The Curse of 1977 (Book 2)

Chapter 35



Inside a tiny, all-night diner at the edge of Downtown, Lynnette sat on her side of the tattered, red leathered booth and watched
as Cloyse swallowed the last morsel of his hot dog before gulping down another chug of Dr.Pepper from his plastic cup.
The aromatic smells of greasy, frying food from the kitchen engulfed the entire establishment, causing the place to smell almost
as if it were on fire. Lynnette was growing more and more impatient with the man.
She could have honestly cared less that he hadn't eaten since God knows when, she had questions to ask, so being rude to
Cloyse wasn't exactly going to cause another bead of sweat to form on her already scorching forehead.
Before Cloyse could swipe up another French fry from off his ketchup plastered plate, Lynnette snatched the plate away from
him.
"Okay, now tell me, where is my son?" She indignantly ordered.
Appearing taken aback by her action, the man swallowed before saying, "My name is Cloyse. I came here to dis city to find
Arthur and Akoni."
"Who are they?"
"Dey are brother and sister from my town."
"Your town in Africa," Lynnette asked.
Blushing, Cloyse replied, "I am not from Africa. I am from a town in Jamaica."
"Jamaica?" Lynnette frowned.
"Yes. Arthur and Akoni came here with deir brother Damerae, but for some reason or another dey both murdered him. Now, it is
only dose two."
"So are you saying that these two have my son?"
Suddenly, on the speaker above their heads, the Kenny Rogers' song 'Lucille' began to play. Startled, Cloyse began looking all
around the diner to see just where the music was coming from.
Slamming both of her hands on the table, Lynnette raised her voice, "I need you to focus on this conversation! Not that stupid
song!"

Cloyse sat up and still in his seat like a soldier. "I don't know if dey have your son or not. But I do know dat dey are here for you
and him both."
"Why? What did we do to them?"
Cloyse's eyes dropped to the table in a depressed manner. "You and your son did nothing to warrant your deaths, neither did my
sister. It is all a part of de curse."
"Your sister," Lynnette questioned. "They're here for your sister, too?"
Looking back at Lynnette, Cloyse said, "My sister Karyn and Arthur were lovers back in our town. But when Karyn found out what
Arthur truly was, he violated her and turned into dat demon."
Lynnette, upon hearing the name Karyn, froze up. She chose to remain silent on the woman, and just where she had heard the
name before.
Drawing close to Cloyse's face, Lynnette whispered, "So, let me get this straight. You know what they are? You actually believe
in these things?"
"Of course I do." Cloyse sounded a bit stunned. "Dey all murdered everyone in our village."
Gawking around for a moment, Lynnette then asked, "What exactly did your people call these things? Because I don't want to sit
here and act like I know what they are."
"We called dem devils, because de devil sent dem to us."
Lynnette scrupulously eyed the man. "What do they look like?"
"You do not know?"
"I just need to make sure we're talking about the same thing here."
Sighing, Cloyse responded, "Dey have fur all over dem. Dey stand at least seven feet or so. Dey appear like wolves."
Lynnette sat back at that instant and inhaled the description that only she wished she hadn't heard at all.
"You sit there and act like it's nothing to you." She threw up her hands.

"I, much like most of de people from my village, was born into it. For years we witnessed dem destroy our people left and right.
Believe me, it is someting, someting dat I have learned to live with, and someting dat I will die with."
Shaking her head, Lynnette said, "I just have a hard time sitting here and believing all of this. I mean, this is something out of
Hollywood. Something that only white folks believe in."
"Evil knows no color."
"Maybe not, but none of this explains why my son and I are being targeted. It was my fiancée that was that thing. He nearly killed
us both back in February."
Cloyse stared on at Lynnette like she was the most tragic thing in the world as the song above them both played on.
"I did not know dat your fiancée was cursed as well."
"Yeah, neither did I." Lynnette twisted her lips. "I thought his ass was just high on some drugs or something."
"Dat is how my sister behaved before she left for dis city last year."
"Hold on, last year?" Lynnette all of the sudden clinched her fists underneath the table. "When last year did your sister arrive
here in Cypress?"
"She had suffered many years with de curse before she left home last July."
Lynnette's mind traveled at the speed of light right then. She turned her head away from Cloyse for a moment and said, "So tell
me, how do you know of me?"
"I felt your presence at dat woman's shelter dis evening."
"My presence," she glared back at the man.
"Yes, you were dere for a time. Dat is why I went to de police station. I could sense dat you had not only been face to face with
one of de devils, but dat you were still alive."
"But I don't understand, how can sense something like that?"
Cloyse examined the few diner patrons that were milling through before he pulled closer to Lynnette and whispered, "I have dis
curse of my own. It allows me to see and sense tings just by touching dem, or seeing tings far, far away. Dis curse has been with

