John Saul - The Right Hand of Evil

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John Saul has been giving readers the jitters since the publication of Suffer the Children in 1977. His 22nd twisted tale, The Right Hand of Evil is another nerve shaker.
The Conway family is in deep financial trouble. Ted Conway would rather knock back bourbon than support his family, and Janet Conway's career as an artist is going nowhere. Happily, the three Conway children-toddler Molly and 15-year-old twins Jared and Kimberley-seem well adjusted. Of course happy children to not make for good horror material, so dark times are just around the corner.
Ted receives an unexpected call from a Louisiana sanatorium, where his aged Aunt Cora is dying. Cora wants to convey a final message to her only surviving family members. She rasps out the ominous words, "I can see it. Stay away! Stay away from here!" Her words are futile-the financially strapped Ted moves his family into Cora's old house, a house deeded to them in a family trust.
Young Kimberley instantly feels a dark presence in the dilapidated Victorian house: "Suddenly her skin was crawling, as if a large insect were creeping across her neck." Tragedy upon tragedy strikes the family. Kim's beloved cat disappears and is sacrificed in a black-magic ceremony; an evil presence takes over Jared's mind-transforming him into the most rotten of bad seeds; the wails of a dead infant fill Kim's head, driving her to the edge of insanity. The family has fallen victim to a centuries-old curse-a curse that threatens to wipe out the Conway name.
Although there is nothing particularly original or earth shattering about this haunted-house story, The Right Hand of Evil is still a welcome piece of escapism. Read it at your peril.

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There was a chill in the air, as though it were the middle of winter and a freak cold snap had struck. But the night had been warm enough to leave the windows open, and a single thin blanket had been sufficient. At some point-probably early this morning when the sun began flooding in-she'd kicked that away, too. Yet as she descended the stairs the air grew colder, until, by the time she reached the first floor, gooseflesh was creeping over her skin.

She paused at the bottom of the stairs. The haze had thickened, and though she smelled nothing unusual, the atmosphere seemed heavy and hard to breathe.

Fumes of some kind?

That must be it-Ted must be painting, or cleaning something, or-

Molly!

Where was Molly? If she were breathing these fumes-

Janet quickened her step, moving out of the entry hall into the dining room, hurrying toward the kitchen. Then something caught her eye, and turning, she stared at the mural on the wall, the mural she'd been working on only last night.

The marble tile of the terrace she had so carefully textured, so you might expect it to be smooth and cold to the touch, looked old and stained.

The balustrade appeared chipped and battered.

And beyond the balustrade, the garden she'd created, painstakingly drawing and coloring every leaf and blossom, had died.

The leaves were gone, only bare limbs and twigs remaining. Even the silvery glow of moonlight had been mottled, and the sky was tinged with green as if a terrible storm were about to break.

It wasn't possible, she thought. No one could have repainted the whole wall during the few hours she'd been asleep!

That was it! It had to be.

She must still be asleep, and this was a nightmare from which she'd awaken in a minute or two. She'd be back in her bed, and it would take a few seconds before she realized that her work-the best work she'd ever done-had not really been ruined.

But she didn't awaken.

Instead, the mural itself seemed to come to life. The clouds in the sky darkened, and then the branches of the trees began to move, bending forward, reaching, their twigs stretching like skeletal fingers, straining toward her. Then talons appeared at the ends of the twigs, and as one of the branches lashed toward her, Janet reflexively turned away, stumbling toward the kitchen.

Then she heard it.

A soft cry, muffled, almost inaudible.

She stopped short, one hand on the kitchen door, listening.

It came again.

A baby?

Molly?

Pushing the door open, she strode into the kitchen, her eyes going to Molly's playpen, over in the corner, safely away from the stove.

Empty!

Her mind raced. The car was outside, so Ted hadn't gone somewhere and taken Molly with him. Where was she? Where was he?

The carriage house?

No! The cry she'd heard-and now she was almost certain it had been Molly-had come from somewhere inside the house! Turning away from the back door, she went back to the dining room.

The sound she heard this time was so low it was almost inaudible. Janet held her breath, wishing there were some way to silence the pounding of her own heart.

