Fury on Sunday

Fury on Sunday

by Richard Matheson
Fury on Sunday

Fury on Sunday

by Richard Matheson

eBookDigital Original (Digital Original)

$8.49  $8.99 Save 6% Current price is $8.49, Original price is $8.99. You Save 6%.

Available on Compatible NOOK Devices and the free NOOK Apps.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers

LEND ME® See Details

Overview

An early pulse-pounding thriller from the Twilight Zone scribe and multi-award-winning author of I Am Legend.
 
Vincent was a brilliant pianist, but a disturbed personality. The asylum he was committed to could not hold him. He escaped on an early Sunday morning, bent on revenge against those who betrayed him—his manager and the man who married his lover, Ruth.
 
With his temper spiraling out of control, Vincent pursued his prey without mercy, brutally slaughtering anyone who got in his way. For four hours he would terrorize a community. His rage would not be sated no matter how much blood he spilled. And he refused to let anyone keep him from Ruth ever again . . .
 
Richard Matheson, “one of the great names in American terror fiction,” unleashes a relentless novel of chilling suspense in Fury on Sunday (The Philadelphia Inquirer).
 
“The author who influenced me the most as a writer was Richard Matheson.” —Stephen King
 
“Perhaps no other living author is as responsible for chilling a generation with tantalizing nightmare visions.” —The New York Times
 
“Matheson’s a writer who just has the special knack, the deft skill to imagine terrifying scenarios on any scale, large and small, and give them chilling possibility.” —Los Angeles Times

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780795336058
Publisher: RosettaBooks
Publication date: 02/12/2019
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 122
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

About The Author
Richard Burton Matheson (born February 20, 1926) is an American author and screenwriter working primarily in the fantasy, horror, and science fiction genres. Between 1950 and 1971, Matheson produced dozens of stories, frequently combining elements from the different genres in which he works, making important contributions to the further development of modern horror. Matheson wrote fourteen episodes for the American television series The Twilight Zone, including the famous "Nightmare at 20,000 Feet." Notably, Steven Spielberg's first full length film (made for television) was based on the story "Duel," for which Matheson also wrote the screenplay.Matheson's first novel, Someone is Bleeding, was published in 1953. His thirty novels since then include The Shrinking Man (filmed as The Incredible Shrinking Man, again adapted from Matheson's own screenplay), and a science fiction/vampire novel, I Am Legend (made into film as The Last Man on Earth, 1964, The Omega Man, 1971, andI Am Legend, 2007).A new film based on Matheson's story "Steel," entitled Real Steel, is a major motion picture that was released in October 2011. His most recent novel, Other Kingdoms, appeared in March 2011.According to film critic Roger Ebert, Matheson's scientific approach to the supernatural in I Am Legend and other novels from the 1950s and '60s anticipated the "pseudorealistic fantasy novels like Rosemary's Baby and The Exorcist." In 2010, Matheson was inducted into the Science Fiction Hall of Fame, and Stephen King has cited Matheson as a creative influence; his novel Cell is dedicated to Matheson along with filmmaker George A. Romero. Author Anne Rice has said that Matheson's short story, "A Dress of White Silk" was a primary early influence on her interest in vampires and fantasy fiction.

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

1:00 AM

There was moonlight on his face and he was playing a funeral march. But there wasn't any piano. There was just the cot he was lying on, low and narrow, without any bedding except a coarse brown blanket wrapped tightly around the mattress. He lay on the blanket, fully clothed, his head resting on a thin pillow. The wide shaft of moonlight flooding across his body lit up the whiteness of his lean hands while they played Chopin on his legs. There was silence in the ward but he heard the music in his head.

He was a young man, about 26 years old, with tangled black hair and dark eyes. His face was the work of a sculptor who had forgotten to stop at the right place; who had, in attempting perfection, overdone the job, cutting everything to paper thinness — ears and nostrils that seemed liable to tear, and lips and chin like brittle glass that might shatter at the slightest blow. And all white — alabaster, ivory white.

He lay straight on the mattress, the gray-flannel trousered legs stretched out so taut that the heels of his ankle-high shoes pressed against the railing at the foot of the bed. His chest, covered by a shirt of grey flannel, rose and fell slowly and evenly.

Breathe correctly, Vincent. You must have the breath control of a distance runner.

The eyes that had been staring at the high ceiling now closed tightly. The hands were transformed to white spiders that jumped on his legs, gouging and scraping out music.

Not triple f, Vincent, double f, for the love of God!

The dirge crashed in his ears and the chords echoed down the endless passage of clouded darkness that was his brain.

Now the slow reflective passage came to life beneath his fingers, consoling. He opened his eyes again to stare at the ceiling.

