Darkside_ A Novel - Belinda Bauer [16]
*
Lucy watched The Exorcist in slices between her intertwined fingers. So silly! She'd watched it a dozen times; it was dated; the story was so copied it was a retroactive cliche; the effects were all pea soup and puppetry - and it scared the crap out of her every time.
Lucy had a degree in psychology. She knew that demonic possession was rubbish - that it was the way religions had for centuries explained conditions like schizophrenia and multiple-personality disorders. She knew that. She reminded herself of that. She believed it to be so. But the idea of a little girl possessed by the devil, of a mother's reluctance to accept the fact as her golden-haired child descends into apparent madness - and the final showdown in all its hellish hamminess. It ticked all the right boxes for Lucy.
She had always liked horror films. As a teenager they had just been a way to allow a boy to put his arm around her at the movies without feeling as though she was being a slut. Then she got addicted to the thrill - the jumps and the gore. How many ways could a head come off a human being? How far could blood squirt from a severed artery? And over what? Or whom? Lucy applauded every new method of murder, exalted any clever new way to make her jump out of her skin, bowed down in awe to any film that could leave her wishing that turning on the lights on a winter's afternoon was a quicker affair than hauling herself across the room on sticks and pressing the switch with her chin.
But she always came back to The Exorcist.
Often, when she thought about her life and death, Lucy wondered about her passion for horror. She had finally come to the conclusion that it was born out of a deep-seated sense of security. Until the MS was diagnosed, Lucy had led a charmed life. She had meandered through school and university in the manner of many very bright students - neglecting her studies with a vengeance and yet still managing to pick up her First and lifelong friends along the way. She had dabbled with cannabis and yet never had a trip worse than the one where she suspected her best friend, Sharma, had stolen her new Max Factor mascara. She had been on three protest marches - Animal Rights, Tibet, and Tibet again - without ever having her name taken by police. She'd got drunk only in the company of friends who made sure she got home safely, she'd never lost a close relative and she'd never had her heart broken. Probably, she reasoned, she enjoyed horror because nothing even vaguely similar had ever happened to her or ever would.
At least, that's what she told Jonas.
But it was not as strictly true as it had been before she was diagnosed. Since the MS had started to take over her life, she grudgingly recognized some need to test herself through horror, to push the boundaries of her own strength and resourcefulness to reassure herself that she was not yet helpless - even if the test was just in her mind.
She watched the films for fun; she studied them like manuals.
No longer could she simply see a pretty young girl walk through creepy woods or a dark house without some part of her wishing she was there - and handling it better.
Lucy Holly would never turn round and call out, 'Who's there?' in that tremulous voice. She'd duck suddenly into the trees, circle silently back through the undergrowth and get behind the lurching zombies. See how they liked it!
She'd never creep downstairs in the dark with a knife shaking pathetically in her hand to confront an intruder; she'd stay at the top of the stairs and tip the landing bookcase on to the bastard as he crept ignorantly up towards her.
If she could stalk a zombie; if she could squash an intruder ... how hard could it be to repel the killer in her own body?
Sometimes, when she felt mentally strong enough, Lucy would stand naked and watch herself in the mirror. That was what it felt like - watching herself, not looking.
She had been beautiful. She knew