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- Story Listed as: Fiction For Teens
- Theme: Horror
- Subject: Science / Science Fiction
- Published: 09/03/2019
Freakuencies
Born 1985, M, from Vancouver, CanadaThe three boys stood on the sidewalk on Elm St., staring up at the newly installed 5G antenna on top of the lamp post at the bend in the street, their skateboards at their side. Wade, the chubbiest of three, squinted in the late afternoon sun, slowly sinking into his eye line, using his free hand to act like the brim of a cap as he reiterated, “I’m telling you, guys! It’s because of those things that everyone is acting so crazy.”
Marcus, the darkest of them in complexion, tilted his head at Wade and raised an eyebrow questionably. Donnie beside him remained hypnotized, gazing up lazily at the lamppost, his wavy blonde bangs hovering over his brow line. He at least seemed to be considering Wade’s claim. Marcus was having nothing of it.
“How else do you explain it?” shot Wade, eager to prove Marcus stupid for doubting so quickly. “All kinds of shits been happening since these things went up! Haven’t you watched those videos on YouTube about how 5G frequencies mess with your head? They say it can be weaponized. Like New World Order stuff. That’s what’s happening in Seabridge! First, that nine-year-old girl suffocated her baby brother. A week later, crazy Norman from the barbershop stabs that new cop in the parking lot of the Eat N’ Save, and then Lester hangs himself in his basement! Before these towers went up nothing like this ever happened and now…it’s like people are possessed or something!”
Marcus remained unbothered. “I’ll tell you how to explain it. Lester was depressed as hell. And as for that little girl suffocating her brother and snorin’ Norman going knife crazy, that’s simple too – white people are f***ed up.”
“But your mom’s white,” noted Donnie, finally breaking from the antenna’s hold on him.
“And she is f***ed up,” said Marcus, quick in his reproach. “My point is proven.”
“I don’t get it though,” Donnie went on. “If it’s the 5G that’s frying people’s brains then why isn’t the whole town going postal?”
Wade paused to think, his finger resting on his bottom lip. After a moment his eyes became wide, “Braces!”
“Huh?”
“Braces, you assholes! All the people had braces.”
“Did snorin’ Norman?”
“I don’t think so.”
“Yeah, he does.”
“How would you know, Wade? You kiss the guy or something?”
“Okay, I don’t know if he does. But I know for a fact that the other two did.”
Marcus was showing the seldom seen grin of his. “They’re keeping him in lock up at the Sheriff’s Office. I bet Deputy Davidson could settle this for us.”
Donnie put his hand over his mouth and looked to Wade.
Wade kicked a pebble and muttered something nasty under his breath.
***
The boys got to the skatepark just as the after-dinner crowd was starting to arrive. It was the busiest time during the week, with the exception of Friday, when the older guys were out at the Drive-In or some raging kitchen party, chasing girls. Donnie hit the bowl while Marcus and Wade stayed near the bleachers and worked on their flip tricks. Sometimes Wade would just sit on the bleachers and watch Donnie when he got bored or frustrated. Donnie was really good at skating. For Wade, and Marcus too, skateboarding was just a hobby, something to pass the time. But for Donnie, skating was life.
About a half-hour into the skate, just about the time that Wade was getting ready to give up on landing that heel-flip, his attention was pulled to the other side of the park by an inhuman growling, followed by the same roaring voice yelling, “I’ll kill you! I’ll f***ing kill you!”
The voice belonged to a kid named Charlie, a regular at the park. He was a student from the same school as the boys, a year older than Wade. Normally Charlie was cool as a cucumber and a pretty nice guy to get along with. But at that moment he was swinging his arms in a violent rage, wide-eyed and rabid, throwing punches at a younger, very terrified, kid, who had now gone limp with fear.
It wasn’t long before someone yelled, “Fight!” and the heavy slapping of the swarming crowd’s soles on concrete turned into a thick circle of excited spectators surrounding Charlie and the little kid. Wade used his weight to his advantage and pushed through the crowd to the front, Marcus was right behind him. When they got through they saw Charlie, now sitting on the kid’s chest, the kid laid out like a rag doll, already unconscious. Charlie kept hitting him. Over and over again. Once the kid’s nose started squirting out blood, smiles became frowns and some people even looked away. Those who were cheering at the brawl now were pale with concern. But still, the rust stains on Charlie’s knuckles grew larger.
That’s when Wade saw Donnie burst through the crowd of spectators and charge at Charlie. He leaped off his feet and tackled Charlie like a defensive linebacker sacking a quarterback. They rolled in a ball off the beaten kid, onto the pavement, and when they straightened out it was now Donnie who was kneeling on Charlie’s chest.
Charlie, as if unaware he had been bested, kept swinging violently, growling like a dog. Donnie leaned back, out of Charlie’s reach, and grabbed hold of Charlie’s wrists, trying to hold him still.
“Chill!” Donnie kept yelling.
But no matter how many times he told him, Charlie would not chill. Eventually, Donnie had no choice but to slug him one. Charlie’s head bounced off the pavement and his whole body went limp, unconscious. Donnie immediately grabbed his fist and winced like he was in pain.
Wade and Marcus joined Donnie standing over Charlie while excitement and chatter started to circle the crowd once again.
Wade looked down on Charlie, now peacefully asleep. “Dude…Charlie snapped.”
Marcus was inspecting Charlie too. “I have never seen anyone lose it like that. And my dad is a Clippers fan. He’s always losing his shit.”
Donnie stared down at Charlie like he was looking at a ghost, still rubbing his scarred, swollen knuckles. “Guess what, guys?…”
Police sirens in the distance grew louder.
He pointed to Charlie’s mouth, hanging open in his slumber, revealing a thin silver rail running across the center his teeth. “…Charlie wears braces.”
***
Deputy Davidson sat at his desk in the seclusion of his office trying to put a dent in the tower of paperwork leaning dangerously to the right in front of him. His “shift” had ended a couple of hours earlier, but with all that had gone on in the last month and his skeleton staff, he was looking at at least a week of major overtime.
The ticking of the office clock and the clicking of keyboard keys were starting to get to him in a bad way. It seemed like the walls were getting closer by the minute. When Davidson moved to Seabridge County in his early thirties, his third year out of the academy, he imagined a peaceful, serene small town where he could marry and raise a family away from the evils of the big city. But here he was, seven years later, still single and childless, with a mountain of paperwork for violent cases that one would only expect to see in the grungiest corners of a large, faceless metropolis.
Crimes like: a young girl, six years old, putting a pillow over the face of her newborn baby brother while her mother is in the kitchen warming up soup, or another where the County’s resident barber of forty-one years loses his mind in a grocery store parking lot and drives a kitchen knife into the gut of one of Davidson’s rookie officers. He was a transfer, poor kid. It was probably the last thing he expected to have happened to him in a place like this. It was something out of a cable true crime show yet alone from a county hidden in the evergreens of the Midwest, with a population of nine hundred and thirty-seven law-abiding citizens. And a dozen more cases just like that one were stacked in thick folders in columns of various size, waiting for Deputy Davidson to put reason to it.
And the second hand on the office clock kept ticking. The walls kept getting closer.
Davidson was about to break for coffee when the door to his office opened, the blinds snapping against the glass with his name on it, and Officer Knotts, a veteran of three years, leaned inside looking sorry to have to bother his superior. Not sorry enough apparently.
“Hey, Chester,” he sighed. “I got a kid out here who wants to see ya. The son of Miss Avery?” Knotts couldn’t help the grin that followed, though he quickly corrected himself.
“Well, what’s he want?”
“He says he’s got some information on the 148 we just brought in from skatepark.”
“He was there?”
“He and his friends witnessed the whole thing. One of them was the one who broke it up.”
Deputy Davidson sat back in his wooden chair and let out a heavy exhale, tiredly rubbing his eyes. Wade Avery. The stepson who never was. When Davidson had been dating his mother all those months ago, he couldn’t win the kid over for the life of him. And now that it was over, it seemed he couldn’t be rid of the kid if he tried.
At least it was a break from paperwork.
“Send him in,” said Davidson.
Wade, Marcus, and Donnie sat in the Sheriff’s Office watching Charlie across the rows of desks being interviewed by the arresting officer from the skate park, unsuccessfully trying to eavesdrop on the conversation over the ringing phones and office chatter. It clearly was not much of a conversation. Charlie looked distant and disoriented, his head buried in his chest, staring blankly at his still bloodied hands, and only responding to the officer’s question with a head nod or a head shake.
Wade found it hard to look away. It wasn’t like Charlie to act like this. For as long as Wade had known him, Charlie had been like an older brother to the kids at the skate park; lending his time to help kids with their tricks and getting the loitering drinkers to go hang out somewhere else so the park remained safe for children. Everyone loved him. He didn’t just start fights. Especially with kids younger than him.
Something strange was going on in Seabridge County and Wade was intent on finding out what.
“Deputy Davidson will see you now,” said the skinny, large-headed, Officer Knotts, upon his return.
Wade popped up from where he sat and led the way across the floor. “I know where he’s at, Knotts. This isn’t my first rodeo.”
