Read By the Light of the Moon Online
Authors: Dean Koontz
Chapter Thirty-Nine
O
NCE THEY REACHED THE LANDING AND STARTED
to climb the second flight, Dylan felt safer, but his relief immediately proved to be premature. A bullet cracked up through a tread three steps
ahead
of them, and slammed into the stairwell ceiling.
He realized that the underside of this second flight of stairs faced the front door. Essentially, beneath their feet lay the back wall of a shooting gallery.
Proceeding was dangerous, retreating made no sense whatsoever, and halting in midflight meant certain death later if not sooner. So they hauled more aggressively on Shepherd’s belt, Jilly with both hands, Dylan with one, dragged-heaved-bounced him up the second set of stairs, and this time “Where’s all the ice?” squeaked from him in a semifalsetto.
Dylan expected to be shot through the soles of his feet, in an arm, through the bottom of his chin, or all of the above. When they arrived in the upper hall without any of them yet resembling a morgue photo in a forensic-pathology textbook, he let go of his brother and leaned with one hand on the newel post to catch his breath.
Evidently, Vonetta Beesley, their housekeeper, had put her hand on the newel cap earlier in the day, for when Dylan made contact with her psychic trace, images of the woman flared through his mind. He felt compelled to seek her out at once.
If this had occurred the previous evening, if he hadn’t learned to control his response to such stimuli, he might have plunged down the stairs, into the maelstrom below, as he had raced recklessly to Marjorie’s house on Eucalyptus Avenue. Instead, he snatched his hand off the post and dialed down his sensitivity to the spoor.
Already Jilly had pulled Shepherd farther into the hall, away from the head of the stairs. Raising her voice to compete with the explosive tumult below, she pleaded with him to fold them out of here.
Joining them, Dylan saw that his brother remained icebound. The issue of ice continued to bounce around inside Shep’s head to the exclusion of virtually everything else.
No formula existed to determine how long Shepherd would take to extract himself from the tar pit of this latest obsession, but wise money would have to take short odds on a long period of distraction. He was more likely to awaken to the world around him in an hour than in two minutes.
Focusing tightly on one narrow question or area of interest was, after all, another way to insulate himself when the inflow of sensory stimuli became overwhelming. In the midst of gunfire, he couldn’t choose a safe corner and turn his back to the chaos behind him, but he could flee to a symbolic corner in a dark room deep in the castle of his mind, a corner that contained nothing to consider except ice, ice, ice.
“Where’s all the ice?”
“When they’re done downstairs,” Jilly asked, “what’s next?”
“They blast the second floor. Maybe come up on the porch roofs to do it.”
“Maybe they come inside,” she said.
“Ice, ice, ice.”
“We’ve got to get him off this ice,” Jilly worried.
“That’ll only happen with time and quiet.”
“We’re screwed.”
“We’re not screwed.”
“Screwed.”
“Not screwed.”
“You got a plan?” she demanded.
Dylan’s only plan, which Jilly in fact suggested, had been to get above the gunfire. Now he realized that the gunfire would come to them wherever they went, not to mention the gunmen.
The ferocious clatter-bang downstairs, the fear of a stray bullet finding its way up the stairwell or even through the ceiling of the lower hall and the floor of the upper hall: All this made concentrating on tactics and strategy no easier than lassoing snakes. Once again, circumstances thrust upon Dylan a deeper understanding of how his brother must feel when overwhelmed by life, which in Shep’s case was nearly all the time.
Okay, forget about the money he kept in a lockbox. The Beatles had been right: Money can’t buy you love. Or stop a bullet.
Forget about the 9-mm pistol that he’d bought after his mother’s murder. Against these assailants’ artillery, the handgun might as well have been a stick.
“Ice, ice, ice.”
Jilly coaxed Shepherd to skate out of the ice and rejoin them, so he could fold them to someplace safe, but with his eyes closed and thought processes frozen, he remained resistant to sweet talk.
Time and quiet. Although they couldn’t buy much time, every minute gained might be the minute during which Shep would come back to them. Deep quiet was beyond attainment during this jihad, but any reduction in the bang and clangor would help the kid find a way out of that corner of ice.
Dylan crossed the hallway and threw open the door to the guest bedroom. “In here.”
Jilly seemed to be able to tug Shepherd along in a reasonably fast shuffle.
The impact of the fierce barrage sent shudders upward through the walls of the house. The second-floor windowpanes rattled in their frames.
