J anice was about to take a sip of coffee when the chair beside her suddenly shot backwards. Her hand jerked. The hot liquid sloshed against her chin and dripped onto her blouse.
"Woops," she heard.
She turned her eyes to the young man standing behind the chair. "You," she muttered.
"I didn't mean to scare you," he said.
"Of course not. Not you."
"Mind if I sit?"
Janice didn't answer. She grabbed a napkin and dried herself as he sat down on the chair. He slapped his book of Edgar Allan Poe mysteries on the table, and smiled. "What are you up to?" he asked.
"I was studying."
"The student union's no place to study."
"Not with you here."
He laughed. "How right you are. I'll leave, but first you have to promise you'll go to the show with me tonight. There's a great double bill at the Metro, Dawn of the Dead and . . ."
"You must be joking. After the stunt you pulled at Chainsaw, I'll never step into a movie theater with you again. I'll never go anywhere with you again."
He smiled. "Oh, come on. I didn't hurt anyone."
"You scared those kids witless. That's all you ever want to do---scare people. You're almost twenty, Lyle. Why don't you grow up?"
He frowned, pretending to pout. "Does this mean you won't go to the movies with me?"
"Right."
He suddenly smiled. "How about a midnight picnic at the graveyard?"
"No thanks," she said. "Find someone else to play your night games with."
"It's too cold for outdoor games anyway. How about a visit to the Creekmoss house instead?"
Janice shook her head. "Give me a break. You wouldn't set foot in that old place for a million bucks. When it comes right down to it, you're a chicken, Lyle."
"Oh yeah? I'd go in. But I bet you wouldn't."
"How much?" Janice asked.
"Ten bucks."
"You're right. For ten bucks, I won't go near the place." She took a sip of coffee.
"What about a hundred?"
"Are you kidding me?" she asked.
"Have you got the guts?"
"For a hundred dollars, I've got plenty." Even as she spoke, she felt a shiver of fear.
Lyle leaned closer, elbows on the table. "Aren't you afraid the ghost will get you?" he said in a low voice, trying to sound spooky.
"I don't believe in ghosts."
"They say Creekmoss didn't, either, until it crept out of the dark and tore him to pieces."
"That's garbage," Janice said.
He grinned. "Then you'll go inside that house with me?"
"For a hundred dollars, I will."
"What if I give you five hundred?"
"What for?"
"To spend the night alone in the house."
Janice's heart started thudding hard. She suddenly felt cold and sick inside. "Are you nuts?" she muttered.
"You said there's no ghost. So what is there to be afraid of? All you have to do is stay there till morning, and I'll give you five hundred bucks."
She started to pick up the coffee cup, but her hand was shaking so badly that she had to set it down again. Five hundred dollars was more than she made in a month working part-time at the university library. "Do you have that kind of money to waste?"
He laughed. "Oh, it won't be wasted. Because, long before dawn, you'll run out of the house screaming. If that happens---and it will---I won't owe you a penny."
Janice wiped her sweaty hands on her skirt. "Bring the cash," she said.
T hat afternoon, Janice walked to a shopping mall near the campus. She was very nervous. She felt better, however, after buying a cashmere sweater that she had wanted for a long time. It cost a lot of money. But by tomorrow she would be five hundred dollars richer, so she knew she could afford it.
In a sporting goods store, she found what she needed next to a glass case full of handguns. "I'll take that," she said.
The clerk looked at her strangely, and she blushed.
With the packages clutched in her arms she hurried toward her apartment. The sky to the north was dark with clouds, and from the fresh smell of the breeze she knew there would soon be a storm. She was safe inside by the time it hit. Standing at her window, she saw lightning rip across the sky.