A NIGHTMARE REBORN: FREDDY VS. JASON 2
CHAPTER 04
BASED UPON CHARACTERS CREATED BY:
Wes Craven: A Nightmare on Elm Street
Victor Miller: Friday the 13th
John Carpenter: Halloween
Victor Salva: Jeepers Creepers
Clive Barker: Candyman, Hellraiser
CREATIVE CONSULTANTS:
Sean Renaud, Tessa Alexander and Miriam Belle
EDITOR:
Miriam Belle
AUTHOR'S NOTE:
-"I got a few emails asking me why the Sheriff's Office in this story was a little different from the one seen 'Freddy vs. Jason.' Simply put, I like the old design from the original 'Nightmare on Elm Street.' It had a lot of character. Call me a sucker for the oldies..." βbluefox07
***
CONVERGENCE
Sunday, May 15th 2005
Matthew Loomis had expected to arrive in Springwood shortly after eight in the morning. He had hoped to take a shower and gather himself up emotionally before calling Mary Stilfreeze and taking a look at whatever it was his ex-wife wanted him to see. He had also hoped that the memorial service for the victims of the Springwood Massacre of 2002 would be a quiet forum to share memories and for the few survivors to find some resolution. He had hoped that the coincidental proximity to a Friday the 13th two days ago wouldn't mean anything amounting to more than superstition from a frightened man.
But as his taxi slowed along the incline of the freeway off ramp, Loomis knew that things had already gone wrong. He knew that the impossible, or to be more exact the highly improbable had happened. The veil of death had been draped over Springwood yet again. Heavy, roiling storm clouds gathered in the sky above the city, threatening to kill the morning sun. In this fading light he saw an SUV and a beaten-up white Chevy truck blocking the road bumper to bumper. Two men dressed in simple civilian clothes stood by while a long, sleek Springwood Police cruiser parked in front of them.
"It seems to be a road block," Loomis understated as two police officers got out of the cruiser and walked towards the taxicab. He wondered what could have happened during the night that would have necessitated the mobilization of civilians in law enforcement duties? He supposed it was a silly question. He already knew. But he wanted to believe that the Springwood PD was conducting parade traffic control. He wanted desperately to believe anything else other than the obvious was happening here.
But he knew better.
The driver of the cab, a thin wiry black man named Bobby rolled down his window and waited for the cops as they approached. He leaned out the window and asked, "What's going on?"
"Where ya heading to, Bobby?" the lead cop, a short attractive woman asked.
"I was taking this fare into town to the Inn," he said amiably. Bobby looked a little nervous, and Loomis figured he had every right to be. As he sat there, he couldn't deny that seeing the cruiser and trucks in the middle of the road made him feel nervous too. And being as this was the town of Springwood, anything like this probably made its citizens dive for the nearest storm shelter.
"You got a name?" the female cop asked Loomis, her eyes unreadable behind her dark glasses.
"Dr. Matthew Loomis," he replied with a friendly smile.
The expression on the cop's uniquely ethnic face turned from impassive routine to surprise and recognition. She stood back and put her hands on her gun belt. Though the light seemed to be fading to a cold dim, her beautiful cafΓ© au lait skin was warm and a light all its own.
"From New York?" she asked.
Loomis cocked a quizzical brow, "Indeed."
"Please step out of the car, sir," she instructed him. She had a faint ghost of an accent that Loomis could not quite place and as he stepped out into the misty morning air. As he stood there he realized he was also at least a foot and some change in inches taller than her. This didn't seem to bother her at all as she looked up at him, her dark hair almost neutrally iridescent in the sunlight. Loomis stood there, dressed in his typical black suit and gray trench coat, and waited as the female cop whispered to her partner.
"May I ask what this is about?" Loomis leaned forward and read her nametag, "Officer Alexander?"
The officer smiled warmly at Loomis, her stern faΓ§ade melting away rapidly as she reached out for his hand, "Tessa Alexander, Springwood Police department," she said and motioned to her partner, "This is Officer Sean Renaud."
"A pleasure," Loomis smiled as Officer Alexander's grip became almost painful. Her smile was so genuine that he doubted she knew she was hurting him. 'Let size not be a measure of one's strength,' he thought to himself. Once she released him from her grip, he took Sean's hand and shook it.
"Doctor," Sean nodded, his face not nearly as open or welcome to his greeting, but still friendly enough. Loomis studied him for a moment, and knew he recognized the elements in the man's dark African features that denoted fatigue and anxiety.
"What has happened here in Springwood?" Loomis asked.
A helicopter roared overhead causing Tessa to shout, "We've had a bit of situation here since last night! It'll be easier if you come with us..."
"Of course. I have my bags in the trunk," Loomis motioned to the taxi.
Bobby sat there in the drivers seat, watching them intently and eager to hear everything he could. Tessa motioned to him impatiently. Bobby shook his head, his face scrunched in confusion. She whipped her sunglasses off and glared, her lips cocked as though she had had to kick his ass into gear more than one time before. Bobby needed no third prompt. He held his hands up inoffensively, opened the door and hurried around to the trunk of the cab. As he pulled out the suitcase and box of files, Tessa noticed Loomis' amusement.
"He's my half brother," she explained. Bobby hurried past them to her patrol car a few feet away and set the luggage down by the rear bumper.
"I have no key to your trunk," he called.
Tessa turned and shouted, "And you're not getting one now, savvy?"
Bobby shrugged and went to his half sister. He cleared his throat, "Okay, are you taking this guy? I gotta get back."
"Yes, the meter is running isn't it?" Loomis reached into his pocket for his wallet.
"We'll take good care of him," Tessa said as Loomis paid the cabbie his fare.