Goosebumps: The Blob That Ate Everyone (6 page)

Read Goosebumps: The Blob That Ate Everyone Online

Authors: R. L. Stine

Tags: #Children's Books.3-5

I was so upset about Adam ruining my story that I had forgotten!

“You mean—?” I started. My mouth suddenly felt very dry.

“There is a Blob Monster waiting in the basement,” Alex said in a low
whisper. “Waiting for fresh meat.”

“Fresh meat,” I repeated. I gulped.

Alex and I froze for a moment, staring at each other in the darting
candlelight.

“But there is no such thing as a Blob Monster,” I said finally. “I made it
up. So how can a Blob Monster be hiding in my basement?”

Alex’s eyes flashed behind her glasses. “You’re right!” she cried. “They
don’t exist! So… no problem!” She smiled.

But her smile faded when we heard a noise.

A heavy
THUD THUD.

I gasped. “What was
that
?”

We both turned to the door.

And heard the sound again.
THUD THUD.

Heavy and slow. Like footsteps.

“Is it… is it coming from the b-b-b-?” I was so scared I was stuttering.

Alex nodded. “The basement,” she whispered, finishing the word for me.

I picked up a candlestick. The light bounced over the wall and floor. I
couldn’t stop my hand from shaking.

Holding it in front of me, I made my way into the hall.

Alex huddled close, keeping with me step for step.

THUD THUD.

We both stopped. The sounds were closer. Louder.

Taking a deep breath, I stepped up to the basement door.

Alex hung back, her hands pressed to her face. Behind her glasses, her eyes
were wide with fear.

THUD THUD.

“It’s coming up the stairs!” I cried. “Run!”

Too late.

I heard another
THUD—
and the door crashed open.

 

 
22

 

 

A beam of white light made me shut my eyes.

My hands shot up to shield myself.

Behind the beam of light, a large, dark figure lumbered heavily through the
door.

“Dad!” I gasped.

My dad lowered the flashlight to the floor.

“Dad! What were you
doing
down there?” I demanded in a high, shrill
voice.

“Are you two okay?” Dad asked, narrowing his eyes at us. “Why do you look so
frightened?”

“We… uh… well…” I didn’t know how to explain. I
couldn’t
tell
him we thought he was a Blob Monster!

Dad pointed to the basement with the flashlight. “I’ve been down there
checking the circuit breakers,” he explained. “I can’t figure out why the lights
haven’t come back on.” He scratched his head.

“We were looking for you,” Alex said. “We shouted down to the basement for
you.”

“I went across the street to check on your mother. Then I went into the back
room of the basement,” Dad replied. “I guess I couldn’t hear you.”

He shook his head. “What a strange storm. It came up so suddenly. And then it
just stopped. As if someone turned it on, then turned it off.”

Alex and I glanced at each other. “Yes. It was weird,” Alex agreed.

I took a deep breath. “Uh… Dad?” I started.

He beamed the light at my feet. “Yes, Zackie?”

“Dad… when you were down in the basement… was there anything else down
there with you?”

His heavy eyebrows rose up on his forehead. He stared hard at me. “Excuse
me?”

“Did you see anything strange down there? Or hear anything strange?”

He shook his head. “No. Nothing.” His eyes locked on mine. “Are you afraid,
Zackie? I know you have problems with being in the dark like this. Would you
like to hang out with me for a while?”

“No. I’m fine. Really,” I insisted. “I just wondered…”

Dad stepped past us and started toward the kitchen. “I’m going to call the
electric company,” he said. “They should have fixed the lines by now.”

I watched him make his way down the hall. The white beam of light bounced in
front of him.

I held my candle up to the basement door. “I guess the typewriter didn’t work this time,” I told Alex happily. “No Blob
Monster.”

“Let’s go downstairs and check it out!” she replied.

“Huh?” I backed away from the open doorway. “Are you crazy?”

“We have to know if the old typewriter has powers or not,” Alex said. “We
have no choice, Zackie. We have to check out the basement.”

“But—but—”

She pushed past me onto the basement stairway. She walked down the first two
steps.

Then she turned back to me. “Are you coming with me, or not?”

 

 
23

 

 

Did I have a choice?

