complete the final preparations before Mallory’s death.
Tonight, the Killer would assemble the various components at the cemetery, the ones collected from Penelope and the others, then capture Mallory and her family the following evening. The end of five years of agony had finally crept within sight, and the Killer shuddered with anticipation, like a wild dog gnawing through a restraining rope, soon to be free.
Searching through the Andersons’ garage, the Killer collected rope, chain, and tape. Paul Wiess should cooperate nicely when shown his daughter bound and gagged, assisting with the one task the Killer cannot complete alone.
Along the back wall of the room, the Killer located a variety of lawn and garden tools and paused to select a weapon. The Andersons’ firearms remained in the van, but for Mallory’s death, the Killer preferred to use something that cut .
A chainsaw. Tempting, but too noisy.
An ax. Perfect.
The Killer loaded the items into the van then returned to the house to make sure there wasn’t anything else of use.
Someone knocked on the front door.
The Killer halted in the foyer, poised at the foot of the staircase not twelve feet from the sound.
The doorbell rang, followed by a voice. “Mr. Anderson?”
The Killer kept silent.
“ Mr. Anderson, it’s Father Kern. I was wondering if we could speak?”
The Holy Man.
Despite the fact that his calls went unanswered, Kern remained on the step.
“ I heard you weren’t at mass this morning,” he said in a grave tone. “It pains me to think I’m the reason you were absent.”
The Killer drew closer, moving with caution. A tall rectangular sheet of clouded glass in the center of the door revealed nothing of the priest but a foggy silhouette.
“ I assume you’ve heard I’m leaving the church,” he added. “I can understand how hypocritical that might appear in light of what we discussed about belief, faith, and salvation, but please don’t let my own … uncertainties … influence your newfound interest in The Church.”
The Killer paused inches from the door, a hand above the knob.
“ I think it would be best if you sought spiritual counsel through one of my colleagues. If you decide to, that is. I’ve already talked to Father Bachman about it. He knows I’ve blessed the house for you, but if you’d like him to perform a second—”
The Killer threw open the door, and Kern snapped his head up in shock. The man’s pupils dilated, his eyes focusing on what loomed in the entryway.
His face paled.
The Killer stared back, peering through ragged holes cut in the scarecrow costume. The dirty burlap face reflected in Kern’s eyes.
“ Holy Mary—”
“ Mary was mortal,” the Killer said. “If you want the attention of a god, pray to me .”
The Killer seized the priest by his throat and lifted him off his feet, throwing him inside the house. His body crashed through the staircase’s newel post and railing, the noise of cracking wood accompanied by the sound of breaking bones.
Acting before Kern could utter an invocation of his discarded faith, the Killer leapt on the priest’s back and locked an arm around his neck.
The scarecrow mask pressed against Kern’s head, disorderly ranks of teeth brushing his right ear. “ Atum has given me my hands.”
The Killer seized a shaft of wood from the shattered staircase railing and rammed it through the priest’s front teeth, shoving it down his throat. Broken incisors clattered on the ground.
“ I perform The Opening of the Mouth on this, your mouth, so that you may speak in the Afterlife and praise the one who sent you.”
The Killer yanked the makeshift adze to the floor, tearing Kern’s lower jaw from his skull. The man’s arms flailed in wild arcs. He knocked the straw hat off the Killer’s head and tugged at the burlap mask while an arterial torrent pattered on the hardwood. The rich scent of spilled blood enveloped them like a crimson mist.
Kern’s eyes
Serenity King, Pepper Pace, Aliyah Burke, Erosa Knowles, Latrivia Nelson, Tianna Laveen, Bridget Midway, Yvette Hines