“Of course,” muttered Knotts, with a subtle rolling of the eyes.
Marcus and Donnie stood by the wall as Wade, acting as the official spokesman of the group, sat down in the wooden chair across from the Deputy and revealed his theory on the 5G frequencies being responsible for the recent irrational behavior in Seabridge and how braces might have had a part to play in it as well. The Deputy listened to Wade’s story in its entirety without interruption but did so with heavy eyes and little enthusiasm. And when Wade had finished, the Deputy spoke in the familiar condescending manner in which all adults spoke to kids they perceived as foolish or ignorant.
“Now, this is serious business, Wade. That boy Charlie Morgan was beating on has a broken nose. His parents want to press charges. In fact, if he weren’t only sixteen, he’d be back there in lock up with Norman Polinski from the barbershop instead of in the custody of his parents.
“I appreciate you coming down here, trying to vouch for your buddy, but guys – Braces? Radio frequencies? Don’t you think this is all a little, I don’t know, science fiction?”
Wade went on without heed, “What about Mr.Polinski? Does he have braces? They’re keeping in him in lock up, you can check. Can you check?”
The Deputy had heard enough. He put his hand up for silence. “You boys need to get on home. Now. Go on, get out of here.”
The three boys shuffled out of the Deputy’s office with glum faces.
“So what now?” asked Marcus as they walked through the rows of desks toward the lobby.
Wade grew a toothy smile. “Does your dad still have that chainsaw in the garage?”
***
By the time Deputy Davidson started to pack up his things for the night, it was dark. Besides Larry, the overnight holding cell guard, the Sheriff’s office had all but cleared out. The silence of the normally bustling building only added to Davidson’s fatigue. His eyes burned and his stomach grumbled in surrender. And it was going to be another long day tomorrow.
Though most of the thoughts running through his head at that moment were of having a hot shower and a cold beer, he couldn’t help but think back to how utterly convinced Wade had been about the 5G towers being responsible for the recent strange behavior in Seabridge. He even found himself opening the file on Charlie Morgan and reviewing his statement to the arresting officer. The boy said he didn’t know what had caused him to lose his temper. That it was like some sort of out-of-body experience.
Put the file away, Davidson told himself. It couldn’t really be the 5G frequencies causing the violent behavior.
Could it?
Possessed by curiosity, Davidson put the file back in the cabinet and headed for the holding cells.
By design the holding cells were a hostile environment; with no insulation, air conditioning, or heat it was brutally cold in the winters and stifling hot in the summer. Currently, it was dead in the middle of August and even in the night time the heat reverberated off the thick, pale concrete walls. That night there was a slight breeze working its way in from the street, but even still, Larry the night guard’s uniform was puddled with sweat stains, his bald crown shining with free-flowing perspiration while he slouched in a chair behind his desk.
He looked up from the newspaper, his reading glasses low off the brim of his nose, and gave Davidson a silent greeting.
“Hey, Larry,” Davidson sighed. “Just want to have a quick word with Norm.”
Larry’s eyes went back to his paper. “He’s got time,” he grunted.
Davidson walked to the far cell where Norman was being kept and saw him there, slouched on the concrete slab of a bed, shrunken inside a misfitting orange jumpsuit, staring down at his rough hands with a glazed, empty expression as beads of sweat fell off the ridges of his brow. The Deputy’s presence went unacknowledged.
“Hey, Norm,” said Davidson, soft in his approach.
The old man looked up but offered little else. Davidson took a minute to prepare his words in his head before speaking.
“Say, Norm…You don’t wear braces by any chance, do you? Maybe some kind of retainer?”
The old man’s expression lightened slightly. He shook his head and let out a soft, “No” under his breath.
For a second the Deputy found himself relieved, almost laughing at himself for humoring Wade’s ridiculous conspiracy theory. “No, I thought not…”
Davidson turned to leave, but a nagging question kept his boots planted. “Hey, Norm…” he started again. “I know you decided not to give a statement but I have to ask, off the record, why’d you do it? You’ve never been a violent man, you’ve never had any problems with the law. What happened?”
“I can’t say for sure that it was me who did those things,” muttered Norm.
“Well, it was you,” said Davidson with some aggravation. “There’s no debating that. You were still holding the knife when the first responder arrived on the scene. There were a dozen witnesses.”
Norm’s eyes fell to the floor as he muttered something under his breath. All the Deputy could make out was the word, ‘possessed’.
“Possessed?” Davidson said, fishing. “Is that what you said? You were possessed?”
When Norm’s head rose again he looked the Deputy in the eye and very firm and clear said, “Son. I was a god damn dummy. And something or someone had their hand right up my ass. Sure, I was talking. But they weren’t my words.”
A chill ran down Davidson’s spine. He looked away.
“Alright, Norm,” Davidson said off to the side. “I’m heading home for the night. Don’t give Larry a hard time, you hear?”
As Davidson started to walk away Norm called out, “I don’t suppose there’s something that can be done about the humidity in here? It’s doing hell to the metal plate in my knee.”
Davidson stopped in his stride and back-peddled to Norm’s cell. “Metal plate?”
Norm rubbed nursingly on his right knee cap. “Really acts up in the heat.”
Davidson’s intercom shot out static, startling him, and an officer on the other end called for the Deputy. Davidson pressed his thumb to the side of his intercom. “Go ahead.”
Static crackled again. “Deputy, I’m over here on Elm St. and I got two 5G towers down. Looks like somebody took a chainsaw to them, cut the things right in half, smashed the antenna all over the road. You might want to get down here and give her a look.”
Davidson’s jaw clenched.
Those god damn kids.
***
Deputy Davidson pulled up to the scene and put the cruiser in park. Across the street, he saw Officer Clark and his cruiser. The red and blues were still flashing silent and the headlights acted like a spotlight on the fallen lamp post laying headlong on the sidewalk. Like Clark had reported, the body had been rigidly severed, slivers of metal surrounding the remaining stump reflected the lights like glitter and the antenna was smashed into hundreds of pieces scattered on the grass and the road.
There were two other cars at the scene. Behind Officer Clark’s vehicle was the County Repair truck parked with its lights off, the repairman slouched in the driver seat, only visible from the icy blue glow off the cell phone he was mindlessly scrolling through, and then in front of Clark was a black Cadillac with windows tinted dark. The headlights were also putting a spotlight on the fallen post. Two men in black suits that Davidson had never seen before stood by the car, watching Davidson behind dark, boxy sunglasses. Both men were slender and somber, one with jet black hair kept short and the other with ghost-white hair kept the same.
An uneasy feeling in the pit of Davidson’s stomach accompanied them.
Davidson exited his vehicle and walked to Officer Clark, one eye on the damage and the other on the two strange men in suits. The two men were watching Davidson right back.
“Talk to me, Clark,” said the Deputy.
Clark looked nervous. Maybe it was having his superior check up on him, reasoned Davidson.
Or maybe it was something else.
“Called repair as soon as I saw the damage,” offered the rookie officer. “Looks like vandals. Probably kids. Maybe environmentalists. Repair says he could have it up in a few days.”
Not environmentalists. Kids. Asshole kids.
“And the suits?” asked Davidson.
As if the two men had heard Davidson’s inquiry, the white and black haired suits came over from the black Cadillac, synchronic and robotic in their movements, so quick in their stride that Clark didn’t even have time to answer the Deputy before the two men were upon them.
The one with jet black hair spoke to Davidson first, “Good evening. Are you the officer in charge?”
The man’s voice was as mechanical as his movements.
Davidson raised his chin and straightened his posture. His tone became firm. “I’m the Deputy of this county, gentlemen. And who might you be?”
The white-haired suit spoke next while the black-haired one reached inside his suit jacket breast. This reach caught Davidson’s eye and he went for the pistol on his hip. Fortunately, the suit was reaching for his ID. A Federal badge next to a straight-faced photo.
Do these guys ever take their sunglasses off?
“This is Agent Mayweather. My name is Agent Cross. We’re with the NSA.”
The white-haired suit, Agent Cross as he claimed, reached into his inner breast and produced a matching identification cased in leather and shiny plastic.
Davidson nodded, satisfied enough to take his hand off his service revolver, though still confused.
“NSA? What’s the NSA got to do with all this?”
“I’m afraid that information is classified,” answered the black-haired, Agent Mayweather.
“The important thing to understand is that the functionality of these antennas is a matter of national security,” followed Agent Cross. “Do you know who may have done this?”
Davidson lied. “No clue, gentlemen. It’s been a long day. But I can assure you I’ll be looking into it first thing in the morning. For now, I think it’s best if you let County Repair get this clutter off the street and start getting things patched up.”
“I’m afraid that’s not possible,” answered Agent Mayweather, flatly.
“We have a cleared technician on the way,” added Agent Cross.
“Cleared?”
“Security clearance, sir.”
“Right. It’s confidential,” said the Deputy, trying not to sound too condescending. “Boys, if these cell towers are anything but regular old cell towers I think I have the right to know. This town and the people in it have a right to know. I mean, what’s going on here? Some kind of top-secret experiment?”
