Stanley remembered the phone. He brought it to his mouth. “No, I’m sorry. It doesn’t work that way.”
“Then—“
“Yes. This is it.”
Her face was flawless even in the middle of distorting sobs. The sport of the hunt failed to satisfy Stanley as he watched with a steel grip on his phone.
Gaining a moment of composure, she wiped the tears from her face. “I won’t let it happen.”
“Let me in, Anne. It’s much easier this way.”
Anne trembled from head to foot, her will at battle with his. Her hand stretched from her body as if it was being wrenched to the window.
“What will happen if I don’t?” shuddered her voice through the phone.
Stanley’s eyes drifted from her window. “Things will get rotten for both of us, but worse for you. Either way, the game ends.”
Stanley turned reluctant eyes on Anne. She had taken her arm back and folded it straitjacket style across her chest. Her head bent over her knees. One hand still held the phone to her ear, the speaker angled away from her mouth. Slowly, the speaker twisted back.
“What if you found someone else to— Would that—Would I—“
“You would sacrifice a stranger to save yourself?”
The wind cracked through the drying autumn leaves.
“No. I wouldn’t.”
“Good. It wouldn’t work.”
“And you would keep finding more people. You’ll never stop will you?”
“I can’t stop. A lion doesn’t stop needing meat. A tree doesn’t stop needing water. I am what I am, and I am what nature made me.”
“So you weren’t spawned from the devil or any of that?”
“I’ve never met him, and I’ve never made any promises to him. My whole family was born like me. Are we supposed to wallow in Hell for that? It doesn’t seem fair that I should be condemned for something I can’t control. No, the devil is just a myth.”
“Don’t you see anything wrong with what you do? You’re a cannibal.”
“Of a sort, I suppose. I think I’m more a subspecies of human than actually human.”
She studied her toes as they flexed and curled. “What if something happens to you? Would I still—” her toes froze in a flexed position, “die?”
Stanley eyed the svelte creature through the window. Her posture was childlike. She looked so vulnerable.
“I’m not sure how that would effect you. Could you really kill me, Anne?”
Her thoughtful breath carried to his phone. Stanley turned from the window.
“Goodnight, Princess.” It was out before he’d thought it through. The words echoed in his earpiece, sounding just right, and even more wrong.
Stanley traipsed through a still town. The only relief to its stagnant silence was an owl hooting in the distance and the rustling leaves. Not even crickets interrupted a night as thick as this. Stanley hoped Anne could not hold out for longer than his projected five days. Otherwise, things would get messy. The other time had been messy.
***
His mother’s arms were belted to her bed posts, her lips ripped where her teeth tore into them. Her dark red hair threw a ghoulish halo over her white, clammy face. She was at least one hundred years old, but mother and son looked only ten years apart, a small perk of all the youth they had harvested.
A thin white finger pointed at the muted news program. Stanley followed the finger and adjusted the volume.
“That’s him,” she rasped as a picture of a smiling business man filled the screen. By him she meant her intended victim.
Footage of a bridge and a search and rescue team were dominated by a news anchor’s demure exclamations of a needless tragedy.
“Well, he got away, didn’t he? I told him it wouldn’t be easy. He had to dive off a bridge to prove me right.” His mother giggled feverishly. Her giggle turned into a cackle, escalating into violent heaves that spilled over her shoulder and arm. Her arms beat against their restraints, her nails clawing for her face. Stanley mopped at the mess.
“I need someone new, Stanny. I don’t think I’ll survive much longer without a long drink. Two. You’d better get two.”
Stanley dumped the soiled rags in her sink and pulled her bedroom door closed. He stood by her door until the sobs came. He strode into the night. The Elliots never used shopping lists. Two it would be.
***