No.

For one thing, I had the candle. I couldn’t let Alex go down there by
herself—in total darkness.

But I held back, my heart pounding, my mouth dry as cotton. “Dad said he
didn’t hear anything,” I said. “So there is no reason for us to go.”

“That’s lame and you know it,” Alex replied. She took another step down. “Am
I going down alone?”

I forced my rubbery legs to move. “No. Wait up. I’m coming,” I said.

I lowered my foot to the first stair. “But we’ll only stay down for a second—right?”

“Just long enough to see if there is a Blob Monster hiding down there,” Alex
replied.

Waiting for fresh meat,
I added silently.

I stumbled on the next step. But caught myself on the railing.

The candle flame dipped low, but didn’t blow out.

The basement spread in front of us like a black pit.

We both stopped at the bottom of the steps—and listened.

Silence.

I raised the candle high. Tall stacks of cartons came into view. Behind them,
I could see the two wooden wardrobe closets where Mom and Dad store our winter
clothes.

“The Blob Monster could be hiding behind those tall cartons,” Alex whispered.
“Or in those closets.”

I swallowed hard. “Alex—give me a break,” I whispered back.

We made our way slowly to the stacks of cartons. I raised the candle high. We
peeked behind the first stack.

Nothing hiding there.

“Can we go now?” I pleaded.

Alex rolled her eyes. “Don’t you want to know the truth? Don’t you want to
know if your typewriter really has powers or not?”

“No. Not really,” I whispered.

She ignored me. She grabbed the candle from my hand and moved behind the next
stack of cartons.

“Hey—give that back!” I cried.

“You’re too slow,” she snapped. “Keep close behind me. You’ll be okay.”

“I’m not okay,” I insisted. “I want to go back upstairs.”

Alex moved quickly between the stacks of cartons. I had to hurry to keep up.

I never liked the basement. In fact, I was afraid of the basement even in the
daytime.

I knew there really wasn’t anything to be afraid of. But sometimes, telling
yourself that doesn’t do any good at all.

“Alex—” I whispered. “Can we—?”

I stopped when I heard the sound. A soft slapping, from somewhere against the
wall.

Slap… slap… slap

slap…

Steady as a heartbeat.

Alex had moved away from me. I saw her walking quickly toward the laundry
room.

“Alex—!” I hurtled across the room to her—so fast, I bumped into her.

“Hey—watch it!” she exclaimed.

“Alex—it’s down here!” I shrieked. “It’s here! It’s really here! Listen! Do
you hear it?”

 

 
24

 

 

We both froze.

The steady, rhythmic sound rose up from the far wall.

Slap… slap… slap… slap…

“Do you hear it?” I whispered.

Alex nodded. Her mouth had dropped open in shock. She gripped the candlestick
in both hands.

Slap… slap…

“What are we going to do?” I whispered.

“It’s waiting for fresh meat,” Alex murmured.

“I know. I know!” I groaned. “You don’t have to say it.” I pulled her arm.
“Come on. We have to tell Dad.”

I gazed through the darkness to the stairway. The steps seemed a million
miles away.

“We’ll never make it,” I choked out. “We have to run past the Blob Monster to
reach the stairs.”

Slap… slap…

“What’s our choice?” Alex shot back. “Pick one, Zackie. Choice one: We stay here. Choice two: We don’t stay here.”

She was right, of course. We had to make a run for it.

Maybe if we ran fast enough, we’d take it by surprise.

Maybe the Blob Monster was too big to run fast.

Slap… slap… slap… slap…

“Let’s go,” Alex urged. “I’ll go first since I have the light.”

“Uh… can we run side by side?” I asked softly.

She nodded.

Without another word, we took off.

 

 
25

 

 

Our shoes thudded over the concrete basement floor.

I struggled to keep at Alex’s side. My legs felt so heavy, as if I were
running uphill!

“Whoooa!” I cried out when the lights flashed on.

Startled, we both stopped running.

I blinked hard, waiting for my eyes to adjust to the bright ceiling light.

Slap… slap…

We both turned to the far wall to see the Blob Monster.

And stared at a pale white hand slapping against the wall beneath the open
basement window.

A
hand
?