He was starting to sound like the boy.
“That information is classified,” repeated Agent Mayweather.
“It’s an issue of national security,” added Agent Cross.
Davidson was starting to lose his patients. “Well, what would you like me to do?”
“The towers will be functional by morning. It would be best if you find the ones responsible.”
“Before we do,” added Agent Cross. He stared at Davidson until Davidson looked away.
“Okay. Will do,” answered Davidson. He turned and started back for his cruiser, calling out to Officer Clark, “Pack it up. I’ll be wanting to look over the report tomorrow.”
Clark nodded, a little looser now, and headed for the repair truck.
It was clear to Davidson the agents doubted his honesty about who was responsible. But how could they know he was lying?
They’re the NSA.
And what was that about finding the one responsible before they did? Was that some kind of threat? What were they going to do when they found him?
Goddammit, Wade.
***
Deputy Davidson was surprised to find himself combing his hair to the side with his palm as he stood on the front steps to Miss Avery’s place. He had assumed that any romantic feelings for her had flushed through his system after they had called it quits, she more than he, all those months ago, and yet here he was; concerned, nervous even, about his appearance.
Davidson looked down at the garden gnome guarding Miss Avery’s lilac bush and grinned at it as if to break the tension.
“Long time, huh?”
The gnome’s unblinking eyes showed no humor.
The door opened and there stood Miss Avery at the threshold, dressed in a familiar floral summer dress, her body still as tight as Davidson remembered, though the lines under her eyes had deepened and darkened, and her shoulder-length ashy curls were a mess with frizz, looking as though she had just woken from a nap. Despite her sluggishness, she offered the Deputy a warm smile and a greeting that sounded like a pleasant sigh.
“Hey, Maggie,” said the Deputy. “I’m sorry. Were you asleep?”
Miss Avery suddenly became aware of her appearance. “Oh! Yes. I had a dentist appointment earlier in the day. They gassed me. Really took the wind out of my sails. I was just lying down on the couch. Would you like to come in?”
“I better not,” he said despite himself. “I actually came here to talk to Wade. Is he home?”
“He went out with some friends from school but I imagine he will be home soon. Is everything okay?”
Davidson bit down on his lip, wondering how to answer that question. “I’m not sure,’ he said. “He came to see me today. He had some concerns about these new 5G towers they’re installing. I think he and his friends might have gotten in some real trouble. It’s very important that I speak with him. Do you know where he might be at?”
Miss Avery’s smile dropped. “What’s going on, Dale? Should I be worried?”
Davidson told her about the vandalized towers, the government agents, and how he believed that Wade and his friends were the ones responsible. Miss Avery became visibly upset. Despite his urge to console her, Davidson remained professional and waited until Miss Avery composed herself before speaking again.
“If you have any idea of where he might be. It’s better that I be the one to find him.”
Miss Avery stared off to the side, searching her mind. “I know they like to spend time at the railroad tracks, in the yard over on Jackson. That might be a good place to start.”
The train yard on Jackson Ave. It was only a few blocks away. “Thanks, Maggie. I’ll check it out.”
When he turned to leave Miss Avery reached out and softly grabbed him by the wrist. A tickling wave rushed through his stomach and for a moment he remembered what it was like to be wrapped in her embrace; her warm gentle skin breathing against his.
He shook it off, pulled away politely, finding it hard to meet her pleading blue eyes.
“Take me with you,” she said. “If my son is in danger or gotten himself into some trouble, he needs me. Please, I want to come.”
It went against every rule in the book. But still, if anyone could help in locating the boy, it was his mother. She knew his movements better than anybody. The important thing was they got to Wade before the agents did. There was something off about those agents.
Something sinister.
“Alright then, let’s get going,” Davidson said with a friendly smirk.
Miss Avery grabbed her keys off the table and her purse, more a large leather traveling bag, from off the coat rack and shut the front door, locking it. They hurried down the front walkway and across the road to the cruiser. Davidson forced himself not to come around to the passenger side and open the door for Miss Avery. She did look good under the moon in that dress though.
Keep it professional, you dog, Davidson scolded himself.
As the cruiser started and pulled out onto the road, the headlights lit up on the car two lengths behind them. If Davidson had not been so focused on keeping his eyes from wandering, he might have made the vehicle to be a familiar color and model.
A black Cadillac.
***
The 9:16 to Rexdale chugged ferociously through the train yard as the lowered cross-guard dinged over and over, the red blub on the post beside it blinking on and off, shooting short beams of bloody light against the bushy area before leaving it in darkness once again. Wade, Marcus, and Donnie stood a few feet away at the base of a large hill watching the graffiti riddled boxcars whiz by in a blur of shape and color. The train had stopped their sprint and now they huffed and puffed, hunched over with their hands on their knees, except for Wade, who held on to a bulky chainsaw with both hands.
“I can’t believe you actually did it!” laughed Donnie over the passing train.
And he had. Wade had cut those things right through and then stomped on those antennas until they were close to the size of pebbles on the road. Even if it wasn’t the 5G frequencies that were making people insane, Wade felt vindicated. It was what Deputy Davidson deserved for leaving his mother stranded the way he did.
“My dad is going to kill me!” yelled Marcus. “Literally kill me!”
“You are in deep shit, Wade,” said Donnie, still chuckling.
Wade shrugged. “Whatever. Maybe I just saved somebody from getting stabbed by a maniac with braces. Guess we’ll find out.”
Wade couldn’t get the memory of the huge fountain of sparks from his head. Or the reverberating, deafening ding that was made when the falling pole hit the concrete.
The whole street shook.
Wade had never felt so alive. The feeling of freedom to act on an impulse the way he had was like a high off a drug, or at least what Wade imagined a high off a drug might be like. He wanted to do it all the time.
He was so involved with recounting the event in his head that he wasn’t watching Marcus and Donnie, who when he turned back around had already made the climb to the top of the hill. They stood there still, looking out. Something had captured their attention and smeared a look of terror on their face.
“Hey, you assholes! Wait up!” yelled Wade, scrambling up the steep hill after them, struggling with the weight of the chainsaw in his hands and the pull of gravity behind him.
When Wade reached the top of the hill, he looked out and gasped. The chainsaw fell out of his hands and rolled down the other side of the hill, stopping in front of a pair of skater sneakers.
Charlie’s sneakers.
Charlie Morgan, no longer in the custody of his parents, stood at the center of six or seven kids from the town, lined up in a chain, watching the boys with snarling faces, grinding their teeth and showing off the braces in their mouths gleaming under the full moon. Some of them held knives. One of the kids, dressed in baby blue teddy bear pajamas, with soft cheeks and a bowl haircut, looked to be about seven years old. His knife was the biggest.
Charlie bent over and picked the chainsaw up from off the grass. His head rose with a chilling grimace.
“You shouldn’t have smashed those towers, Wade!” he yelled into the dark of night.
Wade swallowed hard and his voice squeaked saying, “Uhh…I’m sorry?”
***
Miss Avery leaned into Deputy Davidson’s shoulder as the 9:16 to Rexdale sped loudly by on the tracks beside them. If not for the narrow beam from Davidson’s flashlight guiding the way through the train yard, the two of them would have been swallowed by the black.
The part of Davidson that was enjoying the nighttime walk with Miss Avery was at odds with his concern for her son and his friends, and about the motives of the strange sunglass-wearing government agents mucking about his county.
“I don’t know how these kids do it,” whispered Miss Avery as the 9:16 shrunk into the horizon and the night went quiet once again. “Hanging out in a place like this…it’s like a horror movie out here.”
“I’ll level with you, Maggie. This entire day is shaping up to be something out of an episode of X-Files.”
“Do you really think it was Wade who cut down those poles?” asked Miss Avery. She sighed with disappointment as if she had already answered her question. “I wouldn’t put it past him. He’s really been acting out since you and I…you know.”
Davidson looked off to the side for a moment. “I don’t know, Maggie…I swear, I think Wade might be on to something. I must be crazy to believe it. But these agents, they have some stake in these 5G towers. What if they’re conducting some sort of top-secret experiment? And using us as lab rats?”
“And that’s why Judy Bloom’s daughter murdered her baby brother?”
“I know it sounds ludicrous. But the instigators of these crimes all had some sort of metal conductor in their body. Braces, a metal plate…”
Miss Avery thought about it.
“And you think they’re picking up the signals like the antenna on an old black and white?”
Davidson raised his eyebrows and nodded.
Miss Avery smiled. “Sounds kind of science-fictiony, no?”
“Like I said…X-Files.”
A faint buzzing could be heard in the distance up ahead, getting louder by the second. Soon the buzzing was accompanied by what sounded like screaming.
Kids screaming.
The boys.
Davidson shined his flashlight further into the distance, illuminating the figures of Wade, Marcus, and Donnie running frantically toward them, waving their hands and screaming over the high pitched rip that grew more intense as their figures got larger.
It was the sound of a chainsaw.
“That’s them!” pointed Miss Avery. “That’s the boys!”
