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The Devil's Cat Part 30

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Romy took one step inside and then hurled himself out of the small foyer and deliberately rolled down the two steps into the large hall. His eyes had caught movement to his right as he swung open the door and stepped in.

Jackson Dorgenois with a knife in his hand.

Romy had been only a fair athlete in high school, but he did remember how to roll. He came up facing his brother with the .38 in his right hand. He c.o.c.ked back the hammer.

Jackson laughed at him.

Romy began pulling the trigger.

Smoking holes began appearing in Jackson's chest as the hollow-nosed slugs impacted with flesh. The booming of the pistol was loud in the home; Romy could see some woman that looked vaguely familiar to him running around with a knife in her hand. Then it came to him who it was: Mary Claverie.

Romy felt sick to his stomach as the blood from his brother's wounds began spurting out of his chest. Jackson staggered backward and fell out of the open front door. He was screaming strangely; not a human sound. But more like a big cat.

Whirling, Romy ducked just as Mary lunged at him with the large knife. He tripped her and she fell heavily, slicing open her arm when she fell on the sharp blade.

Her screaming joined Jackson's strange catlike howling. Jumping to his feet, the empty pistol in his hand, Romy literally ran over Bonnie Rogers, knocking her to the floor. The woman's pale skin, not touched by sunlight in more than two decades, looked sick and evil to Romy. Her eyes were filled with hate and depravity.

She hissed at him, like a cat.

Romy kicked her on the side of the head and ran toward his study. He was conscious of his brother trying to get up off the porch. And even more conscious of the stinking blood that was pouring from Jackson's chest.

Romy jerked over his gun cabinet and pulled out two shotguns, quickly loading one, then the other. He looked up as Jackson appeared in the archway of the study. Jackson was ... laughing. laughing.

When he spoke, his voice was very deep and hollow-sounding. "You're a fool, Romy. But then, you always were.

Romy lifted the shotgun, a Browning five shot autoloader and blew his brother clear out of the archway. He dropped the Browning and lifted the Police Ithaca pump, a sawed-off model holding eight sh.e.l.ls. He lowered the shotgun as Mary and Bonnie ran to Jackson's side and began dragging him out of the house. As they dragged, they cursed Romy.

Romy knew he should shoot both women, but he could not bring himself to do it. He stood and watched them drag his brother into the car he had noticed parked in the drive, in front of the house. He watched as they drove off, still hurling curses at Romy.

Romy walked back into his study and reloaded his pistol and Browning. He gathered up all his rifles and shotguns and carried them out to his car, putting them in the backseat. That foul-smelling blood from Jackson was very nearly overpowering in its stench. He closed the door to his house and drove back to Colter's house. He could not remember ever being so tired.

"Brother Elmer has betrayed us," Lester told his flock. "He has gone over to the side of filth and sin. But we shall not be deterred from our task. Them dirty books and magazines has got to be dis-troyed. And them that sells them terrible things is just as guilty as them that reads 'em."

"Amen, Brother!" the flock responded.

No one had noticed Sadie was gone.

"We forgot our signs last time out," Brother Lester reminded his flock. "Let's rejoice for a moment and then take to the streets like good soldiers."

n.o.body much wanted to shout and prance; everybody was kinda tired and a little dejected. Brother Lester asked Sister Lucille and Sister Edna if they couldn't perhaps whip up some iced tea and look around and see if there wasn't some of them cookies from dinner left over.

"We'll march just at dusk," Lester announced.

As the afternoon slowly waned, a deceptive calmness settled over the town of Becancour. But those who were part of what was happening, willing and unwilling, on the side of Dark or Light, knew the sudden quiet denoted anything but a calmness.

The cats and dogs worked their way closer to the earth on which they lay. Side by side, the cats and dogs lay touching, each drawing strength and comfort from the other. They waited.

The splas.h.i.+ng and sudden eruptions of dead but living flesh from the dark waters of the swamps and bayous had ceased as those fish-belly-white beings had antic.i.p.ated the call from the minions of the Dark One and surfaced-free from their watery confines at last.

