Authors: Dean Koontz
Tommy understood why people liked to be respected, because he received no respect at all. He could see why having a lot of money was desirable. But he did not understand this power thing. He could not figure why anyone would waste a lot of time and energy trying to acquire power over other people. What fun could be gotten from ordering people around, telling them what to do? What if you told them to do the wrong thing, and then what if, because of your orders, people were hurt or wound up broke or something worse? And how could you expect people to like you if you had power over them? After all, Frank had power over Tommy—complete power, total control—and Tommy
loathed
him.
Sometimes he thought he was the only sane person in the family. At other times, he wondered if they were all sane and if he was mad. Whatever the case, crazy or sane, Tommy always felt that he did not belong in the same house with his own family.
As he slipped stealthily out of the kitchen with his can of Coke and two Milanos wrapped in a paper napkin, his parents were querying Mr. Howser about the champagne.
In the back hallway, Frank’s door was open, and Tommy paused for a glimpse of the pumpkin. It was still there, fire in every aperture.
“What you got there?” Frank asked, stepping into the doorway. He grabbed Tommy by the shirt, yanked him into the room, slammed the door, and confiscated the cookies and Coke. “Thanks, snotface. I was just thinking I could use a snack.” He went to the desk and put the booty beside the glowing jack-o’-lantern.
Taking a deep breath, steeling himself for what resistance would mean, Tommy said, “Those are mine.”
Frank pretended shock. “Is my little brother a greedy glutton who doesn’t know how to share?”
“Give me back my Coke and cookies.”
Frank’s grin seemed filled with shark’s teeth. “Good heavens, dear brother, I think you need to be taught a lesson. Greedy little gluttons have to be shown the path of enlightenment.”
Tommy would have preferred to walk away, to let Frank win, to go back to the kitchen and fetch another Coke and more cookies. But he knew that his life, already intolerable, would get far worse if he didn’t make an effort, no matter how futile, to stand up to this stranger who was supposedly his brother. Total, willing capitulation would inflame Frank and encourage him to be even more of a bully than he already was.
“I want my cookies and my Coke,” Tommy insisted, wondering if
any
cookies, even Milanos, were worth dying for.
Frank rushed him.
They fell to the floor, pummeling each other, rolling, kicking, but producing little noise. They didn’t want to draw their folks’ attention. Tommy was reluctant to let his parents know what was happening because they would invariably blame the ruckus on him. Athletic, well-tanned Frank was their dream child, their favorite son, and he could do no wrong. Frank probably wanted to keep the battle secret because their father would put a stop to it, thereby spoiling the fun.
Throughout the tussle, Tommy had brief glimpses of the glowing jack-o’-lantern, which gazed down on them, and he was sure that its grin grew steadily wider, wider.
At last Tommy was driven into a corner, beaten and exhausted. Straddling him, Frank slapped him once, hard, rattling his senses, then tore at Tommy’s clothes, pulling them off.
“No!” Tommy whispered when he realized that in addition to being beaten, he was to be humiliated. “No, no.”
He struggled with what little strength he still possessed, but his shirt was stripped off; his jeans and underwear were yanked down. With his pants tangled around his sneakers, he was pulled to his feet and half carried across the room.
Frank threw open the door, pitched Tommy into the hallway, and called out, “Oh, Maria! Maria, can you come here a moment, please?”
Maria was the twice-a-week maid who came in to clean and do the ironing. This was one of her days.
“Maria!”
Naked, terrified of being humiliated in front of the maid, Tommy scrambled to his feet, grabbed his pants, tried to run and pull up his jeans at the same time, stumbled, fell, and sprang up again.
“Maria, can you come here, please?” Frank asked, barely able to get the words out between gales of laughter.
Gasping, whimpering, Tommy somehow reached his room and got out of sight before Maria appeared. For a while he leaned against the closed door, holding up his jeans with both hands, shivering.