The boys kept looking back over their shoulder with expressions of horror. They were being chased by a clump of shadow that rose and sunk not far behind them. Davidson pointed his light at the shadow and illuminated a pack of more kids from town, running after the boys with rabid intensity.
My god…That’s Charlie Morgan…And he’s waving a chainsaw.
And Charlie wasn’t alone.
There was Jenni Grossman, a freshman at Seabridge Academy, still in her grey private school uniform, knee-highs and all, wielding a hatchet with smears of dried blood across her face.
Beside Jenni, running faster than Davidson had ever seen them before, were the Markham twins. Two preteen gingers whose weight made them formidable football players, but little else. Their chins gobbled as they snarled and drooled, clawing at the boys who were quickly losing their lead.
And behind those four, more shadows started to appear. More kids with knives. And they all wore braces.
Davidson took Miss Avery by the wrist and pointed to the small glowing red taillights parked just over a hundred yards behind them. “We need to get to the car! Now!”
“But the boys!” cried Miss Avery.
“They’re coming! Go!”
By now Wade and the boys were just a few feet away, Charlie about ten feet behind them with the chainsaw raised over his head. The motor’s buzz was so loud it vibrated in the Deputy’s skull.
Davidson withdrew his firearm and took aim at Charlie as Wade and the other two ran past him without so much as a glance.
“Get to the car! Take your mom!”
“No shit, Sherlock!” Wade yelled over his shoulder.
Charlie zeroed in on the Deputy and screamed out at the top of his lungs, racing forward.
“Drop the weapon!” yelled Davidson.
Charlie lunged at the Deputy. Davidson pulled the trigger. A resounding shot rang out. The bullet whizzed through Charlie’s shoulder. Charlie shrieked, twisted, and fell to the grass.
The chainsaw fell beside him, digging into the ground and splashing a mix of grass and dirt toward the sky before tipping on its side and convulsing unattended.
Next Davidson took aim at Jenni Grossman, approaching full steam, her skirt flailing at the will of her galloping thighs. Not able to drop another youth, he lowered and sided his weapon, turning around and following Wade and the boys to the cruiser as fast as his aching middle-aged legs could carry him.
Behind him Jenni Grossman’s flats stomped through the grass, her breath getting heavier and faster. He thought he could feel it on the back of his neck.
Should have shot her when I had the chance.
Now at the car, Miss Avery yelled at the boys to get in before opening up the front passenger door and diving inside. The three boys didn’t argue. They were all in the backseat just after she was, doors closed and locked, ducking in their seats and peeking out the back window.
Davidson got to the driver side door and swung it open, kicking back as hard as he could, knocking Jenni Grossman back a few steps and branding her white blouse with a muddy footprint. She regained her footing and came again, but Davidson had slipped into the car and gotten the door shut just as the hatchet was swinging for his head. The window took the hit and cracked into a spider-web.
Davidson locked his door and started the car.
“Holy shit!” yelled Marcus.
“Get us the f**k out of here, Davidson!” yelled Wade.
The cruiser rocked back and forth like a boat as the Markham twins climbed up on the back of the car with a thud and started banging on the back window with their lumpy fists, their rapid breath staining steam circles on the glass.
Davidson punched down on the gas pedal and as the cruiser jerked forward the Markham twins rolled off the back, onto the grass. He watched the rest of the psychotic mob of kids get smaller and darker in his rear-view as the five of them sped away into the night. Davidson swore he saw little Tommy Wilson, seven years old, holding a kitchen knife and wearing teddy bear pajamas.
Once they were back on the main road, the kids started to breathe again. So did Davidson. Miss Avery was slouched over in her seat, sobbing over her purse. Davidson was surprised that through all that had just happened Miss Avery had managed to hold on to that thing.
“This is really happening!” yelled Wade. “I can’t believe I was actually right!” He turned to Marcus and Donnie and pointed. “I freakin’ told you!”
“My dad’s chainsaw is back there, you asshole!” Marcus shot back at him.
“Marcus, I think your dad might have some more important things to worry about. Like, I don’t know, the whole town going crazy?”
“You shot Charlie!” Donnie yelled at Davidson. “I think you might have killed him!”
Miss Avery’s head rose, her pale face peeking out from the tangled mess of hair. Her voice was shaking, “Where are we going?”
The Deputy answered calmly, though Donnie’s comment had taken the wind from him. That boy was only a child. “Back to the station. I’m going to contact the Sheriff and we’ll get this whole thing figured out, okay? Everybody just cool out, okay? Try to relax…”
Davidson’s eyes went from the road to the rear-view then back to the road. He reached over and switched on his siren.
***
Davidson’s cruiser sat idle in the Sheriff’s Office parking lot, headlights glaring a spotlight on the front of the building. Outside was quiet. Inside the car was just the same. Davidson had spent the ride wondering if it might have been better to turn the car around and flatten those rabid kids. They were evil. Soulless. He couldn’t get the image of their bloodthirsty eyes out of his head.
Leaning back in his seat, Davidson exhaled slowly, rubbing his eyes tiredly.
“That must have been every kid in town with braces.”
No, there were more. Davidson knew that.
Maybe they were out trying to murder someone else. Maybe they were successful.
“I want to go home,” said Donnie. “When can we go home?”
Wade spoke before Donnie could get an answer. “So what do we do now? Those things are out there!”
The Deputy looked at Miss Avery beside him, still hunched over her purse on her lap, tangled hair fallen over her face. She had stopped pulling tissues and sobbing for the last little while. Now she was silent, Davidson thought maybe sleeping.
He spoke softer, “I’ll figure something out. There’s definitely something ungodly going on in this town. But Wade, I’ve been asked to bring you in. Some government agents, NSA, responded to the 5G towers you smashed. They want you arrested.”
“Oh, man. This is serious…” sobbed Marcus.
Wade leaned forward. “You’re not going to hand me over to them, are you? They’re in on this! They have to be! They’re using the frequencies to control people’s minds! What about snorin’ Norman? Did he have braces?”
“No. But he had a metal plate in his knee,” answered the Deputy, looking at Wade through the rear-view.
At that moment the squad car flooded with light and with squinting eyes the Deputy looked out his window for the source of the beam. The pebbles on the gravel driveway popped under the rubber tires of a car pulling in to the lot. Davidson’s heart sunk.
“Who is it?” whispered Marcus.
“It’s a black Cadillac,” answered Donnie, closest to the driver side window.
“So that means that it’s not just braces, it’s anyone with a metal implant,” said Wade, more to himself than the rest of the car.
Davidson’s attention remained on the Cadillac.
Wade continued, “Mom, didn’t they give you a silver molar today at the dentist?”
A flash of panic tightened Davidson’s chest, followed by an alarming pinch in his back that sent a shock through his entire body. He gasped and the world spun. Another moment of excruciating pain as whatever had just been jabbed inside him was being pulled out.
The kids in the backseat screamed out in terror.
Davidson turned, though it stung sharp, and saw Miss Avery holding a bloody knife in her hand. The blade was about six inches.
Just about the size of the length of her purse.
Through the hair over her face, he saw tears in her eyes.
“Maggie…” Davidson uttered.
Miss Avery’s lips quivered. “I’m sorry…I just haven’t been myself.”
She extended her arm and drove the knife deep into Davidson’s side. Another piercing shock flooded his body and Davidson screamed out in agony.
Wade yelled, “Mom! No!”
Miss Avery pulled out the blood-streaked knife from Davidson’s insides. Davidson moaned and looked down at the blood blooming under his uniform. Everything was spinning and it was hard to catch his breath.
Davidson pulled the handle on his door, using the weight of his shoulder to push the door open. He tumbled out of the car onto the gravel, the sharp points of the rocks digging into his back as he rolled over, looking up at the stars, blurred from tears in his eyes.
He heard the doors from the Cadillac open and close, footsteps on the gravel got closer and louder, then they came into view, looking down on Davidson behind dark sunglasses.
Agent Mayweather and Agent Cross.
He was starting to fade in and out. Everything sounded like he was underwater. From inside the car, he could hear Maggie say to the boys, “Don’t be afraid…it will all be over in just a minute.”
The End.
Freakuencies(Gregory Patrick Travers)
The three boys stood on the sidewalk on Elm St., staring up at the newly installed 5G antenna on top of the lamp post at the bend in the street, their skateboards at their side. Wade, the chubbiest of three, squinted in the late afternoon sun, slowly sinking into his eye line, using his free hand to act like the brim of a cap as he reiterated, “I’m telling you, guys! It’s because of those things that everyone is acting so crazy.”
Marcus, the darkest of them in complexion, tilted his head at Wade and raised an eyebrow questionably. Donnie beside him remained hypnotized, gazing up lazily at the lamppost, his wavy blonde bangs hovering over his brow line. He at least seemed to be considering Wade’s claim. Marcus was having nothing of it.
