The Jersey Devil
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Synopsis
“Old school horror.” —Jonathan Maberry
THE LEGEND LIVES
Everyone knows the legend of the Jersey Devil. Some believe it is an abomination of nature, a hybrid winged beast from hell that stalks the Pine Barrens of southern New Jersey searching for prey. Others believe it is a hoax, a campfire story designed to scare children. But one man knows the truth...
THE DEVIL AWAKES
Sixty years ago, Boompa Willet came face to face with the Devil—and lived to tell the tale. Now, the creature’s stomping grounds are alive once again with strange sightings, disappearances, and worse. After all these years, Boompa must return to the Barrens, not to prove the legend is real but to wipe it off the face of the earth...
THE BEAST MUST DIE
It’ll take more than just courage to defeat the Devil. It will take four generations of the Willet clan, a lifetime of survivalist training, and all the firepower they can carry. But timing is critical. A summer music festival has attracted crowds of teenagers. The woods are filled with tender young prey. But this time, the Devil is not alone. The evil has grown into an unholy horde of mutant monstrosities. And hell has come home to New Jersey...
“Shea delivers a tense and intriguing work of escalating tension splattered with a clever, extensive cast of bystanders turned victims…An otherwise excellent, tightly delivered plot…Fans of cryptid creatures are likely to revel in this love letter to a legendary menace.”– Publishers Weekly
Raves for The Montauk Monster
“A lot of splattery fun.”—Publishers Weekly
“Frightening, gripping.”—Night Owl Reviews
Release date: August 30, 2016
Publisher: Pinnacle Books
Print pages: 352
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The Jersey Devil
Hunter Shea
Jane Moreland couldn’t believe how heavy Henry was, now that he was deadweight and starting to ripen. She should have done this last night, right when it happened, but she’d needed a clearer head. Polishing off the bottle of Knob Creek and passing out on the kitchen table hadn’t helped matters much.
Well, no sense complaining. She’d been due a little me time.
She woke up after noon, unsure what had transpired the night before until she saw him, lying there beside the sofa, neck all twisted to one side and his face blue as a Smurf.
At least there isn’t blood all over the place, she’d thought. Just a little at the corner of his mouth. None on the carpet. One less thing she had to worry about.
There was no way she could get him in the truck during the day without anyone seeing. To kill time, she took a long, hot bath, washed and dried a load of laundry, drank three bottles of Coors that had been tucked away in the back of the fridge, watched a Jimmy Stewart movie on TMC, and chain-smoked half a pack of coffin nails. The entire time, her eyes kept flicking to the clock, then the window, waiting for the sun to check out. She found some old jeans and a .38 Special concert T-shirt, put on her scuffed cowboy boots and tied her blond hair in a high ponytail.
When it was half past six, she dragged an old throw rug from the garage, laid it next to her husband and turned him into it with a whole lot of grunting and sweat. She’d thought it would be as easy as rolling up a burrito. Back when she was in high school, she’d worked at a burrito joint owned by a pair of Chinese brothers with deep Southern accents. She’d never been able to reconcile the words coming out of those faces. It was a time before Chipotle, when a burrito was a mushy thing you got at a Mexican restaurant that tasted like crap. The job, and the place, didn’t last very long. In the two months she worked there, she became an expert at making burritos so fat, they were just about to bust out of their flour straitjackets.
A dead Henry, she learned quickly, was a hell of a lot more to handle than shredded beef, beans and rice. Once she’d gotten the rug around him and cinched off the ends with duct tape, she sat propped up against his cocooned body and laughed, wondering how many burritos it would take to equal Henry’s total mass. Logic dictated that she should have been distressed at this point, perhaps freaked out or even, daresay, remorseful.
“You didn’t earn my remorse,” she said to the rug-encased corpse, giving it a hard slap as she stood up.
