Read Tales of Jack the Ripper Online

Authors: Laird Barron,Joe R. Lansdale,Ramsey Campbell,Walter Greatshell,Ed Kurtz,Mercedes M. Yardley,Stanley C. Sargent,Joseph S. Pulver Sr.,E. Catherine Tobler

Tags: #Jack the Ripper, #Horror, #crime

Tales of Jack the Ripper (20 page)

BOOK: Tales of Jack the Ripper
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But he knew everything he was mumbling was wrong. It was the fog that told him, the air, the sky… and the cold, cold room. More than that, it was the other occupant of the bed. A woman.

A
woman
. He shuddered. No woman had fouled his bed, not since Memory permitted. But Memory was slowly permitting now.

Not since Mollie went off her head and tried to do for me, all that time ago, the dirty bitch.
His lower lip trembled.
All that time ago, when I was still me. Before me own blushing bride took me own razor to my… to my… When I was sleeping, she…

His hand dropped to the other scar, and the damage there. The incomplete damage that still half-worked.
She were mad, Mollie were. I were never no whoremonger. Never done what she said, what she shrieked, before I bent her wrist back and took back me razor and I—

“Nnnn,” said the skinny whore in his bed, turning over and wrapping herself in the whole lot of the bedclothes, now that he was out of bed. Blonde locks rustled on her bare, tattooed shoulderblades. He saw a face tattooed on the right one, that looked of heathen Indian design, like a totem-pole, and something that could have been a mermaid, an angel or a demon in the dim light, crawling down the slattern’s arm.

He could smell rut in the room, and it made him sick.
Not opium, not absinthe, not morphine. Nowt could’ha’ caused this thing to be. She’s a woman, for one thing, no rent-boy I take and use and send away. Could never make it wi’no woman, even if I wanted to. Can’t even make it wi’the rent-boys, half the time, like, but…

The thought was gone. That window’d had frost on the outer sill, he remembered, and trembled back to shut it.
I never knew she was expecting, when I did for her. Mad and maybe a month along, and what expecting mother ain’t a little bit mad? What’s done is done, but if I’m damned then by God I’ll have my Day of Judgement, I—

CRASH. His eyes went white, and the headache took him hard, right through the scar. Right through the itch. His knees buckled and he almost fell, but made it close to the direction of the pillow on the right.

At that, the whore in his bed (
Ay, she’s got to be… No ring on the left hand that… Ah, down a bit, yes, lay me flat, there’s a dear
) stroked his scar tenderly, kissing his cheek but planting him as firmly prone on his back as though she were a nurse, and he a patient, and…

He made a noise. “Shoosh, shoosh, sailor,” she whispered, in a marvelous raspy voice like the rattle of half-crowns in a purse. “Your wound must be excitin’ you again. You Limeys just keep going until you drop. Must be the English way.”

“Sailor.” He sat bolt-upright. “I’m… Wot? No sailors, here. I’ve never been to sea. I… I work in a bleedin’ ’ospital. I—”

And then a strange thing began to happen. He blinked, taking her in,(
Cor, that’s a lot of tattoos she’s got, but,)
her bright green eyes focused visibly, and her serpentine mouth pursed. She spoke with her hands a lot, like his Mum.

“You’re just like that other sailor,” she said, almost to herself. “I had a john last year who couldn’t remember his own name.” Her laugh was nervous, and sounded a little sick, but held the fatalism of the streets, the cold fog and the warm doorway and the big night, the long dark… “He’d been Shanghaied.”

When he said nothing, she seemed to understand his blank look. “Great big knot on his head. He worked on a freighter. Said some crimp in London did for him with a cosh to the back of the head when he took to drinkin’, and put him on a ship. There was just an X on his papers where the name was, he told me, so he just called himself Ishmael, like in the Bible.”

He felt the cold sweat begin to bead on his face as she spoke. Every sprout of beard-stubble itched. His heart was pounding. “Don’t fink they can fix me, just yet,” he sighed. She didn’t ask what he meant. He knew she thought she understood. Hell, he almost understood himself.

