CHAPTER 13
The End of the Trail
When they got home, there was an unwelcome
surprise waiting for them. Scratched into the green paint of their
front door was a single word:
Furnace.
Jennifer lost it. She began kicking at the scratch
marks furiously.
“Come out!” She screamed to the air above
her.
“Come out and fight! Cowards!” She
punctuated each sentence with another kick. The door rattled on its
hinges.
“Ssshhh!” Elizabeth pulled her back away from the
door in a hug until her daughter collapsed. “Baby, that’s not going
to help! That’s not going to get him back.”
Jennifer could only sit on the doorstep in her
mother’s arms, sobbing. Her mother cried with her for a while, but
before long the wheels were turning again. “Whoever did this left
evidence. Let’s get to work. You look around the house, and I’ll
focus on the doorstep. Come on, baby, get up. That’s it. Can you do
this?”
With a sniff and a nod, Jennifer got started.
Unfortunately, Phoebe had been out of the car for a few minutes,
and the few places where there might have been visible tracks were
her favorite places to run. Before Jennifer could begin to
interpret the few undisturbed impressions she could find, she
looked up and saw a face looking out the window next door.
It was Mrs. Blacktooth, glowering at her.
Suddenly, a lot of things made sense. The hatred
this family had for her. The way their church had rejected her
mother years ago. The word “prophecy.” The way they would watch her
father, and all of the Scales family, closely. How easy it would be
to slip next door that morning and scratch the front door while no
one was watching. And above all, the way Eddie had been acting
lately.
“Hey!” she called out to the woman in the window.
In an instant, the scowling face disappeared. “Hey!” She
began to walk across the yard toward the Blacktooth house.
“What’s going on? Jennifer, where are you
going?”
“It’s them!”
“Honey, what do you—no, wait!”
Elizabeth tried to grab her daughter by the
shoulder, but her hand was too easy to shake off. It took a bear
hug in the middle of the lawn to get Jennifer to stop her march and
pay attention.
“Mom, it’s obvious! They’re trying to get
the furnace and they took Dad because they think he can help! Look
at the evidence!”
“Jennifer, come inside. Let’s talk about
this—”
“He’s been gone more than a day. If he’s over
there—”
“You can’t know that. And if he is, what are you
going to do about it?”
“I don’t need to be in dragon form to kick those
jerks’ asses.” She started to move again, but Elizabeth held on
with both arms clasped.
“Not every problem can be solved by kicking a
jerk’s ass, sweetheart. And we don’t even know it’s them. You’re
jumping to conclusions.”
“What’s your plan, Mom?” Jennifer shouted,
redirecting her rage. “Sit at the kitchen table and work through
all the possibilities while Dad dies next door? Are you really that
unfeeling?”
Her mother’s eyes narrowed. “Get over yourself,
kid. You’re way out of line. I deal with death every day. And I’m
telling you that if you go through that family’s front door, you’ll
die.”
Jennifer stopped struggling and stared. “You know
what they are, don’t you? You’ve known, this whole time. We’ve been
putzing around the highway, and you knew!”
“We still can’t be sure it’s them, Jennifer. We
have to approach this methodically, based on evidence and a plan.
That’s why police usually handle—”
“Oh, no, of course, Mom! It’s probably not
these beaststalkers. It’s probably the beaststalkers two
doors down! Or the ones at the bakery, or the bookstore! I can’t
believe I’ve wasted this day with you. Dad could have been home by
now.” With that, she broke free from her mother and continued
toward the Blacktooth house.
“Jennifer, don’t!” She could hear her mother about
to cry again from the edge of their lawn.
“I can’t believe you’re such a damn coward! We’re
talking about Dad!”
Her mother’s voice was desperate now. “Jennifer, if
you go in there they’ll kill you. They must know by now what you
are. Please. Come back into the house. I can help. We can do this
together, if we talk it through.”
“You go ahead and talk, Mom. Talk all you like.”
She was at the front door. It stood stark and black before her.
Without looking back, she raised her foot and kicked it off its
hinges.
Mrs. Blacktooth was waiting for her in the foyer.
She was a tall woman, though not as tall as Eddie or Jennifer. Her
raven hair streamed down her shoulders onto a housewife’s modest
blue-and-white-checkered dress and frilly apron. Meticulous makeup
shaped her nose and cheeks, and her sapphire eyes flashed with
disdain. Across her carefully manicured hands, she held a long
sword. The blade did not shine—instead, it seemed to suck the light
out of the doorway.