“How else do you explain it?” shot Wade, eager to prove Marcus stupid for doubting so quickly. “All kinds of shits been happening since these things went up! Haven’t you watched those videos on YouTube about how 5G frequencies mess with your head? They say it can be weaponized. Like New World Order stuff. That’s what’s happening in Seabridge! First, that nine-year-old girl suffocated her baby brother. A week later, crazy Norman from the barbershop stabs that new cop in the parking lot of the Eat N’ Save, and then Lester hangs himself in his basement! Before these towers went up nothing like this ever happened and now…it’s like people are possessed or something!”
Marcus remained unbothered. “I’ll tell you how to explain it. Lester was depressed as hell. And as for that little girl suffocating her brother and snorin’ Norman going knife crazy, that’s simple too – white people are f***ed up.”
“But your mom’s white,” noted Donnie, finally breaking from the antenna’s hold on him.
“And she is f***ed up,” said Marcus, quick in his reproach. “My point is proven.”
“I don’t get it though,” Donnie went on. “If it’s the 5G that’s frying people’s brains then why isn’t the whole town going postal?”
Wade paused to think, his finger resting on his bottom lip. After a moment his eyes became wide, “Braces!”
“Huh?”
“Braces, you assholes! All the people had braces.”
“Did snorin’ Norman?”
“I don’t think so.”
“Yeah, he does.”
“How would you know, Wade? You kiss the guy or something?”
“Okay, I don’t know if he does. But I know for a fact that the other two did.”
Marcus was showing the seldom seen grin of his. “They’re keeping him in lock up at the Sheriff’s Office. I bet Deputy Davidson could settle this for us.”
Donnie put his hand over his mouth and looked to Wade.
Wade kicked a pebble and muttered something nasty under his breath.
***
The boys got to the skatepark just as the after-dinner crowd was starting to arrive. It was the busiest time during the week, with the exception of Friday, when the older guys were out at the Drive-In or some raging kitchen party, chasing girls. Donnie hit the bowl while Marcus and Wade stayed near the bleachers and worked on their flip tricks. Sometimes Wade would just sit on the bleachers and watch Donnie when he got bored or frustrated. Donnie was really good at skating. For Wade, and Marcus too, skateboarding was just a hobby, something to pass the time. But for Donnie, skating was life.
About a half-hour into the skate, just about the time that Wade was getting ready to give up on landing that heel-flip, his attention was pulled to the other side of the park by an inhuman growling, followed by the same roaring voice yelling, “I’ll kill you! I’ll f***ing kill you!”
The voice belonged to a kid named Charlie, a regular at the park. He was a student from the same school as the boys, a year older than Wade. Normally Charlie was cool as a cucumber and a pretty nice guy to get along with. But at that moment he was swinging his arms in a violent rage, wide-eyed and rabid, throwing punches at a younger, very terrified, kid, who had now gone limp with fear.
It wasn’t long before someone yelled, “Fight!” and the heavy slapping of the swarming crowd’s soles on concrete turned into a thick circle of excited spectators surrounding Charlie and the little kid. Wade used his weight to his advantage and pushed through the crowd to the front, Marcus was right behind him. When they got through they saw Charlie, now sitting on the kid’s chest, the kid laid out like a rag doll, already unconscious. Charlie kept hitting him. Over and over again. Once the kid’s nose started squirting out blood, smiles became frowns and some people even looked away. Those who were cheering at the brawl now were pale with concern. But still, the rust stains on Charlie’s knuckles grew larger.
That’s when Wade saw Donnie burst through the crowd of spectators and charge at Charlie. He leaped off his feet and tackled Charlie like a defensive linebacker sacking a quarterback. They rolled in a ball off the beaten kid, onto the pavement, and when they straightened out it was now Donnie who was kneeling on Charlie’s chest.
Charlie, as if unaware he had been bested, kept swinging violently, growling like a dog. Donnie leaned back, out of Charlie’s reach, and grabbed hold of Charlie’s wrists, trying to hold him still.
“Chill!” Donnie kept yelling.
But no matter how many times he told him, Charlie would not chill. Eventually, Donnie had no choice but to slug him one. Charlie’s head bounced off the pavement and his whole body went limp, unconscious. Donnie immediately grabbed his fist and winced like he was in pain.
Wade and Marcus joined Donnie standing over Charlie while excitement and chatter started to circle the crowd once again.
Wade looked down on Charlie, now peacefully asleep. “Dude…Charlie snapped.”
Marcus was inspecting Charlie too. “I have never seen anyone lose it like that. And my dad is a Clippers fan. He’s always losing his shit.”
Donnie stared down at Charlie like he was looking at a ghost, still rubbing his scarred, swollen knuckles. “Guess what, guys?…”
Police sirens in the distance grew louder.
He pointed to Charlie’s mouth, hanging open in his slumber, revealing a thin silver rail running across the center his teeth. “…Charlie wears braces.”
***
Deputy Davidson sat at his desk in the seclusion of his office trying to put a dent in the tower of paperwork leaning dangerously to the right in front of him. His “shift” had ended a couple of hours earlier, but with all that had gone on in the last month and his skeleton staff, he was looking at at least a week of major overtime.
The ticking of the office clock and the clicking of keyboard keys were starting to get to him in a bad way. It seemed like the walls were getting closer by the minute. When Davidson moved to Seabridge County in his early thirties, his third year out of the academy, he imagined a peaceful, serene small town where he could marry and raise a family away from the evils of the big city. But here he was, seven years later, still single and childless, with a mountain of paperwork for violent cases that one would only expect to see in the grungiest corners of a large, faceless metropolis.
Crimes like: a young girl, six years old, putting a pillow over the face of her newborn baby brother while her mother is in the kitchen warming up soup, or another where the County’s resident barber of forty-one years loses his mind in a grocery store parking lot and drives a kitchen knife into the gut of one of Davidson’s rookie officers. He was a transfer, poor kid. It was probably the last thing he expected to have happened to him in a place like this. It was something out of a cable true crime show yet alone from a county hidden in the evergreens of the Midwest, with a population of nine hundred and thirty-seven law-abiding citizens. And a dozen more cases just like that one were stacked in thick folders in columns of various size, waiting for Deputy Davidson to put reason to it.
And the second hand on the office clock kept ticking. The walls kept getting closer.
Davidson was about to break for coffee when the door to his office opened, the blinds snapping against the glass with his name on it, and Officer Knotts, a veteran of three years, leaned inside looking sorry to have to bother his superior. Not sorry enough apparently.
“Hey, Chester,” he sighed. “I got a kid out here who wants to see ya. The son of Miss Avery?” Knotts couldn’t help the grin that followed, though he quickly corrected himself.
“Well, what’s he want?”
“He says he’s got some information on the 148 we just brought in from skatepark.”
“He was there?”
“He and his friends witnessed the whole thing. One of them was the one who broke it up.”
Deputy Davidson sat back in his wooden chair and let out a heavy exhale, tiredly rubbing his eyes. Wade Avery. The stepson who never was. When Davidson had been dating his mother all those months ago, he couldn’t win the kid over for the life of him. And now that it was over, it seemed he couldn’t be rid of the kid if he tried.
At least it was a break from paperwork.
“Send him in,” said Davidson.
Wade, Marcus, and Donnie sat in the Sheriff’s Office watching Charlie across the rows of desks being interviewed by the arresting officer from the skate park, unsuccessfully trying to eavesdrop on the conversation over the ringing phones and office chatter. It clearly was not much of a conversation. Charlie looked distant and disoriented, his head buried in his chest, staring blankly at his still bloodied hands, and only responding to the officer’s question with a head nod or a head shake.
Wade found it hard to look away. It wasn’t like Charlie to act like this. For as long as Wade had known him, Charlie had been like an older brother to the kids at the skate park; lending his time to help kids with their tricks and getting the loitering drinkers to go hang out somewhere else so the park remained safe for children. Everyone loved him. He didn’t just start fights. Especially with kids younger than him.
Something strange was going on in Seabridge County and Wade was intent on finding out what.
“Deputy Davidson will see you now,” said the skinny, large-headed, Officer Knotts, upon his return.
Wade popped up from where he sat and led the way across the floor. “I know where he’s at, Knotts. This isn’t my first rodeo.”
“Of course,” muttered Knotts, with a subtle rolling of the eyes.
Marcus and Donnie stood by the wall as Wade, acting as the official spokesman of the group, sat down in the wooden chair across from the Deputy and revealed his theory on the 5G frequencies being responsible for the recent irrational behavior in Seabridge and how braces might have had a part to play in it as well. The Deputy listened to Wade’s story in its entirety without interruption but did so with heavy eyes and little enthusiasm. And when Wade had finished, the Deputy spoke in the familiar condescending manner in which all adults spoke to kids they perceived as foolish or ignorant.
“Now, this is serious business, Wade. That boy Charlie Morgan was beating on has a broken nose. His parents want to press charges. In fact, if he weren’t only sixteen, he’d be back there in lock up with Norman Polinski from the barbershop instead of in the custody of his parents.
“I appreciate you coming down here, trying to vouch for your buddy, but guys – Braces? Radio frequencies? Don’t you think this is all a little, I don’t know, science fiction?”
Wade went on without heed, “What about Mr.Polinski? Does he have braces? They’re keeping in him in lock up, you can check. Can you check?”