Slap… slap…

“It—it’s a rubber glove!” Alex exclaimed.

“It’s one of Dad’s gardening gloves,” I choked out.

Dad usually leaves his heavy gardening gloves on that window ledge. One of
the gloves was hanging from a nail. And the wind kept slapping it against the
wall.

Alex laughed first. Then I joined in.

It felt good to laugh. And it felt especially good to know that no Blob
Monster was hiding in the basement.

What a relief!

Alex and I climbed happily up the stairs. Then she made her way to the front
door. “Thanks for the awesome entertainment!” she teased. “It was better than a
movie! See you tomorrow.”

She started out the door, then turned back. “We definitely got a little crazy
tonight, Zackie. I mean, about that old typewriter.”

“Yeah. I guess,” I admitted. “It doesn’t have any special powers. It didn’t
make a Blob Monster appear in the basement. And all the lights came back on
without me having to type that they came on.”

“The typewriter didn’t cause
anything
to happen tonight. It was all
coincidence,” Alex said.

“Oooh. Big word!” I teased.

She slammed the door behind her.

 

“Are you doing anything, Zackie?” Mom asked.

“Not really.”

It was Saturday afternoon, and I was just hanging out. I had a ton of homework to do. So I was lying on the couch, staring
up at the ceiling, thinking up excuses not to do it.

“Can you run to the store for me?” Mom asked. “The Enderbys are coming for
dinner, and I need a few things.” She held up a slip of paper. “It’s a short
list.”

“No problem,” I said, climbing up from the couch.

Maybe I can add a few items to the list, I thought, taking it from her hand.
Like maybe a few candy bars. Or a box of Pop-Tarts….

I love to eat Pop-Tarts raw.

“Ride your bike, okay?” Mom asked. “I’m kind of in a hurry. Come straight
back—okay?”

“No problem,” I repeated. I tucked the list into the back pocket of my jeans
and headed to the garage to get my bike.

The afternoon sun poured down. The air felt hot and dry. More like summer
than spring.

I jumped onto my bike and pedaled down the driveway standing up. I turned
toward town and sat down, pedaling fast, riding no-hands.

A few minutes later, I leaned my bike against the brick wall of Jack’s.
Jack’s is mainly a meat market, but they sell fruits, and vegetables, and other
groceries too.

The bell over the glass door clanged as I stepped inside. Mrs. Jack was at
her usual spot, leaning her elbows on the counter beside the cash register.

Mrs. Jack is a big, platinum-haired woman with about a dozen chins. She wears
bright red lipstick and long, dangling earrings.

She is really nice to everyone—except kids.

She hates kids. I guess she thinks we only come into her store to steal. When
a kid comes in, she follows him up and down the aisles and never takes her eyes
off him.

I closed the door behind me and reached into my back pocket for my shopping
list.

Mrs. Jack had the newspaper spread out in front of her on the counter. She
raised her eyes slowly and made a disgusted face at me. “Help you?” she
muttered.

I waved the list. “Just buying a few things for my mom.”

She grabbed the list out of my hand and squinted at it. Then she handed it
back with a grunt. “Tuna is in the back on the bottom,” she said.

“Thanks.” I picked up a shopping basket and hurried to the back of the store.

A big air conditioner rattled against the wall. A fan in front of it blew
cold air down the narrow aisle.

I found the tuna quickly and dropped two cans into my basket.

The long, white display counter of the meat department stretched in front of
me. Behind the glass, cuts of red meat were lined up in perfect rows.

Beside the counter, an enormous side of beef hung from the ceiling.

That is really gross! I thought.

It looked like an entire cow—stripped of its hide—hanging upside down.

Yuck.

I started to turn away from it—when the dead cow moved.

It swung to the right, then swung back.

I stared in surprise.

The cow swung further, to the right, then back.

I watched it swinging on its rope, swinging heavily from side to side.

And then I heard a harsh, whispered voice:

“Fresh meat… Fresh meat…”

 

 
26

 

 

“Ohhh.” A low moan escaped my throat as I gaped at the side of beef, swinging
so slowly, back and forth, back and forth.

“Fresh meat…”
came the raspy whisper again.
“Fresh meat…”

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