Devil's Hand Read online




  DEVIL’S HAND

  by M. E. Patterson

  Copyright © 2011, M. E. Patterson

  Cover design by Chris Valentine

  Book design by M. E. Patterson

  All rights reserved.

  This book is a work of fiction. Any resemblance to actual events, places, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  ISBN 978-0-983-84480-8

  Published by Digimonkey Studios

  CONTENTS

  Title

  Copyright

  Acknowledgments

  Dedication

  The Ferry of Shadowtown

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  About the Author

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  Thanks to those who have journeyed with this story at various points along the way: Kurt, Carrie, Kari, Matt, Stephanie, Diane, John, Michelle, the Novels-in-Progress and SlugTribe study groups, and many others.

  This book would not have been possible without you.

  For Katrina, my light in shadow.

  Sway to and fro in the twilight gray;

  This is the ferry for Shadowtown;

  It always sails at the end of the day,

  Just as the darkness closes down.

  Rest, little head, on my shoulder so

  A sleepy kiss is the only fare;

  Drifting away from the world we go,

  Baby and I in the rocking chair.

  See, where the fire logs glow and spark,

  Glitter the lights of the shadowland;

  The raining drops on the window, hark!

  Are ripples lapping upon its strand.

  There, where the mirror is glancing dim,

  A lake lies shimmering, cool and still;

  Blossoms are waving above its brim,

  Those over there on the window sill.

  Rock slow, more slow, in the dusky light,

  Silently lower the anchor down,

  Dear little passenger, say “Good night!”

  We’ve reached the harbor for Shadowtown.

  The Ferry of Shadowtown, Nursery Rhyme

  1

  “THE END TIMES ARE NEARLY upon us! We will all stand in judgment beneath the watchful eyes of our Lord! Come now, to the arms of the King, and repent! Repent for your sins, and you will find everlasting love in the–”

  He had only listened to “Eddie Palisade’s Hour of Faith” for a few minutes out of sheer curiosity and a certain morbid fascination. Too hellfire-and-brimstone for Trent’s taste, but the syndicated radio show was immensely popular with the God-fearing crowd. Trent had found it on three separate stations as he searched the band for some decent music.

  Thick drops of rain splattered against the windshield of the rented moving van. Ahead, the flat horizon glowed like a neon tube set in the sand of the south Nevada desert, and beyond stood the hypercolor wasteland of Las Vegas, a neon monstrosity to which Trent had no interest in returning. He looked sidelong at Susan, asleep in the passenger seat, smiling, blonde hair half-covering the pixie-like features of her face. He would do anything for her, though, even if it meant coming back here.

  The radio hissed through a patch of white noise and then settled on an oldies country music station, a bit weak in strength, but listenable. Johnny Cash cried from the van’s tinny speakers, barely audible above the endless drumming of the rain atop the metal roof. Trent smiled. To Hell with Eddie and the “Hour of Faith.” He’d take Cash as his preacher any day.

  He shifted uncomfortably in the driver’s seat as the van bounced along Interstate 15. His right thigh ached–an old injury from the crash–the only physical wound that had lasted. The wet-slick road trashed the van’s handling, making every steering adjustment a nerve-wracking event. He had always hated traveling. But after the crash, the hatred had become dread. He wondered again why he had let Susan talk him into coming back here.

  He glanced at her, and then at himself in the rearview and used a free hand to adjust the angle of the gray cowboy hat. He didn’t think the hat looked silly. She had said that to him a few months back, on his thirtieth birthday no less, when he’d insisted on wearing it out to meet friends at a bar. She had been teasing, he knew, but still...

  “You look ridiculous,” Susan had said. “Like you’re trying to be that guy from Pale Rider.”

  “You mean Clint Eastwood?”

  Susan frowned. “No, the character, not the actor.”

  “The Preacher?” Trent laughed. “You think I look like an old-west preacher? I’m more like the guy in High Plains Drifter.”

  Susan had smiled at him then, one of her smiles that made him feel weak and strong at the same time. She leaned in and kissed him on the forehead. “You’re not that guy,” she whispered. “That guy’s pure evil. He only looks out for himself. And that’s just not you, honey.”

  Trent smiled at the memory and turned his attention back to the road, fingers drumming on the steering wheel.

  Johnny sang out from the radio, “Well, there’s things that never will be right I know–” And then an intense, screeching burst of static, timed perfectly with a shuddering thump upon the roof of the van that set the entire vehicle to ringing. The noise dashed Trent’s smile and he ground his teeth together in surprise.

  Susan sat up, alert and confused. “Wha–?”

  Trent gripped the steering wheel even tighter as another massive impact dented in the roof above him. The van skidded wildly on the road. He peered through the window, up at the sky, and saw white dots growing larger and larger until one of them resolved into a chunk of ice that slammed into the windshield right in front of him and exploded, sending icy shards in a radial spray across the glass.

  Trent snapped back in his seat. His foot hit the brake. The cowboy hat flipped backwards off his head. The moving van squealed and fishtailed, the popping coming faster now, rapid-fire against the metal panels, a tumultuous barrage of softball-sized hail.

