Read The Bannerman Effect (The Bannerman Series) Online
Authors: John R. Maxim
Tucker's eyes were wild. He saw fear in them, then hatred, and then a glee that bordered on hysteria. They were moist, blinking rapidly, as if bothered by the light. Now they changed again. A certain drunken slyness appeared. Tucker was on something. Speed, thought Billy.
“Go on, shit face,” Tucker rasped. “Make a move/’
What's this?
Billy wondered.
You go to shoot, you shoot
“Go on,” Tucker snarled. “Go for it.”
Billy understood. The voice was low. Close to a whisper. He did not want to be heard. Nor did he want to shoot. Not yet. Not now. He had something else in mind. Slowly, Billy raised his hands.
Tucker seized a branch for balance. The touch shocked his ruined thumb. He stood, nearly erect, holding it out for Billy to see. His mouth twisted into a terrible smile.
“Ohhhh—yeah,” was all he said. He raised the thumb toward the sturnp of his ear, turning his head as if to remind Billy of what he had done. The smile remained. It was making a promise. But still, not quite yet.
He waved Billy forward, using the machine pistol. An amateur, thought Billy. You don't wave guns. Billy took a step. Tucker waved again, indicating a point just beyond him on the path.
Good.
Billy saw it now.
Tucker wanted him. But he wanted Grassi more. Tucker would use him to get close to the table. He would be Tucker's shield.
Billy offered a silent hope. Let Tucker be so dumb, or so wired, that he sticks that gun in his back. Billy would take it from him before Tucker could blink, breaking a few more of his fingers, then hammer his teeth out with the butt.
Tucker was that wired. He was not that dumb.
He reached with his left hand, letting Billy see it, holding his weapon well back with the other. He patted Billy's waist, under his shirt, front and back. He found Billy's automatic. He took it, jamming it into his belt.
Billy obeyed.
He sighed inwardly.
Tucker had about a minute to live. Two at most.
The problem was, so did he.
The woman sat, not moving, listening.
She reached for a thin cotton cord that hung between her legs. She pulled at it, steadily. Something white and heavy fell into her hands. She stripped away a covering of cloth. A switchblade knife. She opened it and worked its edge under the tape at her wrists.
She rose slowly to her feet, first gathering the vibrators that had fallen to the floor. These in hand, she stepped through into the room where Erna Dietz lay still. One knee on the bed, she reached to feel the pulse at the German's throat. There was a beat. Very faint. She counted three full seconds before she felt another. She moved the tips of her fingers farther down. They found the place where the windpipe had been crushed. She felt the damage, assessing it. Again, she wet her lips. Soon the pulse would stop. She put the knife aside.
She turned the German's head, parted her teeth, and forced both vibrators between them. She stood again and stepped into Erna Dietz's bathroom where she found three large towels. These in hand, she left the room, stepping over the Algerian.
At the table, she picked clean undergarments from the pile and put them on. Next came her jeans and her jewelry. She had chosen a blouse but she found a stain on it. Her eye fell on another in the pile belonging to her companion. She hesitated, her eyes rising to the door of the master suite. She shrugged. Her friend would not mind. She slipped it on, then took a brush and began teasing her damp and curly hair into a fullness that approached its normal state.
That done, she returned to the body of Amal Hamsho. Bending over, she retrieved the thin metal rod that had pierced his brain. His flesh cleaned it as it withdrew. This she wiped against his shirt.
She returned to the table, found its mate plus a skein of white yarn, gathered the three towels and stepped out onto the terrace. She shook out two of the towels and hung them over the railing. The third, for the time being, she left folded.
She settled into a deck chair, wondering briefly whether she should first put lotion on her arms and face. The sun was high, strong for February. But no, she decided. She would not be there long enough to burn.
Unless Carla took her time.
She glanced at the unused towel.
Then Janet Herzog began to knit.
“
Lesko?”
He heard Katz's voice. In his head. He cursed, silently.
Katz was all he needed now.
He was having enough trouble trying to make conversation and listen at the same time.
