The Five Masks of Dr. Screem (4 page)

BOOK: The Five Masks of Dr. Screem
13.67Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads
11

“Huh?” I uttered a gasp. I felt my heart skip a beat.

“What do you
mean
we can’t?” Peter cried. “We
have
to do something. We
have
to bring them back!”

“You can’t bring your parents back because you won’t help me,” Bella said. “If you change your minds and go on the hunt for the five masks …”

I started to breathe again. “If we go on the hunt …”

“If you recapture all five masks,” Bella said, “Screem will lose their evil magic for another year.”

“And our house will come back? And our parents?” Peter demanded.

“It’s the only way,” she said. She brushed her straight black hair back over her shoulder. Her red fingernails glowed in the firelight.

“Here. This will help.” She disappeared into the library.

Peter and I gazed at each other but didn’t speak. I could tell he was thinking the same thing I was.

The hunt for the masks was crazy. But we had to do it. We had to defeat Screem and get our parents back! Screem’s evil magic was real. It wasn’t some kind of Halloween joke.

If we wanted to get our lives back to normal, we had to go after him. We had to collect the masks and keep them from him till Halloween was over.

Bella came back into the room. Her long dress trailed behind her. She held a narrow sheet of paper in one hand.

“Here.” She pushed it into my hand. “This is a list for you. A list of the five masks.”

I raised the paper and read the list out loud: “
Ugly insect; mummy; Himalayan snow wolf; human skull; alien pig creature
.”

“But where do we find them?” Peter asked. “Where do we start?”

“Yes, this is crazy!” I said. “Screem could hide the masks
anywhere
. Where do we begin? We don’t have a clue where to search.”

She narrowed her eyes at me. “You’ll find them, Monica. In fact, sometimes they will find you.
Keeping
them will be harder than finding them. Screem is very tricky. Will you be
able to bring them back to me? That’s the question.”

I didn’t really understand what she meant. But I was too jumpy to stand there and talk about it anymore. I wanted to get moving.

Mainly, I wanted to get this night over. I knew there were horrors ahead. But maybe … maybe Peter and I could find the five masks and bring back Mom and Dad.

I glanced down. Without realizing it, I had my fingers crossed on both hands.

I didn’t have any pockets. So I handed the list of masks to Peter. He tucked it into his pocket.

“Let’s go,” I said. I started for the door. He followed close behind.

“Wait.” Bella hurried after us. “Final instructions.”

We turned at the front door.

“You have until dawn,” she said. “You must bring the five masks back here, back to me. If you grab one, Screem will try his best to take it away from you.”

“How — how can we stop him?” I stuttered.

“Wear the masks you capture,” Bella answered. “If you wear a mask, he cannot take it away. Slide one over another. When you are wearing them all, Screem will be powerless.”

Powerless
.

Was she telling the truth? I hoped so.

I grabbed the doorknob and pulled open the front door. A blast of cold wind pushed against Peter and me.

I ducked my head against the wind and stepped outside.

But Bella’s shout made me stop. “Oh, yes,” she called. “One thing I forgot to tell you …”

12

Bella stepped into the doorway. The wind made her long dress swirl around her. She appeared to fade in the gray light.

“Remember this warning,” she said. “Screem has many powers. But his most impressive power is his ability to lie.”

The swirling wind made it hard to hear her. “Did you say
lie
?” I shouted.

She nodded. “Screem is the best liar on earth. He’s so good, it’s almost impossible
not
to believe him.”

She pointed her finger at us. “Do not forget this,” she said. “Whatever you do, do not believe what he tells you. Do not fall for his lies.”

The door closed with a hard thud. Peter and I stood in the sudden darkness. I felt as if I’d been swallowed by the night.

I gasped as the blowing winds suddenly stopped. The silence startled me. Here we were,
my brother and I. Alone on this dark, cold Halloween night.

Really alone. More alone than we’d ever been.

And about to do battle with a powerful, evil, lying wizard.

Peter pulled the list of masks from his pocket. It trembled in his hand.

“Where do we go?” he asked, staring into the darkness. “Where do we start?”

I shook my head. I didn’t have a clue. I couldn’t even begin to think straight.

Peter and I began to jog down the long driveway. At the street, the hedges rose up like dark ocean waves frozen in place.

A tall streetlamp cast a triangle of dim light over the hedges.

“Peter — look.” I grabbed his shoulder and stopped him. I pointed to the bottom of the hedge. “See that?”

He squinted hard. “Yes,” he answered in a whisper. “Something is tucked in the hedge.”

My heart started to pound. “Is it a mask? Is it possible?”

We carefully made our way down the driveway to the hedge.

I dropped to my knees and lowered my head nearly to the ground. Yes. It was a mask.

“The insect mask,” Peter whispered.

In the light from above, it looked olive green. It was shaped like a long face, kind of like a
grasshopper’s. I saw wiry antennae on top of the smooth green head. Tiny black eyes. The mouth hung open, revealing a stringy black forked tongue.