Outside the window, the bloody fingers of Dawn pointed at him from the East. But East was the wrong way. The whore was still talking.

“I remember—” She frowned. “In
Collier’s Weekly
or one of those magazines from out East, something… Something about this railroader, years back. His name was Gage something. Took a tamping-rod right through the head, and lived, but it took him years to come all the way back to himself.
Years.

Again, the fatalistic chuckle, the wide white smile. He saw a silver incisor, and smelled his own sweat on her sweet breath. She took his hand in both of hers.

“My name’s Mina,” she told him. “Do you remember yours?”

He pushed her hand away, but gently. “I… I’m not sure.” He was, but she didn’t need to know it. She was insistent, and took it again. “Do you remember where you live?”

He sighed. This was getting intolerable. She didn’t need to know that, either. Or why.
No reason to lie…
“I fink I know me own address, dear,” he muttered. “It’s… in Prince William Street. Whitechapel. ’Ow… ’Ow close are we t’… ”

She relaxed a little. “Oh, we’re in Whitechapel. That’s a very good start, mister, sure enough. But there’s no Prince William Street anywhere here. You’re on B Street, sir. B Street and Fourth Avenue. The old Phillip Hotel… I’m not even supposed to be here.”

It was a good start for him, too. A little. He tried to smile. “Wot, no respectable place for a lady?”

Now wasn’t the time to betray the true thoughts that screamed through his head, begging him to be up and gone. There was important work to do, and so much lost time. He could feel how much lost time. But the time wasn’t now.

“Ha,” Mina smirked. “ This is Skid Road. There’s no lady anywhere in Portland,
Oregon,
comes this far west of Wash’nton street, English! You’re too kind. No, that day man on the Front Desk doesn’t like me. Hisses and spits like a cat, and then gives me the bum’s rush. I think he’s a fairy.”

Portland. Oregon. America. Dear God. Dear God…
“Oh, aye? As you say. Doin’ for a woman like that. Never a policeman near when you need one…”

Now he understood why his heart was pounding so hard, the cold sour sweat springing anew. The strange breeze. The sky that wasn’t gray soot, the streets so empty. “Can you tell’s one more thing, love?”

Mina twinkled. “Anything, English. Speak.”

He was insistent. “The year.”

This put her off a little, but only momentarily. “Sakes alive, you really must be like that Gage fellow.” But her smile came back, and grew a little warmer. “Eighteen hundred and ninety-two.

Red lightning ate his eyes again. The itch in his head was all there was.
Three years. Maybe almost five. So much lost time. So much work left to do…

The window full of Dawn before him was red, too, and the light fell on a new field bright for reaping, reflected back double from the vanity mirror and the mother-of-pearl inlays on his straight-razor.

So much lost time. So much work left to do.

“Clever, you are,” he managed to whisper. “I fink I’m… ’ow’d you put it… comin’ back to meself already.” His heart was in his throat. “I’ll set this town alight…”

He loved his work. He wanted to start again. He could only wait a little longer.

No time now. No time to squeal. The whore was lying flat now, with the bedclothes off. Waiting. Blushing to the tips of her shell-pink ears. Mina smiled again as he got up to lock the door.

 

 

FOR HARLAN ELLISON

 

 

 

 

 

Juliette’s New Toy

Joseph S. Pulver, Sr.

 

for Robert Bloch and Harlan Ellison

 

 

Expunge

Erase

Delete

Rub out

 

wipe out

 

obliterate

 

child’s play…

 

Juliette smiled. Her mouth cradled the color of desire. Settled into her pillow. Closed her eyes and peered into a dream…

…Lustrous knife. Sexy blouse. A whisper of cleavage.

She could climb to heaven on flesh. Be born in the flight of color. Blood in the moonlight. Her eyelids flutter. Her lips, larks above the bones.

Red.

Glimmering.

