FIFTEEN
H
e arrived at the Walters Clinic a few minutes after four p.m. A battered silver Taurus drove into the parking-lot outside Doctor Beech's window, and Ammy immediately said, â
There he is
!
That's him
!' Ruth and Doctor Beech glanced at each other, but neither of them asked her why she was so sure. They didn't really understand Ammy's sensitivity, but they both respected it.
It was still raining, harder than ever, and the low clouds were billowing like a filthy gray circus tent with its guy ropes adrift. The door of the Taurus opened up, and a tall man in a brown wide-brimmed hat and a long white trench coat climbed out. He kept his hat clamped to his head to stop it from blowing away, so that as he crossed the parking lot his hand masked his face. He walked quickly toward the clinic entrance with his coat flapping in the wind.
After a few moments, Dora, the receptionist, knocked on the door. âMr Watchman's here, Doctor,' she announced. But Doctor Beech didn't have time to reply before Martin Watchman entered the room, lifting off his hat as he did so.
âDoctor Beech!' he said, in a low, hoarse voice, holding his hat over his heart and extending his hand. âI can't tell you what a great pleasure it is to meet you again, in spite of the circumstances.'
Ruth would have guessed his age at thirty-five or thirty-six. He had dirty-blond hair â collar-length, and wildly messy, as if he had only just woken up â and he obviously hadn't shaved in three or four days. He was handsome, in a lean, hollow-cheeked way, with unusually pale green eyes, the color of a shallow sea, and he had a faint, faded tan, as if he had visited someplace exotic sometime in the spring.
He took off his white trench coat and handed it to Dora, who accepted it with a look of disdain. âI'll hang this up for you, shall I?' she said.
âThank you,' he told her. âOn the chain, please. It's a Burberry. Bought it in London. Oh â and here. My hat. Thanks.'
âThis is Ruth Cutter, Amelia's mother,' said Doctor Beech. âAnd this is Amelia.'
Martin Watchman came across the room and shook hands with both of them. âSo you're the arson investigator,' he said. âI'm delighted to meet you. And I'm
very
pleased that Doctor Beech had the good sense to call me. I remember how skeptical you were when I talked to you in Chicago, Doctor Beech, but I believe that you have a critical situation here, and we need to deal with it as a matter of urgency. It could be too late already.'
Ruth couldn't quite place his accent. It was educated, and it certainly wasn't Chicago. He lifted up the ends of his words and said âhere' like a Bostonian: âhe-
yuh
'.
Doctor Beech said, âWhy don't you sit down, Mr Watchman? How about some coffee, or a soda? You've had a long drive down from Chicago.'
âA glass of mineral water will do for me, thank you. No ice.'
âIs that all? Anything to eat?'
âI'm good, thank you. And please â do call me Martin.'
He went over and lifted up an armchair, carrying it across the room and placing it close to Amelia. He sat down next to her, turning his head and staring at her unblinkingly with those sea-green eyes. Amelia gave him an uncomfortable smile and shifted in her chair.
In spite of his unruly hair and his stubbly chin, there was an old-school formality about the way that Martin Watchman was turned out. His suit was well-worn, but it had obviously been expensive when it was new. It was light gray, immaculately cut, but it was double-breasted, with wide lapels, and who wore double-breasted suits any more?
His tan loafers were the same: expensive, but with scuffed toes and worn-down heels. Ruth noticed that he wasn't wearing a wedding band, although he had a heavy gold signet ring on the third finger of his right hand.
âI've already told Ruth and Amelia about our meeting at the psychiatric convention,' Doctor Beech told him. âWhat you said about “people coming through from underneath”.'
Martin nodded, without taking his eyes away from Amelia. âI'm flattered that you remembered me, Doctor. You meet so many goddamned fruit-loops at those conventions, don't you? Pardon my French.'
âWell, I won't deny that I thought
you
were a fruit-loop, too. To begin with, anyhow. I'm sorry.'
