The layout of the entire passage had proven to be similar to those first few rooms, with small rooms leading out onto staircases descending into curved hallways leading into another room, though each turn had something unique to throw at them; A room with several dog-like monsters with split-open heads greedily gnawing on a hunk of meat (which they’d managed to avoid by dashing across the room and quickly slamming the door), a hallway strewn with shrouded corpses, a few more of those nurses. The hall they were in, at least, seemed clear, though uncomfortably damp and cold. It seemed endless. Chris was tired, and it looked to be wearing on Lisa, too. For a girl her age she was holding up surprisingly well, but she definitely wasn’t at her best. She’d taken a fresh and painful looking cut to the cheek going at one of the nurses and wasn’t keeping up quite as well as she had been. He slowed down a bit to allow her to keep pace with him again.
“Hey,” he asked, noting that she still looked unhealthily ashen, “You okay?”
She gave a slightly annoyed sigh and frown, quickening her pace a little so that she passed him by a step or two.
“I’m fine.”
Chris caught her by the shoulder… She certainly didn’t look ‘fine’.
“Lisa.”
“I said I’m alright! Okay?” Lisa insisted, stamping one foot hard into the floor angrily. Then she took a deep breath, released it, and shook her head slowly. “I’m sorry if I got angry, Chris. Just… don’t worry about me, alright? I dragged you into this, so it’s my own fault if-”
“If what? If he gets killed or something?”
Wait. He recognized that voice. The childish tone came from near the end of the hall, where a small form was moving in the darkness. Sure enough, as she moved closer, he made out bright red hair and a pristine white dress with an inexplicable pang of dread… Rachael.
Still watching us, maybe? I’d like to know what the hell’s up with this kid, now…
He kept his face even, though. No matter what she might be doing, she was just a kid.
“Rachael,” he called out to her, “You shouldn’t have wandered off like that.”
Lisa’s eyes were wide and surprised as she took in the child.
“A little girl?” she whispered, leaning close to him. He nodded in confirmation.
Rachael rolled her eyes with a slight smile on her face. “Aww, Chris, don’t be so lame about it. I’m okay, aren’t I?”
It was true. The little girl didn’t have a single scratch on her, strangely enough considering the monsters wandering around.
“I suppose you are,” Chris admitted. Rachael chuckled.
Lisa approached a few steps towards her and, he noticed, she didn’t back away from her as she had from him. He found himself, guiltily, grateful that she was dealing with her so he wouldn’t have to, and wondered if she got the same skin-crawling feeling from being near the child that he did…
“Rachael… right?” she spoke gently, in just the right tone for speaking to a girl that age. Her expression was soft and there were a million questions in her eyes, but Rachael just seemed mildly amused. “Where are your parents?”
Chris caught the undertone in her question. It wasn’t just Rachael she was asking for.
The younger girl shrugged nonchalantly, flashing a fleeting glimpse of part of what appeared to be a circular crimson mark on either of her arms just above the cut of her sleeves, and walked to tinker with a pair of valve handles on the wall.
“Well, my mom’s around here somewhere. I’ll look for her when I’m done here… I’ve got a job to do now.”
Again with her being busy?
Lisa nodded thoughtfully. “Just what is this job, then?”
Rachael paused in turning the valves and rubbed at her chin in exaggerated contemplation.
“Mmm…” Then she smiled again mischievously. “You know, I don’t think I’m going to tell you. Not now, anyways.”
Chris groaned internally, ready to clench his fists in frustration. Lisa, however, remained calm.
“But aren’t you worried?” she continued, still maintaining her gentle tone.
At that, Rachael outright giggled. “Worried? Nah…” She shook her head, her smile growing into a reverent grin, “I’ve got God to protect me.”
She fully believed what she was saying, he could see in her bright little face, however naïve the thought was; she was at least close to ten, she must’ve been aware of at least some of the danger…
“So you think God’s just going to keep you safe from all of those monsters?” he couldn’t help asking skeptically.
That got her slightly eerie grin to drop, and she turned to face Chris with a suddenly utterly solemn look.
“Of course I do, Chris. And I wouldn’t talk that way if I was you…” She gave the valves a full turn each and then, seemingly satisfied with her work, stepped away from them and gestured around herself in a sweeping motion. “I mean, look around.”
Rachael walked forwards until she was barely a couple of steps away from Lisa, though she was focused on both of them.
“God is here… She’s just waiting.”
Chris’s gut instinct was relaying a sudden and sharp urge to get away to his brain. If he’d thought it before he was certain now… There was something utterly wrong with this little girl. He saw Lisa’s expression go from a look of concern to one of fright and confusion.
She stared down at her for a few moments in silence before almost whispering, “Waiting for what?”
As abruptly as she’d turned so serious, Rachael’s cheerful demeanor returned with a sweet little laugh that was completely out of place.
“Oh, you’ll see. You’ve just got to be a little patient. By the way, Lisa,” she said, smiling up at her in a manner that had even Chris shuddering from where he stood, “I’m glad you lived; just try not to let something like that happen again. It would be no good if you went and got yourself killed.”
She walked up to the wall next to her valve handles and felt along an edge for a minute before swinging open a door that…
I did not just miss that before, the damned thing was never there…
“All I can say is, just keep moving. It’ll all work out eventually.”
Rachael favored them with one final grin before closing the door behind her. Lisa hurried to investigate where she’d gone through, but Chris shook his head. Sure enough, his suspicion was confirmed when there was no trace of where the door had been.
“Damn it,” he muttered anyways.
“That girl… Who is she, anyways?”
