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Children of Chaos




  CHILDREN OF CHAOS

  Greg F. Gifune

  Digital Edition

  Children of Chaos © 2014, 2009 by Greg F. Gifune

  All Rights Reserved.

  A DarkFuse Release

  www.darkfuse.com

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either a product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

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  OTHER BOOKS BY AUTHOR

  Blood In Electric Blue

  Deep Night

  Dominion

  Judas Goat

  Long After Dark

  Midnight Solitaire

  Rogue

  Saying Uncle

  The Bleeding Season

  The Living and the Dead

  Check out the author’s official page at DarkFuse for a complete list:

  http://www.darkfuseshop.com/Greg-F.-Gifune/

  For Melanie Maxwell, the best teacher and one of the kindest people I’ve ever known. I’ve never forgotten everything you did for me. You’re missed.

  In Greek mythology, CHAOS is the first thing that existed, the void of nothingness from which everything else emerged.

  “As men, we are all equal in the presence of death.”

  —Publilius Syrus

  SUMMER, 1978

  We all stood there awhile and watched him die.

  “I think we just killed God.”

  Somehow, despite the wind and rain, I knew Jamie had spoken but couldn’t be sure I’d heard him correctly. His voice was a quiet, emotionless monotone, and as we all stood beneath the rain, drenched and out of breath, neither Martin nor I answered him. At our feet lay the scarred man, most of his massacred form concealed behind fresh wounds. Martin still held the sword in both hands like a baseball bat, but it was down in front of him, the tip pointed at the ground. Mixed with rainwater, blood and small chunks of flesh coated the huge blade, the excess dripping steadily into the tall grass. It all seemed like some distant fever dream, like none of it could possibly be real.

  How it rained that night. Pouring from the sky, it spattered through the forest, lashed buildings, flooded the coastline and drummed the ground, punching little holes in the earth then overflowing them until the rains ran in furious rivers across every field and sidewalk, driveway and road. A living thing had come to New Bethany, a vast and unstoppable liquid entity, its tendrils spread across town and beyond. Drowning some and baptizing others, it set everything in motion, making even the most grounded things seem fleeting. A bank of dark clouds sat perched overhead, overseeing the fury with eerie indifference. Through it all, an oddly brilliant moon defiantly shone through, a beacon in the darkness and blinding rain.

  In the distance the midway had all but shut down. Only the Ferris wheel was still lit up and slowly rotating in the rain, providing additional light to the carnies rushing about and shutting down the various rides and booths.

  With that Ferris wheel as a backdrop, eerily turning on an otherwise dark horizon, I first saw the scarred man. In the rain and awash in moonlight, he looked like a burn victim, and I figured him for one of the carnies in the freak show. Though not very tall, he was a large and thickly muscled man, and moved with a powerful and surprisingly graceful stride. It wasn’t until he’d emerged from the tall grass and crossed the dirt road separating us that I realized he was making his way toward a modest encampment. He’d set up an old tent with a small awning-like tarp outside the entrance, and there’d been a fire but the rain had long since doused it, leaving a circle of stones, a battered iron skillet and a tin coffee mug sitting in a soggy pile of mud and ash.

  At first I’d wondered if perhaps only the man’s bald-head, face and neck had been mutilated by flames, but as he moved to the center of the camp and looked to the night sky, he slowly unbuttoned and removed his shirt then let it fall to the ground. Like his pants and jacket, it was wrinkled and tattered, and his work boots were so badly worn they scarcely had soles. I imagined the small tent, the clothes on his back and the few items scattered about camp were probably all the scarred man had in the world, but my eyes remained locked on his upper body. The scars were even worse there, slashed across his sculpted chest and back, shoulders and arms, a hideous mélange of horror carved into his skin like demonic brands. Across the back of his shoulders he bore a large tattoo in black Gothic letters that spelled out a single word.

  CHAOS.

  He put his head back, catching the rain in his mouth, and slid shut his eyes as his brawny arms reached for the heavens. I was sure the mangled smudges that had once been lips were moving but I couldn’t make out anything he was saying. When he sank to his knees, splashing mud and rain, I knew he was praying.

  As I hid in the tall grass on the other side of the road, I watched the scarred man kneel before his god, reminded of Sundays spent in church with my mother, and yet there seemed something far more powerful about this strange scene than anything I’d ever experienced at Saint Gabriel’s. There was something different about this peculiar man, something beyond the obvious. By all appearances he should’ve been frightening. But he wasn’t.

  I’ll never know for sure if he finished his prayers or simply realized I was watching him, but the scarred man collapsed onto his backside and sat beneath the awning. “What are you doing there, boy?” he asked in a gravely but surprisingly kind voice.

  I stepped from the grass into the tiny camp. “I’m going home.”