Martin smiled. âYou don't have to be. The things that I've found out, they're not at all easy to believe in. For a very long time, I didn't believe in them myself, even though all the evidence was right there in front of me, staring me in the face.'
âPersonally, I'm still reserving judgment,' said Doctor Beech.
âI know, and I don't blame you,' Martin told her. âBut you have to admit that if Amelia here has been talking about people coming through from underneath, it's a coincidence at the very least.'
âBut what exactly is so critical? Why did you think it was so urgent for you to come down here?'
Martin didn't answer her for so long that Doctor Beech said, â
Martin
?', but then he immediately turned away from Amelia and said, âThe fires. It was the fires that convinced me.'
âThe fires?' Ruth asked him.
âThat's right. Totally by chance, I caught a report about one of them on the TV news. It was the one where the girl was burned to death in her bathtub.'
âGo on,' said Ruth, cautiously.
âFires like that, they have a very specific cause, unlike any other kind of fire, and they very rarely happen in isolation. Like, you'll almost always have a pattern of four or five consecutive fires, and sometimes many more. The highest number I've heard about is eighteen, in Indianapolis, about three years ago. I checked on the Internet and saw that you'd had a similar fire here in Kokomo only a couple of days before. And now all those seniors have been burned to death on that bus. I heard all the grisly details about that on the radio while I was driving down here.'
âThat's all very well,' said Ruth. âBut I still don't understand how these fires can be connected to what Ammy's been saying about “men and women coming through from underneath”. Or how they're connected with each other, even.'
âListen to me: the same boy keeps showing up at every fire, doesn't he? And Doctor Beech told me that you've also seen him mooching around outside your own house.'
âThat's right. Amelia calls him the Creepy Kid. But we have no idea who he is, or what he's looking for.'
âThe Creepy Kid,' said Martin, and allowed himself a thin, slanted smile. âThat's a really appropriate name for him, I have to tell you.'
âBut what's the connection? We're still investigating these fires, but there's no obvious link between any of them. The first victim was a young mother, abducted from a supermarket parking lot, and burned on a mattress. The second was that poor girl who was cremated in her own bathtub. And the third one was all of those seniors in their bus. Each fire was
very
unusual. Each of them was started by an intense, highly-concentrated source of heat, but that's about all they had in common.'
Martin shook his head. âYou're wrong. They have the Creepy Kid in common. And the fact that he's been hanging around outside your house is the proof of that. He knows who you are, Ruth, and he knows that you're trying to discover the cause of these fires, but he doesn't want you to. Right now, you've been lucky, and he's only been threatening you. But you could be in very real danger, I warn you.'
Ruth said, âI saw him in the woods at Bon Air Park, after the Spirit of Kokomo bus fire. He said that if I didn't leave him alone, something terrible would happen to me. But come on, when it comes down to it he's only a kid.
Creepy
, for sure, but still a kid.'
âNo way. He's much more than that. He's a catalyst, don't you get it? He's the one who's been causing these fires.'
âAll right,' said Ruth. âYou want to explain it to me?'
Martin got up. He went to the window and looked out, then he came back and stood directly behind Amelia's chair, with his hands on her shoulders. Amelia didn't seem to be at all disturbed by him doing this, and turned to look up at him with a smile.
Martin said, âMy mother was what you might call a psychic. She could tell fortunes and she could also clear disturbing vibrations from houses and apartments in which something traumatic had happened in the past â like a suicide or a murder or an accidental death.
âMy gift has never compared to hers â that's if you can call it a gift. It's more of a curse, to tell you the truth. But I've always been sensitive to the resonance that remains in a room after a tragedy. I can even walk into a doctor's surgery like this and feel the pain that people have talked about while they've been here. Human distress, Ruth! It echoes, and it goes on echoing for years.'
Oh God,
thought Ruth,
I hope we're not wasting our time here. This man is beginning to sound like a nut job. Or a charlatan. Or a Scientologist. Or all three.