The Deputy had heard enough. He put his hand up for silence. “You boys need to get on home. Now. Go on, get out of here.”
The three boys shuffled out of the Deputy’s office with glum faces.
“So what now?” asked Marcus as they walked through the rows of desks toward the lobby.
Wade grew a toothy smile. “Does your dad still have that chainsaw in the garage?”
***
By the time Deputy Davidson started to pack up his things for the night, it was dark. Besides Larry, the overnight holding cell guard, the Sheriff’s office had all but cleared out. The silence of the normally bustling building only added to Davidson’s fatigue. His eyes burned and his stomach grumbled in surrender. And it was going to be another long day tomorrow.
Though most of the thoughts running through his head at that moment were of having a hot shower and a cold beer, he couldn’t help but think back to how utterly convinced Wade had been about the 5G towers being responsible for the recent strange behavior in Seabridge. He even found himself opening the file on Charlie Morgan and reviewing his statement to the arresting officer. The boy said he didn’t know what had caused him to lose his temper. That it was like some sort of out-of-body experience.
Put the file away, Davidson told himself. It couldn’t really be the 5G frequencies causing the violent behavior.
Could it?
Possessed by curiosity, Davidson put the file back in the cabinet and headed for the holding cells.
By design the holding cells were a hostile environment; with no insulation, air conditioning, or heat it was brutally cold in the winters and stifling hot in the summer. Currently, it was dead in the middle of August and even in the night time the heat reverberated off the thick, pale concrete walls. That night there was a slight breeze working its way in from the street, but even still, Larry the night guard’s uniform was puddled with sweat stains, his bald crown shining with free-flowing perspiration while he slouched in a chair behind his desk.
He looked up from the newspaper, his reading glasses low off the brim of his nose, and gave Davidson a silent greeting.
“Hey, Larry,” Davidson sighed. “Just want to have a quick word with Norm.”
Larry’s eyes went back to his paper. “He’s got time,” he grunted.
Davidson walked to the far cell where Norman was being kept and saw him there, slouched on the concrete slab of a bed, shrunken inside a misfitting orange jumpsuit, staring down at his rough hands with a glazed, empty expression as beads of sweat fell off the ridges of his brow. The Deputy’s presence went unacknowledged.
“Hey, Norm,” said Davidson, soft in his approach.
The old man looked up but offered little else. Davidson took a minute to prepare his words in his head before speaking.
“Say, Norm…You don’t wear braces by any chance, do you? Maybe some kind of retainer?”
The old man’s expression lightened slightly. He shook his head and let out a soft, “No” under his breath.
For a second the Deputy found himself relieved, almost laughing at himself for humoring Wade’s ridiculous conspiracy theory. “No, I thought not…”
Davidson turned to leave, but a nagging question kept his boots planted. “Hey, Norm…” he started again. “I know you decided not to give a statement but I have to ask, off the record, why’d you do it? You’ve never been a violent man, you’ve never had any problems with the law. What happened?”
“I can’t say for sure that it was me who did those things,” muttered Norm.
“Well, it was you,” said Davidson with some aggravation. “There’s no debating that. You were still holding the knife when the first responder arrived on the scene. There were a dozen witnesses.”
Norm’s eyes fell to the floor as he muttered something under his breath. All the Deputy could make out was the word, ‘possessed’.
“Possessed?” Davidson said, fishing. “Is that what you said? You were possessed?”
When Norm’s head rose again he looked the Deputy in the eye and very firm and clear said, “Son. I was a god damn dummy. And something or someone had their hand right up my ass. Sure, I was talking. But they weren’t my words.”
A chill ran down Davidson’s spine. He looked away.
“Alright, Norm,” Davidson said off to the side. “I’m heading home for the night. Don’t give Larry a hard time, you hear?”
As Davidson started to walk away Norm called out, “I don’t suppose there’s something that can be done about the humidity in here? It’s doing hell to the metal plate in my knee.”
Davidson stopped in his stride and back-peddled to Norm’s cell. “Metal plate?”
Norm rubbed nursingly on his right knee cap. “Really acts up in the heat.”
Davidson’s intercom shot out static, startling him, and an officer on the other end called for the Deputy. Davidson pressed his thumb to the side of his intercom. “Go ahead.”
Static crackled again. “Deputy, I’m over here on Elm St. and I got two 5G towers down. Looks like somebody took a chainsaw to them, cut the things right in half, smashed the antenna all over the road. You might want to get down here and give her a look.”
Davidson’s jaw clenched.
Those god damn kids.
***
Deputy Davidson pulled up to the scene and put the cruiser in park. Across the street, he saw Officer Clark and his cruiser. The red and blues were still flashing silent and the headlights acted like a spotlight on the fallen lamp post laying headlong on the sidewalk. Like Clark had reported, the body had been rigidly severed, slivers of metal surrounding the remaining stump reflected the lights like glitter and the antenna was smashed into hundreds of pieces scattered on the grass and the road.
There were two other cars at the scene. Behind Officer Clark’s vehicle was the County Repair truck parked with its lights off, the repairman slouched in the driver seat, only visible from the icy blue glow off the cell phone he was mindlessly scrolling through, and then in front of Clark was a black Cadillac with windows tinted dark. The headlights were also putting a spotlight on the fallen post. Two men in black suits that Davidson had never seen before stood by the car, watching Davidson behind dark, boxy sunglasses. Both men were slender and somber, one with jet black hair kept short and the other with ghost-white hair kept the same.
An uneasy feeling in the pit of Davidson’s stomach accompanied them.
Davidson exited his vehicle and walked to Officer Clark, one eye on the damage and the other on the two strange men in suits. The two men were watching Davidson right back.
“Talk to me, Clark,” said the Deputy.
Clark looked nervous. Maybe it was having his superior check up on him, reasoned Davidson.
Or maybe it was something else.
“Called repair as soon as I saw the damage,” offered the rookie officer. “Looks like vandals. Probably kids. Maybe environmentalists. Repair says he could have it up in a few days.”
Not environmentalists. Kids. Asshole kids.
“And the suits?” asked Davidson.
As if the two men had heard Davidson’s inquiry, the white and black haired suits came over from the black Cadillac, synchronic and robotic in their movements, so quick in their stride that Clark didn’t even have time to answer the Deputy before the two men were upon them.
The one with jet black hair spoke to Davidson first, “Good evening. Are you the officer in charge?”
The man’s voice was as mechanical as his movements.
Davidson raised his chin and straightened his posture. His tone became firm. “I’m the Deputy of this county, gentlemen. And who might you be?”
The white-haired suit spoke next while the black-haired one reached inside his suit jacket breast. This reach caught Davidson’s eye and he went for the pistol on his hip. Fortunately, the suit was reaching for his ID. A Federal badge next to a straight-faced photo.
Do these guys ever take their sunglasses off?
“This is Agent Mayweather. My name is Agent Cross. We’re with the NSA.”
The white-haired suit, Agent Cross as he claimed, reached into his inner breast and produced a matching identification cased in leather and shiny plastic.
Davidson nodded, satisfied enough to take his hand off his service revolver, though still confused.
“NSA? What’s the NSA got to do with all this?”
“I’m afraid that information is classified,” answered the black-haired, Agent Mayweather.
“The important thing to understand is that the functionality of these antennas is a matter of national security,” followed Agent Cross. “Do you know who may have done this?”
Davidson lied. “No clue, gentlemen. It’s been a long day. But I can assure you I’ll be looking into it first thing in the morning. For now, I think it’s best if you let County Repair get this clutter off the street and start getting things patched up.”
“I’m afraid that’s not possible,” answered Agent Mayweather, flatly.
“We have a cleared technician on the way,” added Agent Cross.
“Cleared?”
“Security clearance, sir.”
“Right. It’s confidential,” said the Deputy, trying not to sound too condescending. “Boys, if these cell towers are anything but regular old cell towers I think I have the right to know. This town and the people in it have a right to know. I mean, what’s going on here? Some kind of top-secret experiment?”
He was starting to sound like the boy.
“That information is classified,” repeated Agent Mayweather.
“It’s an issue of national security,” added Agent Cross.
Davidson was starting to lose his patients. “Well, what would you like me to do?”
“The towers will be functional by morning. It would be best if you find the ones responsible.”
“Before we do,” added Agent Cross. He stared at Davidson until Davidson looked away.
“Okay. Will do,” answered Davidson. He turned and started back for his cruiser, calling out to Officer Clark, “Pack it up. I’ll be wanting to look over the report tomorrow.”
Clark nodded, a little looser now, and headed for the repair truck.
It was clear to Davidson the agents doubted his honesty about who was responsible. But how could they know he was lying?
They’re the NSA.
And what was that about finding the one responsible before they did? Was that some kind of threat? What were they going to do when they found him?
Goddammit, Wade.
***
Deputy Davidson was surprised to find himself combing his hair to the side with his palm as he stood on the front steps to Miss Avery’s place. He had assumed that any romantic feelings for her had flushed through his system after they had called it quits, she more than he, all those months ago, and yet here he was; concerned, nervous even, about his appearance.