  “Go on then. Home’s a good place to be.” The scarred man brought a big, square-fingered hand to his face and wiped away the rain. The scars covered every inch of his head, face and neck, and had even left his ears deformed and cauliflowered. Such deep trenches of scarring, along with his olive-colored skin, made his ice blue eyes even more pronounced than a normal man’s, and when he spoke his disfigured lips parted to reveal large, very white teeth. “This is no weather to be out in. Go home, boy.”

  “I’m not a boy,” I told him. “I’m fourteen.”

  “Just a child.”

  “Yeah, whatever.”

  “Don’t fight it. There’ll come a day you’ll wish you could get it back.”

  I moved closer. “What happened to you?”

  “Didn’t your parents ever teach you anything?”

  “Like what?”

  “Like not to ask certain questions of people.” The scarred man stared at me awhile then finally waved me closer. “If you’re not leaving get out of the rain and rest a minute. Then go. It’s all right, I won’t hurt you.”

  I gave him my best tough-guy stare. “I ain’t afraid of you.”

  “No, I bet not.” He smiled a little. “Come on, take shelter before you drown.”

  I scurried under the awning and knelt down, making sure to keep enough distance between us so I could escape if need be. “What are you doing out here?”

  “Passing through is all.”

  “The police catch you they’ll beat you down. They don’t like bums hanging around town.”

  “Tell you what,” he said, gazing out at the darkness as thunder rumbled in the distance. “I won’t call you boy if you don’t call me bum.”

  I nodded guilt
ily. “OK, mister.”

  “Catch your breath then head home. Storm’s only gonna get worse.”

  “How do you know?”

  “I just know.”

  “Are you with the carnival?”

  “No. Happened to be in town the same time they were is all.”

  “Me and my friends just came from there.”

  “Have a good time?”

  I nodded. Even up close it was difficult to tell how old he was, but I guessed maybe his middle forties. “It was pretty cool. Did you go too?”

  He shook his head no.

  “Were you praying before?”

  “Something like that.”

  I studied his scars awhile. “Were you in Vietnam?”

  His eyes took on a faraway look but he never answered.

  “Is that how you got like that?”

  Raindrops trickled along his scars. “Sins of the world,” he muttered.

  “What do you mean?”

  The shadows shifted. The Ferris wheel had gone out.

  “You always ask so many questions?”

  Embarrassed, I shrugged as if I didn’t care.

  “You should go now,” he said.

  “Does it hurt?” I pressed.

  “Sometimes. But there are different kinds of pain.”

  The ominous undercurrent to his tone made me uneasy, and for the first time I felt a twinge of fear in his presence. “My friends will be coming soon.” I looked back out across the dark field. “I had a big lead on them.”

  “Just go.” The scarred man motioned to the road. “Don’t bother waiting on them. Some bad things happened in town tonight, and there’s worse coming.”

  I inched closer to the edge of the tarp. “What kind of bad things?”

  “Go home. Boy your age should be home at this hour.”

  Heart racing, I slowly stepped out from beneath the awning and stood in the rain watching him. “You do something wrong mister?”

  He shook his head no and reached for his shirt.

  As he did so, he bent forward, no longer fully protected by the tarp. Rain fell across him quickly, cascading along his bald dome, arms and wrists, chest and stomach. Yet even then I knew it wasn’t just the rain moving over him, but something more. I frantically brushed water from my eyes and squinted for a better look.

  The scars were moving, rippling and changing—one morphing into the next in a constant state of flux—running over his flesh with the rainwater in a liquid motion that made them look like separate living organisms. And though he tried to pull his shirt on to conceal what was happening, the pain had apparently become too great, and he groaned and slumped to his side, one shoulder pressed deep into the mud just beyond the tarp.

  “What’s happening to you, how—how are you doing that?” I stammered, stumbling backwards.

  “It’s all right,” he moaned, straightening and holding both hands to his stomach, eyes pressed tightly closed. His chest heaved with one breath and then another, and finally the movement of the scars ceased. The man’s body relaxed, and while he looked winded he no longer appeared to be in pain. “Go now,” he said breathlessly. “Just…go.”

  My bladder nearly let loose, but despite my terror I couldn’t move. It felt like my sneakers were anchored to the mud. Unable to accept what I’d witnessed, my mind rapidly rifled through other possibilities. A trick of shadow, moonlight and rain, that—of course that had to be it—there was no other explanation that made any sense.

  “Phil!”

  I looked back through the rain at the tall grass behind me and traced the voice to Martin. He and Jamie stood at the edge of the dirt road, two drenched rats trembling in the mounting storm. Both watched us with horror, eyes wide and mouths open in shock. They’d seen it too.

  The scarred man struggled into his ratty shirt and held it closed with an enormous hand. “D-Don’t be afraid,” he gasped, trying to regain his feet.

  “Run!” Martin screamed.

  But no one did.

