The Deep

Free The Deep by Nick Cutter

Book: The Deep by Nick Cutter Read Free Book Online
Authors: Nick Cutter
Tags: Fiction, General, Thrillers, Horror
Zach’s closet door open and rattling the coat hangers.
    “See, Zachy? No monster. You’re perfectly safe, I promise. Monsters aren’t real. They’re just figments of your imagination.”
    Zach looked even more petrified. “Fig Men?”
    Luke nearly burst out laughing. He pictured these bloated, misshapen, fruitlike creatures, the Fig Men, massing in his son’s closet.
    “Not Fig Men, Zach, fig ments . Figments aren’t real. Your mind is making them up, that’s all. No Fig Men. No monsters.”
    But that night, Zach crept into their room and curled up on the floor.
    “What are you doing here, buddy?”
    “The Fig Men are in my closet,” Zach whispered.
    Luke got up and marched his son back to his bedroom.
    “There is no monster, Zach. No Fig Men. Didn’t I show you that?”
    “That was in the daytime,” Zach said with bone-deep worry. “Monsters hide from grown-ups in the day. It’s night now.”
    But Luke was adamant. “I’ll leave the hall light burning, buddy. That’s the best I can do. You’ve got to sleep in your own bed, okay?”
    Zach pulled the covers up to his throat and nodded wretchedly.
    Back in bed, Abby said: “You’re not being fair, Luke. Zach’s allowed to be scared. He’s a kid. There shouldn’t be a penalty in this house for being scared.”
    Luke knew she was right. Your child doesn’t owe you loyalty or obedience. You owe your child love and understanding, owe it unconditionally, and if you love them strongly enough, eventually that love may be returned. Luke’s own mother had never seen it that way. She thought Luke and Clay owed her love regardless of how she treated them.
    Luke got out of bed and grabbed his toolbox. He returned to Zach’s room and pointed at the closet.
    “So this is where the Fig Men are lurking?”
    Zach nodded forlornly. Luke cracked the toolbox and pulled out a stud finder. He ran it over the closet walls and made a few exploratory taps with his knuckles.
    “There are traces of ectoplasm,” he said in the tone of a veteran contractor. “That’s monster slime, in layman’s terms. What do these suckers look like?”
    Zach said: “ Old , all wrinkly, like they’ve lived a million years.”
    The short hairs stood up on the back of Luke’s neck. Something about the way his son said that one word, old , was chilling. Luke didn’t feel like laughing this time. The Fig Men—these twisted, ancient, calculating little devils hunched in the dark closet, peering at his son through the slats with cruel avidity—had taken on a sinister shape in his mind.
    Luke gripped his chin, putting on a good show. “The Fig Men. I’ve never heard of them specifically, but harmless monsters do infest closets and crawl spaces. They usually like sweet stuff—you haven’t been keeping anything tasty in your closet, have you?”
    “That’s where I put my Halloween candy.”
    “Well, that’ll give you a Fig Man problem. Now, I’m sure they’re not dangerous—just gross. But if you let a few hang around they’ll call their buddies and before long you’ve got an infestation on your hands.”
    “I don’t want that, Daddy.”
    “I’ve got good news and bad news,” said Luke. “What do you want first?”
    Zach said: “Good.”
    “Good news is I can get rid of the Fig Men.”
    Luke rooted through his toolbox for a pouch of fine red powder.
    “This is cardamom; it’s made from the crushed shells of stag beetles. It’s used in monster containment spells.”
    Luke laid down a line of powder in the shape of a keyhole.
    “Now this,” he said, “is the trap. The Fig Men will wander up this path, which gets narrower and narrower until— bang-o! —they get stuck. The circle closes and the Fig Men will starve overnight. They’ll turn black and hard as a rock. Now the bad news, Zach. You have to pull one hair out of your head, and that’ll hurt a bit.”
    “Why?”
    “Fig Man bait.”
    Zach plucked a strand of hair. Luke laid it in the middle of the

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