me ever since I was a child. I too am infected with devils."
Rolling her eyes, Lynnette said, "You're not possessed. You have something called ESP."
"Can de disease kill me?" Cloyse looked shocked.
Sounding irritated, Lynnette replied, "It's not a disease. My father watches this show on TV sometimes where certain people in
the world have this sixth sense. I used to think it was stupid. Then again, I used to think a lot of things were stupid."
"But it led me here to dis town, and dat is how I recognized you in de police station. It is like a magnet dat pulls me towards a
person or ting."
"Talk about dumb luck." Lynnette dropped her shoulders.
"Arthur and Akoni have been all over dis city doing as dey please."
"Yeah, I know. They even attacked some teachers at my old high school the other day."
"You have to understand, dis curse is like a disease. It doesn't just infect de ones dat are dammed, but it also hurts dose around
dem as well."
"I don't understand." Lynnette's hands began to tremble on the table.
"Dere is a curse within de curse itself. You have seen firsthand what happens to one dat is first infected. But what takes place
after dat is like a scar dat cannot be removed. Everyone dat one person once knew or loved is also taken in until dey are
destroyed. One doesn't have to be eaten alive in order to be wiped out. Whoever your fiancée came into contact with somehow,
someway becomes caught up in de storm."
"But my son and I didn't do anything!" Lynnette desperately pointed at herself.
"You never had to. For Arthur and Akoni to be here in dis city, has to mean dat you both were marked at one time. Dey will not
stop until you both are dead. Dey never stopped until dey murdered everyone in my village. Now...I am de last."
"I think I saw this Akoni at the park a few days ago."
"I saw her within a crowd some days back myself. Someting is wrong, however."

"How do you mean?"
"She is using a crutch to move about. Dat only means dat she has been changing back and forth constantly."
"So," Lynnette shrugged.
"If dis is true for de both of dem, den dey are weakened. My friend and I back in my village managed to capture deir father in a
weakened condition before we put an end to him."
Just then, Lynnette began to giggle to herself. Cloyse sat and stared at her like she had lost her senses.
"I...I can't believe I'm actually sitting here and listening to this bullshit." She tossed up her hands. "For all I know you could be one
of them, or at least some crazy serial killer like the guy in New York going around shooting folks left and right. I feel like I can't
wake up."
"I have never killed anyone in my life." Cloyse spoke seriously. "But I vow to kill both of dem."
Calming down from her forced jocular tirade, Lynnette said, "Look, can you use your ESP to find my child? Because once you
do, me and him both are leaving this town for good. I'd like to see them come and find us."
Cloyse sat absolutely motionless at that point. To Lynnette, he looked like a mannequin, he was so immobile.
"What's the matter?" She shivered.
"Dere is nowhere on dis planet you can run to." Cloyse spoke so grimly. "Dis is not de police we are talking about...de devil has
you and your son on de palms of his hands."
"You two sound like a couple of movie folks!" A raggedy looking, drunk white man slurred as he rose up from his own booth to
invade theirs. "Hell, if he were still alive, I'd tell Cecil B. Demille to give you both the Oscar right now!"
Taken off their guard, both Lynnette and Cloyse blushed. Lynnette then took a ten dollar bill out of her pocket and slammed it
onto the table before getting up.
"C'mon, we need to keep moving." She said to Cloyse. Cloyse got up from the booth and followed Lynnette out the door.
Before Lynnette could take another step down the sidewalk, she stopped and stared at a red neon sign across the street that
read Clancy's Department Store.

"You look like you haven't slept in days." Cloyse mentioned as he stood beside her. "I could see it in your eyes."
But Lynnette paid the man no attention. Her worn, stinging eyes remained only on the sign across the semi-empty road.
"Do you really wanna sleep in this town?" She turned her nose up at Cloyse. "C'mon, you have my child to find."


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