âI first felt it when I was only five years old,' Martin went on. âWe went to stay with my grandparents in Maine, my mother and me. I woke up in the middle of the night and saw a young curly-haired boy in a white nightshirt hanging from the back of the door. I screamed and ran into my mother's bedroom. At the time she told me that it was only a bad dream. But years later, she said that her younger brother Thomas had accidentally hanged himself with the cord from his bathrobe, fifteen years before, and that my description of him fitted exactly.
âAs I grew older, I had experiences like that more and more often. I very rarely
see
anybody, not like poor young Thomas. We were related, maybe that was why I saw him so clearly. But I can
feel
people, I can feel their presence, and sometimes I can hear them, too.'
âSame as me!' Amelia burst out, with sudden enthusiasm. âI can walk into a room, and I can tell right away if people have been sad in there, or if somebody got hurt, or if somebody died. And those people coming through from underneath, I can hear them whispering.
Whisper-whisper-whisper
. It's like sand, when the wind blows it.'
Martin nodded. âYou see?' he said. âMe and Amelia, we're pretty much the same. I used to think that being sensitive to human resonance was like being a medium, or a clairvoyant. But it isn't. It's nothing to do with the supernatural, it's a physical ability that you're born with â or a disability, depending on how you look at it. It's genetic. Me â I don't have William's Syndrome like Amelia here, but I do have a chromosome disorder which makes me aware of stuff that normal people simply can't pick up on. It's just like some people can hear dog-whistles, or see infrared lightâ'
âOK,' Ruth interrupted him, âbut what does any of this have to do with these fires?'
âI'm sorry, I'm getting around to that,' said Martin. âAs I grew older, I kind of learned to live with all of the voices that I could hear and all the pain that I could feel. It became like background noise, you know, like living in some crowded apartment where you can hear everybody's TV playing and people arguing and doors slamming.
âBut then I met a girl called Susan and we fell in love. Susan was a very talented painter and she was funny and bright and pretty and we talked about getting married. But we had only been together for seven months and four days when we went swimming at Breakheart Reservation near Saugus and Susan just disappeared under the water. A beautiful summer's afternoon, a flawless blue sky, but she just disappeared. The lifeguard dived down and found her tangled up in weeds on the bottom of the lake. He tried to resuscitate her, but it was too late. To this day I still don't know what happened. Could have been a cramp, who can tell?'
âBreakheart Reservation,' said Doctor Beech. âThat was a sadly apt place to lose the love of your life.'
âThis is the whole point, though,' Martin told them. âI
didn't
lose her. Not completely, anyhow. About a month after the funeral, when I was taking a shower, I felt her put her arms around me. I practically jumped out of my skin, I can tell you, but when I turned around I couldn't see her. I could still
feel
her, though. Her face, her hair, her body. I stayed in that shower for almost twenty minutes, holding her, but when I turned off the water she was gone. How can I describe it? It was just like she
evaporated.
âAfter that, almost every time I took a shower or a bath, I felt her clinging on to me, although I never saw her. I put my hands into the kitchen sink once, to pull out the plug, and under the water I felt her hand taking hold of my wrist, as if she didn't want me to empty it out.
âI was scared, I can tell you. But in a strange way I didn't want her to stop doing it. I didn't know if she was a spirit, or if I was gradually going mad, but at least I felt that I hadn't lost her for ever.'
He gently stroked Amelia's hair, as if he were giving her a blessing. Amelia closed her eyes. Ruth was sorely tempted to tell him to take his hand off her, but he seemed to calm Amelia down, and she didn't want to appear too prickly.
Martin said, âOne day I went back to Breakheart and I took a swim in the same lake that Susan had drowned in. I don't know why â just to kill my ghosts, I guess. But I was less than halfway across when I felt Susan pulling me down from under the water. She dragged me under five or six times before the lifeguard reached me and helped me back to the shore. I was about as close to drowning as you can get, but somehow I had felt for a few insane seconds that I
wanted
to drown.' He paused and looked away for a moment. âAt least Susan and me would have been together again.'