Elena on his left, telling him about Spain, all the places she wanted to show him. Urs Ðrugg on his right, huddled with the little KGB guy. They kept saying his name, and Bannerman's, connecting the two, asking Grassi a question now and then but not including him otherwise. He could not get the sense of what they were saying, although he was damned well going to ask if Elena ever gave him the chance. He was almost getting the feeling that she was deliberately keeping him from hearing.
“
Lesko!!”
Katz's voice. Lesko groaned. He shut him out.
And if Elena wasn't distraction enough, here comes Billy McHugh, up from where Susan had gone. On top of McHugh, he did not need Katz.
“
Lesko! Wake up, already.
”
“
Hey. Do you mind?
”
Wait.
“Lesko?”
”I know,” he said softly. “Drop your napkin. Bend low to pick it up. Stay there.
“Uncle Urs,” she said, into Lesko's ear.
”I got him. Just do it.”
She did as he asked.
Carla Benedict was weeping softly. Twice she had squealed in pain. The squeals were genuine.
She had tried to squirm away, fend him off with her bound hands, but he had slapped her face, and he had choked her, pushing her under the water and holding her there until the last of her air bubbled to the surface. She very nearly had to end it then.
Time.
Janet would need twenty minutes at least. For the German to become absorbed by her. To taste her. More time would be better. Carla would stand this as long as she could.
He was doing her back and shoulders now. He had draped her over one end of the jetted tub. He knelt behind her, fully nude. She could feel his penis nestled between her buttocks but he made no attempt to enter her. She was, she knew, not yet clean enough. She tried, through her pain, to listen for sounds from outside the room. She could hear nothing. The rush of the swirling water was too loud and too close.
But now, a sound. A clatter. Something, it sounded like plastic, had been dropped. Not much longer, she thought. She closed her eyes and wondered about her skin. It would be a while, she was afraid, before it could stand the sun again. She wondered what she could wear. Soft cottons. None of her winter things. No silks.
The scrubbing stopped.
She felt the Englishman's fingers in her hair. Picking at it. His tongue clucking in disgust. The fingers appeared before her face. Bits of pool algae on them. “How could you stand to touch each other?” he spat.
“Please—” she swallowed a sob.
“You should thank me for this,” he said, still probing. “Your friend should as well.”
“Are you—will you let us go?”
“We'll see.” He found the stem of a leaf. He tore it loose. “We'll have to see how you clean up first, won't we.” He seized the hair in his fist. “Come on, now. Up you get. On your knees, facing me.”
She pivoted, slipping. He held her up, painfully, until she was kneeling erect, her face at the level of his groin, inches away from his hardness. “What are you going to—”
“Have you done this before?” he asked. “For a man, that is.”
She hesitated. Then shook her head.
“It is done very gently. Much as with a woman. Use the lips and the tongue. Drink deep. I must never feel your teeth.”
Her lips quivered. But she parted them.
“Who knows?” he purred, taking himself in one hand, guiding it toward her lips. “We may open whole new vistas for you today. Gently now.”
He saw her own hands rising up from the water, covered with suds, twisting at their wrists so that one of them could be used freely. The other stayed below. She was taking him. Willingly.
“What are you doing?” He rapped her skull sharply with his knuckles.
She looked up at him. This time he saw the smile.
“I'm about to cut your pee-pee off,” she said.
And she did.
A high-pitched shriek startled Janet Herzog.
She heard the splash of water, waves of it, more screams, and a series of dull thumps as if someone were bouncing off the walls and floors.
The screams, though shrill, were those of a man. But the person being bounced, might it be Carla?
Janet was afraid of this. So was Paul. That she would play with him first. Let him know why he was dying. But not before she crippled him. What if she hadn't? What if she played too long?
She eyed the third towel, wishing she could hang it. Better go check first. She set down her knitting, except for one needle, and stepped through the screen door of the terrace.
Tucker saw the guards.
They were pretending, some of them, not to see him. But he'd heard the low whistle. And he saw where their hands had gone.
“Uh-huh. Okay.” He smiled. It was more of a twitch.