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as she was when they were young girls during the Depression.

      “You need to go somewhere,” Bernia was saying, directing Althea’s attention to a door set in one wall of the living room, where a door had never been before.

      My heavens, am I dead? Althea thought. Then the truth came to her. No, it has to be a dream; a very peculiar one, but a dream nonetheless.

      Althea Kinchloe had always possessed the ability to recognize when she was experiencing a dream, which this most definitely had to be. But before she could step outside of her experience any further, the door opened. Behind it was a staircase leading down to the basement. She went down.

      It was dark at the bottom, but not so dark that Althea could not see. A washing machine sat to one side, the old fashioned kind that looked like a drum on legs and had a hand roller to squeeze out the water, the kind her mother had used, and which she herself had used for the first several years of her marriage. Beyond the laundry room was a long, dark corridor, which she started down. The basement corridor reeked of musty dankness, which was hardly surprising. But as she walked, the musty smell was overwhelmed by another one—it was unmistakably the scent of oil paint. It was a familiar odor from her younger days; the smell of an art studio, like the one in which she and Howard used to meet, using the cover story that she was posing for one of his paintings. If her father had known what had really gone on in that studio, he would have taken a shotgun to both of them.

      How Althea had loved Howard Kearney. When he became one of the tens of thousands who did not return from the Great War, so young and suddenly so dead, she thought her life was over. That, though, had been seven decades worth of life ago; seven decades that had encompassed a forty-eight year marriage to a fine, if unexciting, man, two children, five grandchildren, and now two great-grandchildren. Her life had not ended when Howard died on the battlefield any more than it had when Barry, her husband, suffered a heart attack and died while on a fishing trip two months before his eightieth birthday. Both tragedies had changed her life, though she often mused that overcoming Howard’s death when he was young had in some way prepared her for Barry’s death when she was old. The fact that both had been separated from her at the times of their passing left her each time with feelings of emptiness that was painfully hard to overcome, but ultimately she had overcome them. As her grandmother used to say, it was amazing how much people were able to bend in the wind without breaking.

      Althea Kinchloe, née Dorneman, had done a lot of bending in the wind.

      She continued to walk down the dark corridor, the walls of which were covered with paintings of people, all engaged in some kind of activity. She recognized the artwork instantly, and her pulse raced. A figure stepped out from the shadows. “Howard!” Althea cried, rushing toward him. “Oh, Howard!”

      Howard was as big and tall and strong and youthful as the last time she had seen him alive, in 1942. He smiled as she approached and held his arms out, and Althea melted into them. He smelled of paint and tobacco, as he always had, but now there was a faint new odor, that of gunpowder. “I’ve missed you, darling,” Althea said, her voice shaky, not with age, but with emotion. “Howard, have you come for me? Am I dying?”

      “Not yet, Pookie,” he answered softly, and her heart melted. That had been his private name for her. No one else on earth knew of that name. “I’ve come to tell you that there is something you must do first.”

      “Tell me and I’ll do it, Howard. I’ll do anything for you.”

      “You must help defeat it.”

      “What must I help defeat?”

      “The legion.”

      “What legion?”

      “We thought we took care of it way back when, but the gateway has been opened again.”

      “I don’t understand.”

      “You have to make yourself understand,” Howard replied. “It will not be easy, but you will have help. You will not be alone. There will be a little girl.”

      “Howard, please tell me what are you talking about!”

      “It’s fighting me...the legion...I don’t have much time. Look for the little girl at Tarelton, California.” Howard said, stepping back from her. “And be brave, Althea. Don’t give in to it.”

      “Howard!”

      Her long dead love was gone now, like he had never been there. The only signs of life in the basement room were simulated ones: the painted figures on each wall, which had been rendered in the style of a public art mural, the kind Howard used to create before the war. Althea looked from one face to another, and then put her hand to her mouth to stifle a cry.

      The painted figures all slowly turned to face her.

      I’m dreaming I’m dreaming I’m dreaming I’m dreaming, she chanted to herself, but that did nothing to eliminate her fear.

      A shadow in her peripheral vision caused her to look down the seemingly endless corridor. Another figure was standing there, one that was all black. She could not make out features of any kind, but she could see that the shadow was moving. It was coming toward her, very quickly. Althea began to back up, keeping her eyes on the dark figure. As the black figure passed the pictures, the painted figures within them withered and rotted.

      That was when Althea screamed. She turned and started running down the corridor, never daring to look back, too frightened to slow down. She ran as fast as she did when she and Bernia used to have races up the drive from the street. Ahead now she could see the stairs leading up to the mysterious door of her house. Behind her, she could hear the footfalls of the dark figure chasing her, as well as the moans of the figures on the wall.

      Why can’t I wake up?

      She got to the base of the stairs and sprinted up, taking two steps at a time, until she reached the top. Althea was about to bolt through the door, when it violently slammed shut in her face. She felt the pressure of the wooden door hitting her flesh, but no pain. Then she fell backwards.

      She expected to hit the steps with her back at any moment, but that moment never came. Instead she continued to fall helplessly through the air, like she was falling down a mine shaft. She opened her mouth to cry out....

      But Althea Kinchloe did not cry out as her eyes opened and she bounced tensely on her bed, as though she had just landed there from a height. Her nightgown was sopping wet, but it was from sweat, not one of the bladder accidents she occasionally had in her sleep. She reached for her forehead and found that her hair was wet as well, like she had just emerged from the shower. Her heart was pounding almost audibly. “Dear Lord in Heaven,” she moaned, closing her eyes again, and wondering whether or not she should call the emergency room.

      No, that would be foolish, she decided. There was no pain, only discomfort. And fear. In fact, in her ninety-three years of life, she could not remember a dream that had been so thoroughly terrifying. She glanced at the digital clock beside her bed: it was 4:37 a.m.

      “I doubt I’m going to get back to sleep,” she told herself, getting out of bed and shuffling to the bathroom to dry herself off. Putting her damp nightgown into the sink, Althea clad herself in her cotton robe, walked into the dark living room and seated herself on the sofa. She searched the cushions for the television remote, finally found it, and switched on the new, impossibly large set that her grandson had bought for her, more for light and noise than entertainment. The programming choices were nothing special this time of night, anyway, mostly those thirty-minute commercials for real estate classes or vacuum cleaners or weight-loss programs. But just having something with sound in front of her might help her to forget the terrible dream.

      No. You mustn’t forget, you cannot forget, my darling, I will not let you, a voice whispered in her mind.

      “Lord, have mercy,” Althea uttered. Fine; she would not forget. Rising, she walked into the dining room, where she had a small desk and an upright typewriter that she had had since business school. Taking a clean sheet of paper, she fed it into the roller of the Underwood. There was no doubt that she was

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