“Wow, that’s ugly,” Peter said.

I reached out with a trembling hand and touched it. I ran my hand along the top of the head. “I think it’s rubber,” I whispered. “But … it feels …
warm
.”

“Screem tried to hide it in the hedge,” Peter said. “But he didn’t hide all of them. This hunt isn’t so tough.”

I stared at it. Just the sight of the ugly mask sent chill after chill down my back.

“Go ahead. Pick it up,” Peter said.

I reached down again — then stopped. “Peter,” I whispered, “did he deliberately leave it showing? Is it a
trap
?”

Peter gazed up and down the street. “I don’t see anyone, Monica. Grab the mask. Quick. Put it on before Screem comes back for it.”

I bent down and reached for the mask. The insect’s buggy little eyes gazed up at me. The antennae quivered in a gust of wind.

I picked it up in two hands. I started to pull the mask to my face.

But I stopped with a sharp cry.

“Peter — it … it
moved
!” I gasped. “I felt it move! It’s … ALIVE!”

13

“No way!” Peter exclaimed.

I stretched out the opening and gazed inside the mask.

“Oh, gross!” I cried. “Oh,
sick
!”

I dropped the mask to the grass.

“What
is
it? What’s wrong?” Peter asked.

“The mask … it’s filled with bugs!” I choked out.

“Huh?” He took the mask in his hands and gazed inside the opening. “Oh, wow. It’s totally
infested
!”

The mask was
crawling
with fat insects. They scrabbled all over the smooth inside of the mask. They rolled and climbed over each other.

Peter handed the mask back to me. “Monica, you have to put it on,” he said. “Before Screem comes back for it.”

“But — but —” I sputtered again. “I
can’t
, Peter. All those disgusting bugs. There are
hundreds
of them. How can I put it over my face?”

“You
have
to!” Peter cried. “You have to do it, Monica. You heard what Bella said. You have to wear the masks so Screem won’t take them back.”

I gazed into the mask and felt sick. The bugs were fat and brown and slimy wet.

“We’ll take turns,” Peter said. “I’ll put on the
next
one.”

He pushed the mask to my face. “Go ahead. We want to see Mom and Dad again — don’t we?”

I stood frozen there, the mask in my hands. A bug crawled out of the mask and walked over my hand. My skin prickled. I wanted to scream.

My stomach was doing flip-flops. I shook the bug off my hand. It was sticky. I could still feel it on my skin.

“Do it, Monica,” Peter urged. “Go ahead. Put it on.”

I couldn’t. No way.

“Do it, Monica,” Peter repeated. “Hurry.”

My stomach heaved. My throat tightened. I felt like I was about to puke.

I took a deep breath. I shut my eyes.

And I
jammed
the mask down over my head.

I didn’t move.

I didn’t open my eyes.

The mask fell loosely over my face. I could feel the tiny insect legs poking at my cheeks.
The bugs scrabbled down my cheeks … down my neck.

I could feel them on my chin. Feel them trying to squeeze into my mouth.

I couldn’t stand it.

I wanted to jump out of my skin.

“Peter — help me!” I shrieked. “They’re BITING me! Ohhh … help. They’re BITING my face!”

14

The pain ended suddenly.

I stopped screaming. A hush fell over me. The only sounds I heard were the pounding of my heart and my wheezing, panting breath.

I opened my eyes. The night was a blur of purple and black.

“Peter?” My voice was muffled by the heavy rubber mask. But at least the bugs were gone. Vanished. “Peter?”

I squinted out through the eyeholes of the insect mask. “Peter!”

Where were we? We weren’t standing in front of the tall hedge. We appeared to be in a thick woods.

My eyes finally focused on Peter. To my surprise, he didn’t turn to me. He was staring wide-eyed, straight ahead.

I turned to follow his gaze — and cried out in shock.

“Peter — what
are
those things?”

“Big insects,” he answered. His whole body shook, but he didn’t move his eyes. “They’re … like giant praying mantises, Monica. A dozen of them. I — I don’t believe it!”

“They’re taller than we are!” I cried.

The smooth green insects were at least eight feet tall. They had long, slender heads with bulging black eyes as big as teacups on each side. Their antennae swayed in the wind, making a
scup scup scup
sound as they bumped each other.

They stood erect on their back legs. I saw giant wings draped behind their backs like silvery capes.

Their mouths moved up and down rapidly. It took me a while to realize they were chewing. Chewing … chewing … Their teeth made a grinding sound that made my ears ache.

“It — it’s like a
horror
movie,” Peter murmured, moving closer to me. “How did this happen?”

“The mask,” I said in a whisper. “It must be the evil magic of the mask.”

We watched them, listening to their grinding teeth as they kept chewing … chewing …

And suddenly they were moving forward. Coming at us quickly, antennae whipping the air as they stepped over the tall grass on their broomstick legs.

Grinding … grinding … grinding …

Their huge black eyes glowed as they lowered their flat heads.