“We have learned what you are, worm.”
“Where’s my father?”
“We know what he is, too, now. You cannot save
him.”
“Want to bet?”
Jennifer took a step forward. In a flash, the tip
of the dark sword pointed at her throat.
“The Blacktooth blade has killed a beast in every
generation, for the last two thousand years. It will kill again
today.” Something moved behind Mrs. Blacktooth.
“Eddie!” she called out. It was indeed
Eddie, but not as Jennifer remembered him. His face seemed older,
drawn. “Eddie, please!”
“You should leave now,” he told her over his
mother’s shoulder. “Your father isn’t here.”
“Where is he?”
He ignored the question. “I can’t save you.”
This betrayal was too much. For what seemed like
the hundredth time in the last day, she felt tears well up. “Eddie,
how could you?”
“That’s enough. Justice must be served. It’s time
to die.” Mrs. Blacktooth stepped forward and pulled her sword back
to strike. Jennifer flinched.
Then the sword came down—but slowly, and by its
wielder’s side.
“You are lucky today, worm. Your mother is here. By
my people’s code, I cannot kill a child before the eyes of her
parent.”
“My mother wouldn’t care if you did.” The words
sounded wrong to Jennifer as she said them, but she could not help
herself. Too much was happening to her, all at once.
“Do not let me find you alone. Ever.”
“Go to hell.” Jennifer backed away, still wiping
her cheeks. Neither Blacktooth moved until she was out in the road.
She backed away from her waiting mother.
The idea of going back home was humiliating. And
there was no point staying here, if Eddie was telling the truth.
But where could she go?
She felt Geddy’s feet on her shoe. He swirled up
her leg like a tree trunk, crossed her stomach, and settled on her
left shoulder. With a turn of his tiny head, he opened his bright
red mouth and hissed at the gaping front doorway of the Blacktooth
house.
“Jennifer!” Elizabeth’s called out
desperately.
She didn’t even turn to look. A mixture of anger,
shame, and fear drove her in the other direction. The Blacktooths
had marked her father for a freak. Now he was gone, her mother was
useless, and she was alone.
It was several miles to the mall, walking the same
route she had the October night she had first morphed. Whether it
was that memory, or just the rage and frustration that seeped out
of her very skin, Jennifer thought she felt her insides swirl a
bit. It was nothing, of course—the next crescent moon was still
days away. Easy to shake off, the feeling was soon gone. By the
time she got to Winoka’s typical mall, with its typical parking lot
and typical crowd of people and cars, it was midafternoon.
It was unseasonably warm. She felt the heat and her
own pain, but very little else. She was thirsty. If she went to the
ice-cream shop, she could order a malt and think about what to do
next. Maybe she should try to call Joseph or her grandfather up at
the farm . . .
“Jennifer!” The most welcome voice in the
world.
“Skip!” She practically tackled him with her
embrace.
The delight in his face turned to worry as he saw
her desperation. “What’s the matter?”
Jennifer finally reached the point where she
couldn’t hold back any longer. On the spot, without pausing or
thinking, she simply poured out her entire story, from the fateful
night in Mr. Blacktooth’s truck to her father’s disappearance to
the scene at Eddie’s house. She didn’t know how he would take it,
but the more she told him, the better she felt, and the more right
it seemed to share.
When she was finally done, he stood there with
wide-open eyes for a minute or so.
“Skip? Hello?”
“I’m with you.” He gulped and tried a game smile.
“This is pretty heavy stuff, Jennifer. Maybe your mom’s right—maybe
you should go home and talk this through.”
“Haven’t you been listening?” She could tell from
the way he flinched that he wished he hadn’t been. “She doesn’t
want to do anything, or confront anybody! She’s blathering on about
talking, and waiting, and all this time the Blacktooths have my dad
socked away somewhere!”
“Eddie says they don’t have him at their
house?”
“Yeah. He might be lying, of course. But I don’t
think so. They didn’t seem scared of me at all, so they would have
just told me if they had him in the basement.”
“Huh.” Skip thought for a moment.
“What?”
“Well.” He paused. “Remember that night back in
October you first changed, when Mr. Blacktooth was asking about my
dad?”
“I guess. There was a lot going on.”