Good old boy Henry was a righteous bastard, a redneck from some pissant town in South Carolina who’d made his way to New Jersey via a construction job when he was in his twenties. They’d met at Dingo’s Bar when she was still two years from legal drinking age. At first, she’d been entranced, as young, dumb girls will, by his sweet Southern accent. She’d heard him order a Jack and Coke over the din of meatheads and was immediately drawn to the rugged cutie with long hair and five-day stubble. He couldn’t have stood out more if he had worn an alien mask and bikini.
They dated for six months, took a trip to Vegas and became a cliché. It took a whole year before the real Henry Moreland came out. He smacked her across the face in a drunken stupor one night because she didn’t hand him the TV remote fast enough.
The rest is the same sad story that too many women confess to at shelters or police stations. After a while, Jane didn’t know who she hated more—Henry for being an abusive asshole or herself for not having the guts to run away.
On nights she couldn’t sleep, she’d let her mind linger on all the different ways she could make him disappear. That was her happy place. Poison his dinner, cut the brake lines in his truck, loosen the top step going down to the basement—the possibilities were endless. Thinking about it always settled her down. But that’s all they were—private thoughts. Jane knew she was too chickenshit to actually do anything. Hell, she couldn’t even bring herself to jump in the car and just drive until she hit a border crossing, north or south. It didn’t matter.
And then he came home last night so drunk he could barely stand. He’d parked his pickup on the front lawn, stopping just a few feet from the house. Jane had been reading in her favorite lounge chair—the one with the little head cushion—on the ground-level porch. It had been a nice night and even the bugs tapping against the overhead light didn’t bother her . . . much. If Henry had applied the brakes just a hair later, he would have killed her. She should have been fuming at him.
No. It was the other way around. He stomped past her, bursting through the door screaming incoherently, a bottle of Bud dangling in his fingertips, sloshing suds all around.
“Henry, what are you saying?” she’d asked, tensing up for the inevitable. He’d cracked one of her ribs the week before. It was just starting to heal. She knew another shot to her right side would break the rib entirely, and he was not taking her to a hospital anytime soon.
When he swung at her, for what only Henry and God knew, she’d twisted away, protecting her vulnerable side.
That’s when he kind of corkscrewed in the center of the living room. His feet went out from under him and he pitched forward, so drunk he didn’t have the sense to put his arms out to break his fall.
His head thwacked the corner of the coffee table.
And just like that, he was dead. His neck swiveled to an angle the human spine is not meant to support. He was dead so fast, his body didn’t even twitch. Jane heard a sickening crack, like marbles being smashed together. When she got the courage to get close to him, kneeling on the floor so she could see if he was breathing, she saw that the lights in his eyes had been turned off for good.
Henry was the second person to die in front of her. The first was her grandpa, who suffered a fatal heart attack during Thanksgiving dinner when she was eight. He was talking one second, asking her mother for more yams, and gone the next, his head on his plate, peas and carrots mashed under his cheek, staring at her with graying eyes.
Jane couldn’t call the cops because all of Henry’s friends were on the force. He liked to tell them that if anything ever happened to him, Jane was suspect number one. Sure, they laughed it off when he said it, but she couldn’t trust them any further than she could throw Henry. Henry knew that there might come a day when he pushed her to her breaking point. That was his way of letting her know she’d never get away with it.
“Bet you didn’t see this coming,” she said to the open trunk. The back of her old Honda sagged a bit from his weight.
It was going to take a hell of a lot to get him out of there, but she had plenty of time and no fear of prying eyes.
Jersey’s Pine Barrens, or Pinelands as the locals called them, were vast and dark and sparsely populated. The moment Henry took that dive, she knew she’d end up here. The Barrens were an infamous dumping ground for bodies. Henry was just another log on the fire. The critters and wilderness would make quick work of him.
It was a two-hour ride from their house to this spot. She remembered it from the nature walks she used to take with her father. The trail was a mile from here. She found a break in the trees and drove as deep as she could. Decayed leaves crunched under the tires. They would cover up the fresh grave nicely.
She almost popped a vein in her neck getting Henry out of the trunk. His body made a soft thud when it hit the ground. Wiping her brow, she grabbed the shovel and flashlight and got to work.