He was waiting for Harry. Harry was the male nurse who handled the ward, an ape of a man with plastered-down hair and fat hands with black hair on their backs. Lying there, Vince thought about those hands while his own rippled gently over the keyboard that wasn't.

Harry's hands weren't piano hands, Vince knew. Harry had ape hands that were coming soon to pluck him from the darkness. He could almost see Harry moving down the outside hall for the door that led to the ward. He could almost see the door opening and Harry standing there, waiting for him.

His hands punched down and a crescendo of despair mounted in his brain. He didn't want to think of Harry so he pushed aside the thought of his moist searching hands, the vacuous smile. He jammed his eyes shut and propelled himself back to Town Hall. The audience was rapt. They held their breaths while he ended the funeral march, paused dramatically, then drove himself into the incredible fury of the last sonata movement.

Now he was really there. He had driven away all memories. There was no Ruth in his life. No Bob. No Stan or Jane. No Saul. He was alone with his music; the music that had always been his only comfort. He was bent over the keyboard, brow glistening with sweat, hands a blur of white movement on the keys, drawing out crystal sound from the stillness. Faster and faster. The sound of the music welled up in his brain.

Then the little man who had stabbed his wife sixteen times with a carving knife began to cough.

Vince's hands snapped into fists that trembled in the moonlight. His teeth clicked together and his body shuddered on the bed. The need for violence pushed out from his insides until he felt as if it would force out the walls of his body. It came on him like this, his temper. It came pounding up from his guts, eager for destruction.

Vince rolled onto his stomach and clamped his teeth on the pillow.

Vincent, you simply must control your temper!

A hissing breath escaped his lips. The memory of forgotten words only made it worse. He tossed onto his back and pushed up to a tense position, eyes wide open, planning to rush down to the little man's bed and squeeze the coughing from his lungs.

Then the man stopped coughing and went back to sleep. Vince caught himself, waited a moment, then fell back on the pillow. After a moment, he smiled in the moonlight.

Not now. Not when his chance was here at last. He'd waited too long to throw it away on a moment's vengeance. His breathing slowed down and he cleared his throat softly. I can control myself. I'm sane. That's the difference between a sane man and an insane man. When you're sane you have control. He smiled again.

Then he rolled on his side and looked toward the door that Harry would open soon. The door that led out to freedom. To revenge.

Madhouse, he thought, and his fingers tinkled a witty improvisation on his legs. They thought him mad. That was their mistake. Did the truly mad plot escape the way he did, with detail and care? No, not the mad. They gibbered and beat fists on the plaster walls and kicked at the door until Harry came. But they never planned like this. He kept his eyes on the door, his hands drawing at each other as he waited. In his mind he went over the plan again. It was very simple. Once he had escaped he would leave the building and take the subway down to 18th Street. Walk a few short blocks in the early morning when the streets were deserted. Ring the bell, go upstairs and wait outside the door. Then when Bob came to the door ...

His knuckles cracked as he drew his hands into fists.

But what if Ruth came to the door first? His brow knitted at the sudden problem. Then he nodded curtly to himself. Never mind that. She'd understand why he was there. She wouldn't stop him. After all, wasn't she as much a prisoner as he was? Maybe she wasn't behind locked doors but she was a prisoner anyway. Held in a more vicious kind of chains, the chains of emotional terror.

Poor Ruth. She'd suffered long enough. Well, he'd take care of her. After Bob was dead they could go away somewhere together. He could get a job doing something. He had strong hands. Maybe he could play the piano in a bar at night when no one could see his face. But that didn't matter. It wasn't important that he played the piano anymore. He made a soft, scoffing sound. What was piano music to compare with his love for Ruth?

Yes, that was the plan. The long wait was ended. Escape, revenge, escape, revenge, es ...

He was up like a hungry cat at the slight clicking in the door lock. He crouched in the shadows by the bedside, licking the sweat drops from his upper lip.

The door opened.

Harry stood there, square and white. Vince remained motionless, hearing in his brain thumping piano music beneath the liquid voice of the male nurse. The voice that always made Vince feel as if hands were massaging syrup into his brain. You like Harry, don't you Vincie boy? Harry likes you. You're a nice little boy and Harry will take care of you.

Vince took a deep breath and stood up. He started to walk down the aisle between the beds. Harry stood motionless, waiting. Vince's stomach muscles were tense at the sight of him. His fingers bent over into tight arcs at his sides. He moved stealthily through the ward of the sleeping mad. He didn't want any of them to wake up and start a disturbance. Everything had to go right.

He walked by the next window and the moonlight bathed him in its whiteness.