Moving ahead of Jilly and Shep, Dylan hurried into the bedroom, to a walk-in closet. He switched on the light.
A cord dangled from a pull-down trapdoor in the closet ceiling. He yanked on the cord, lowering the trap.
Downstairs, the deafening volume of gunfire, which had sounded like the fiercest moment during the Nazi siege of Leningrad, as Dylan had once seen it portrayed on the History Channel, abruptly grew louder.
He wondered how many major splintering hits the wall studs could sustain before structural damage became critical and one or another corner of the house sagged.
“Ice, ice, ice.”
Arriving at the closet door with Shep, referring to the ungodly racket on the lower floor, Jilly said, “We got a double scoop of Apocalypse now.”
“With sprinkles.” A ladder in three folded segments was mounted to the back of the trapdoor. Dylan lowered it.
“Some of Proctor’s experimental subjects must’ve developed weird talents a lot scarier than ours.”
“What do you mean?”
“These guys don’t know what we can do, but they’re so wet-pants scared of what it
might
be, they want us seriously dead, faster than fast.”
Dylan hadn’t thought about that. He didn’t
like
thinking about it. Before them, Proctor’s nanobots had evidently produced monsters. Everyone expected him and Jilly and Shep to be monsters, too.
“What?” Jilly asked disbelievingly. “You want us to go up that freakin’ ladder?”
“Yeah.”
“That’s death.”
“It’s the attic.”
“The attic is death, a dead end.”
“Everywhere we can go is a dead end. This is the only way we can buy some time for Shep.”
“They’ll look in the attic.”
“Not right away.”
“I hate this,” she declared.
“You don’t see me dancing.”
“Ice, ice, ice.”
Dylan said to Jilly, “You go first.”
“Why me?”
“You can coax Shep from the top while I push from below.”
The gunfire ceased, but the memory of it still rang in Dylan’s ears.
“They’re coming.”
Jilly said, “Crap.”
“Go.”
“Crap.”
“Up.”
“Crap.”
“Now, Jilly.”
Chapter Forty
T
HE ATTIC LIMITED THEIR OPTIONS, PUT THEM IN THE
position of trapped rats, offered them nothing but gloom and dust and spiders, but Jilly ascended the sloped ladder because the attic was the only place they could go.
As she climbed, her shoulder-slung purse banged against her hip and briefly got hooked on the long scissoring hinges from which the ladder was hung. She had lost the Coupe DeVille, all her luggage, her laptop, her career as a comedian, even her significant other—dear adorable green Fred—but she was damned if she’d give up her purse under any circumstances. It contained only a few dollars, breath mints, Kleenex, lipstick, compact, a hairbrush, nothing that would change her life if kept or destroy it if lost, but supposing that she miraculously survived this visit to Casa O’Conner, she looked forward to freshening her lipstick and brushing her hair because at this dire moment, anyway, having the leisure to primp a little appealed to her as a delicious luxury on a par with limousines, presidential suites in five-star hotels, and Beluga caviar.
Besides, if she had to die far too young with a brain full of nanomachines,
because
of a brain full of nanomachines, she wanted to leave as pretty a corpse as possible—assuming that she didn’t take a head shot that left her face as distorted as a portrait by Picasso.
Negative Jackson, vortex of pessimism, reached the top of the ladder and discovered that the attic was high enough to allow her to stand. Through a few screened vents in the eaves, filtered sunlight penetrated this high redoubt, but with insufficient power to banish many shadows. Raw rafters, board walls, and a plywood floor enclosed a double score of cardboard boxes, three old trunks, assorted junk, and considerable empty space.
The hot, dry air smelled faintly of ancient roofing tar and strongly of uncountable varieties of dust. Here and there, a few cocoons were fixed to the sloped planks of the ceiling, little sacs of insect industry vaguely phosphorescent in the murk. Nearer, just above her head, an elaborate spider web spanned the junction of two rafters; though its architect had either perished or gone traveling, the web was grimly festooned with four moths, their gray wings spread in the memory of flight, their body shells sucked empty by the absent arachnid.
“We’re doomed,” she murmured as she turned to the open trapdoor, dropped to her knees, and peered down the ladder.
Shep stood on the bottom rung. He gripped a higher rung with both hands. Head bowed as if this were some kind of prayer ladder, he appeared reluctant to climb farther.
