Darkwind: Ancient Enemy 2 (45 page)

But the bullets didn’t slow them down. She blew one away, but others took its place, grabbing her legs and dragging her down into the hole. Her legs were almost down below the floorboards now. She dropped her gun and grabbed at the floorboards, her fingernails snapping off as she tried to dig them into the wood and hold on.

Joe was suddenly at her side. He grabbed at Stella’s wrists, pulling at her. He strained as he pulled at her, but he was losing this tug-of-war. The dead were too strong. She was slipping farther down into the hole.

The birds and buzzards above swooped down around Cole, Palmer, and Begay, then flew away, pecking at them. Begay swung at one of the buzzards, connecting with it like a baseball bat with a ball. He knocked it away in a fluttering of feathers.

The spinning black ball in front of David grew bigger and bigger, spinning faster and faster, opening up into a void, like a hole in reality, sparks of lightning flashing out of it and through it, crackling in the air.

“Don’t look at it!” Joe yelled at Stella as he struggled to hold on to her. “Don’t look at David! Don’t look into their world!”

Stella wanted to look at David; she wanted to make sure he was okay. But she heeded Joe’s advice. She knew that one glimpse into their world might drive her insane. She closed her eyes and she could feel the electricity in the air all around her, she could feel the hair on her arms and her head wanting to stand up. But she concentrated on fighting to stay out of the hole in the floor.

• • •

As the flames around them died down quickly, Cole watched as the Ancient Enemy stood up from the two dead bodies that had somehow twisted together in a melting of flesh—if standing up could be the correct term. The thing unfolded itself from the two bodies, then refolded, then unfolded again, constantly reforming itself, changing constantly as it achieved solidity. And then the air around it began to shimmer and distort.

Oh God, Cole thought … it’s going to teleport away again like it did at the Mountainside Inn. It was going to teleport away and they were going to lose it.

• • •

Begay beat at the snakes and spiders and scorpions, but none of them attacked him—they only attacked Palmer and Cole. Palmer had been bit twice so far, maybe more than that, and Begay wasn’t sure if Cole had been bit. Begay had seen the black hole opening up in front of David, and he knew that David was fighting that thing across the room, drawing that thing back into its own world. Begay just needed to hold on a little longer … he just needed to give David a chance to defeat the Darkwind.

There was a screech in the air as the Ancient Enemy was drawn across the floor, its constantly changing form stretched out, tentacles and feelers trying desperately to hold on to the floor much like Stella was trying to hold on. But that thing seemed like it was losing the battle … Was David winning?

• • •

Stella was almost over the edge of the hole in the floor now, her legs dangling down inside. She could feel more of the skeletal hands down inside the hole grabbing on to her. It seemed like they were making a last ditch effort to pull her down into the darkness. She could feel Joe pulling on her wrists, but it felt like she was slipping away from him.

She looked up above Joe at the swirling birds in the smoky air. A few of the buzzards and bats were dive-bombing Joe, trying to get him to loosen his grip as they pecked and clawed at him. But he wouldn’t let go. He kept his head down, his teeth gritted, his eyes on her, and he would not let go.

But Stella saw something else above the birds and bats that concerned her even more—the church ceiling was shaking apart now. Debris and pieces of wood and shingles were already raining down around them. Then she heard the popping noise of wood beams snapping, braces breaking loose.

And then part of the roof was caving in, collapsing down onto them.

CHAPTER SEVENTY-THREE

“L
ook out!” Cole yelled. He pushed Begay and Palmer out of the way of the large section of roof that was falling down on them—it was the size of a king-sized bed. He managed to get Begay out of the way, but the piece of roof fell down on top of Palmer, burying him underneath it in a cloud of dust and sand.

• • •

Stella pulled her legs as hard as she could, and Joe was helping, but it seemed like the skeletal things were still making one last massive effort to pull her down beneath the floor with them. She thought they were going to tear her legs off.

• • •

The Ancient Enemy tried to distort the space around it, trying to bend and fold itself around the shimmering air … but it was losing the battle. The alien thing slid across the floor towards the spinning vortex, screeching in fury and fear, twisting and writhing as it was dragged along, feelers and tentacles flapping around and slapping at the floorboards. The Ancient Enemy resisted, but the force from the spinning black hole was too strong, and it was sucked into the gaping hole in reality, back into its own world. With one last screech of anguish, the constantly twisting and changing black thing was gone.

