The Haunted Air (44 page)

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Authors: F. Paul Wilson

BOOK: The Haunted Air
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Maybe the impetus had been the unbidden thoughts of Tara Portman the night before, perhaps it was nothing more than mere ennui, but whatever the reason, Eli had yielded to an urge to flaunt his invulnerability. So on Saturday afternoon he had told someone that he had killed hundreds of children, and that another would die with the next new moon, all but daring him to do something about it.
Eli permitted himself a fleeting smile. Adrian would shit his pants if Eli told him.
Instead Eli said, “Be that as it may, the trophy cabinet had nothing to do with our current predicament.”
Strauss leaned back and returned to his slouch in the rear seat. “Maybe it did and maybe it didn't, but it was a bad idea all around. That kind of in-your-face shit threatens us all. Maybe you don't care, but we do.”
“I sympathize, and I'll try to take your feelings into account in the future,” Eli said. If the Circle had a future.
They lapsed again into silence as the car moved into traffic, then Adrian cleared his throat.
“Eli, am I the only one bothered by you thinking of Tara
Portman for no good reason on Friday night, and then this stranger popping into your shop on Sunday to try and buy the key ring? Then someone—possibly the same man—attacks us Monday night, and steals Tara's key ring on Tuesday. And today he claims that Tara is ‘back'—whatever that means. Could he have brought her back on Friday night?”
“She's not back!” Eli said, his voice rising of its own accord.
“Then why, of all possible lambs, did you think of Tara Portman?”
“What time was this?” Strauss said, leaning forward again and refouling the air of the front seat with his breath. “That you thought of her, I mean.”
“I don't know. I wasn't watching the time. Late, I'd say.”
“You know what else happened late Friday night? The earthquake.”
Eli remembered reading something about that. “I didn't feel a thing.”
“But locals around here did. The paper said it was centered in Astoria.”
“Dear God,” Adrian whispered.
“Oh, come now,” Eli said. “You can't seriously believe one has anything to do with the other. That's absurd!”
But was it? Eli felt an Arctic chill blow through the chambers of his heart. He couldn't let on how deeply the scenario Adrian and Strauss were describing disturbed him. It only heightened his feelings of being at the mercy of chance as well as the forces of nature itself.
“Perhaps it is,” Adrian said. “But you can't help wondering, can you.”
No, Eli thought. You can't.
He realized the only thing that would assuage this mounting malaise and uncertainty was another Ceremony to bulwark his defenses.
“For the moment,” he said, “let's turn away from lambs of the past and focus on a lamb for the present.” He glanced
at Strauss. “Any progress in the matter of Ms. DiLauro's child, Freddy?”
“Some. I spent a little time watching her place today.” He laughed. “I was wearing my old blues—they still fit me, y'know—and I waltzed them up to her door after I seen her leave her place alone. I figured if the kid was there, I'd pull the old your-mommy's-been-hurt routine, but she wasn't home. Learned from a neighbor's maid that she's away at camp.”
“Really?” Eli said. He felt a surge of hope.
“Why are you fixated on her?” Adrian said. “We can snatch a child anywhere—”
“We've succeeded in lasting this long because we don't take chances. This situation has interesting possibilities. Think: A child disappears from a camp in the woods and the first thing everyone assumes is that she wandered off. They waste precious time beating the bushes for her when all the while she could be miles away, unconscious, in a car speeding toward the city …”
“Yes,” Adrian said, nodding. “I see. Which camp?”
“That's the problem. This maid didn't know.”
Adrian groaned. “Do you know how many summer camps there are in the tri-state area? We'll never find her.”
Eli's mood sank. Adrian was right. There were hundreds, maybe thousands.
Strauss slapped the back of the front seat. “Never say never, my friend. I'm working a few angles. I've already recruited Williamson. He'll be full speed on the trail of little Victoria Westphalen tomorrow.”
Wesley Williamson was a longtime member of the Circle and deputy director of the state banking commission. Eli didn't know how he could help, but he'd leave that to Strauss.
“He'd better hurry. If we don't complete the Ceremony by midnight Friday, we'll have to wait until next month.”
Eli couldn't bear the thought of spending a whole month in his current state. Not just the fear and uncertainty, but
the vulnerability, which was so much worse. His nameless enemy would have all that time to move against him.
“I'm doing my best, okay? This is short notice, but we'll get her. So sharpen up your knife for Friday night.”
The entity that was Tara Portman floats in darkness and frustration. The one she was sent for has stayed away. She has something Tara wants, something Tara desperately needs.
She must find a way to bring her here. She thinks she knows a way. Tara touched her while she was here, perhaps she can touch her in another way, beyond these walls. Touch her and make her return.
And then what? What will happen to Tara after her purpose is finished? Will she be returned to nothingness? Anything, even this half existence, is better than that.
Stay here. Yes … but not alone. She does not want to stay here alone …
Break time.
Jack glanced at the clock above the Kentons' kitchen sink: 10:15. Was that all? Seemed as if they'd been working a lot longer than two hours. He sipped his Gatorade and considered the progress they'd made.
