He found the story on page three. He sat beside Lindsey, and they read the article together.
According to the newspaper, police were interested in talking to a young man in his early twenties, with pale skin and dark hair. A neighbor had glimpsed him fleeing down the alleyway behind the Palm Court apartments. He might have been wearing sunglasses. At night.
“He’s the same damned one who killed the blonde,” Hatch said fearfully. “The sunglasses in the rearview mirror. And now he’s picking up on my thoughts. He’s acting out
my
anger, murdering people that I’d like to see punished.”
“That doesn’t make sense. It can’t be.”
“It is.” He felt sick. He looked at his hands, as if he might actually find the truck driver’s blood on them. “My God, I sent him after Cooper.”
He was so appalled, so psychologically oppressed by a sense of responsibility for what had happened, that he wanted desperately to wash his hands, scrub them until they were raw. When he tried to get up, his legs were too weak to support him, and he had to sit right down again.
Lindsey was baffled and horrified, but she did not react to the news story as strongly as Hatch did.
Then he told her about the reflection of the black-clad young man in sunglasses, which he had seen in the mirrored door in place of his own image, last night in the den when he had been ranting about Cooper. He told her, as well, how he lay in bed after she was asleep, brooding about Cooper, and how his anger suddenly exploded into artery-popping rage. He spoke of the sense he’d had of being invaded and overwhelmed, ending in the blackout. And for a kicker, he recounted how his anger had escalated unreasonably as he had read the piece in Arts
American
earlier this evening, and he took the magazine out of his nightstand to show her the inexplicably scorched pages.
By the time Hatch finished, Lindsey’s anxiety matched his, but dismay at his secretiveness seemed greater than anything else she was feeling. “Why’d you hide all of this from me?”
“I didn’t want to worry you,” he said, knowing how feeble it sounded.
“We’ve never hidden anything from each other before. We’ve always shared everything. Everything.”
“I’m sorry, Lindsey. I just... it’s just that... these last couple months... the nightmares of rotting bodies, violence, fire... and the last few days, all this
weirdness....”
“From now on,” she said, “there’ll be no secrets.”
“I only wanted to spare you—”
“No secrets,” she insisted.
“Okay. No secrets.”
“And you’re not responsible for what happened to Cooper. Even if there is some kind of link between you and this killer, and even if that’s why Cooper became a target, it’s not your fault. You didn’t
know
that being angry at Cooper was equivalent to a death sentence. You couldn’t have done anything to prevent it.”
Hatch looked at the heat-seared magazine in her hands, and a shudder of dread passed through him. “But it’ll be my fault if I don’t try to save Honell.”
Frowning, she said, “What do you mean?”
“If my anger somehow focused this guy on Cooper, why wouldn’t it also focus him on Honell?”
Honell woke to a world of pain. The difference was, this time he was on the receiving end of it—and it was physical rather than emotional pain. His crotch ached from the kick he’d taken. A blow to his throat had left his esophagus feeling like broken glass. His headache was excruciating. His wrists and ankles burned, and at first he could not understand why; then he realized he was tied to the four posts of something, probably his bed, and the ropes were chafing his skin.
He could not see much, partly because his vision was blurred by tears but also because his contact lenses had been knocked out in the attack. He knew he had been assaulted, but for a moment he could not recall the identity of his assailant.
Then the young man’s face loomed over him, blurred at first like the surface of the moon through an unadjusted telescope. The boy bent closer, closer, and his face came into focus, handsome and pale, framed by thick black hair. He was not smiling in the tradition of movie psychotics, as Honell expected he would be. He was not scowling, either, or even frowning. He was expressionless—except, perhaps, for a subtle hint of that solemn professional curiosity with which an entomologist might study some new mutant variation of a familiar species of insect.
“I’m sorry for this discourteous treatment, sir, after you were kind enough to welcome me into your home. But I’m rather in a hurry and couldn’t take the time to discover what I need to know through ordinary conversation.”
“Whatever you want,” Honell said placatingly. He was shocked to hear how drastically his mellifluous voice, always a reliable tool for seduction and expressive instrument of scorn, had changed. It was raspy, marked by a wet gurgle, thoroughly disgusting.
“I would like to know who Lindsey Sparling is,” the young man said dispassionately, “and where I can find her.”
Hatch was surprised to find Honell’s number in the telephone book. Of course, the author’s name was not as familiar to the average citizen as it had been during his brief glory years, when he had published
Miss Culvert
and
Mrs. Towers.
Honell didn’t need to be worried about privacy these days; evidently the public gave him more of it than he desired.
While Hatch called the number, Lindsey paced the length of the bedroom and back. She had made her position clear: she didn’t think Honell would interpret Hatch’s warning as anything other than a cheap threat.
Hatch agreed with her. But he had to try.
He was spared the humiliation and frustration of listening to Honell’s reaction, however, because no one answered the phone out there in the far canyons of the desert night. He let it ring twenty times.
He was about to hang up, when a series of images snapped through his mind with a sound like short-circuiting electrical wires: a disarranged bed quilt; a bleeding, rope-encircled wrist; a pair of frightened, bloodshot, myopic eyes... and in the eyes, the twin reflections of a dark face looming close, distinguished only by a pair of sunglasses.
Hatch slammed down the phone and backed away from it as if the receiver had turned into a rattlesnake in his hand. “It’s happening now.”
The ringing phone fell silent.
Vassago stared at it, but the ringing did not resume.
He returned his attention to the man who was tied spread-eagle to the brass posts of the bed. “So Lindsey Harrison is the married name?”
“Yes,” the old guy croaked.
“Now what I most urgently need, sir, is an address.”
The public telephone was outside of a convenience store in a shopping center just two miles from the Harrison house. It was protected from the elements by a Plexiglas hood and surrounded by a curved sound shield. Hatch would have preferred the greater privacy of a real booth, but those were hard to find these days, a luxury of less cost-conscious times.
He parked at the end of the center, at too great a distance for anyone in the glass-fronted convenience store to notice—and perhaps recall—his license number.
He walked through a cool, blustery wind to the telephone. The center’s Indian laurels were infested with thrips, and drifts of dead, tightly curled leaves blew along the pavement at Hatch’s feet. They made a dry, scuttling sound. In the urine-yellow glow of the parking-lot lights, they almost looked like hordes of insects, queerly mutated locusts perhaps, swarming toward their subterranean hive.
The convenience store was not busy, and everything else in the shopping center was closed. He hunched his shoulders and head into the pay phone sound shield, convinced he wouldn’t be overheard.
He did not want to call the police from home, because he knew they had equipment that printed out every caller’s number at their end. If they found Honell dead, Hatch didn’t want to become their prime suspect. And if his concern for Honell’s safety proved to be unfounded, he didn’t want to be on record with the police as some kind of nutcase or hysteric.
Even as he punched in the number with one bent knuckle and held the handset with a Kleenex to avoid leaving prints, he was uncertain what to say. He knew what he could
not say: Hi, I was dead eighty minutes, then brought back to life, and now I have this crude but at times effective telepathic connection to a psychotic killer, and I think I should warn you he’s about to strike again.
He could not imagine the authorities taking him any more seriously than they would take a guy who wore a pyramid-shaped aluminum-foil hat to protect his brain from sinister radiation and who bothered them with complaints about evil, mind-warping extraterrestrials next door.
He had decided to call the Orange County Sheriff’s Department rather than any particular city’s police agency, because the crimes committed by the man in sunglasses fell in several jurisdictions. When the sheriffs operator answered, Hatch talked fast, talked over her when she began to interrupt, because he knew they could trace him to a pay phone given enough time. “The man who killed the blonde and dumped her on the freeway last week is the same guy who killed William Cooper last night, and tonight he’s going to murder Steven Honell, the writer, if you don’t give him protection quick, and I mean right now. Honell lives in Silverado Canyon, I don’t know the address, but he’s probably in your jurisdiction, and he’s a dead man if you don’t move now.”
He hung up, turned away from the phone, and headed for his car, jamming the Kleenex into his pants pocket. He felt less relieved than he had expected to, and more of a fool than seemed reasonable.
On his way back to the car, he was walking into the wind. All the laurel leaves, sucked dry by thrips, were now blown toward him instead of with him. They hissed against the blacktop and crunched under his shoes.
He knew that the trip had been a waste and that his effort to help Honell had been ineffective. The sheriff’s department would probably treat it like just another crank call.
When he got home, he parked in the driveway, afraid that the clatter of the garage door would wake Regina. His scalp prickled when he got out of the car. He stood for a minute, surveying the shadows along the house, around the shrubbery, under the trees. Nothing.
Lindsey was pouring a cup of coffee for him when he walked into the kitchen.
He took it, sipped gratefully at the hot brew. Suddenly he was colder than he had been while standing out in the night chill.
“What do you think?” she asked worriedly. “Did they take you seriously?”
“Pissing in the wind,” he said.
Vassago was still driving the pearl-gray Honda belonging to Renata Desseux, the woman he had overpowered in the mall parking lot on Saturday night and later added to his collection. It was a fine car and handled well on the twisting roads as he drove down the canyon from Honell’s place, heading for more populated areas of Orange County.
As he rounded a particularly sharp curve, a patrol car from the sheriffs department swept past him, heading up the canyon. Its siren was not blaring, but its emergency beacons splashed red and blue light on the shale banks and on the gnarled branches of the overhanging trees.
He divided his attention between the winding road ahead and the dwindling taillights of the patrol car in his rearview mirror, until it rounded another bend upslope and vanished. He was sure the cop was speeding to Honell’s. The unanswered, interminably ringing telephone, which had interrupted his interrogation of the author, was the trigger that had set the sheriffs department in motion, but he could not figure how or why.
Vassago did not drive faster. At the end of Silverado Canyon, he turned south on Santiago Canyon Road and maintained the legal speed limit as any good citizen was expected to do.
8
In bed in the dark, Hatch felt his world crumbling around him. He was going to be left with dust.
Happiness with Lindsey and Regina was within his grasp. Or was that an illusion? Were they infinitely beyond his reach?
He wished for an insight that would give him a new perspective on these apparently supernatural events. Until he could understand the nature of the evil that had entered his life, he could not fight it.
Dr. Nyebern’s voice spoke softly in his mind:
I believe evil is a very real force, an energy quite apart from us, a presence in the world.
He thought he could smell a lingering trace of smoke from the heat-browned pages of
Arts American.
He had put the magazine in the desk in the den downstairs, in the drawer with a lock. He had added the small key to the ring he carried.
He had never locked anything in the desk before. He was not sure why he had done so this time. Protecting evidence, he’d told himself. But evidence of what? The singed pages of the magazine proved nothing to anyone about anything.
No. That was not precisely true. The existence of the magazine proved, to him if to no one else, that he wasn’t merely imagining and hallucinating everything that was happening to him. What he had locked away, for his own peace of mind, was indeed evidence. Evidence of his sanity.
Beside him, Lindsey was also awake, either uninterested in sleep or unable to find a way into it. She said, “What if this killer...”
Hatch waited. He didn’t need to ask her to finish the thought, for he knew what she was going to say. After a moment she said just what he expected:
“What if this killer is aware of you as much as you’re aware of him? What if he comes after you... us ... Regina?”
“Tomorrow we’re going to start taking precautions.”
“What precautions?”
“Guns, for one thing.”
“Maybe this isn’t something we can handle ourselves.”
“We don’t have any choice.”
“Maybe we need police protection.”