“Peter — run!” I gave him a shove and lurched to the side.

“Oh, noooo.” I let out a moan. Nowhere to run. The big insects surrounded us. They formed a tight circle, trapping us.

They raised wiry front legs. They rubbed them together in front of their flat chests as they stepped closer.

“Wh-what are they going to do?” Peter stammered. “
Eat
us?”

“The mask,” I muttered. “The insect mask is doing this.”

I knew what I had to do. I had to pull the evil mask off.

I grabbed the sides and tugged.

No.

It didn’t budge.

I grabbed it by the top. But the rubber was too slippery. I couldn’t grasp it tightly enough.

Chewing … grinding … the insects stepped closer. Their antennae waved rapidly over their heads.

Frantic, I grabbed the bottom of the mask. I tried to pull it apart so I could free myself from it.

No. No way.

“Peter —
help
me!” I cried.

Too late.

A giant mantis lowered itself — and bumped its head against the side of my head.


Owww
!” I cried out as pain rocketed down my head, down my body. It felt as if I’d been slammed by a wooden board.

It battered me again. Slammed its long, heavy head into mine.

Stunned, I felt my knees fold. Pain shot through my head and down my whole body.

And before I could move, it lifted me. Lifted me in its short, sticky front legs.

Lifted me off the ground. And pulled me up … up … toward its enormous grinding teeth.

15

“No! No! NO!”

The screams tore from my throat until I couldn’t yell anymore.

I could see gobs of yellow drool on the insect’s pointed teeth. The jaw moved back and forth above my head.

It pulled me closer to its grinding teeth. Its head loomed like a gigantic parade balloon.

I thrashed my hands. I kicked my feet.

But the slender front legs gripped me tightly. And raised me higher.

“NOOOOOOO!” Another scream ripped from my mouth and made my throat ache.

The mantis’s jaws opened wide.

I tried to squirm. I tried to kick the front of its trunk.

But it held me helpless. And then …

To my surprise, it didn’t shove me into its grinding mouth. Instead, it turned. And carried me away from the circle of giant insects.

I saw Peter being carried by another insect. The big bug had my brother cradled under one bent leg, pressed against its smooth body.

Peter screamed in protest. But the insect gripped him tightly. He couldn’t move.

The two insects carried us side by side. They walked stiffly, their bodies bobbing on their thin legs.

They both stopped suddenly. I glanced down. I saw a line of leafy shrubs.

The insect holding me leaned forward and began to lower me onto a shrub.

I let out a sigh of relief. Did this mean it wasn’t going to
eat
me?

The spindly legs lowered me onto my back. I gazed down. The bush was only a few feet tall. Maybe I could drop to my feet and run.

I took a deep breath. I started to move. Slowly, I lowered myself …


YOWWWWW
!”

I wailed in pain as the insect jabbed its pointed pincer into my chest. It leaned over me, bringing its head down close to my face. It chomped its jaws.

It kept me pinned down with the sharp pincer pressed against the front of my gymnastics T-shirt. I was trapped on top of the bush. I couldn’t move.

“Peter — are you okay?” I called. “Peter?”

I heard him shout from somewhere nearby. I
struggled to turn. But the big mantis had me pinned too tightly to the bush.

I gazed down toward my feet and saw something that filled me with horror.

“No! Oh, please — NO!” I screamed.

The insect was using its other pincer to pull thread from its belly.

Working quickly, it pulled a long line of sticky white thread from its body. And to my horror, it was wrapping the thread around my legs.

Like a spider’s webbing. The thread slid out silently, an endless line of it.

The insect worked feverishly, wrapping my knees together tightly now.

“Peter?” I called.

Again, Peter uttered a cry. But he was too far away. I couldn’t hear what he was saying.

The insect worked faster. Circling my waist now. Pulling more sticky white string from its belly. Tightening it.

I tried to kick and break through the string, but it was too strong.

The insect held me in place with its sharp pincer and kept spinning the thread, tighter and tighter.

The giant mantis was wrapping me inside a thick cocoon.

“No! Please!” My cries came out shrill and hoarse.

I swung my arms, but I couldn’t reach the big insect. I tried to twist my body. Twist myself free.

But the ugly bug had me pinned down. And now it was wrapping its thread around my neck. Round and around.

Working so fast. Spinning. Wrapping me like a caterpillar in a cocoon.

The thread whipped around my neck. And now the insect was starting on the mask that covered my face. It was going to wrap the mask tight to my face in the thick webbing.

The thread swung tightly around the bottom of the mask. In a few seconds, my mouth would be covered.

One last scream.

“Peter!” I cried. “Peter — are you here? DO something!”

BOOK: The Five Masks of Dr. Screem
13.67Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The year She Fell by Alicia Rasley
Lies of the Heart by Laurie Leclair
Edward's Dilemma by Paul Adan
Beating Heart by A. M. Jenkins
Unravelled by Anna Scanlon
The Retreat by Patrick Rambaud