  “Shit!”

  He over-corrected and the vehicle swerved on the two-lane interstate and crossed over the middle before he managed to bring it back into its original lane. Balls of ice smashed against the road and the van. It was all he could do to keep the tires tight against the pavement. Out of the corner of his eye, he could see Susan, fully awake now, gripping the door handle in frozen panic, her lips moving. Trent couldn’t hear anything except the pounding hail.

  He turned his full attention forward again. Something in the road. A tire? A hubcap? No, green and rigid, like a piece of a highway sign. Trent threw the wheel to the left, desperate to avoid the debris, but too late. The broken sign jumped halfway up onto the hood, then screeched back down, gouging the paint, until it vanished beneath the tires.

  The van screeched, swayed, and veered off into the left lane again. Then Trent heard the loud pop and felt the sickening sideways drift. The van careened out of control.


  He jammed the brake to the floor and squeezed the wheel in a death-grip, gritting his teeth as the van pitched off the left shoulder and headed for dirt. He wrenched his right hand free of the wheel, threw his arm across Susan’s chest, and felt her slam against it as the vehicle dove into the muddy desert and slid to an awkward stop.

  Everything went quieter for a moment, save the hail, which continued its staccato rhythm in time to Cash singing, “Well I know I had it coming, I know I can’t be free–”

  “Susan, baby, you alright?” Trent leaned across the cab, arm still pinning his wife to her seat.

  She looked up at him, eyes wide and mouth agape. She blinked, coughed, and then formed a weak smile. “Holy shit,” she said.

  Another massive ball of hail exploded against the windshield. They both jumped.

  They looked at each other for a silent moment and then began to laugh, quietly at first, inaudible above the din, and then louder, until they were both cackling, foreheads pressed together. Trent kissed her and could feel her shaking with both laughter and adrenaline overload. He pulled back, looked at her with a crazed grin on his face, and shook his head.

  “I think we blew a tire,” he yelled, gesturing behind him with his thumb.

  “Holy shit,” she said again, still chuckling.

  Trent looked around the cab for something–anything–that he might use as a shield against the falling hail. He thought about waiting the storm out, but it didn’t look like it intended to let up soon. He needed to get the van moving, or they might end up stuck in the gathering mud. He couldn’t see anything useful, just the old gray Stetson behind his seat–the hat the hospital staff had given him from the wreckage of the plane. They had thought it was his but he never had the heart to tell them it wasn’t. He grabbed it and put it back on his head, covering up his short black hair. He shrugged and kicked open the driver-side door with his foot.

  “Trent!?” shouted Susan.

  He turned to look at her. “What?”

  She gave him one of those you’re-doing-something-stupid-again looks that both infuriated him and made him smile. Susan had an arsenal of those kinds of looks; it was part of what made him love her. And Trent had a history of doing stupid things since the crash. Maybe it was facing certain death and winning that had left him dull to the sense of threat. Or maybe the impact with the ground had just knocked a few screws loose. He wasn’t quite sure.

  “It’s too dangerous!” she shouted. Another icy softball punctuated her statement by smashing against the windshield right in front of her. She winced.

  “Gotta change the tire!” Trent replied. “Or we’ll get stuck in this mud!”

  She stared at him for a moment and then, with a determined look, she grabbed the hardcover novel in the passenger-side floorboard, lifted it above her head, and popped open her door.

  “Wait–” said Trent, but she was already out, yelling at the top of her lungs, the book barely covering her head.

  He stared for a moment, irritated but not surprised. Susan was like that. Farmer’s daughter, never one to stand by while others worked. He shrugged and leapt out the driver’s side and into the pounding hail, expecting that he could make it to the back of the truck without any major damage. After all, he was the luckiest man alive, right?

  The first ball smacked against his arm, bringing up an immediate welt and intense, stinging pain. The second smacked against his denim-covered thigh as he dashed toward the back of the van. The third chunk of ice crashed down atop his head. The sudden shot of pain was like a hammer blow, blinding, and he reeled and barely caught himself on a handhold at the back of the U-Haul as the cowboy hat tumbled to the ground.

  Susan was there and already had the back of the van open and had jumped inside. She was rummaging through the few pieces of furniture and boxes. Trent grabbed the fallen hat and then managed to climb gingerly in next to her. He slumped down in a beat-up old recliner they had taken from her apartment. Most of the stuff in the van had belonged to Susan. After the Gaming Control Board blacklisted him, they needed money. Trent’s expensive items brought in more cash at the pawnshops. Pawnshops and the GCB–two more reasons he hated seeing that glowing city on the horizon again.

  “Yes!” She held up an old whiteboard she had used while studying for her nursing exam. It was large enough for them both to hide under if they crowded close.

  “That’ll work,” said Trent. He reached up to touch the sore spot on his head. His fingers came away with sticky blood. “Dammit.”

  “Oh, honey, are you okay?” Susan set the whiteboard down and rushed over to him.

