Janey sat up, letting the paperback fall to the floor. “That’s not funny. I’ll have you fired–”
“Two days, Miss Mays,” the strange voice taunted. “Let them believe what they want to believe.”
She recognized the line she’d delivered to Violet earlier in the day. So the hired help was gossiping. She’d have to clean house the hard way, forcing Violet to finger this impetuous cook before Janey bounced them both out on their asses.
But how had they known the hotel was closing? She’d not told anyone.
“You’re fired,” she said into the phone, barely controlling the tremor of rage in her voice.
“Fired by the forge below, Miss Mays. The sweetboy tried to tell you, but you only believe what you want to believe, right?”
No one else had been around when Cody had mentioned demons to her. She gripped the phone and glanced into the closet. The shadows had crept closer to the bed.
No, not possible.
She was letting Cody’s imagination get to her. If she believed the shadows belonged in the corners of the room, then they had to stay there.
Paranoia. Pending change. Fear of the unknown.
It all boiled down to loss of control.
“I’m coming down,” she said. “You better be clocked out and gone or else I’ll have you arrested for trespassing. And there better not be so much as a teaspoon missing or you’ll be up for embezzlement, too.”
Embezzlement was a simple threat. She could alter the hotel inventory and hold any employee accountable: Violet for petty cash, Rosalita for sheets and towels, and this nameless crud for kitchenware. And just like an accused child molester was ruined whether the charge was bogus or not, an employee with such a black mark would never work in the area again.
“A little white lie never hurt anybody,” said the voice on the phone. Except the voice sounded like voices—a chorus talking in unison.
The shadows now covered the floor. Janey eyed the bedroom door. Even if she made it, she’d still have to cross the rest of the way to the hall. The floor no longer looked solid, the carpet roiling and undulating.
“Come on down, Miss Mays,” said the voices. “What are you waiting for?”
She let the phone drop onto the bed. The darkness on the floor was like an abyss of ink, and she expected the bed to sink into it at any moment. Instead, the ink began to rise like a tide.
Janey clicked the phone signal dead and punched the extension for maintenance. The phone rang twice, and then the line crackled.
“Maintenance.”
“J.C. Thank God.”
“Nobody’s ever said them words together before, Miss Mays.”
“There’s a leak in 226,” she said. “Hurry.”
“What kind of leak?”
Sewer? Water? A crack in hell?
“It’s staining the carpet,” she said.
“You know that boiler in the basement?”
“Don’t worry about it.”
“I think that’s the problem.”
“What’s that got to do with a leak on the second floor?” The leak was rising fast, at least a foot above floor level.
“It’s stored up a whole lot of dark over the years, and it finally blew a gasket.”
“When can you get here?”
“Oh, two days or so.”
”J.C.?”
“That’s one of our names.” The voices had blended together again. Janey cut the connection.
The dark, oily shadows were now a couple of feet from the bottom of the mattress. She imagined how cold the water was–no, it’s a shadow, not water–and what it would be like to wade across it to escape. Assuming the floor was still there beneath it. The shadows had also swelled out from the corners and were closer now, as if forming solid columns of darkness.
She was afraid of what the phone would do to her next, but she couldn’t release the handset. Risking her balance, she leaned over and reached into her night stand drawer. She tried to keep her eyes away from the darkness, but she couldn’t help glancing down. The shadowy sea robbed her of her focus, and she recalled that saying about staring into the abyss until it stared back. Finally she blinked and realized her hand was inside the drawer.
She felt past the paperbacks, vibrators, jewelry, and cigarette packs until she found the gun.
Its cool grip gave her comfort, and she drew the weapon into the room. It was a .38 revolver, simple to load and use, but she couldn’t remember if she’d put bullets in it. She fished several from the drawer and laid them on the night stand. One rolled free and fell into the black haze. It didn’t hit bottom.
Janey shoved a couple of bullets into their round slots inside the cylinder, and then clicked the weapon closed. She wasn’t sure what she would shoot, though. She played the gun around the room, hoping a real target would emerge. After all, what good would a bullet do against the absence of light?
The ink was now six inches from the top of the mattress. It made neither a gurgling sound nor the hiss of escaping air, and its silence was more terrifying than an odd liquid noise would have been.
Feeling a little safer with the gun in her hand, she dialed the in-house connection again. Rhonda was at the front desk, smacking and chomping her gum.
“Ya?” Rhonda said, in her usual distracted fashion.
“Janey here. Everything okay?”
Because if it is, then I’m the one who needs a little rewiring.
“One of the guests walked out of the bar and took a whiz in the potted plant, but other than that, nothing unusual for a Friday night with a special on Coronas.”
The shadow was lapping at the top of the mattress, its persistent tide working the edge of the bedspread. She smiled. This couldn’t be happening, because things like this were impossible. And in the world of Janey Mays, the impossible had no place.
And—
Drugs.
It would be just like those vengeful, snot-nosed slaves to spike her coffee with LSD or Ecstacy or whatever mindblower the kids used these days. And that would make every cracked piece of the puzzle fit. Hallucinations, disorientation, paranoia, cold sweats, heart palpitations.
“Do you know what happens in two days?” Janey asked as a test.
“Sure, I’m off, but then I’m scheduled the rest of the week until Friday.”
“Good,” Janey said.
“The only trouble is the goddamned hotel is going to be bulldozed,” Rhonda said. “What’s going to happen to me then?”
“How did you—”
“I know everything.” The voices blended into the unwholesome chorus. “Battle Axe.”
Maybe the hotel wasn’t a living thing, with its own memories and desires. Maybe those belonged to something deeper, something that dwelled in the basement.
“That’s one of our names.”
Maybe more than one thing lived in the basement.
Janey let the phone slip into her lap. She leaned forward and gazed into the abyss. Now it was staring back.
One last try, one last test, one last link to the sane, real world.
She dialed 9-1-1.
The phone made a strange noise and she looked at the digital readout on the handset. 6-6-6.
She punched the “9” and the “6” appeared.
Janey giggled, pointing the gun across the room as the shadows crept over the edge of the mattress. A little inner voice–remarkably similar to that of the demented kitchen worker–whispered “Swim for it, Janey.”
She let out a cracked laugh and rose on the bed, the bedsprings groaning beneath her. She took a long step, the cold gelid blackness oozing around one ankle, and then she launched herself, a crippled swan dive, the gun clenched in one fist.