She hears a violin in the vineyard. Sees a drunkard’s wrist, throat, beholds the spectrum of fruit. Hears the lyrical beauty of a scream.

Temptation.

Action.

The soul of a man. Guiding her. Prey healed of the world’s chain of suffering and pain. The frequencies of her philosophies slow …
s…l…o…w
… Or you’d spoil the game. Deprive fun its bursts and frolics.

16 going on 722. Ready to bloom… Again…

A street attired in poor shabby roofs. Unhurried clouds begetting shadows.

Juliette’s red lips sip forever from a vial. She has returned.

 

He came. A monster carved by the full moon. Entered her Perfect. Carved Hell in her war paint, shamed her belly with his rooting snout. Closed the theater dance in her eyes.

Jack

White skin.

Nest of black hair.

Slippery Jack.

He touched. Thickened. Exhausted her years with between. Howled in her deepest ruts, in the lanes and alleys she kept under lock and key. Took the stars from her seams.
Gave her slave language. Surprised her lightning with taboo.
The ages and branches of her fields traveled from ash to dust to void.
His “Ah” peeled her rind. Brutal, swelled by absolutely, bars her from azure and the moon. His hectic teeth—reading, inquiring, spit lust, as they wandered, flowering her tender with void. His open mouth won’t be sidetracked by her wings and eternities. Open. A waterfall of Jolly. When he clipped off her ear.

Left her in the desert street for rats.

Then he took the path of Future… Again…

 

Dead, but she did not die… in the litter of the dead she crawled… found a shaft… tasted the supplies of life… ate the storms of nothingness… opened what was forgotten with breath…

She waved down the taxi. “Flower & Dean.”

“Out for a pint, Miss?”

Of blood
. “Yes.”

A knowing grunt. A cluttered smile.

“Calms the cursed swords of a godforsaken day it does… Breaks the blacks of the horizon’s unforeseen events.”

The cabbie nods in agreement. “Up and on it is, Miss.”

Chariot of yellow and chrome deposits her at the door of The Little Blue Book. Lightyears swing low and flee the club’s windows.

The demon and the hulk employed as bouncers smile and let her pass.

IN.

Bump and grind on FUNK. The star children and thumpasorus people ridin’ lowdown are out. Gamin’. Watching for getten’-to-know-you and surprise. Comin’ for ta carry you to love, or sureshot fever.

Glasses of Ride On and escape ecstasy shine in the senses;gladly flashing laser light. Wide RED hooks under the summer night religion of BLUE. Strobes translate hands and faces harvesting the flavor of silk soft altitudes. GREEN loose at the hip and Emphasis-ORANGE fly to free your mind.

Thrust.

Nuthin’ but a party bangin’.

Shake.

Shake.

In 3-D.

Feet perfumed in getaway burn with fire-method, hoping to persuade careful princesses to points where trembling sears skin in overnight.

“Soul food.” Juliette smiles at the fruit of life.

Let them sing. Let them dance. Let them drink. A playground should thrill.

She needs to stretch, needs a little taste

 

before

 

Jack.

 

Before she climbs the streets and the stars in search of the death-rattle of his heart…

Jack.

The flower.

The hanged man.

Baked.

Burned by the hunger of her ink.

Jack.

Deep in PAIN.

Jack.

Never existed.

Never had color.

Jack.

Just raw material.

To feed to the black stars.

Soul food
.

A bird at her shoulder. A pale courtier. Smooth-shaven. Lion’s jaw. Climax eyes. I celebrate what pleases you in the tango of his words.

She’ll have him barefoot and sailing the unavoidable.

This one will do
.

And they do.

Curtains down. Stories of violence open. Getting down. No textbooks.

Chest…

Belly.

Massacre without explanation. Juliette’s silhouette gestures as she operates.

Her ringmaster-need bites as her sculpture clings to the scream.

Time is dragged off to another shore.

It’s mouth and hands and wounds smell like

BOOK: Tales of Jack the Ripper
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