When he'd arrived, Lyle and Charlie had already started chipping away at the concrete along the edges of the crack. If there'd been a gap in the earth below after the quake, it was gone. Just a groove in the dirt now. Jack had brought along some blues CDs as a compromise between his kind of music and the Kentons'. He heard no objections when he put on a Jimmy Reed disk, so he picked up a pickax and joined in, swinging in time to the beat, chain-gang style.
He started off stiff and achy. Yesterday he'd worked muscles he rarely used and they awoke today tight and cranky; but ten minutes of swinging the pick loosened them up.
Two hours later they'd widened the gap to maybe four feet. Slow, hard work. And hot. The cellar had started out cool but the heat thrown off by the exertions of three bodies soon raised the temperature. Like a sauna down there now. Jack could see he was going to need lots of Gatorade before the day was through, and lots of lager after.
He and Lyle sat and sipped at the kitchen table in their damp T-shirts. The faint breeze through the windows and open back door carried little cooling power. Charlie had grabbed a paper and a donut and retreated to the shade of the backyard with the morning paper. He'd said little all morning.
“Something wrong with Charlie?”
Lyle's eyes gave away nothing. “Why do you ask?”
“Pretty quiet.”
“He's just going through a phase. Not your worry.”
Right. Not Jack's business why the brothers Kenton weren't getting along. But he liked these two, and it bothered him.
He dropped the subject. He lifted the front of his T-shirt and wiped his face. “Ever hear of air-conditioning?”
“Not much use when the windows and doors won't stay closed.”
“Still?”
Lyle nodded. “Still. If I close them they don't reopen as fast as they used to, but eventually they do.”
“Tara, you think?”
Another nod. “I get the feeling she's trapped here. She wants to get out—maybe she keeps trying—but can't.”
Just then Charlie burst through the door, waving the morning paper. “Yo, Jack! Peep this!” He had the Post folded back and then in half, commuter style. He dropped it on the table and pointed to a headline. “Is this you, dawg? This yo' setup?”
Jack picked up the paper. Lyle came around and peered over his shoulder.
SHE SHOULD'VE KNOWN BETTER
Elizabeth Foster, better known as psychic advisor Madame Pomerol, has had her second brush with the NYPD in one week. Just last Sunday morning she and her husband Carl were found wandering the financial district unclothed; but the charges are more serious this time: the Federal government is involved. Foster and her husband Carl were picked up yesterday afternoon trying to pass phony hundred-dollar bills at La Belle Boutique on Madison Avenue. The Treasury Department is investigating.
But things get worse. A search of their Upper East Side apartment—also known as “Madame Pomerol's
Temple of Eternal Wisdom”—not only turned up thousands more of the funny money, but provided indisputable evidence that this particular psychic medium is little more than a scam artist.
Jack had to grin as the article went on to describe the eavesdropping devices found in her waiting room, the electronic ear pieces hidden in her hats, the monitors, the trapdoors, and most damning of all, the files on her clients, filled with xeroxes of driver licenses, Social Security cards, bank statements, and notes containing more than a few scathing comments about their weaknesses, predilections, and obsessions. As a result, the Manhattan DA was preparing to add charges of fraud and conspiracy to defraud to the federal counterfeiting rap.
“They're done!” Lyle cried. “Gone! Fried! Fini! Madame Pomerol will be reading palms for cigarettes in either Rikers or a federal pen! Is this your fix?”
“I do believe it is.”
“The queer? How'd you manage that? You plant it on them?”
“Trade secret, I'm afraid.”
“You done it, G!” Charlie said, grinning for the first time all morning. “You nailed her!”
Jack shrugged. “Sometimes things go according to plan, sometimes they don't. This one did.”
He stared at the article, basking in the sunny sensation of a job well done. He'd set the Fosters up for a fall and had known they'd tumble sooner or later. He was glad it turned out to be sooner.
The big if in this particular fix-it had been how they handled their cash. Did they deposit it and write checks, or spend it? Jack had banked on the latter. With a good cash flow—real cash, not checks and charges—that they probably didn't declare, they'd tend to pay for things in cash to leave less of a money trail should the IRS come sniffing.
Lyle clapped Jack on the shoulder. “Remind me never
to get on your wrong side, Jack. You are not a man to mess with!”
If Jack had his way, Eli Bellitto would soon feel the same, only worse. Much, much worse.
As they all headed back down to the cellar, Jack sensed a better mood than when they'd started the break. They retrieved the pickaxes and renewed their combined attack on the concrete slab, tossing the broken chunks onto the pile of paneling.
By midday they'd broken up half the slab. After a quick lunch of juicy gyros at a Greek deli up on Ditmars, they returned to work.
“You know what?” Lyle said as he surveyed the rubble that had once been a basement. “I think two of us should start digging in the dirt while the other keeps after the concrete.”
Jack kicked at the hard packed, red-brown soil. Not a hell of a lot softer than the concrete.