3
WITH THEIR PARENTS OFF AT A CAMPAIGN APPEARANCE, TOMMY AND Frank ate dinner together, after heating up a casserole that Maria had left in the refrigerator. Ordinarily, dinner with Frank was an ordeal, but this time it proved to be uneventful. As he ate, Frank was engrossed in a magazine that reported on the latest horror movies, with heavy emphasis on slice-and-dice films and with lots of color photographs of mutilated and blood-soaked bodies; he seemed oblivious of Tommy.
Later, when Frank was in the bathroom preparing for bed, Tommy sneaked into his older brother’s room and stood at the desk, studying the jack-o’-lantern. The wicked mouth glowed. The narrow pupils were alive with fire.
The scent of roses filled the room, but underlying that odor was another more subtle and less appealing fragrance that he could not quite identify.
Tommy was aware of a malevolent presence—something even worse than the malevolence that he could
always
sense in Frank’s room. A cold current raced through his blood.
Suddenly he was certain that the potential murderous power of the black pumpkin was enhanced by the candle within it. Somehow, the presence of light inside its shell was dangerous, a triggering factor. Tommy did not know how he knew this, but he was convinced that if he was to have the slightest chance of surviving the coming night, he must extinguish the flame.
He grasped the gnarled stem and removed the lid from the top of the jack-o’-lantern’s skull.
Light did not merely rise from inside the pumpkin but seemed to be
flung
at him, hot on his face, stinging his eyes.
He blew out the flame.
The jack-o’-lantern went dark.
Immediately, Tommy felt better.
He put the lid in place.
As he let go of the stem, the candle refit spontaneously.
Stunned, he jumped back.
Light shone from the carved eyes, the nose, the mouth.
“No,” he said softly.
He removed the lid and blew out the candle once more.
A moment of darkness within the pumpkin. Then, before his eyes, the flame reappeared.
Reluctantly, issuing a thin involuntary sound of distress, Tommy reached into the jack-o’-lantern to snuff the stubborn candle with his thumb and finger. He was convinced that the pumpkin shell would suddenly snap shut around his wrist, severing his hand, leaving him with a bloody stump. Or perhaps it would hold him fast while swiftly dissolving the flesh from his fingers and then release him with an arm that terminated in a skeletal hand. Driven toward the brink of hysteria by these fears, he pinched the wick, extinguished the flame, and snatched his hand back with a sob of relief, grateful to have escaped mutilation.
He jammed the lid in place and, hearing the toilet flush in the adjacent bath, hurried out of the room. He dared not let Frank catch him there. As he stepped into the hallway, he glanced back at the jack-o’-lantern, and, of course, it was full of candlelight again.
He went straight to the kitchen and got a butcher’s knife, which he took back to his own room and hid beneath his pillow. He was sure that he would need it sooner or later in the dead hours before dawn.
4
HIS PARENTS CAME HOME SHORTLY BEFORE MIDNIGHT.
Tommy was sitting in bed, his room illuminated only by the pale bulb of the low-wattage night-light. The butcher’s knife was at his side, under the covers, and his hand was resting on the haft.
For twenty minutes, Tommy could hear his folks talking, running water, flushing toilets, closing doors. Their bedroom and bath were at the opposite end of the house from his and Frank’s rooms, so the noises they made were muffled but nonetheless reassuring. These were the ordinary noises of daily life, and as long as the house was filled with them, no weird lantern-eyed predator could be stalking anyone.
Soon, however, quiet returned.
In the postmidnight stillness, Tommy waited for the first scream.
He was determined not to fall asleep. But he was only twelve years old, and he was exhausted after a long day and drained by the sustained terror that had gripped him ever since he had seen the mummy-faced pumpkin carver. Propped against a pile of pillows, he dozed off long before one o’clock
-and something thumped, waking him.
He was instantly alert. He sat straight up in bed, clutching the butcher’s knife.
For a moment he was certain that the sound had originated within his own room. Then he heard it again, a solid thump, and he knew that it had come from Frank’s room across the hall.
He threw aside the covers and sat on the edge of the bed, tense. Waiting. Listening.
Once, he thought he heard Frank calling his name—“Tooommmmyy”—a desperate and frightened and barely audible cry that seemed to come from the far rim of a vast canyon. Perhaps he imagined it.
Silence.