  He waved her off. “No, no, don’t worry about it. It’s fine.” He jammed the Stetson back onto his head and grinned at her, but her expression still showed worry. “I’ve had a lot worse.”

  She gave him a plaintive look.

  “Come on,” he said and got up from the recliner. He walked over to the spare tire hanging on the inside wall of the van, next to a hand-crank jack. “Let’s change a tire.”

  The off-road jaunt had sent the front driver’s-side tire across a jagged chunk of rock, cutting its rubber flesh like a knife. No way would this roll any further. Trent brought the new tire over, trying his best to avoid the crashing hail as Susan struggled to keep them both beneath the whiteboard.

  They worked as a team, Susan holding the flashlight and whiteboard as Trent worked to break the lug nuts on the ruined wheel. Every few minutes, he heard her yelp as a ball of ice crashed down on some part of her that had snuck out from beneath the rectangular shield. He wanted to tell her to quit–to get back inside the truck and let him handle this–but he knew better. She wouldn’t leave him here by himself, even if he told her to.

  Trent forced his weight down on the tire iron, struggling to break the last nut. “Dammit!” he swore, as the hail battered the whiteboard over his head. He summoned as much strength as he could find and gave the tire iron a powerful shove. The lug nut broke with a pop, nearly sending Trent pitching forward to the ground as the tire iron started to spin. He dropped to his knee, removed the final nut, and pulled off the useless tire.

  The hail stopped, as sudden as it had come.

  Susan looked up at the sky and then down at Trent with a quizzical look on her face. He shrugged. The rain had not abated, but at least the pounding hail had quit. She hesitantly lowered the whiteboard. A sudden, sickening thwack startled them both. They looked at the top of the van as Susan shone the flashlight on it. A thin stream of–blood?–was running in a rivulet down the white side-panel.

  Trent dropped the tire and stood up. “What the–?”

  Another splat as something landed on the van’s hood and they both jumped again. A fish? Another slammed down next to it, splattering Trent with blood. He grimaced and leapt back, away from the van.

  Susan screamed as a sudden multitude of fish began to rain down. Panicked, she dropped the whiteboard and ran for the back of the truck, still shrieking, hands covering her head.

  Trent watched her go, astounded. He had never seen her so terrified, not once in the years they had been together. She usually had a remarkable fortitude and a stern strength in the face of obstacles. But this... He looked up as dead fish began bouncing off the top of the van.

  Fucking Eddie is right, he thought.

  He grabbed the fallen whiteboard and sprinted for the back of the van. He reached it and found Susan curled up inside the truck, tears streaming down her face.

  “You okay, baby?!” he shouted.

  “Jesus Christ!” She looked at him with tears in her eyes. “What does it look like?”

  Trent climbed in and put an arm around her. “It’s just fish.”

  She sobbed. “It’s not about the fish, Trent.” Tears streamed down her face. “It’s everything. Everything’s gone wrong. We shouldn’t have come back here. The job at the hospital and fucking James and you didn’t want to be here anyway and your head. This place fucking hates us both–”

  Tren
t grabbed her by the shoulders and kissed her on the lips. She kissed him back, hard.

  After a moment, they pulled away and Trent looked her in the eyes and smiled. “Come on, babe,” he said, gesturing toward the storm raging around them. “It’s just fish. Happens sometimes. Bad storm, tornado picks up some garbage from a lake and throws it a few miles. It’ll be over soon. Least it’s not hail.”

  They stared at each other for a moment. Finally, Susan cracked a tentative smile.

  Trent laughed. “You gotta find the humor in this, right?”

  Susan nodded and took the whiteboard from him. “Okay,” she said, smile widening. “Thanks.”

  After a minute, the rain of fish lightened, and they made their way to the front of the van, to the ruined tire. Susan lifted up the whiteboard, just in time to catch another bloody slap on top of it. Trent dove under the shield and grabbed the spare tire. Something about fish dropping from the sky encouraged him to work harder. Then the pace picked back up again, as another wave of slimy bodies splattered against the van and the pavement and the muddy shoulder, some still alive, flopping and writhing as they died.

  “This is awful!” shouted Susan, struggling to be heard over the thumping sounds of flesh against the metal van.

  “At least it doesn’t hurt as much,” Trent replied without looking up from his work. He had two of the lug nuts back on the new wheel; two to go.

  Susan stumbled as a particularly hefty fish slammed down atop the whiteboard. Blood ran off the edges in glimmering red streams. “Hurry up!” she yelled.

  “Okay, got it!” Trent torqued the final nut down and kicked the release on the jack. The van slumped back down, mud squelching from beneath the shiny new tire. “Let’s go.”

  They dove into the cab and slammed the door shut. Susan scrambled across the center into the passenger seat. She dumped the whiteboard into the space behind them.

  She looked at the windshield, now nearly opaque with fish guts and bloody smears. The periodic thumping against the roof seemed to have a predictable rhythm. “What the fuck?!” she exclaimed, laughing. “This is insane!”