“Well later that night, he called about some work
around town my dad was doing. Dad talked to him for a while and
gave him some information on an undeveloped property at the edge of
town. We never figured out why he was interested. A few weeks
later, Dad said that Mr. Blacktooth bought it.”
“So?”
“Well, there’s no one around for miles,” he
explained slowly. “Nobody’s built anything on it, or near it. And
during the winter, Eddie and I went down there a few times for
snowball fights. There’s a huge entrance to the town sewer system
right there. If I wanted to hide something, or someone . . .”
“Skip, you’re a genius! Come on!” She left her malt
half finished on the table and pulled him out of his seat. They had
only gone a few steps when they ran into Susan.
“Hey, guys! What’s up?”
Ten minutes later, as Jennifer finished telling her
everything she had told Skip—it felt so good again!—Susan looked as
though she wished she had never asked.
“Wow.” This was all she said for a while.
“Susan, I’m so sorry I told you I was sick. You,
too, Skip. But we have to find my father. Will you please help?
Three is better than two. Mr. Blacktooth may not be alone, and Dad
may not be in any condition to—”
“Jennifer, hold on!” Susan stopped cold.
She turned impatiently, guessing what her friend
was going to say. “What?”
“Listen, I’m just a little freaked out, and that’s
okay, I believe you. And I forgive you for . . . for pretending you
were sick, like my mom. But we can’t just go running into a sewer
to face this . . . whatever you call it.”
“Beaststalker.”
“Yeah. I mean, it sounds way too scary, for me.
Jennifer, I’m sure you don’t want to hear this, but I don’t think I
can go with you.”
Instead of getting angry, Jennifer took a deep
breath. “Susan, I’ve given you a lot to take in. I can see you’re
really worried about doing this. That’s cool.”
Susan exhaled.
“So you go home. Please . . . just don’t tell
anyone about this.” After a quick hug, she and Skip left their
astonished friend behind.
Winoka’s southeast side was primarily an industrial park. A few family farms pressed up against a strip of dingy wetlands that separated them from the park. It was to this strip, and alongside a steep hill, that Skip led her to the sewer entrance.
The culvert was large enough that they could nearly
stand straight up inside. Before they went in, Skip clutched her
arm. He was visibly shaking.
“Jennifer. This is for real. You could get hurt.
Are you sure you want to do this?”
Jennifer turned her face up to the sky. Two eagles
were circling far above. The scent of lilacs was thick in the air.
“All I can think about is my father, and how much he loved flying.”
She looked back at Skip. “You’re a great friend, Skip, but I have
to set that aside if you’re not with me. I’m doing this for my dad.
This is no time for cold feet.”
“Right.” He didn’t look happy at the thought, but
her resolve was apparently contagious. “Let’s go, then.”
The culvert led deep into the hillside and they
faced their first problem—the darkness. Fortunately, Skip had a
solution.
“Dad smokes cigars,” he explained as he flicked a
lighter. “He’s always looking for a light.”
It flickered faintly, but it let them see an
opening directly in front of their feet that they might have fallen
into otherwise. Ladder rungs were built into the concrete, all the
way down into blackness.
“I’ll go first,” Skip offered.
“Very chivalrous. But remember Bob Jarkmand?”
“Hmm. Yeah, okay, I should stop coddling
you.”
Smiling back at him, she took the lighter and
carefully stepped onto the first rung. A few steps down, she tried
to get a look around—but she could barely see past Geddy, who sat
calmly on her shoulder, much less anything about the sewer around
them.
The smell, however, was unavoidable.
A year ago, the darkness and the stench would have
been too much for her. She knew she would have gone running back to
her mother (or her father, had he been available). But today, she
would endure it. She had to.
That thought carried her all the way down to the
last rung and onto a new level of the sewer system. Now she could
hear running water. There appeared to be a narrow stream going
through this hall, or room—maybe a utility room? The lighter did
not reveal much.
Then, on the wall in front of her, she saw the
third one-word message from her father’s kidnapper, written in the
substance it identified:
Blood.
The rashness of her pursuit finally hit home.
They were expecting her. She looked back up at Skip to tell
him to hurry back up. He seemed almost frozen on the rungs above
her, staring at her—or behind her?
Before she could decide, the shadow behind her
swung. The blow landed on the back of her neck, and with an
oomph she crumpled to the floor. Her last sight was of Geddy
scrambling into the safety of a dark corner as the lighter went out
and she slipped into nothingness.