His hands were slick with sweat. He put the big knife aside and blotted his palms on his pajamas.
Silence.
He picked up the knife again. He reached under his bed and found the flashlight that he kept there, but he did not switch it on. He eased cautiously to the door and listened for movement in the hallway beyond.
Nothing.
An inner voice urged him to return to bed, pull the covers over his head, and forget what he had heard. Better yet, he could crawl under the bed and hope that he would not be found. But he knew this was the voice of the wimp within, and he dared not hope for salvation in cowardice. If the black pumpkin
had
grown into something else, and if it was now loose in the house, it would respond to timidity with no less savage glee than Frank would have shown.
God,
he thought fervently,
there’s a boy down here who believes in you, and he’d be very disappointed if you happened to be looking the other way right now when he really, really, really needs you.
Tommy quietly turned the knob and opened the door. The hallway, illuminated only by the moonlight that streamed through the window at the end, was deserted.
Directly across the hall, the door to Frank’s room stood open.
Still not switching on the flashlight, desperately hoping that his presence would go undetected if he was mantled in darkness, he stepped to Frank’s doorway and listened. Frank usually snored, but no snoring could be heard tonight. If the jack-o’-lantern was in there, the candle had been extinguished at last, for no flickering paraffin light was visible.
Tommy crossed the threshold.
Moonlight silvered the window, and the palm-frond shadows of a wind-stirred tree danced on the glass. In the room, no object was clearly outlined. Mysterious shapes loomed in shades of dark gray and black.
He took one step. Two. Three.
His heart pounded so hard that it shattered his resolve to cloak himself in darkness. He snapped on the Eveready and was startled by the way the butcher’s knife in his right hand reflected the light.
He swept the beam around the room and, to his relief, saw no crouching monstrosity. The sheets and blankets were tumbled in a pile on the mattress, and he had to take another step toward the bed before he was able to ascertain that Frank was not there.
The severed hand was on the floor by the nightstand. Tommy saw it in the penumbra of the flashlight, and he brought the beam to bear directly on it. He stared in shock. Frank’s hand. No doubt about its identity, because Frank’s treasured silver skull-and-crossbones ring gleamed brightly on one slug-white finger. It was curled into a tight fist.
Perhaps powered by a postmortem nerve spasm, perhaps energized by darker forces, the fisted hand suddenly opened, fingers unfolding like the spreading petals of a flower. In the palm was a single, shiny nickel.
Tommy stifled a wild shriek but could not repress a series of violent shudders.
As he frantically tried to decide which escape route might be safest, he heard his mother scream from the far end of the house. Her shrill cry was abruptly cut off. Something crashed.
Tommy turned toward the doorway of Frank’s room. He knew that he should run before it was too late, but he was as welded to this spot as he had been to that bit of dusty ground in the pumpkin lot when the carver had insisted on telling him what the jack-o’-lantern would become during the lonely hours of the night.
He heard his father shout.
A gunshot.
His father screamed.
This scream also was cut short.
Silence again.
Tommy tried to lift one foot, just one, just an inch off the floor, but it would not be lifted. He sensed that more than fear was holding him down, that some malevolent spell prevented him from escaping the black pumpkin.
A door slammed at the other end of the house.
Footsteps sounded in the hall. Heavy, scraping footsteps.
Tears slipped out of Tommy’s eyes and down his cheeks.
In the hall, the floorboards creaked and groaned as if under a great weight.
Staring at the open door with no less terror than if he had been gazing into the entrance of Hell, Tommy saw flickering orange light in the corridor. The glow grew brighter as the source—no doubt a candle—drew nearer from the left, from the direction of his parents’ bedroom.
Amorphous shadows and eerie snakes of light crawled on the hall carpet.
The heavy footsteps slowed. Stopped.
Judging by the light, the thing was only a foot or two from the doorway.
Tommy swallowed hard and worked up enough spit to say,
Who’s there?
but was surprised to hear himself say instead, “Okay, damn you, let’s get it over with.”
Perhaps his years in the Sutzmann house had toughened him more thoroughly and had made him more fatalistic than he had previously realized.