As she dug, she thought about what she’d do when she got back. Dozens of scenarios swam through her head. Whenever she started to worry about being accused of murder, she said out loud, “Habeas corpus.” Not that she was any kind of law expert, but she’d watched enough Law & Order to have a little confidence in her assessment of the situation. Corpus had to mean corpse, and her husband sure fit that bill. Now the habeas part, she was just spitballing.
Without a corpse, they’d have to leave her be. Wasn’t that the gist? Or was there another word for it?
No matter, she didn’t care if it took a year for everything to die down and go away. She’d proven she was patient.
Lost in her dreams of a new life, the head-piercing screech that ripped through the still night air made her drop her shovel.
“What the hell was that?”
Jane grabbed the flashlight propped on the edge of the grave. The beam swept through the trees.
What kind of animal makes a noise like that?
She couldn’t stop the hammering of her heart.
It was one thing to hear an odd cry during the light of day. Hear something like that in the dead of night, in the middle of a primeval forest, and it got your attention.
Jane picked up the shovel, now holding it as a weapon. She waited, her chest rising and falling faster and faster.
A soft breeze ruffled the trees. She saw hundreds if not thousands of twinkling pinpricks in the sky.
She didn’t dare move or make a noise. Whatever it was, it either sounded as if it were royally pissed off or in pain.
Could have been an owl. They’re supposed to sound like a woman screaming. So are deer when they’re afraid.
Her body tensed.
What’s out here that would scare a deer like that?
“I don’t know, but it’s scaring me pretty good right about now,” she said, comforted by the sound of her own voice. The jolt of fear snapped her to reality for the first time since Henry had taken his fatal fall.
“Holy shit. I’m out in the middle of nowhere, burying my husband. What the hell’s wrong with me?”
Grrrrrrllllllllllll.
“Oh, my God,” she yelped, swinging the shovel in every direction in an effort to protect herself. The growl sounded near . . . and dangerous.
A river of cold sweat trickled between her breasts. She’d never been so scared in all her life, not even the night Henry broke the bedroom door down with the fireplace poker, trying to get at her because he was drunk and horny and angry as hell that the Yankees had lost the playoffs to the Tigers. “Beaten by nigger town!” he’d spat over and over again, even while he was on top of her, grunting and pumping too long because he had a full case of whiskey dick. She’d been terrified that night, but she knew he couldn’t hump and swear forever. He’d eventually roll off her and pass out.
Now, she wasn’t so sure what would happen.
“Stay away from me,” she said with faltering conviction. She saw the rug with Henry wrapped up inside, and for the first time in over a decade, she wished he were here.
The flap-flap of wings whooshed overhead. Jane looked up but didn’t see a thing.
Eyes flickering around her, a scream froze in her throat as she watched something swoop down and carry the carpet, and Henry, away.
There weren’t any birds that could do that. Henry weighed over two hundred pounds. It would take a damn pterodactyl to get him off the ground.
“No, no, no, no, no!” The shovel clanged at the bottom of the grave as she struggled to get out. Her car was only fifteen feet away. She had to get inside. The soft soil crumbled in her hands. The more she struggled for a solid hold, the worse it got, like quicksand.
Jane tried jumping straight out of the hole, but she’d dug it too deep. She hit the edge hard with her chest, knocking the wind out of her. Her feet and hands fought to get any kind of purchase. It seemed as if everything gave way at once. She fell on her back, staring in horror as one side of the grave poured on top of her.
That insane flapping noise returned.
Maybe it’s better I just stay in here and wait for it to leave. If it thinks I’m gone, it won’t stick around.
Jane gathered more soil, covering her body from the neck down. She clicked her flashlight off, trying her best to steady her breathing so as not to make a sound.
When she heard another growl, she almost screamed. She had to clench her lower lip between her teeth, drawing blood, to keep from crying out. Hot tears dripped from the corners of her eyes.
You did this to me, Henry! I wouldn’t be here if you hadn’t turned into a monster. I kept telling you that drinking was going to kill you someday. Goddamn you! Goddamn you!