  “It’s all right,” the scarred man said again. He’d gotten to his knees but was still unable to stand. Blue eyes gaping at us helplessly, he teetered, and it was then—when I looked into his eyes and for the first time truly saw what resided behind those scars—that I was seized by unbearable sadness. It was like the sorrow of all mankind had manifested before us in the personification of this strange man, and there was no escaping it.

  For any of us.

  Jamie blessed himself. “Did you guys see that?”

  “Come on.” Martin moved up beside me, grabbed hold of my arm. “Now.”

  But I still couldn’t move.

  “Phil.” He shook me a little, and I was reminded how strong Martin was despite his average size. “Come on.”

  “You think he did it?” Jamie asked. He still hadn’t moved from the road.

  “Did what?” I asked blankly, my mind still a jumble.

  Martin glanced at the scarred man to be sure he was still down. “Somebody killed Sarah Bryant.”

  He’d spoken so softly I’d barely heard him. “David’s little sister?”

  Martin nodded, his curly hair matted down against his face. “Right after you took off the cops were all over the midway and I heard Mr. Barrett talking with Chief Burke.”

  “Why would anybody hurt Sarah?”

  “They found her body at the playground over by the library. Some sick bastard cut her head off.” His voice cracked and I couldn’t tell if the water running across his cheeks was rain or tears. I’d never seen him so frightened and frayed emotionally, and it only added to my own mounting fear.

  David Bryant was in our grade, and while I didn’t consider him a close friend I did know him fairly well. I’d seen Sarah around town but she was a lot younger than us, only eight at the time. I tried to remember what she looked like but for some reason couldn’t. It just seemed like one more unbelievable thing thrown on the pile. People weren’t murdered in New Bethany. There was virtually no crime in town to speak of, much less the killing of children. This was like something out of a drive-in movie, not real life.

  “Cops threw down a curfew,” Martin told me, “and they’re giving kids at the carnival rides home because they don’t know if the killer’s still around.”

  “We knew you were already out here,” Jamie added, “so we ran for it before anybody saw us.”

  I looked at the scarred man. He was up on one knee now and trying to stand again, pushing off with one of his massive arms but still struggling. The episode—whatever it was—had weakened him to a point of total exhaustion.

  Some bad things happened in town tonight…

  “I think it might’ve been him,” I heard myself say, damning us all. “He said some bad shit happened in town tonight.”

  …and there’s worse coming…

  “Plus he’s got this freaky tattoo on his back,” I told them.

  “We gotta get out of here!” Jamie called. “We gotta get the cops!”

  If Martin heard him he gave no indication. Brow knit, he stared off into the night, more mesmerized by his uncertainty and fear than crippled by it. I could almost hear the thoughts churning in his head. “Then he must have something to do with it. How could he know if he wasn’t involved?”

  “Yeah,” I said, “Jamie’s right, let’s get out of here and find the cops.”

  “You don’t understand,” the scarred man said. “You don’t—listen to me, you don’t—”

  “Shut up!” Martin pivoted and threw a savage kick into the center of the man’s face so suddenly that it took several seconds before I realized what had happened. The scarred man grunted and fell back, his shirt falling open as he splashed into a puddle of mud and rainwater. “You fucking freak!”

  The level of violence Martin had shown so quickly and effortlessly stunned me, and I stood there stupidly, my mind still struggling to process any of this.

  Writhing about on his back, the scarred man tried to roll over onto his hands and knees. Blood le
aked from his smashed nose, and he began to speak in a rapid tongue none of us recognized.

  Martin held an icy expression I’d never before seen him display. “What the hell’s he doing?”

  “I think he’s praying.”

  “What language is that?”

  “Come on,” Jamie whined, fidgeting about like he needed a bathroom. “Let’s go!”

  “Yeah,” I agreed, moving away from the tent. “Come on, let’s—”

  “Who’s he praying to?” Martin slowly circled the fallen man, relishing his newfound position of dominance. While fear had left Jamie and me horrified and wanting out, it had made Martin stronger somehow, more focused. “Can’t be God, not with prayers like that.”

  Now I was the one telling him we had to leave this place. “Let the cops deal with it, man, let’s book.”

  Martin turned and looked at me, eyes narrowed in the heavy rain. “And what was that shit with his skin? How did he do that?”

  “I don’t know, I…”

  “Look at the size of him,” Jamie said. “If he gets up, we’re all—”

  “He’s not getting up,” Martin said evenly.

  “Wait,” I said, trying to think clearly in all the madness. “We don’t know for sure if he did anything.”

  “Yeah we do.” Martin spat the words at him. “Look at him. He did it. Nobody in town would do something like that to a little girl. Shit, he’s probably not even human.”

  “Oh Christ Jesus,” Jamie said, blessing himself again. “Don’t say that.”

  “You guys saw the way those scars moved. A human can’t do that.”

  I watched the scarred man roll onto his stomach and begin to crawl back toward the tent. The tattoo showed through the rain and darkness, slick on his otherwise ravaged back. CHAOS.