Terry Brooks - Running With The Demon
nothing to see. She looked for Wraith as well, but there was no sign of him
either. Just thinking of Wraith sent a shiver down her spine. The park stretched
away before her, vast, silent, and empty of movement. She picked up her pace,
the urgency of Bennett's situation spurring her on. Pick rode easily on her
shoulder, attached in the manner of a clamp, arms and legs locked on her sleeve.
He was still muttering to himself, that annoyingly incessant chatter in which he
indulged ad nauseam hi times of stress. But Nest let him be. Pick had a lot of
responsibility to exercise, and it was not being made any easier by the
increasingly bold behavior of the feeders. It was bad enough that they occupied
the caves below the cliffs in ever-expanding numbers, their population grown so
large that it was no longer possible to take an accurate count. But where before
they had confined their activities to nighttime appearances in the park, now all
of a sudden they were starting to surface everywhere in Hopewell, sometimes even
in daylight. It was all due to a shifting in the balance of things, Pick
advised. And if the balance was not righted, soon the feeders would be
everywhere. Then what was he supposed to do?
The trees ahead thickened, trunks tightening in a dark wall, limbs closing out
the night sky. Nest angled through the maze, her eyes adjusting to the change in
light, seeing everything, picking out all the details. She dodged through a
series of park toys, spring-mounted rides for the smallest children, jumped a
low chain divider, and raced back across the roadway and into the burial mounds.
There was still no sign of Bennett Scott. The air was cooler here, rising off
the Rock River where it flowed west below the cliffs in a broad swath toward the
Mississippi. In the distance, a freight train wailed as it made its way east
through the farmland. The summer night was thick with heat, and the whistle
seemed muted and lost. It died away slowly, and in the ensuing silence the
sounds of the insects resurfaced, a steady, insistent hum.
Nest caught sight of Daniel then, a dark shadow as he swooped down from the
trees just long enough to catch her attention before wheeling away again.
"There, girl!" Pick shouted needlessly in her ear.
She raced in pursuit of the barn owl, following his lead, heading for the
cliffs. She ran through the burial mounds, low, grassy hummocks clustered at the
edge of the roadway. Ahead, the road ended in a turnaround at the park's highest
point. That was where she would find Bennett. Unless ... She brushed the word
aside, refusing to concede that it applied. A rush of bitterness toward Enid
Scott tightened her throat. It wasn't fair that she left Jared alone to watch
his brothers and sisters. Enid knew about his condition; she just found it
convenient now and then to pretend it didn't matter. A mild form of epilepsy,
the attacks could last for as long as five minutes. When they came, Jared would
just "go away" for a bit, staring off into space, not seeing or hearing, not
being aware of anything. Even the medicine he took couldn't always prevent the
attacks. His mother knew that. She knew.
The trees opened before her, and Daniel dove out of the shadows, streaking for
the cliffs. Nest put on a new burst of speed, nearly unseating Pick. She could
see Bennett Scott now, standing at the very edge of the cliffs, just beyond the
turnaround, a small, solitary figure against the night sky, all hunched over and
crying. Nest could hear her sobs. The feeders were cajoling her, enticing her,
trying to cloud her thinking further so that she would take those last few
steps. Nest was angry. Bennett made the seventh child hi a month. She had saved
them all, but how long could her luck hold?
Daniel started down, then arced away soundlessly. It was too dangerous for him
to go in; his unexpected presence might startle the little girl and cause her to
lose her balance. That was why Pick relied on Nest. A young girl's appearance
was apt to prove far less unsettling than his own or Daniel's.
She slowed to a walk, dropping Pick off in the grass. No point in taking
chances; Pick preferred to remain invisible anyway. The scent of pine trees
wafted on the humid night air, carried out of the cemetery beyond, where the
trees grew in thick clumps along the chain-link fence. In the moonlight, the
headstones and monuments were just visible, the granite and marble reflecting
with a shimmery cast. She took several deep breaths as she came up to Bennett,
moving slowly, carefully into the light. The feeders saw her coming and their
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