Then he started violently as a low chuckle sounded in the darkness at his left. His black eyes darted over and he saw Kramer sitting up in bed, watching him. Vince stiffened, but he kept walking. He wouldn't stop now. If Kramer tried to stop him, then Kramer would die. He kept on walking and Kramer only chuckled again as if he knew something.

Vince smiled to himself. Well, let the fool chuckle. If he only knew that Vince would be out of the place soon, he'd stop chuckling soon enough.

He looked at Harry. Harry wouldn't stop him from escaping either. No matter how strong he was. Vince thought of raking out those watching eyes and stamping on them. He'd scrape them out the way he'd scraped Jane's face that night when she tried to seduce him. The way he'd tried to do with Saul that day before the maid had come in and found them.

Harry stepped back and Vince stood nervously in the hallway. He heard the door shut behind him and the sound of it shutting away his prison was like a chord of triumph.

He padded along quietly beside Harry, controlling his urge to twist away from the moist hand that lay on his shoulder, the heavy arm pressing across his back. At his sides, his hands still ran over his legs with menacing glissandos. They hovered and waited.

Build to the climax, Vincent! Build to it!

"Did you wait long for Harry, Vincie boy?"

Vince made a sound of assent. Be quiet, he told himself. Harry mustn't suspect anything about the escape.

"That's good, boy. I like your spirit. I told you I'd take care of you. Didn't I?"

Another sound of assent.

"Speak up, Vincie boy, speak up. Nothing to be scared of. We're gonna have a nice time, you and me. A few smokes, a couple shots of whiskey and — who knows?" He jabbed his elbow into Vince's side. "Eh, Vincie, boy?"

Vince nodded. He didn't hear what Harry was saying. His eyes kept moving down to the end of the hall. There was an office there. Vince remembered when they brought him there he had sat in the office and been finger-printed. There was a guard there, too, and the guard would have a pistol.

"Whoa, there. Where you goin', Vincie boy? This is Harry's room right here. You think you're out for a stroll, boy?" The voice was slightly menacing. Vince smiled as if he didn't hear the menace. He waited quietly while Harry pushed open the door and gestured for him to go in. He entered the small room and heard the big male nurse follow him in. He saw the dim bulb burning overhead. Then the door shut, the lock clicked and Vince's throat moved. He pressed his thin lips together. If he failed, he'd kill himself.

"Sit down, Vincie boy. Take a load off your feet."

Vince turned and looked at Harry's face, the pink, smooth skin, the fat sweat drops under his nose.

"I said, sit down, Vincie boy," the voice warned gently.

Vince sank down on the bed that had its covers thrown back. His hands flinched on the cool sheet. His eyes moved to the bedside table; to the half empty whiskey bottle on top of it, its cap off and lying beside it; to the open pack of Chesterfields. They didn't get cigarettes in the ward. Vince licked his lips.

"You want a butt, Vincie boy? You want one?

Vince swallowed. He nodded once.

"Well go ahead, boy. Have a butt on Harry. That's all right."

Vince reached for the pack. Harry's hand closed over his.

"You remember favors, don't you boy?" Harry said. "When a pal does you a favor you remember it, don't you?" Vince looked blank. Harry patted his cheek and nodded, chuckling.

"Sure you do, Vincie boy. When a pal does you a favor, you remember it. Take one, Vincie boy. Light up. Enjoy yourself."

The fumes tickled deliciously in his throat and nostrils. Time, he heard a voice, you need time. Over the glowing tip of the cigarette, he looked around the room at the closet, the bureau, the throw rug on the floor.

Then there was a rustling sound and Vince, looking up suddenly, saw that Harry had pulled off his white, short-sleeved shirt. His face tightened.

"What's the matter, Vincie boy? Take it easy. Harry won't bite your head off. Harry is your pal, remember?"

Vince looked bleakly at the dark swirls of hair that covered Harry's chest, the fat ridges that pushed over the belt line.

"Relax, Vincie boy. You're on a picnic, a regular picnic."

Harry's voice dripped like honey. But Vince had heard the same tone in his voice the time Harry had crushed in an old Italian's nose with one blow. Vince remembered the scream. He remembered the writhing body on the floor. A shiver passed over his body. He'd have to wait. He sat there smoking and his right hand played Scriabine and didn't know.

"How about a little pick-me-up, Vincie boy? You drink, don't you? Sure you do. There's nothing like a nice little pick-me-up to get us girls acquainted."

The amber liquid gurgled into the two glasses as Harry poured. Vince watched the hands. He was thinking of how Harry had watched him for a long time. When the men took their showers and Harry stood in the doorway to see there was no trouble, Vince had seen the male nurse watching him, running his eyes over the smooth leanness of Vince's body, the small, hard muscles, the firm stomach.