“You mean, start looking for Tara.”
“Right. The sooner we find her, the sooner we can stop pretending to be day laborers and go back to being gentlemen of leisure.”
“How will we know it's her?”
Lyle stared at the dirt. “You still think she's got company down there?”
“I'd bet on it.”
“Well, we'll cross that bridge whenever.” Lyle looked up at Jack. “You game to dig a little dirt?”
“Not exactly my idea of a fun treasure hunt,” Jack said, “but I'll give it a go.”
Lyle turned to his brother. “How about you, Charlie? Dirt or 'crete?”
Charlie shrugged. “I'll stick with the slab.”
“Okay. We'll rotate around if anybody wants to switch.” He leaned toward Jack and spoke in a stage whisper. “And if you should happen to find the remains of the Missing Link while you're digging, don't let Charlie know. He doesn't believe in evolution and it would upset him.”
Charlie said, “Step off, Lyle.”
My sentiments exactly, Jack thought.
Lyle grabbed the shovel and jammed the spade into the dirt. “Well, it's true, isn't it. You believe the universe was created in six days, right?”
“That what it say in the Bible, so that what I believe.”
“So did Bishop Usher, who ran down all the dates in the Bible and the ages of all people mentioned. According to his calculations, the earth was created on October 26, 4004 BC.” He tossed a shovel full of dirt aside and struck a pensive pose. “I wonder if that was A.M. or P.M.? Anyway, seems to me the earth's packed an awful lot of growth and development into six thousand years.”
Jack grabbed a shovel. “Fascinating. Let's dig.”
“That what it say, then that what I believe. We talkin' the word of God, yo.”
“Are we?” Lyle raised a finger. “Well, I've got a few words of my own—”
Oh, no, Jack thought. They're off.
“Hey, what is all this?” he said, cutting in. “I didn't always pay my bills doing fix-its. I've done landscaping and worked with nonunion wrecking crews, and all I ever heard guys talk about was booze and broads. But you two—what is it with you guys, anyway?”
Lyle grinned. “Maybe it's because Charlie doesn't drink and we've both been celibate far too long.”
“Ay, yo, how 'bout you, Jack?” Charlie said. “What you believe?”
“About what?” he said, although he knew exactly what.
Lyle said, “Faith, god. All that.”
That was a little too personal for Jack. He didn't even tell anyone his last name, so he wasn't about to discuss religion with a couple of guys he hadn't known a week. Besides, it wasn't a subject he gave much thought to. In his world, the unseeable and unknowable simply hadn't much mattered.
Until lately.
“I'm pretty much for whatever gets you through the day,
as long as you don't start insisting it's the way everyone should get through the day.”
“That ain't tellin' nothin'.”
“Okay, then, I can tell you that whatever I did believe has been pretty much turned upside down in the past few months.”
Lyle looked at him. “All that stuff you told us about the Otherness?”
Jack nodded.
“Here's my problem,” Lyle said. “I have just as much trouble believing in your Otherness as I do in Charlie's personal God.”
“How about Tara Portman?” Jack said. “And what's been going on in this house? That's not hearsay. You've been here. It's your own experience.”
Lyle's cheeks puffed as he let out a breath. “Yeah, I know. This is terra nova for me. I never believed in ghosts or life after death, or even the soul. I assumed when you died you were gone forever. Now … I'm not so sure.”
Jack said, “Then maybe we should stop jawing and dig up this terra nova.”
Lyle laughed. “Excellent idea!”
The Best of Muddy Waters
was in the boombox tray. Jack turned up “Mannish Boy” loud enough to make conversation a chore, then went to work.
By late afternoon, with another Gatorade break somewhere in the middle, they'd pocked the surface of the dirt with holes but hadn't come across a single bone.
“We've only been going down three feet or so,” Lyle said. “Maybe that's not deep enough.”
Jack leaned on his shovel. “Hate to think they went the full traditional six.”
“Might have. Especially if they wanted to be sure of not having any telltale odors. Which means we have to go down six.”
Jack's T-shirt was soaked. He looked around. The pile of smashed paneling and broken concrete already took up
one end of the cellar. They'd added some of the dirt to it, but they'd be running out of room soon.
“You're talking a lot of dirt.”
“Tell me about it. Look, I know it's been a long day, but I'd like to keep after this.”
“There's always tomorrow,” Jack said.
Charlie stopped digging and looked at his brother. “No there ain't.”
Jack opened his mouth but Lyle cut him off.
“Don't ask. Look, why don't we take another break and see if we can come up with a systematic way of going about finding her.”
Jack glanced at his watch. “I've got an errand to run, but I should be back in an hour and a half or so.”
“I'm going to have to bail soon myself. That Forest Hills women's club thing.”
“That's right,” Charlie said. “Everybody run off and leave baby brother to do all the work.”
Jack laughed. “I'll be back to help out as soon as I can.”
“Where're you off to?” Lyle said.
“To make sure the last piece of the Tara Portman puzzle fits where I think it does.”

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