Jane wept as quietly as she could, holding on to her belief that it was Henry that put her in this position. Before she knew it, she was fast asleep, the stress of the past twenty-four hours having bled her dry of her last ounce of energy.
The flickering sun filtering through the trees woke her up. When she lifted her hand to block the rays, sand and dirt fell into her eyes.
She was cold. A case of the shivers hit her hard.
Birds chirped. A woodpecker hammered away on a nearby tree.
“Thank you, God,” she whispered, emerging from the soil like she was in a cheap zombie movie.
Now that she wasn’t in a panic and could see what she was doing, getting out of the hole was a whole lot easier. Any hopes that what had happened last night was a dream brought on by temporary insanity were dashed when she saw that Henry was still missing.
What the hell could have taken him?
Jane had heard that there were bald eagles in the Pinelands. Didn’t eagles carry off baby cows? A baby cow could weigh as much as a man, couldn’t it?
No, they weren’t that strong.
She’d go online to check when she got home.
Home.
Where, for the first time, she could actually relax without the fear of madness to come.
Her hands shook as she fumbled for her car keys.
“At least that bird did me a favor. Hopefully, he took Henry someplace he’ll never be found.”
Dropping the shovel and flashlight in the trunk, she wondered if she should cover up the hole.
Nah. People see that, they’ll think some kids were just messing around.
She didn’t think she had the strength to fill it back up anyway. It felt as if she’d been cored and bled dry.
A shower, Valium, glass of wine and proper sleep in her bed, that’s what she needed.
The car door opened with a loud creak. Henry was always promising to grease up those hinges.
A burst of wind washed over her just before a pair of sharp claws dug into her shoulders. In an instant, she was looking down at the top of her car. She tried to scream but nothing would come out.
Leathery wings flapped on either side, the cool morning air biting her flesh.
Up and up she went, until her mind saved itself by shutting completely down.
“I hate this,” Michael said, his mouth full of sunflower seeds. He spit gobs of shells out the van’s window. “I really do. We don’t know what the fuck’s back there. For all we know, that shit is in the air giving us cancer or shrinking our dicks.”
John shook his head, keeping his eyes on the road. They’d been surrounded by pine trees for miles now, without another car in sight. It was like driving in a nightmare—you kept going and going, never getting anywhere, never seeing anything but the same unbroken scenery, mile after mile.
He liked it better when they went to the site by the water, down south more. Getting to it involved some real overgrown terrain, but at least they could chill out at the nearby beach when they were done. The blue water and sand made up for the spookiness of the overgrown woods where they dumped the shit, usually under cover of night.
“How about this,” John said. “Measure your dick now, and measure it again when we get back. Then you’ll know if it shrunk.”
Michael held up a finger. “One, I don’t have a tape measure. Two, there’s no need to be an asshole. You mean to tell me you like carting around barrels of chemicals, not knowing what they’re made of?”
“There’s worse ways to earn a buck. Look, quit crying. We’ve done this like half a dozen times already. Do you have cancer?”
“No.”
“I rest my case.”
“That doesn’t mean it’s not growing inside us, getting even stronger now because we’re locked in this van with the stuff.”
John laughed. “You’re getting soft, Mikey. Maybe you need to stop eating seeds like a bird and try a steak every once in a while.”
“Wait until you’re married and your wife gets these crazy ideas in her head. You’ll be a vegetarian, too.”
“I don’t think so.”
“Yeah, we’ll see. I know this little fad of hers won’t last. It’s easier to just go along.”
“Even when you’re not around her you’re eating like the fattest rabbit in Edison. What do you say we go to Morton’s for lunch? My treat.”
Michael waved him off. “No can do. When you stop eating meat, you get like this super sensitivity. You can smell it on someone from a block away. If I have a steak for lunch, Gloria will know the second I walk in the door.”
“You’re outta your mind.”
“I’m not fucking kidding you. Last week, I ate one of those sausage biscuits at McDonald’s for breakfast. I didn’t get home until midnight, and Gloria could still smell it. She stopped me before I could even kiss her hello. Next thing I know, I’m on the damn couch. I spent a lot on that custom sleigh bed upstairs and I intend to sleep in it as much as possible.”
“You sure you’re the same Mikey who used to knock back twenty White Castle sliders in one sitting?” John said. The turnoff wasn’t far. He kept his eyes peeled for the marker—a red bandana nailed to a tree on the right side of the road.
“Ha-ha, single man. I can’t wait until Julie gets her hooks into you. You talk a big game now,” Michael said.
“That’s not going to happen because that ring finger of Julie’s is going to remain the way it is—ringless. I guess I gotta thank saps like you for saving me from myself.”
That got a chuckle from Michael. “It’s good to know I’m providing a service.” He moved forward in his seat. “Look, there it is.”
John had to squint to spot the smear of red. Michael always had incredible eyesight. Must be getting even better with all those carrots he’s been eating, he thought.
He turned the van off the unpaved road. It barely fit within the narrow clearing. That was the point. No one was supposed to know about this spot.
The terrain was treacherous. He wished they could have used a four-by-four, but the van was the only thing that fit the containers. A couple of times, the van almost got stuck, tires spinning and kicking up the soft earth in muddy fountains.
“Home, sweet home,” John said, pulling up to the second marker, a tattered blue bandana tied around the branch of a dying bush. The circular clearing was a shade over forty feet in diameter. The first time they’d come here, Michael had commented how it looked like a landing site for a UFO that’d punched down through the trees. John agreed that it looked pretty unnatural. He’d heard that a whole town used to be out here, built around some kind of factory hundreds of years ago. Over time, people left the town and its rotted structures gradually sank into the earth. He wondered if there was a house or general store right under his feet.
“You wanna start the digging?” John asked.
Michael shrugged. “No skin off my ass. Let’s lug those containers out first. I don’t wanna get tired from digging, then have to get them out of the van.”
John got out, admiring the new Venuccio Brothers logo on the side of the van. The boss had hired a legitimate designer to come up with it. The sweeping letters reminded him of old-time Little League lettering they used to have on their jerseys.
They opened the double back doors, slipping on thick rubber gloves and white masks to cover their mouths and noses. The four black steel containers looked heavy. They knew from experience that whatever was inside was remarkably light.
Each grabbed a side of one barrel and hefted it out of the van. They made sure not to drop it on the ground. They’d been told time and time again to be very careful. Michael was so paranoid, he treated those things like they were newborn babies.
“Does the lid seem kinda loose to you?” Michael said as they shuffled in tandem to the clearing. Liquid sloshed about inside.
“No. If it was, I’d let you carry it yourself.”
“You’re really pushing it today.”
They lugged it to the spot where they estimated the last batch had gone under, near the upper right edge of the circle. As they got closer, Michael pulled up.
“Holy shit, Johnny. What the hell?”
Three months earlier, they had buried six barrels of the waste material only Venuccio Brothers Carting would carry out of the lab in Elizabeth. They both knew whatever was in the barrels was illegal. If it was on the up and up, it wouldn’t be in their van. They’d never been told how toxic the materials were, but it didn’t take a genius to figure out it was probably some pretty bad stuff.
John’s heart pumped faster when he saw that one of the barrels had been dug up. It was still nestled in the tight hole they’d placed it in, but all of the dirt had been removed from the top.
Worst of all, the lid had been pried open.
“Jesus, you smell anything weird?” Michael said, his eyes showing way too much of the whites.
John looked around, taking a few deep sniffs. “Nah, all I smell is trees.”
“I’m not going near that, man.”
“All right, all right, don’t get yourself in a panic. We’ll just bury them over there,” John said, nodding to the other side of the clearing. “We haven’t planted anything there yet.”
“But what about that one? If we leave it like that and someone finds it, we’re screwed.”
Sighing, and now cringing with the start of a massive headache, John said, “Look, we’ll just throw the dirt back on.”
“And breathe in whatever’s in there? No way.”
“Then I’ll do it.”
In fact, that was the last thing John wanted to do, but he knew there was no way Michael was going to take one step closer.
Just get it done quick and get the hell out, he thought. We’ll have to tell the boss someone’s been snooping around. Jeez, I hope it wasn’t some dumb kids. What if they got sick?
John and Michael were hard men who did terrible things from time to time, but they never, ever harmed a woman or child. John’s stomach turned at the thought of that nasty sludge getting on some kid who just wanted to play in the woods. Best to cover it up quick and hope no one else tried to go digging for China.
They gently placed the barrel on the ground while John went back to get the shovel.
Michael was pointing. “Look, is that a boot?”
John peered at the other side of the exposed hole.
There was a brown cowboy boot in the brush.
“Looks like some hick ran out of his shoes,” John said, trying to lighten their mood. “I don’t see the other one, though.”
He found the lid and flipped it with the end of the shovel on top of the barrel. Before it landed, he looked at the black sludge inside. It looked like used motor oil. A tank of oil like that would weigh a ton. I wonder what it’s made of?
John quickly went about tossing the dirt back onto the barrel. He wanted it out of sight in a hurry. If there were toxic fumes rising from it, the less he breathed, the better.
It took less than a minute to cover it all up.
“See, that wasn’t so hard, was it?” he said.
When he turned around, Michael was gone.
“Hey,” he called out. “No piss breaks until we get these new ones planted. You hear me?”
He stopped, listening for the sound of his partner’s heavy stream or the crunch of leaves.
“Mikey! Quit playing around. Let’s get this shit done, son.”
He waited a minute, checked the van to make sure he wasn’t taking a nap inside.
“Mikey?”
A loud scream put him on instant high alert. It sounded as if someone had just shouted their voice box raw. John drew his gun from the holster he kept at his back.
If that’s you, Mikey, you’re gonna get shot.
It couldn’t be him. Michael knew better.
John flew forward as something smashed into him from behind. His gun thumped underneath last fall’s leaves. John howled. It felt like the back of his shoulder had been shattered. His right arm had gone numb, right down to the tips of his calloused fingers.
“You son of a bitch,” he cursed, struggling to flip onto his back and face his attacker.
Twigs snapped as something stepped beside him.
He looked up.
“No way. No way. No! No!”
Present day
Sam Willet—Boompa to his family—woke up with an admirable case of morning wood. Scratching at his chin underneath the wild tangle of his beard, he looked down at his tented pajama bottoms and said, “Not bad. Now what am I supposed to do with this?”
Truth was, it wasn’t bad, considering his eighty years on God’s green earth and disdain for male enhancers. When he was a younger man of sixty, his sex life with Lauren had been better than when they were honeymooners. He’d assumed that things would settle down when he turned seventy. After that, there was no sense funneling PEDs to his pecker, chasing the poor woman around the house. She’d earned her peace. Then he’d pass away and bide his time in the ether waiting for her.
It wasn’t part of the plan, her dying ten years ago and his body still champing at the bit to find some loving. Every time he woke up like this, he felt grim satisfaction that he still had it, and pain at the reminder that his days of strutting were long behind him.
There was a knock at his door.
“Boompa, you up?”
That was his grandson Daryl.
“Of course I’m up,” he said. “I’ve been getting up before the crack of dawn more years than you’ve been kicking around.”
Daryl gave a short laugh.
“You need me to help you out of bed, old man?”
He flipped the covers back, crossing the room in three heavy strides, his footsteps sounding like thunderclaps on the bare, hardwood floor. Throwing open the door, he barked, “How about I change your diaper, son? Lord knows I seen enough crap come out of you over the years.”
Daryl jumped back, hands held up in surrender. He was tall and solid as a fireplug, just like his father. His frayed Mets cap was on backwards. Sam pulled it off his head, setting it straight, so the bill was facing front.
“I swear you do that just to hound me,” Sam said.
Daryl’s sad blue eyes sparkled for a moment. “You found me out.” He happened to look down and said, “No need to salute. I’m not an officer.”
Sam chuckled, covering his slight bulge w. . .
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