• • •

Stella felt the grips of the dead hands loosen on her legs all at once. She saw the dead bodies rise up out of the holes in the floorboards like invisible cranes were picking up their bodies. The dead shot across the air towards the spinning black hole. She couldn’t help it, she turned to look.

“Don’t look,” Joe whispered. He was right there beside her, and he hugged her, shielding her from the sight as he held on to her.

• • •

Cole watched as the animals that weren’t on fire suddenly backed up away from them. If animals could’ve looked like they had suddenly woken up in confusion, then this was it. The buzzards, birds, and bats swirled above them in the smoke, and then they all shot up and out through the large hole that was in the ceiling now, escaping out into the sandstorm above. A few of them flew out of the broken windows, some of them colliding with each other in a panic, but then escaping.

Snakes, spiders, and scorpions skittered away from the fires that were dying down quickly, slithering and crawling back towards the open doorway like an army, and others escaped down into the cracks in the floor and at the edges of the walls.

Cole looked over at the black hole in front of David as the hole turned back into a spinning black ball crackling with electricity, getting smaller and smaller until it closed up on itself and disappeared into nothing.

The church’s walls were still rumbling and more of the ceiling was going to collapse soon. The storm outside was at its strongest now.

“Help me get him out of there!” Begay yelled at Cole.

Begay grabbed a corner of the large section of roof that had fallen down on Palmer, and Cole took the other. They managed to move the piece of roof back far enough to see Palmer underneath, unconscious now, but they had moved it enough to pull him out.

“We need to get him to the door!” Cole said.

Begay looked a little uncertain about that, but the snakes, spiders, and scorpions were almost entirely gone now, and the dead bodies of the man and woman had slipped into the spinning ball along with the Ancient Enemy that had been inside of them.

“It’s over,” Cole said. “David won. That thing is gone!”

Begay didn’t question it. He grabbed one of Palmer’s arms and Cole grabbed the other one. They pulled him through the debris across the floor.

“We gotta go!” Cole yelled at Stella and Joe who were crouched down on the floor together. Stella grabbed her gun and stuck it down into the waistband of her pants as she got to her feet. Joe helped her stand and they looked at David.

David had collapsed on the floor inside the circle and he was unconscious now. The spinning ball or hole in their reality or doorway or whatever it had been, was gone now. There was only the ozone smell in the air from the crackling electricity.

The sandstorm was already dying down, but the building was still shaking, still ready to collapse.

“Get David!” Cole yelled at Stella. “We need to get out of here. This building’s going to collapse!”

Stella darted to the painted circle. She scooped David up in her arms, and Joe followed her through the debris as the roof caved in behind them, crashing down section by section as they both ran to the doorway.

All of them got outside of the church as large sections of the roof fell down to the floor behind them. Cole and Begay dragged Palmer down the wood steps, and then down the path through the rock garden and into the dirt street of the ghost town. Stella cradled David in her arms, and then she dropped down to her knees and set him down on the sand near Palmer.

“Is he …?” Cole asked Stella.

“He’s still breathing,” she told him as tears streamed down her face.

Cole looked at Palmer. He was still breathing, too. But he had lacerations on his face and hands, and he looked pale from the snakebites.

A crashing sound from behind them turned all of them around to the church. The roof had caved in all the way, but the walls in front were still standing, and somehow part of the steeple had held up. From the front it still looked almost like a regular church.

But they were out here now; they were safe.

“David won,” Cole said to Stella, and he realized he was crying too. “David, beat it. He sent it back.”

Stella nodded. “It’s over,” she said. “It’s really over.”

Joe hugged Stella, and then he pulled away and smiled at her.

“I’m going to need you two to raise your hands up slowly,” Begay said.

Cole turned around and saw that Begay was pointing his service pistol at him.

CHAPTER SEVENTY-FOUR

“W
hat are you doing?” Stella yelled at Begay.

“He’s a wanted criminal.”

“He saved your life!” Stella screamed at Begay.

“It’s okay,” Cole told Stella and he raised his hands up a little in front of him.