Davidson looked down at the garden gnome guarding Miss Avery’s lilac bush and grinned at it as if to break the tension.
“Long time, huh?”
The gnome’s unblinking eyes showed no humor.
The door opened and there stood Miss Avery at the threshold, dressed in a familiar floral summer dress, her body still as tight as Davidson remembered, though the lines under her eyes had deepened and darkened, and her shoulder-length ashy curls were a mess with frizz, looking as though she had just woken from a nap. Despite her sluggishness, she offered the Deputy a warm smile and a greeting that sounded like a pleasant sigh.
“Hey, Maggie,” said the Deputy. “I’m sorry. Were you asleep?”
Miss Avery suddenly became aware of her appearance. “Oh! Yes. I had a dentist appointment earlier in the day. They gassed me. Really took the wind out of my sails. I was just lying down on the couch. Would you like to come in?”
“I better not,” he said despite himself. “I actually came here to talk to Wade. Is he home?”
“He went out with some friends from school but I imagine he will be home soon. Is everything okay?”
Davidson bit down on his lip, wondering how to answer that question. “I’m not sure,’ he said. “He came to see me today. He had some concerns about these new 5G towers they’re installing. I think he and his friends might have gotten in some real trouble. It’s very important that I speak with him. Do you know where he might be at?”
Miss Avery’s smile dropped. “What’s going on, Dale? Should I be worried?”
Davidson told her about the vandalized towers, the government agents, and how he believed that Wade and his friends were the ones responsible. Miss Avery became visibly upset. Despite his urge to console her, Davidson remained professional and waited until Miss Avery composed herself before speaking again.
“If you have any idea of where he might be. It’s better that I be the one to find him.”
Miss Avery stared off to the side, searching her mind. “I know they like to spend time at the railroad tracks, in the yard over on Jackson. That might be a good place to start.”
The train yard on Jackson Ave. It was only a few blocks away. “Thanks, Maggie. I’ll check it out.”
When he turned to leave Miss Avery reached out and softly grabbed him by the wrist. A tickling wave rushed through his stomach and for a moment he remembered what it was like to be wrapped in her embrace; her warm gentle skin breathing against his.
He shook it off, pulled away politely, finding it hard to meet her pleading blue eyes.
“Take me with you,” she said. “If my son is in danger or gotten himself into some trouble, he needs me. Please, I want to come.”
It went against every rule in the book. But still, if anyone could help in locating the boy, it was his mother. She knew his movements better than anybody. The important thing was they got to Wade before the agents did. There was something off about those agents.
Something sinister.
“Alright then, let’s get going,” Davidson said with a friendly smirk.
Miss Avery grabbed her keys off the table and her purse, more a large leather traveling bag, from off the coat rack and shut the front door, locking it. They hurried down the front walkway and across the road to the cruiser. Davidson forced himself not to come around to the passenger side and open the door for Miss Avery. She did look good under the moon in that dress though.
Keep it professional, you dog, Davidson scolded himself.
As the cruiser started and pulled out onto the road, the headlights lit up on the car two lengths behind them. If Davidson had not been so focused on keeping his eyes from wandering, he might have made the vehicle to be a familiar color and model.
A black Cadillac.
***
The 9:16 to Rexdale chugged ferociously through the train yard as the lowered cross-guard dinged over and over, the red blub on the post beside it blinking on and off, shooting short beams of bloody light against the bushy area before leaving it in darkness once again. Wade, Marcus, and Donnie stood a few feet away at the base of a large hill watching the graffiti riddled boxcars whiz by in a blur of shape and color. The train had stopped their sprint and now they huffed and puffed, hunched over with their hands on their knees, except for Wade, who held on to a bulky chainsaw with both hands.
“I can’t believe you actually did it!” laughed Donnie over the passing train.
And he had. Wade had cut those things right through and then stomped on those antennas until they were close to the size of pebbles on the road. Even if it wasn’t the 5G frequencies that were making people insane, Wade felt vindicated. It was what Deputy Davidson deserved for leaving his mother stranded the way he did.
“My dad is going to kill me!” yelled Marcus. “Literally kill me!”
“You are in deep shit, Wade,” said Donnie, still chuckling.
Wade shrugged. “Whatever. Maybe I just saved somebody from getting stabbed by a maniac with braces. Guess we’ll find out.”
Wade couldn’t get the memory of the huge fountain of sparks from his head. Or the reverberating, deafening ding that was made when the falling pole hit the concrete.
The whole street shook.
Wade had never felt so alive. The feeling of freedom to act on an impulse the way he had was like a high off a drug, or at least what Wade imagined a high off a drug might be like. He wanted to do it all the time.
He was so involved with recounting the event in his head that he wasn’t watching Marcus and Donnie, who when he turned back around had already made the climb to the top of the hill. They stood there still, looking out. Something had captured their attention and smeared a look of terror on their face.
“Hey, you assholes! Wait up!” yelled Wade, scrambling up the steep hill after them, struggling with the weight of the chainsaw in his hands and the pull of gravity behind him.
When Wade reached the top of the hill, he looked out and gasped. The chainsaw fell out of his hands and rolled down the other side of the hill, stopping in front of a pair of skater sneakers.
Charlie’s sneakers.
Charlie Morgan, no longer in the custody of his parents, stood at the center of six or seven kids from the town, lined up in a chain, watching the boys with snarling faces, grinding their teeth and showing off the braces in their mouths gleaming under the full moon. Some of them held knives. One of the kids, dressed in baby blue teddy bear pajamas, with soft cheeks and a bowl haircut, looked to be about seven years old. His knife was the biggest.
Charlie bent over and picked the chainsaw up from off the grass. His head rose with a chilling grimace.
“You shouldn’t have smashed those towers, Wade!” he yelled into the dark of night.
Wade swallowed hard and his voice squeaked saying, “Uhh…I’m sorry?”
***
Miss Avery leaned into Deputy Davidson’s shoulder as the 9:16 to Rexdale sped loudly by on the tracks beside them. If not for the narrow beam from Davidson’s flashlight guiding the way through the train yard, the two of them would have been swallowed by the black.
The part of Davidson that was enjoying the nighttime walk with Miss Avery was at odds with his concern for her son and his friends, and about the motives of the strange sunglass-wearing government agents mucking about his county.
“I don’t know how these kids do it,” whispered Miss Avery as the 9:16 shrunk into the horizon and the night went quiet once again. “Hanging out in a place like this…it’s like a horror movie out here.”
“I’ll level with you, Maggie. This entire day is shaping up to be something out of an episode of X-Files.”
“Do you really think it was Wade who cut down those poles?” asked Miss Avery. She sighed with disappointment as if she had already answered her question. “I wouldn’t put it past him. He’s really been acting out since you and I…you know.”
Davidson looked off to the side for a moment. “I don’t know, Maggie…I swear, I think Wade might be on to something. I must be crazy to believe it. But these agents, they have some stake in these 5G towers. What if they’re conducting some sort of top-secret experiment? And using us as lab rats?”
“And that’s why Judy Bloom’s daughter murdered her baby brother?”
“I know it sounds ludicrous. But the instigators of these crimes all had some sort of metal conductor in their body. Braces, a metal plate…”
Miss Avery thought about it.
“And you think they’re picking up the signals like the antenna on an old black and white?”
Davidson raised his eyebrows and nodded.
Miss Avery smiled. “Sounds kind of science-fictiony, no?”
“Like I said…X-Files.”
A faint buzzing could be heard in the distance up ahead, getting louder by the second. Soon the buzzing was accompanied by what sounded like screaming.
Kids screaming.
The boys.
Davidson shined his flashlight further into the distance, illuminating the figures of Wade, Marcus, and Donnie running frantically toward them, waving their hands and screaming over the high pitched rip that grew more intense as their figures got larger.
It was the sound of a chainsaw.
“That’s them!” pointed Miss Avery. “That’s the boys!”
The boys kept looking back over their shoulder with expressions of horror. They were being chased by a clump of shadow that rose and sunk not far behind them. Davidson pointed his light at the shadow and illuminated a pack of more kids from town, running after the boys with rabid intensity.
My god…That’s Charlie Morgan…And he’s waving a chainsaw.
And Charlie wasn’t alone.
There was Jenni Grossman, a freshman at Seabridge Academy, still in her grey private school uniform, knee-highs and all, wielding a hatchet with smears of dried blood across her face.
Beside Jenni, running faster than Davidson had ever seen them before, were the Markham twins. Two preteen gingers whose weight made them formidable football players, but little else. Their chins gobbled as they snarled and drooled, clawing at the boys who were quickly losing their lead.
And behind those four, more shadows started to appear. More kids with knives. And they all wore braces.
Davidson took Miss Avery by the wrist and pointed to the small glowing red taillights parked just over a hundred yards behind them. “We need to get to the car! Now!”
“But the boys!” cried Miss Avery.
“They’re coming! Go!”
By now Wade and the boys were just a few feet away, Charlie about ten feet behind them with the chainsaw raised over his head. The motor’s buzz was so loud it vibrated in the Deputy’s skull.