Lula's Love-Inn was filled to capacity and beyond, wall to wall packed with unwashed human flesh. They sat at tables and at the bar, they lined the walls and leaned against the silent jukebox. Men and women and young people with dead evil eyes and willingly lost souls.

They waited for the call to gather.

At the old Dorgenois home, the Princess and her followers had dressed in their finest. They now waited for darkness to fall, for the night to displace day, for all vestiges of sunlight to be gone, for any trace of G.o.d's hand to be shrouded in darkness. Only then could they move.

Dave Porter and Bette and Max Encalarde and Louis Black and Frank and Thelma Lovern and Nate Slater and Carl Nichols and Bob Gannon and Mrs. Carmon and a dozen others with souls as black as midnight had gathered at the motel. They waited, breathing the stinking air polluted by their own bodies.

A hundred or more young people had gathered around the local drive-in where they used to bring their girls and drink c.o.kes and eat hot dogs and hamburgers and french fries. They sat in their cars and trucks and on their motorcycles and looked at Mr. Janson-the guy who owned the drive-in. He stood inside the little building where all the good stuff was cooked and stared back at the sullen young people. Janson didn't know what in the h.e.l.l was going on, but these d.a.m.ned kids were making him very uneasy, he knew that for an ironclad fact.

"How we gonna do it?" a teenager asked another.

"Slow," his companion replied. "Pay him back for all them greasy, overpriced burgers."

"How 'bout them kids in there with him?" another asked.

"They had their chance. They turned us down, didn't they?"

"Yeah," a girl spoke from the truck parked next to the car. "Now it's too late."

"When?" the question was tossed out.

"Full dark."

Mrs. Wheeler sat on her front porch and listened to the silence around her. She was old enough to remember when conditions came very close to paralleling what was now taking place in this small, quiet off-the-beaten-path town. She had forgotten all about that. She'd been just a little girl ... ten years old, maybe. Sixty-five-odd years ago.

She could remember that her parents had been very frightened that day and longer night. But when G.o.d's dawn broke free, everybody seemed to settle right down. And it had never happened again.

Until now.

Mrs. Wheeler didn't think the next dawn would improve a d.a.m.n thing.

Not this time.

Mrs. Wheeler sat with a shotgun across her lap. Her eyes moved from left to right. Those young punks were back; they thought they'd been slipping up on her, but she had seen them. Mrs. Wheeler waited.

Old Man Jobert had been drinking all day. Good homemade wine that he'd made hisself. Jobert lived a few miles out from Becancour, off the road and 'bout a mile inside the deep swamp. Jobert had fought in the big war, back in '44, and then, with a taste for adventure in his mouth, he'd joined up with the French Foreign Legion and got his a.s.s shot in Southeast Asia.

d.a.m.n kids comin' back from Vietnam couldn't tell him nothin' about that miserable place. Jobert had been fightin' there when some of them were in diapers.

Jobert took another swig of homemade wine and opened his war trunk, carefully, lovingly, taking out his French Foreign Legion uniform. That he was still able to fit into the thing showed what hard work done for a man.

He dressed up and put his kepi on his head. He felt like marchin' and singin' the old songs this night. So, by G.o.d, that's what he'd do. Just pole over to the road and march into Becancour; maybe go to Lula's and have a drink or two with the boys.

For some reason he could not fathom, Jobert strapped a pistol and cartridge case, and picked up his old .30-06, slinging a bandoleer of ammo over his shoulder.

Brother Lester and his flock were just about ready to go. They had their placards and signs and had changed socks and shoes for the big march.

"Brothers and sisters!" Brother Lester shouted. "Let's march!" march!"

Backslider Brother Elmer stood on a deserted street corner of Becancour and wondered how come the town was so quiet?

And in the Becancour cemetery, Bob Savoie opened his eyes and began pus.h.i.+ng at the lid of his coffin.

SECOND NIGHT OF THREE.

"It's so quiet, Sam," Romy said, stepping out of the house to join Sam on the porch.

"Wait a few hours, it won't be then."