Behind Shep, Dylan glanced through the open closet door, into the guest bedroom, no doubt expecting to see men on the porch roof beyond the windows.
“Ice,” said Shep.
To Jilly, Dylan said, “Coax him up.”
“What if there’s a fire?”
“That’s damn poor coaxing.”
“Ice.”
“It’s a tinderbox up here. What if there’s a fire?”
“What if Earth’s magnetic pole shifts?” he asked sarcastically.
“
That
I’ve got plans for. Can’t you push him?”
“I can sort of encourage him, but it’s pretty much impossible to
push
someone up a ladder.”
“It’s not against the laws of physics.”
“What’re you, an engineer?”
“Ice.”
“I’ve got bags and bags of ice up here, sweetie,” she lied. “Push him, Dylan.”
“I’m trying.”
“Ice.”
“Plenty of ice up here, Shep. Come on up here with me.”
Shep wouldn’t move his hands. He clung stubbornly to his perch.
Jilly couldn’t see Shepherd’s face, only the top of his bowed head.
From below, Dylan lifted his brother’s right foot and moved it to the next rung.
“Ice.”
Unable to get the image of the dead moths out of her head, and growing desperate, Jilly gave up on the idea of coaxing Shep to the attic, and instead hoped to break through to him by transforming his monologue on ice into a dialogue.
“Ice,” he said.
She said, “Frozen water.”
Dylan lifted Shepherd’s left foot onto the higher rung to which he’d already transferred the right, but still Shepherd wouldn’t move his hands.
“Ice.”
“Sleet,” Jilly said.
Far down in the house, on the ground floor, someone kicked in a door. Considering that the volleys of gunfire must have reduced the outer doors to dust or to lacy curtains of splinters, the only doors requiring a solid kick would probably be inside the house. A search had begun.
“Ice.”
“Hail.”
“Ice.”
“Floe,” Jilly said.
Another crash downstairs: This one reverberated all the way up through the house, trembling the floor under Jilly’s knees.
Below, Dylan closed the closet door, and their situation seemed markedly more claustrophobic.
“Ice.”
“Glacier.”
Just when she suspected that Shepherd was about to respond to her, Jilly exhausted her supply of synonyms for ice and words for types of ice. She decided to change the nature of the game, adding a word to Shepherd’s
ice
as if to complete a thought.
Shep said, “Ice.”
“Berg,” said Jilly.
“Ice.”
“Cube.”
All this talk of ice made the attic hotter, hotter. Dust on the rafters, dust on the floor, dust drifting in the air seemed about to combust.
“Ice.”
“Rink.”
“Ice.”
“Skater.”
“Ice.”
“Hockey. You ought to be embarrassed, sweetie, taking the easy half of the game, always the same word.”
Shepherd had raised his bowed head. He stared at the section of the ladder rung exposed between his clenched hands.
Downstairs: more crashing, more breaking, a quick nervous burst of gunfire.
“Ice.”
“Cream. Shep, how much fun would it be to work a puzzle that only had one piece?”
“Ice.”
“Pick.”
“Ice.”
“Tongs.”
As she slipped new words into his head,
ice
no longer ricocheted around in there all by itself. A subtle change occurred in his face, a softening, suggesting a relaxation of this obsession. She felt sure she wasn’t imagining it. Pretty sure.
“Ice.”
“Bucket.”
“Ice.”
“Age. You know what, sweetie? Even if I’ve got the harder half of this game, it’s a bunch more fun than listening to synonyms for
feces.
”
A faint smile found his lips, but almost at once he breathed it away with a trembling exhalation.
“Ice.”
“Cold.”
Shepherd shifted his right hand to a higher rung, then his left. Then to a still higher rung. “Ice.”
“Bag.”
Shepherd moved his feet without assistance from his brother.
Downstairs the doorbell rang. Even in a squad of professional killers, there had to be a bonehead joker.
“Ice.”
“Box.”
Shepherd climbed, climbed. “Ice.”
“Show.”
“Ice.”
“Storm.”
“Ice.”
“Tea, ax, breaker, man, chest, water,” Jilly said, talking him up the last rungs and into the attic.
She helped him off the ladder, to his feet, away from the trapdoor. She hugged him and told him he was terrific, and Shep didn’t resist, though he did say, “Where’s all the ice?”
Down in the closet, Dylan switched off the light. He climbed quickly in the darkness. “Good work, Jackson.”
“
De nada,
O’Conner.”