He shrugged, trying not to let the fading chill he’d gotten show. “Beats me. I saw her before while you were out, just wandering around talking about a god and… and whether or not you were going to make it. I know she’s just a kid, but something about her just doesn’t seem right to me.”
Lisa turned to face him, making that unbreakable eye contact again.
“You were thinking something wasn’t right with me just a little while ago.”
“That’s not it.”
And, despite the enormity of the revelation he’d had about her, it wasn’t.
“Oh yeah? Like how?”
How should he explain it… “It doesn’t feel the same. When I’m around you or Rachael, I mean. I do get a feeling from you… Just not a bad one.”
Her mood visibly improved at that, and Chris’s did in response. It was a much-needed relief from the creepy air still lingering after Rachael’s disappearance. She almost looked like she wanted to smile.
“And what might that feeling be, Chris?”
Chris fell silent; the question was more pressing than she could’ve known.
“Chris?”
He sighed. “I don’t know.” Then he shook his head, clearing himself from those thoughts. “Let’s just keep moving.”
Lisa broke eye contact awkwardly and nodded in agreement. “Yeah… Good idea.”
She started out ahead of him, preventing further conversation, but soon stopped when something on the floor was sent skidding out of the way in front of her feet.
“Hmm?”
She kneeled and picked whatever it was up, studied it for a moment, and then grimaced.
“Great,” she muttered sarcastically.
“What is it?”
With a sigh she tossed the object to him, which he caught reflexively. It was a small, featureless doll crafted out of wax, with a torn-out piece of paper stuck into its chest by two pins similar to the ones supposed to be stuck into a voodoo doll. The object itself was chilling enough, but it may have been surpassed by the simple sentence that came with it.
‘Well Lisa,’ it read, ‘You coming?’
Christ. Before, when Lisa had claimed that the girl who’d killed Rebecca was out to get her personally, Chris couldn’t help but think that she may have been on to something. Now it was starting to look like she’d been right, for whatever reason that might’ve been. He looked up from the doll at her, silently asking for an explanation. She bowed her head and finally spoke,
“Linda’s mom… at the funeral… asked me what the last thing that she said was. That was it… She asked me…” She swallowed thickly before finishing in a hoarse whisper, “If I was coming with her. We always did do everything together.”
She took a deep breath and looked up to hold him stuck in a desperate, suddenly tearful look.
“I took her boyfriend from her, alright?” she shouted, “He said that he loved me and I slept with him and stole him from Linda. I knew damned well that she loved him, and that she was sensitive like that, but I betrayed her. Even after I did that to her she wanted to finish it the way we’d always been.
“She waved to me, Chris! She wanted me to… to…”
“To die with her,” Chris finished for her, at a loss for any other response. Lisa sobbed and rushed forwards. He caught her in his arms and hugged her to him, wanting to offer her what comfort he could.
“Lisa…”
“I used to have nightmares about it, you know… That she was angry at me for not going with her,” she whispered as though afraid someone would hear, plucking the doll from his hands and moving her arms to toy with it behind his back, “And she wanted to… to get me or something. She always looked horrible, the way she did after she got hit… She’d call me all these terrible things, too, just like she did right before she did it. She’d call me a bitch… she’d call me a junkie… she’d call me a whore…” Lisa sniffled. “I don’t know… Maybe she was right to. After what I did, I deserved it.”
Chris shook his head. “No,” he assured her firmly, but she shrugged it off with a sigh.
“Every time she’d give me another chance to choose to go with her. I never did, though; trust me, I don’t have the guts for something like that. And when I didn’t, she’d kill me herself. It wasn’t always the same, but most of the time she’d stab me through the back… Like I did to her.”
She released her arms from around him and shrugged out of his own before walking a few steps towards the still-existing door, keeping her back to him. By that point he could almost see her sad, sarcastic smirk.
“You should feel lucky, Chris. I’ve never told that to anyone else… Not even my mother.”
“Lisa, your friend… She wasn’t in her right mind then. You should know that.”
“Really, Chris? Because she seemed like she knew what she was talking about to me.”
Chris now saw what she’d done to the doll that she clutched in her left hand… Its semi-flexible neck was bent at an odd angle and its head was partially caved in on one side, and one of its legs and both of its arms were just barely dangling from the breaks she’d put in the wax. Somehow he thought of it as a cue to drop the subject, immediately. The horrific symbolism of it didn’t escape him, and for a second the image of those same injuries on a bloody twelve-year-old body flashed through his mind.
Without saying anything more, he followed her to the door at the end of the hallway. This door looked different from the ones they’d come through so far. It was larger, a double door, and made of a darker hue of metal, with a small depression cut into the square of stone floor in front of it. The feeling radiating out from it, he hated; it was the feeling of something grave and final lurking on the other side, just waiting. It made the hairs on the back of his neck and arms bristle uncomfortably. Lisa showed the same unease on her face.
“You feel that?” he asked. She nodded.
Despite the dread twisting his gut, though, Chris took hold of the handles and tried to pull it open. The doors didn’t budge. Like she’d known the whole time what to do, Lisa kneeled and set the broken wax doll gently into the hole in front of it. It was exactly the right size. Within the door came the soft click of the lock being released.
“I’ve got a really bad feeling about this,” he cautioned.
Lisa shrugged. “So do I. If you don’t want to go in, I’ll go in myself.”
He shook his head. “Not a chance. You just stick behind me and I’ll clear anything standing in our way.”
She rose back to her feet and hovered nervously at his side with a nod. For a moment Chris hesitated, his hands tightly gripping the door handles, before he swung them wide open.