"I still can't believe what I saw happen with Jackson. I can't believe it. It simply is not possible." possible."

"Get it through your head that Jackson is not a human being. Colter believes he sold his soul to the devil when he was just a child. I don't know; I can't say."

"Julie says that our son is ... not of this earth."

"No," Sam said bluntly. "He is not."

"How can you be so sure?"

'Because Nydia told me. Little Sam told her. Dog told Little Sam."

"A dog dog told your son!" told your son!"

"Yes."

"How?"

"I don't know. I was not there. Both my wife and son have powers that are not of this earth. So, too, does Dog. I rather doubt that Dog opened his mouth and spoke English to my son, but somehow he got the message across."

Sonny Pa.s.son, Trooper Norris, and Father Javotte had stepped outside to the porch. They stood quietly, listening.

Both Pa.s.son and Norris could not suppress a chilling shudder at the words.

The last rays of sunlight had vanished; deep purple was now mixed and mingled with darkness. And Sam knew that it was no longer G.o.d's land. It now belonged to the Dark One.

He said as much, his voice low-pitched.

"How could anyone kill a little child like my Guy?" Romy asked.

"If he can be killed," Sam said, "he will not be a little child. He will be transformed into the demon that he was born to be. And it will not be me who kills him."

"Then ... who?"

"Little Sam," Sam said softly.

Brother Lester and his placard-carrying flock had marched up to the main street of town. There they stopped and stared in amazement. The street was so empty someone could have fired a cannon down it not hit a thing but air.

"I knowed we'd picked the wrong time for this here parade," Brother Ira grumbled. "This here street is as empty as Will Jolevare's head."

"Be quiet," Lester said. "I hear singin'. Probably comin' from a jukebox in one of those d.a.m.n saloons."

The singing drifted to the Brothers and Sisters of Lester's c.r.a.p.

"Sautons ensemble! Sautons ensemble! "Sautons ensemble! Sautons ensemble!

Legionnaires, nous ne reviendrons pas.

La bas, les ennemis t'attendent Sois fier, nous allons au combat."

"It's that drunken old fool, Jobert!" Lester said.

"Come on, soldiers of the Lord. Forward, march!" march!"

The line straggled onward, without much enthusiasm, and without a single citizen-soldier in step. Looked like a bunch of duck hunters after a bad hunt.

Aging Legionnaire met the members of c.r.a.p in the center of the street.

"Get out of the street, you old sot!" Lester hollered.

Jobert slipped his rifle off his shoulder and stood his ground. "Non, bordel de merde!" "Non, bordel de merde!"

'What'd he call me?" Lester asked.

"He called you a d.a.m.ned s.h.i.+t," Brother Benny informed the lay preacher.

"How dare he?" Sister Bertha squalled. "Get out of the way, you old fool!" she screamed at Jobert.

"You get out of the way, putain de merde," putain de merde," Jobert replied. Jobert replied.

"'What'd he call me!" Sister Bertha shrieked, her voice very nearly capable of cracking bra.s.s.

Brother Benny took a deep breath. "He called you a s.h.i.+tty wh.o.r.e!"

With a war whoop that would have awed Cochise, Sister Bertha put her act in gear and charged, all two hundred odd pounds of c.r.a.p.

Jobert might have been drunk, but he wasn't stupid. Jobert, soaking wet, might have weighed one thirty-five. No way he could halt the charge of this moose coming at him. So he sidestepped and stuck out his boot. Sister Bertha went rolling up the street, making as much racket as an empty fifty-five-gallon drum tossed off a moving truck.

The march was forgotten and placards tossed aside when Brother Lester shouted, "Get that heathen! He's a.s.saulted Sister Bertha."

Jobert slung his rifle and took off running, cutting into a dark alley, very much aware of Brother Lester's footsteps close behind him.

A shadow fell across the open end of the alley. Jobert put on the brakes and stood staring in horror at the thing that loomed up in front of him, blocking the escape route.

Brave Legionnaire he was, but fighting Arabs and Vietnamese was one kind of battle ... Jobert didn't even know what this thing was!

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