On his knees in the gloom, Dylan folded the accordion ladder upward, as quietly as possible reloading it onto the back of the trapdoor, which he would then pull shut. “If they aren’t upstairs yet, they’re coming,” he whispered. “Take Shep over there, the southwest corner, behind those boxes.”
“Where’s all the ice?” Shepherd asked too loudly.
Jilly hushed him as she guided him across the shadow-choked attic. He wasn’t tall enough to rap the lowest rafters with his forehead, but his big brother would have to duck.
In lower realms the wrecking crew crashed into another room.
A man shouted something unintelligible. Another man returned his shout with a curse, and someone barked with laughter.
A hardness, a roughness, a swagger of presumption in these voices made them sound less like men to Jilly, more like the never quite defined shapes in a nightmare chase, which pursued sometimes on two feet, sometimes on four, alternately howling like men and crying like beasts.
She wondered when the cops would come.
If
they would come. Dylan had said the nearest town was miles away. The closest neighbor lived half a mile south of here. But surely somebody had heard the gunfire.
Of course the assault had started just five minutes ago, maybe six, and no rural police force would be able to answer such a remote call sooner than another five minutes, more likely ten.
“Where’s all the ice?” Shepherd asked as loudly as before.
Instead of hushing him again, Jilly answered in a soft voice with which she hoped to set an example: “In the refrigerator, honey. That’s where all the ice is.”
Behind stacked boxes in the southwest corner, Jilly encouraged Shep to sit beside her on the dusty floor.
Filtered through a screened fresh-air vent, a blush of daylight revealed a long-dead bird—a sparrow, perhaps—reduced by time to papery bones. Beneath the bones were trapped a few feathers that drafts had not stirred to other corners of the attic.
The bird must have stolen in here on a chilly day, through some chink in the eaves, and must have been unable to find its way out. Perhaps having broken a wing battering against rafters, certainly exhausted and hungry, it had waited for death by the screened vent, where it could see the sky.
“Where’s all the ice?” Shepherd asked, this time lowering his voice to a whisper.
Worried that the kid had not come as far out of his ice corner as she had thought when he climbed the ladder, or that he was sliding into it once more, Jilly pressed forward with her new game, seeking dialogue. “There’s ice in a margarita, isn’t there, sweetie? All slushy and nice. Man, I could use one now.”
“Where’s all the ice?”
“In a picnic chest, there’d be ice.”
“Where’s all the ice?”
“Christmas in New England, there’d be ice. And snow.”
Moving gracefully and quietly for such a large man, Dylan loomed out of the deeper darkness swaddling the center of the attic, into the bird light that dimly illuminated their refuge, and sat next to his brother. “Still the ice?” he asked worriedly.
“We’re going somewhere,” Jilly assured him with more confidence than she felt.
“Where’s all the ice?” Shep whispered.
“Lots of ice in a skating rink.”
“Where’s all the ice?”
“Nothing but ice in an
icemaker.
”
Boots met doors on the second floor. Rooms were breached with crash and clatter.
Whispering yet more discreetly, Shepherd said, “Where’s all the ice?”
“I see champagne in a silver bucket,” Jilly said, matching his quiet tones, “crushed ice packed around the bottle.”
“Where’s all the ice?”
“North Pole has a lot of ice.”
“Ahhh,” Shepherd said, and for the moment he said no more.
Jilly listened tensely as voices in rooms below replaced the boom and crack of violent search. Mummified conspirators in pyramidal tombs, speaking through their grave wrappings, could not have been less clear, and nothing said below was intelligible up here.
“Ahhh,” Shep breathed.
“We have to move along, buddy,” Dylan said. “It’s way past time to fold.”
Under them the ravaged house sank into silence, and after half a minute, the disquieting hush grew more ominous than anything that had preceded it.
“Buddy,” Dylan said, but made no further plea, as if he sensed that Shep would respond better to this silence, this stillness, than to additional pressure.
In her mind’s eye, Jilly saw the kitchen clock, the pig grinning as the second hand swept around the numbers on its belly.
Even in memory, that porcine smile disturbed her, but when she wiped the image from her mind, she saw instead, equally unbidden, the Minute Minder with which Shep timed his showers. This image shook her worse than she’d been shaken by the pig, for the Minute Minder looked remarkably like a bomb clock.
Gunmen opened fire on the ceilings below, and geysers of bullets erupted through the attic floor.