Davidson withdrew his firearm and took aim at Charlie as Wade and the other two ran past him without so much as a glance.
“Get to the car! Take your mom!”
“No shit, Sherlock!” Wade yelled over his shoulder.
Charlie zeroed in on the Deputy and screamed out at the top of his lungs, racing forward.
“Drop the weapon!” yelled Davidson.
Charlie lunged at the Deputy. Davidson pulled the trigger. A resounding shot rang out. The bullet whizzed through Charlie’s shoulder. Charlie shrieked, twisted, and fell to the grass.
The chainsaw fell beside him, digging into the ground and splashing a mix of grass and dirt toward the sky before tipping on its side and convulsing unattended.
Next Davidson took aim at Jenni Grossman, approaching full steam, her skirt flailing at the will of her galloping thighs. Not able to drop another youth, he lowered and sided his weapon, turning around and following Wade and the boys to the cruiser as fast as his aching middle-aged legs could carry him.
Behind him Jenni Grossman’s flats stomped through the grass, her breath getting heavier and faster. He thought he could feel it on the back of his neck.
Should have shot her when I had the chance.
Now at the car, Miss Avery yelled at the boys to get in before opening up the front passenger door and diving inside. The three boys didn’t argue. They were all in the backseat just after she was, doors closed and locked, ducking in their seats and peeking out the back window.
Davidson got to the driver side door and swung it open, kicking back as hard as he could, knocking Jenni Grossman back a few steps and branding her white blouse with a muddy footprint. She regained her footing and came again, but Davidson had slipped into the car and gotten the door shut just as the hatchet was swinging for his head. The window took the hit and cracked into a spider-web.
Davidson locked his door and started the car.
“Holy shit!” yelled Marcus.
“Get us the f**k out of here, Davidson!” yelled Wade.
The cruiser rocked back and forth like a boat as the Markham twins climbed up on the back of the car with a thud and started banging on the back window with their lumpy fists, their rapid breath staining steam circles on the glass.
Davidson punched down on the gas pedal and as the cruiser jerked forward the Markham twins rolled off the back, onto the grass. He watched the rest of the psychotic mob of kids get smaller and darker in his rear-view as the five of them sped away into the night. Davidson swore he saw little Tommy Wilson, seven years old, holding a kitchen knife and wearing teddy bear pajamas.
Once they were back on the main road, the kids started to breathe again. So did Davidson. Miss Avery was slouched over in her seat, sobbing over her purse. Davidson was surprised that through all that had just happened Miss Avery had managed to hold on to that thing.
“This is really happening!” yelled Wade. “I can’t believe I was actually right!” He turned to Marcus and Donnie and pointed. “I freakin’ told you!”
“My dad’s chainsaw is back there, you asshole!” Marcus shot back at him.
“Marcus, I think your dad might have some more important things to worry about. Like, I don’t know, the whole town going crazy?”
“You shot Charlie!” Donnie yelled at Davidson. “I think you might have killed him!”
Miss Avery’s head rose, her pale face peeking out from the tangled mess of hair. Her voice was shaking, “Where are we going?”
The Deputy answered calmly, though Donnie’s comment had taken the wind from him. That boy was only a child. “Back to the station. I’m going to contact the Sheriff and we’ll get this whole thing figured out, okay? Everybody just cool out, okay? Try to relax…”
Davidson’s eyes went from the road to the rear-view then back to the road. He reached over and switched on his siren.
***
Davidson’s cruiser sat idle in the Sheriff’s Office parking lot, headlights glaring a spotlight on the front of the building. Outside was quiet. Inside the car was just the same. Davidson had spent the ride wondering if it might have been better to turn the car around and flatten those rabid kids. They were evil. Soulless. He couldn’t get the image of their bloodthirsty eyes out of his head.
Leaning back in his seat, Davidson exhaled slowly, rubbing his eyes tiredly.
“That must have been every kid in town with braces.”
No, there were more. Davidson knew that.
Maybe they were out trying to murder someone else. Maybe they were successful.
“I want to go home,” said Donnie. “When can we go home?”
Wade spoke before Donnie could get an answer. “So what do we do now? Those things are out there!”
The Deputy looked at Miss Avery beside him, still hunched over her purse on her lap, tangled hair fallen over her face. She had stopped pulling tissues and sobbing for the last little while. Now she was silent, Davidson thought maybe sleeping.
He spoke softer, “I’ll figure something out. There’s definitely something ungodly going on in this town. But Wade, I’ve been asked to bring you in. Some government agents, NSA, responded to the 5G towers you smashed. They want you arrested.”
“Oh, man. This is serious…” sobbed Marcus.
Wade leaned forward. “You’re not going to hand me over to them, are you? They’re in on this! They have to be! They’re using the frequencies to control people’s minds! What about snorin’ Norman? Did he have braces?”
“No. But he had a metal plate in his knee,” answered the Deputy, looking at Wade through the rear-view.
At that moment the squad car flooded with light and with squinting eyes the Deputy looked out his window for the source of the beam. The pebbles on the gravel driveway popped under the rubber tires of a car pulling in to the lot. Davidson’s heart sunk.
“Who is it?” whispered Marcus.
“It’s a black Cadillac,” answered Donnie, closest to the driver side window.
“So that means that it’s not just braces, it’s anyone with a metal implant,” said Wade, more to himself than the rest of the car.
Davidson’s attention remained on the Cadillac.
Wade continued, “Mom, didn’t they give you a silver molar today at the dentist?”
A flash of panic tightened Davidson’s chest, followed by an alarming pinch in his back that sent a shock through his entire body. He gasped and the world spun. Another moment of excruciating pain as whatever had just been jabbed inside him was being pulled out.
The kids in the backseat screamed out in terror.
Davidson turned, though it stung sharp, and saw Miss Avery holding a bloody knife in her hand. The blade was about six inches.
Just about the size of the length of her purse.
Through the hair over her face, he saw tears in her eyes.
“Maggie…” Davidson uttered.
Miss Avery’s lips quivered. “I’m sorry…I just haven’t been myself.”
She extended her arm and drove the knife deep into Davidson’s side. Another piercing shock flooded his body and Davidson screamed out in agony.
Wade yelled, “Mom! No!”
Miss Avery pulled out the blood-streaked knife from Davidson’s insides. Davidson moaned and looked down at the blood blooming under his uniform. Everything was spinning and it was hard to catch his breath.
Davidson pulled the handle on his door, using the weight of his shoulder to push the door open. He tumbled out of the car onto the gravel, the sharp points of the rocks digging into his back as he rolled over, looking up at the stars, blurred from tears in his eyes.
He heard the doors from the Cadillac open and close, footsteps on the gravel got closer and louder, then they came into view, looking down on Davidson behind dark sunglasses.
Agent Mayweather and Agent Cross.
He was starting to fade in and out. Everything sounded like he was underwater. From inside the car, he could hear Maggie say to the boys, “Don’t be afraid…it will all be over in just a minute.”
The End.
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Andre Michael Pietroschek
05/02/2022Good and atmospheric writing style. To me, it is the second story mentioning 5G issues (the other were bombing 5G signal towers). Quite a surprise that people so much younger still know the X-Files, in case Fox Mulder & Dr. Dana Scully were meant. LOL
ReplyHelp Us Understand What's Happening
JD
09/09/2019That was certainly a horror story, Gregory, but the most horrifying thing of all, for me, was the part in which the one 'infected' kid started beating up on a much smaller kid, and the crowd of kids who were there not only did nothing to stop it, but actually cheered him on by chanting "fight! fight!". Since those kids were supposedly not infected, but 'normal', it was especially terrifying and deeply disturbing, to me, that they would do nothing to stop such senseless violence, even when the younger and smaller child was unconscious and the bigger boy kept beating on him. The rest of the horror in the story paled in comparison.
ReplyHelp Us Understand What's Happening
JD
10/21/2019Hey Patrick, Thanks for all the great short stories you've shared on Storystar! And congratulations on being selected as one of the Short Story STARS of the Week! :-)
Help Us Understand What's Happening
JD
09/10/2019I thought perhaps you were unaware of the horror within the horror you had created, so that is why I felt obliged to point it out.
Help Us Understand What's Happening
Gregory Patrick Travers
09/09/2019Wow, an unexpected thoughtpoint but appreciated nonetheless. Society's idleness to external suffering has become so regular to me that I had barely noticed. But thank you for that.
Help Us Understand What's Happening
Kevin Hughes
09/09/2019Gregory,
When I was a young teen, there was a show on TV called: "The Twilight Zone." It was followed a few years later by a slightly different show called: "The Outer Limits." Either Show would have been proud to have this story as one of their episodes. I don't usually like horror - or death and betrayal stories (they scare me...LOL)- but I stayed with this to the bloody end.
Great job, and I think it is going to end up winning you yet another StoryStar Award.
Smiles, Kevin
Help Us Understand What's Happening
Gregory Patrick Travers
09/09/2019I love the Twilight Zone. The comparison is a high honor. Thank you, Kevin.
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