There!

A low, throbbing sound, so low she wasn't quite certain whether she'd heard it or simply felt it. It could have come from the floor itself, up through her feet and body, and only then into her consciousness.

The basement.

It was coming from the basement.

As she pulled the door to the basement open, she heard the muffled cry of the baby again. But it was much clearer now. She groped for the light switch. Flipped it.

"Molly?"

No answer.

"Molly!" Then: "Ted? Are you down there?"

There was still no answer, and she started down the steep flight of stairs.

As she did, the cold deepened, its icy grip closing around her.

As a thick haze appeared out of nowhere, the glare of the naked bulb that lit the stairs was muted to a pallid silver glow that barely held the shadows at bay. The bulb itself appeared to be suspended in nothing but the gathering mist.

The throbbing sound was louder with every step she took, but so also was the sound of the crying baby.

Nor was there any longer any question that the bawling child was Molly.

Janet came at last to the bottom of the stairs, and the closed door to Jared's room. The pulsing rhythm was all around her now, drowning out even the pounding of her heart, but still she could hear Molly crying out. She put her hand on the doorknob to Jared's room and paused, a terrible feeling of foreboding passing over her. Suddenly, she wanted to turn away from the closed door, to escape the throbbing beat of the music and the terrible cold.

But she couldn't.

Not until she'd found Molly.

The doorknob was so cold it numbed her fingers, and when she tried to turn it, she thought at first that it might be locked.

Then the knob turned.

The light above her blinked out.

Janet froze in the darkness.

The bulb. It was only the bulb. No one was above her; no one had turned the light out. Yet all around her-everywhere and nowhere-hidden in the darkness, she could feel a presence.

The blackness held her to the spot where she stood like an insect pinned in a display case. She had a terrible sense of being watched, as if some unseen being were above the case, peering down at her as if at some strange species.

A feeling of utter helplessness came over her. The throbbing rhythm grew stronger still. The cold and darkness threatened to strangle her. With every fiber of her being she tried to free herself so she could flee back up the stairs and escape from the horror that held her in its thrall.

Then, once again, Molly cried out.

This time her voice was filled with terror. In an instant all of Janet's maternal instincts rose within her. Her own fears vanished and she threw off the bonds of the cold and blackness. She pressed against the door.

It opened a crack and a flickering light crept through.

Janet pushed the door harder, and it swung open.

As she saw what lay beyond, a terror beyond anything she'd ever felt before gripped Janet.

She began to scream.

And scream. And scream…

The sound of her name was so faint that at first Kim barely heard it. But then she heard it again: "Kiiiimmm"-the single syllable drawn out as if whoever was calling out to her had almost despaired of her responding. Then, as the cry came a third time, it seemed suddenly sharper.

"Kim? Kim! Kim, can you hear me?"

Hands gently shook her. She opened her eyes and looked up. Three faces loomed above her, but their features were lost in the glare of the bright light behind them. Then, as her eyes adjusted to the light, the faces came into focus.

Sister Clarence. Father Bernard. Father MacNeill.

But where was she? She'd been in the lake, trying to save Jared, but-

She tried to sit up, but Sister Clarence's hand held her back.

"It's all right, Kim. Don't try to get up. Just try to tell us what happened."

"Jared!" Kim blurted. "He needs me! He's-" But then, before she finished the sentence, her mind began to clear. "Molly!" she cried out. She pressed her hands against her eyes and shook her head as if trying to deny even the memory of what she'd seen. "They cut her up! They cut her up, and put her in jars, and-" Now her sobbing did overtake her, and a moment later she felt Sister Clarence's arms go around her. The nun's hand gently stroked her hair.

"It's all right, Kim. We're here. Nothing's going to happen to you. Just try to tell us what you saw."

A kaleidoscope of images was tumbling through her mind, and she instinctively clutched at the tiny golden cross her aunt had given her. "What is it?" she whispered. "What's happening to Jared? He-"

"Hush, child," Sister Clarence soothed. "You're safe with us. Everything will be all right." But even as the nun spoke, Kim knew that Sister Clarence didn't believe her own words.

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