadn’t broken any bones. At least he wouldn’t go to prison in a wheelchair.
The train had slowed to a crawl, but the harsh shriek of its wheels remained strong enough to blot out all other sounds.
He stood up—and gasped without hearing it.
Through the gap between the last two freight cars, Tim saw someone standing on the opposite side of the train, staring straight back at him. He only caught a fleeting glimpse of a vague shape, registering nothing more than a silhouette against the blacker countryside beyond. In that brief instant, he witnessed the light from the shops behind him reflecting back in a pair of cold white eyes.
A chill worked its way up his spine, and his fear escalated with the imminent passage of the final car. What he’d glimpsed could have been nothing more than a concerned neighbor from one of the houses he’d already passed, someone who’d seen what had happened and rushed to out to check on him. On the other hand, the image that darkened his mind consisted of a single shadowy figure, its body black and featureless, with shimmering eyes that may have simply mirrored ambient light from the street lamps, or may have glowed with a fire of their own.
Tim whirled around and ran, almost crumpling under his own weight from the agony in his right thigh. He needed to get out of sight.
Instead of going up two streets and turning right onto Crestview, the way home, he made a sharp right onto Railway Street and sprinted east, around the post office. Half a block away the church loomed. The cross atop its steeple hovered over the town like a beacon of hope. Past the church, he could cut between yards all the way home.
He glanced over his shoulder before rounding the corner and saw the train had cleared County Road 19. Nothing waited behind it but more blacktop stretching into darkness.
He proceeded toward home at a slower, less painful pace.
That deer had to be diseased, he pondered in silence. Rabies or something, but it couldn’t have been dead.
Then he reminded himself about the alien voice in his head. Where did that come from?
The train had finally fallen silent behind him, and he picked out the first excited calls of those who’d been summoned by the commotion. He guessed by the buoyancy of several male shouts the onlookers had come from the Choo Choo Bar, but that seemed to be it for the moment.
Looking ahead, Tim hesitated before the poorly lit section of street between him and the church. In an instant, he forgot all about the scrapes and cuts he’d received from his fall. Instead, he concentrated all his attention on scanning the overabundance of shadows that littered his path.
Two roadside lamps thinned the blackness here on the street, one directly to his left and another farther up on the right. In addition to those lights, multiple security lamps illuminated the Parish Center and the church’s main entry. They gave off a caramel glow that coated both buildings but did little to disperse the dark near the road.
None of the houses offered much light, either. He counted four on the left and three on the right, including the Parish Office. Some had lights over their front steps, but none of the bulbs helped to diminish the oppressive darkness in his path.
Gathering his courage, Tim started toward the church, limping like his right foot kept landing in potholes. The wind picked up around him, prompting the tree branches to claw at the light.
He hastened his step.
I’ll be home in two minutes tops, Tim thought. It’s just past the church and up the hill. Hey, think of it this way, the next time I see Mallory, I’ll have a hell of a story to tell her. I doubt Mr. Mercedes has ever jumped in front of a train.
He passed the junction of Loretto Street on his left, just before the turn-around cul-de-sac preceding the church.
A sound rose above the wind, petrifying him in mid-stride.
He reevaluated the gloomy street, holding his breath, but saw no one.
The noise came again, sounding like a hand clawing at a shower curtain. Tim looked to the right, finding nothing but a bundle of extra-large lawn bags at the end of an empty driveway.
He turned to move onward when one of the lawn bags moved.
Its polymer surface suddenly shifted, something pushing outward from inside it.
Like a person in a body-bag!
No sooner had the idea formed in his head when five points stretched the plastic membrane, creating that elusive shower curtain sound.
Before Tim had a chance to react, the sack split open, torn down the middle by bony digits made from gnarled sticks. Twin glowing white eyes peered out from the hole.
“You can’t escape.”
Tim spun away but not before seeing the bag’s grassy contents blast forward in the shape of a lunging man. He screamed and tried to dodge, but wooden fingers closed on his shoulders and seized his shirt. The plant-thing landed on his back, tackling him to the asphalt. Explosions of pain detonated at various points across his body, ignited from the cuts and scrapes on his arms and legs. The creature’s claws hooked in his skin, and it rolled him over to confront its moonlight gaze.
His bowels weakened when an up-close view of the monster corroborated what he’d glimpsed a second ago. It had the shape of a man, but the damn thing was made of grass. The botanical beast cracked a wide grin and hissed a foul breath into his face. Tim shrieked a cry of both panic and rage in reply, simultaneously swinging his fist. He hit the beast square in the face and felt a sudden rush of encouragement when he knocked its head clean off its shoulders.
Lawn clippings sprayed through the air.