Once, when McCarran had shoved Vince so he fell down on the icy wet floor, Harry had stepped quickly through the stinging sprays of water to spin McCarran around and drive his beefy fist into the Irishman's stomach. Then Harry had leaned over and helped Vince up and pretended to lose balance, pulling Vince's wet body against him.

Vince re-focused his eyes on the glass held before him. Even breath drained from his thin nostrils. That's it, he heard the whisper in his brain, control your breath. That shows you're sane. No matter what happens you're going to get out of here.

"Drink up, Vincie boy. Good for you. Puts hair on 'em."

Vince didn't take the glass. He knew he should drink to set Harry at ease. Yet he knew he mustn't touch it. Vaguely he recalled a time when that same dark liquid had stultified his brain and his reflexes. That was the night of the big party, he remembered, the one Stan threw after the concert at Carnegie. And Jane had taken him into the bedroom with her. No, drink was bad: he mustn't drink because he had no escape.

"I said drink, Vincie boy."

Vince shook his head, smiling.

Harry's face went blank.

"You're not drinking, boy?" he said flatly.

Vince stared at him. He felt his heartbeat catch suddenly.

Then a cry broke from his thin lips as Harry grabbed him by the hair and jerked back his head. Vince clamped his teeth together before Harry could pour in the whiskey. He could smell the nicotine breath of the big nurse, and the red face blotted the ceiling from sight.

"I said drink, you dirty little bastard!"

Vince twisted away with a whine and Harry, strangling on a curse, flung the contents of the glass in his face. Vince gasped and blinked as the whiskey burned in his eyes. Tears sprang from beneath the lids to mingle with the drops of whiskey on his face.

Harry shoved him onto his back.

"Awright, damn it," he growled, "cut the crap. I know what you are so cut it!"

Vince tried to sit up, but the nurse, with one hand, pinned him down by the throat. Vince forgot his plan completely. He started to thrash violently on the bed forgetting everything but the wild need to escape. He clawed at Harry's eyes and his nails scraped across the hot forehead. Harry cursed and something hard exploded against Vince's jaw. The sound of Harry's breathing flooded away and, when he tried to open his eyes, the red face was hazy before him.

"You want to fight, huh?" the words came through a fog. "Don't you know you ain't foolin' me? You ain't foolin' Harry for one minute, Vincie boy. I know you like it. Don't you, boy, don't you?"

Vince jerked away from the whiskey-laden breath. He whimpered in fright and a voice crackled in his brain.

Dear boy, do go to the bathroom and wash off your face. You look positively bizarre.

Harry's hands started to move over him. The pain in Vince's jaw made him groan. His struggles began to weaken. Then he shuddered violently as Harry started to unbutton his shirt. The moan in his throat rose in volume.

"Aah, shut up, boy! You know you like it." The red face leaned close and the obscene breath covered Vince's mouth and nostrils.

Vince closed his eyes. All he could think of was three words. They drummed into his brain again and again.

When it's over, when it's over, when it's ...

* * *

He opened his eyes. The sound of bubbly snoring filled his ears. He sat up quickly and slid his bare legs over the side of the bed.

He stood looking down over Harry. On his flesh he still felt the bruises and teethmarks. As he stood there, breathing evenly, his hands moved on his stomach as if they were rubbing off something.

His mouth tightened. Well, it was over now and he was one step closer to freedom. His plan had worked. Harry was dead drunk. Vince had seen to that. He'd needed an advantage and now he had it. Smiles and touches had made the male nurse drink all of the whiskey, leaving Vince clear-headed and strong.

Now he reached out as if he meant to start the opening chords of the Rachmaninoff Second. But instead of music he drew an empty whiskey bottle to himself. He stood there motionless over the bed, looking down. Then, with a sharp motion, he broke the bottle in half across the table edge. Harry stirred and mumbled to himself and Vince heard someone screaming in his brain, If you dare touch his hands, I swear to God I'll kill you!

Vince leaned over Harry, his eyes glittering in the light of the bedside lamp. He rolled the bottle neck in his fingers. Then, abruptly, the color drained from his face and a trembling pulled back his lips. He tapped Harry on the shoulder.

"Wake up, Saul," he said.

And, when the sleep-thickened eyes fluttered open for a second, he raised his arm and drove the jagged glass edges straight down into them.

(Continues…)


Excerpted from "Fury on Sunday"
by .
Copyright © 2014 Richard Matheson.
Excerpted by permission of RosettaBooks.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

1:00 AM,
1:15 AM,
1:50 AM,
2:30 AM,
3:15 AM,
3:20 AM,
3:40 AM,
4:00 AM,
4:15 AM,
4:35 AM,
4:40 AM,
5:00 AM,

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews