Psycho Within Us (The Psycho Series Book 2) (4 page)

BOOK: Psycho Within Us (The Psycho Series Book 2)
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I know you
, those eyes said to Jovita as they slipped on by. 
What do you know?
she wanted to reply right back.  But it wasn’t just the eyes.  It was the…the…watchacallit?  The “
aura
” as her mother used to say.  It was an outpouring of something that went further than just a penetrating gaze.

Mama said it skips a generation
.  Jovita’s mother used to have that same knowing look, like she could tell when somebody was lying.  And not just her children,
anyone
.

But Kaley didn’t need to have any kind of
intuition to know her mother.  A month ago, the girl walked into the kitchen while she was hunched over the sink, lighting up another crumbled bit of white rock in her spoon.  Jovita had been nearly scared to death, nearly dropped the spoon, lighter and all.

But maybe I only hallucinated a little of that
, she thought.  After she had stormed out of the kitchen, Jovita had gone to the room her two daughters shared, to check on Shannon…only to find
both
of her daughters in bed.  When she’d gone back to check the kitchen, Kaley was gone.  The crack rock, the meth…the horrors that her daughters had faced…her guilt over having done nothing about it…
I’m losin’ it
.


The girl
,” someone whispered.  Jovita jumped, turned, looked all about her.  “
Her?
” asked someone else.  At once, her hands started shaking.  Then, there came a reply.  “
No, the other one

This one’s the mother, she is no use
.”

“Okay, who the
fuck
is that?” she hissed.  No answer.  Nothing at all.  Jovita moved around the living room, listening for the slightest noise. 
Losin’ it

Yeah

Fuh sho’

Oh

God

 

 

 

The attic was clear, as was the entire upstairs.  Zakhar double-checked the downstairs, every bedroom, bathroom, and closet, flicking lights off as he left each room.  He checked behind every curtain and under every table, around every corner and inside every shower and tub.  The only thing left to check was the basement.

Part of him felt silly,
and a bit annoyed with himself for being so on edge.  This was supposed to be a place of respite, a retreat from the rest of the world, where he could be alone to do what he needed to do.  No poachers had ever been so bold as to…

But Ivan and the others
, he thought. 
Maybe they thought the same thing
.  Considering what had happened to the rest of his family, anyone would forgive him his paranoia.

Zakhar
went to check the basement door in the hall.  The three locks on it were untouched, as was the small wedge of wood he never forgot to jam between the middle hinge and the doorframe; a telltale sign someone had disturbed it, if it had fallen.  He went to his bedroom, opened the middle drawer, rummaged around until he found the key ring tucked behind his thickest winter bedclothes, and returned to the hall to go through the locks, one by one.

When he opened it, the usual darkness awaited him, as did the usual odors.  Cleaning solutions, and pine-scented air fresheners.  Zakhar flipped the switch beside the door, and fluorescent lights cast a pallid, funereal glow about the staircase.  He kept the gun in a kind of loose low-ready position, and started down.  The wooden steps creaked in protest beneath his considerable weight.  At the foot of the steps, Zakhar flipped another switch, this one with
a brighter, more familial glow.  To his left was the food pantry for his guest.  To his right was the guest room, also triple-locked.  Three different keys opened the locks.

Before he stepped inside, Zakhar knocked
twice, then once, then twice again.  This would signal his young guest to go to the far side of the room, as he’d been trained.  Gun at the ready, he stepped through.

The room was exactly as he’d left it, and his
young guest had kept it clean, as he’d been trained to do.  Hard, smooth concrete floors, with two couches covered in plastic sheeting and a television mounted on the wall, high enough so that it was out of reach, and behind Plexiglas.  The TV happened to be on, and was playing a
SpongeBob SquarePants
DVD that Zakhar permitted him.  There was a single coffee table, oak, spotless, and with a glimmering top.  The room smelled of Pine-Sol.  That was good.  The boy had cleaned recently.

Zakhar took three steps inside, and paused.
  His guest was huddled on the far couch, sitting there obediently in his underwear, thumb in his mouth.  Zakhar looked at the TV, then at his young guest.  “Are you all right?” he said.  The boy spoke English.  Zakhar had had to brush up on his own.  The boy looked at him, all doe-eyed, nodded slowly, and looked back at the television.  Zakhar also looked at the TV.  Squidward was wroth with SpongeBob, it seemed.  “Have you heard anything?  Any knocking?  Anyone moving upstairs?”  The boy continued sucking his thumb.  “I’m talking to you!”  The boy jolted, and shook his head, trembling.  “You heard nothing?  Heard no one?”  The boy shook his head.  Zakhar nodded.  “Dinner will be ready in a little while.  Make sure you bathe.  I’ll also bring down your shots.”  He backed away towards the door.  “And don’t watch so much TV.  It will rot your mind.”

Back out the door, locking all three locks, then back up the stairs, switching off the lights as he went.  He shut the door in the hall, locked every lock, and replaced the keys in his drawer.  Zakhar was about to return to the fireplace, but paused halfway through the living room and thought for a moment.  Something told him to check one last time.  Perhaps
it was paranoia left over from his days in the service.

The radio was still going in the kitchen
, but the weather report was finished for the nonce.  It had gone to commercials now for some kind of aftershave.  The water in the kettle still hadn’t warmed enough to start squealing yet.

Zakhar swept the attic one more time, the upstairs, then the downstairs again.  The wind blew harder outside, pressed against the windows.

Satisfied, he holstered the Colt, and finally returned to the logs.  He stacked them neatly in the fireplace and then set up some twigs and kindling.  He still liked doing things the old way, using bow-drill kits the way the old wilderness survivalists taught.  Zakhar had taken numerous courses on primitive survival skills—living way out here, one never knew when the gas tanks might suddenly shut off, without warning, in the dead of winter.  No man could survive the blunt force of a Siberian winter.  No man.

It took a while for the punk to ignite, but once he had a workable ember, Zakhar set the nest of burning kindling lovingly into the
pile of smaller sticks of wood, where it quickly caught flame and began to spread.  He stood up, and saw his stalker in the mirror over the mantelpiece a second too late.  Zakhar spun, his hand going reflexively for his pistol, but he saw what his stalker had in his hands, and froze.  Military experience had also taught him when he was too slow on the pickup.

“Arrogance b
efore the gods,” his enemy said, seated comfortably on the couch, directly below the two hanging bearskin rugs.

Zakhar’s heart jumped a beat, but he steeled himself, sighed.  “What?”

 

 

 

“I said, get’cho
black
behind
out that do’, befo’ you miss the damn bus!  What’s the matter?  You got wax in yo ears, girl?”

Kaley helped Shannon with her coat.  It was a hand-me-down from Kaley, but Shan was small, even for her age, and it was just too big.  It was almost comical. 
She looks like a turtle uncomfortable with her shell
, Kaley thought, grinning.  But she swallowed her smile quickly when she felt the animosity pouring off her mother.  Mixed with guilt and fear of the future, it was a disgusting mélange on Kaley’s tongue and on her mind.

It was a difficult time for all of them.  Kaley and Shannon were victims of something horrid, Shan especially, and their mother felt the burden of guilt of not having protected them.  In fact, it had been her that sent them out that night, all alone, for groceries she herself ought to have gotten
the day before.  Now Jovita Dupré emanated such self hate that Kaley couldn’t help but absorb it, and the more she absorbed it, the more she showed her hatred for the insufferable woman.  And, the more Jovita Dupré saw the hatred in her daughter’s eyes, the more she hated herself.

It’s a vicious cycle
, she thought. 
And it’s never going to end

Never
.

The door was hanging open.  A new winter’s breeze came sweeping in, and it seemed to penetrate their clothes, finding the tiniest of gaps, slipping up around them like icy tendrils.  For a moment, Kaley felt swept away.  She smelled…pine?  And Pine-Sol? 
Mom doesn’t use Pine-Sol
was the last thing she thought before stepping over the threshold.  She shouldered her book bag and handed Shannon hers.  “Here,” she said, and they stepped outside.

And for a moment, Kaley saw something else.  Trees.  And snow.  But it hadn’t snowed during the night and she knew it.
  She blinked.  It was gone, and all that was left was Bentley Drive, in Cartersville, Georgia.  Bentley Drive was a short stretch of forgettable road that was a forgettable offshoot of Tennessee Street, and covered by dying oaks and forlorn willows.  Of the nine houses on Bentley, there were only two that were actually owned by real homeowners, the rest of the houses were all rented out by the same landlord as the one Kaley’s mother had found through one of the officers at the Atlanta Police Department.  The nice detective, Leon Hulsey, the big man who never stopped looking for them that night, had suggested it to them before he was swallowed by controversy—apparently, he’d been turning a blind eye to his brother-in-law’s chop shop, and was now on suspension pending an investigation.

The tr
ees blew in a sourceless wind, a wind that felt colder by the second.  It blew in hard and fast, pushing against both Kaley and her sister.  It had another strange odor to it.  It didn’t…well, as strange as it seemed, it didn’t
smell
like the wind was from around here. 
More of that pine smell
, she thought.  There were no pines around Bentley Drive.

“Hurry on, now!” said Jovita
Dupré, safely in the doorway, hugging her robe more tightly to herself.  “Gawn, I got a job interview to get to!  Don’t be late to the bus!”  She waved them away, almost like pests, and shut the door.

Kaley reached for her sister’s hand, gripped it,
and gave it a reassuring squeeze.  They walked fifty feet to the bus stop, where two other kids were waiting for the bus, as well.  They were older kids, though, a couple of ninth graders, white boys who never did more than glance at Kaley and her sister with an exquisite blend of pity and disgust.

“Did you get the sheets in the washin’ machine before Mama saw?” asked Shan.

Always looking out for me
.  “Yeah, I got it,” Kaley said.  At least, that’s what she meant to say.  Only when her lips moved, different words came out.  “Arrogance before the gods.”

“Huh?” Shannon said.

 

 

 

The man on the sofa lounged for a moment, then stood.  In his hand was a Glock.  His grip showed it was nothing casual; he knew how to use it. 
He wore black jeans and a black jacket, unzipped, and the shirt underneath had a message written in English:
YEAH, I’M INTO THAT SHIT
.  The man’s complexion was pale, his hair black and wild like overgrowth in the forest, his face…there was an illusion on his face.  A shadow, brought on by the dark stubble.  But something else was wrong.  The hairs weren’t growing right.  There was some sort of distortion, like a scar that—

“Hubris,” said Zakhar’s enemy.  “That’s arrogance before the gods.  And there’s a spirit of vengeance, set against those who succumb to hubris.  That’s what the Greeks believed
, anyway.  Guess they’re good for somethin’ besides makin’ a mean eggplant.”  He smiled, and Zakhar noted that the smile was slightly off, too.  “Do you know what they called this spirit of vengeance?”  The man stepped around the coffee table, his boots were wet and his jeans were soaked almost to the knees.  He took a seat at the edge of the table.  “
Nemesis
.  That’s where the word comes from.”

Zakhar started to speak, felt something catch in his throat, and swallowed.  After he cleared his throat, he said, “What do you want?  I have money—”

“You know, I never much believed in god or gods, still not sure that I do, but it’s interesting how they supply a kind of, uh…what’s the word…underpinning?”  The gunman nodded.  “Yeah.  Yeah, an
underpinning
for how we describe what takes place around us.  A basis, a foundation for the things we don’t understand.”

“If you want money—”

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