“I need you to take your gun out and throw it over to me,” Begay told Cole.

Cole nodded, indicating that he understood. He reached inside his coat and pulled his gun out slowly and held it with two fingers by the barrel. He threw it across the sand to Begay where it landed with a thud.

Cole raised his hands again. “Take me,” he said. “I’m the one you want. Just let them go.”

“He was helping them get here,” Joe told Begay, “helping David get here so he could send the
Darkwind
back to its own world.”

“I didn’t kill those people,” Cole told Begay. “I helped rob that bank in Colorado. One of our guys killed that old man in the bank, not me. But they’re all dead now, including my brother. That thing … the Ancient Enemy killed all of them.”

Begay picked up Cole’s gun from the sand and stuffed it down into the waistband of his pants. He looked at Stella. “What about you? You have a gun?”

Stella nodded, already resigned to the fact that they were going to get nowhere arguing with this man. “I’ve got one in my waistband,” she said in a low voice. “It’s empty,” she added.

“Throw it over here. Move very slowly.”

The wind was dying down and the air was almost still again. The coyotes were gone. The spiders, snakes, and scorpions had all crawled away to their safe havens.

Stella pulled her gun out slowly and then threw it across the sand to Begay. “You don’t have to do this,” she said.

Begay didn’t answer.

“That man is dying,” Joe said, nodding down at Palmer. “We need to get him to a hospital.”

Begay looked at the four wheelers parked near them, and then he looked back at Joe. “I have my truck parked a few miles away from here. I followed your trail, but I had to follow you on foot after the group of rocks.”

Joe nodded like he understood exactly where Begay was talking about.

“I have a large first aid kit in the back of my truck. There’s anti-venom in there for rattlesnake bites. Agent Palmer will still need medical attention, but the anti-venom will help for now.”

Joe nodded again.

“I want you to take one of your four wheelers and get the anti-venom for me.”

Joe didn’t move.

Begay lowered his gun and holstered it. “I’m not going to arrest you two,” he told Cole and Stella. “I just want to help Palmer and I want all of this to be over. I just needed to have your guns.”

Cole lowered his hands and nodded like he understood, but he still looked wary.

Joe walked over to his four wheeler without another word. He started it and then drove off down the street towards the ghost town.

“What about the FBI agent?” Stella asked Begay. “How are we going to get him out of here?”

Begay just sighed … he didn’t have the answer.

CHAPTER SEVENTY-FIVE

“L
ook what I found,” Joe said as he drove up on the four wheeler with his horse following him. It had taken him nearly an hour to get to Begay’s truck and back. “We can put the agent on my horse and take him back with us,” he said as he smiled.

After the injections of anti-venom, Cole helped Begay load Palmer’s body up onto the horse, laying him facedown over the back of the horse. Joe got into the saddle, and rode the horse with Palmer’s body right behind him.

Cole drove one of the four wheelers and he had Stella with him. Begay drove the other four wheeler with David on the back. They all traveled away from the ghost town.

• • •

Thirty-five minutes later they were at Begay’s Ford Bronco. Begay and Cole laid Palmer down in the back seat. Palmer was somewhat conscious for a few moments, but he didn’t seem to know what was going on, and then he passed out again.

Begay looked at Stella and Cole. “When Agent Palmer wakes up, I’ll tell him that you two got away. But I have to take David back with me. He has an aunt who’s very worried about him.”

Stella nodded. She knew this was coming. She knew there would come a time when she would have to let David go.

Cole knelt down in front of David and gave him a hug. He wiped at tears in his eyes. “Thank you, David, for fighting that thing. For sending it back. For saving all of us.”

“Thank you for helping me,” David said, holding on to Cole tightly.

Cole stood up and then Stella knelt down in the sand in front of David. She was already crying but she smiled at him. “You’re a special kid. Don’t you ever forget that.”

Other books

Home Front by Kristin Hannah
The F- It List by Julie Halpern
Glass Ceilings by A. M. Madden
Legacy and Redemption by George Norris
My Canary Yellow Star by Eva Wiseman
Vanishing Point by Alan Moore
Anyone Who Had a Heart by Burt Bacharach
An Education by Nick Hornby