Desolation. Derek Landy

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Desolation - Derek Landy


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smiled and nodded. “And it is surely a town worth celebrating.”

      “A question, if you please,” said Warrick, squeezing between them. Belinda recoiled slightly. “This motel. Is it pet friendly?”

      “I’m sorry?”

      “Is it friendly to pets? For instance, my dog. Is it friendly to my dog?”

      Belinda looked horrified. “Are you asking if your dog is allowed inside the hotel?”

      “That is what I’m asking, yes.”

      “No.”

      “Is that a ‘No, my dog is allowed,’ or a ‘No, my dog isn’t allowed’?”

      “No pets are allowed on the premises,” said Belinda. “My brother is extremely allergic. Having an animal under this roof could kill him.”

      “What if I told you he was house-trained?”

      “Absolutely not.”

      “What if I told you he would not try to have sex with any potted plants you may possess, or any of your favourite stuffed animals? Still no? Then I will be forced to sleep with him in our van. Is that what you want? Me sleeping in a van? This isn’t California, let me remind you. This is Alaska. It gets cold here. You’re really okay with me spending the night in a van, freezing to death while my oversexed dog humps my head?”

      “Animals are not allowed.”

      “What if we sneak him in without you noticing?”

      “We’re not going to do that,” Ronnie said quickly.

      Warrick nodded, and did the air quotes thing. “Yeah, we’re ‘not’.”

      “We’re actually not,” said Linda. “If Warrick won’t go anywhere without that dog, he can sleep in the van and take the consequences. The rest of us would like beds, please – until Wednesday.”

      “When you will depart,” said Belinda.

      “When we will depart,” echoed Linda.

      They were shown to their rooms and Kelly dumped her bag on her bed and went to the bathroom while Linda showered quickly. Then they switched, and got changed, and met the guys outside.

      They drove through town, familiarising themselves with the layout before focusing on the quieter streets. They followed the few small scrawls of graffiti like it was a trail of breadcrumbs, losing it sometimes and having to double back to pick up the trail again. It took them the rest of the afternoon, but finally the trail led them all the way to a park, at the bottom of the hill that led to the motel.

      “Well, that was a waste of time,” said Kelly.

      They got out, went walking. Kelly zipped up her jacket while Two ran in excited circles. On the east side of the park there was a small building that housed the public restrooms. Facing the park, it was a pristine example of a public utility that was kept up to snuff. But the interesting stuff was all across the back in layers of names and promises and oaths and declarations.

      Kelly was a quick study, but even so her ability to decipher the messages hidden in graffiti could only take her so far. Ronnie was better at it, and Linda was better still, but Warrick was the master. He was the one who’d told them all about it, after all. Graffiti was the cave painting of the modern world, he’d told Kelly after she’d taken her first trip in the van.

      That had been her recruitment, she supposed. Once she was part of the group, one of the gang, he felt comfortable telling her his secrets. A town’s history, its true history, he said, could be found in the scrawls and crude pictures hidden from the prying eyes of the disapproving authorities, those to whom whitewashing a wall was the same as whitewashing a mind. They could paint over the truth as many times as they wanted, but the truth could always be scrawled anew.

      Kelly found declarations of love and accusations of infidelity, she found boasts of conquests, of prowess and of physical exploits, and she found pictures of genitalia that were suspect in their accuracy.

      “Look at this,” said Linda, pointing to a drawing of a thin man with a wide, smiling mouth, too big for his head. There was an artistry to it, some genuine talent, but there was something else – something about that smile that unnerved Kelly. Linda took a picture of it with her phone.

      “Got something else,” Ronnie said. “A name – Donnie Welker. Says here the Narrow Man got him in 2003.”

      Linda hurried over, documenting the message.

      They found five more references to the Narrow Man, and then Warrick said, “Found it.”

      They crowded round him. On the wall, almost at the corner and faded, yet isolated from the other scrawls, almost as if nobody dared paint over it, was a short rhyme.

       The Narrow Man, the Narrow Man,

       He’ll sniff you out, you know he can.

       Counting, counting, one, two, three,

       Your name he’ll call, his face you’ll see.

       Tap at your window, tap at your door,

       You can hide no longer, run no more.

       The Narrow Man, the Narrow Man,

       He’ll drag you to hell, fast as he can.

      “He’s here, all right,” said Ronnie.

      “Look at this,” said Kelly, waving to a group of kids hanging out in the trees behind them. “We have an audience.”

      Two bounded over. A few of the kids backed away, but most of them made a fuss over the dumb dog as he licked their hands and rolled on to his back so they’d scratch his belly.

      Kelly and the others walked over.

      “Hi there,” she said. The kids regarded her warily. “Could you do us a favour? Me and my friends were wondering what that Narrow Man thing is all about. We’ve heard of him, we’re kind of geeks for this sort of crap, but we’ve never seen anything so concentrated as this.”

      Some of the kids, the ones who were wary of the dog, glanced at each other and walked away.

      One of the other kids who stayed gave a shrug. “So what’s the favour?”

      “Actually, less of a favour, more of a … job, really.” Kelly took out a crumpled ten-dollar bill. “What can you tell us about him?”

      “He’s a story,” said the kid.

      “What kind of story?” Ronnie asked.

      “Creepy bedtime story.”

      “He’s the boogeyman,” said a girl.

      “Yeah, that’s it,” the boy said. “The boogeyman. Comes out and snatches away naughty boys and girls.”

      “What about the rhyme?” asked Linda.

      “Just something we used to say. Something fun.”

      Warrick took a treat from his pocket, tossed it to Two. “He ever snatch away anyone you know?”

      “Are you stupid or something?” the boy asked. “He’s a story. He’s not real.”

      Warrick jerked his thumb over his shoulder. “I think whoever drew that picture thought he was real.”

      “My cousin drew that,” said a smaller kid at the back, “and you don’t know what you’re talking about. It’s a nursery rhyme. Just something kids used to say.”

      “What about the counting, counting, one, two, three thing?” Ronnie asked. “What’s that mean?”

      The kids looked at each other uneasily, until Ronnie produced


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