Authors: John R. Maxim
Tags: #Horror, #General, #Psychological, #Suspense, #Memory, #Thrillers, #Fiction, #Time Travel
“
Nothing of the sort. He's a doctor.”
“
Your uncle's field is sports medicine. His specialty is
the effect of the mind on athletic performance. That makes
him a shrink as far as I'm concerned. How much did you
tell him?”
A glorious morning, he thought happily. A bit of shop
ping, a brisk walk after breakfast, then perhaps by afternoon
the flag would be up on the Fifth Avenue cars, indicating
that the ice in the park was cleared for skating. Yes. An
excellent idea. He could pick up a bird-and-bottle hamper
at Delmonico's, and after a few turns around the lake they'd
share it by a bonfire while the sun went down. And if we're
seen together, so be it. Any arched eyebrows we encounter
will be more the result of envy than of censure.
A flash of motion caught the corner of his eye as his
head dropped below street level. Lesko paused on the sub
way stairs, allowing the motion to register. A car door.
Gray or silver. Swung partly open and then arrested. A
single foot reaching out and halting there. Hesitating. As if
the hand on the door knew that it had moved too soon.
“
Dancer, you tidy little devil,” he murmured to himself.
“Have you decided that this old buck needs a leash? Well,
if you have, Twinkletoes, you're going to find out that
leashes have two ends.”
“
No,” he lied. “My mind just wandered. A slip of the
tongue.”
“
Okay.” He dropped his eyes.
“
Well, what did you see?”
”
A bar? No. It's a place to buy newspapers and maga
zines.”
“
Named O'Neill's?”
“
No, a Greek runs it. Actually, it's a Te-Amo cigar
store.”
“
Do you know who?”
Corbin's expression went blank.
“
You didn't see him,” she established. “Do you recall
me stopping you from walking into that tree?”
”
I remember you said, ‘Watch out,’ but I thought it was
because more snow was falling off the wires.” Corbin
raised a hand in surrender. ”I know. There weren't any
wires, either.”
“
What about Margaret? Did she say anything?”
“
No.” He didn't think so. Not just then. ”I was thinking
about taking her ice-skating in Central Park. She might
have been nervous about that for my sake. Being seen with
me, I mean.”
“
Because you were a man of some ... substance, and
she was a known prostitute.”
“
What wife? Margaret was your wife?”
“
No.” He made his hands into fists as if to hold on to
it before it left him. “The woman in the snow. The one
who just died. I think she was my wife. And before you
ask, no, I didn't kill her so I could be with Margaret. One
thing had nothing to do with the other.”
Gwen was silent for a long moment. “My God,” she
said finally, a bemused smile on her face, “it really happens
to you, doesn't it? This is utterly fascinating.”
“
I'm glad you're having a nice time.”
He saw nothing else that especially troubled him during
the rest of their stroll toward Fifth Avenue. No phantom
people or horses. No fading or materializing buildings.
Only a snowbound and depopulated city digging out from more than a foot of snow. He could hear the grinding hum
of plows all around him, and of dump trucks carting tons
of snow to the edge of the Hudson River. He heard the
hiss of air brakes on the few struggling buses and the sound
of snow shovels rasping over cement sidewalks. All these
sounds, modern sounds, gave Corbin comfort and a certain clarity of place. Even so, he continued to see buildings that
seemed vaguely out of position, as if the city had been rearranged by some giant's hand. On these and others, Cor
bin, who knew almost nothing about architectural design,
sensed sadly that certain stylistic adornments had been
stripped away. Heavy rooftop cornices, balustrades, finials
that ought to have been there were gone, leaving an ungraceful boxy appearance to what remained. The more
modern buildings, most of them, were an abomination to
Corbin. Too much glass. No sense of substance. Even the
streetlights, which Corbin had never particularly noticed be
fore, now seemed a graceless triumph of function over
form. Ahead of him, however, he saw the tapering spires of Saint Patrick's Cathedral and he felt, as he explained it to Gwen, something like an urge to applaud.
“
Maybe. I don't think so.”
“
Try, Jonathan,” she urged him. “Try to think why
you'd want to clap for a church. Is it an especially.religious
feeling?”
“
Would you like to go inside?”
”
I can pay for these,” he told her. “Why don't I just
write them a check?’'
“‘
Because I like dressing you. And them who buys ‘em,
picks ‘em. You're still too young and dashing for some of
the dreadfully stuffy clothing you wear.”
When he went to change, she selected three colorful
pocket handkerchiefs that would add a bit of spark to his
boring business suits. What about an ascot, she wondered.
No, he'd never wear it. In this country ascots seem to be
the exclusive property of aging Hollywood types who want
to hide their wattles. Her eye fell on a tubular umbrella
stand, which held not umbrellas but a selection of canes
and walking sticks. With no particular purpose in mind, she
ran her fingers through the assortment, searching for one that was black. With a silver knob. Nothing there. Only
trendy stuff such as knobbed shillelaghs made of blackthorn
and assorted oak shafts with handles made of brass duck
heads. Too bad. Not that he'd start carrying one even if she
found it, but Jonathan did say he always seemed to be walking with a black silver-headed cane during those excursions
of his. “Aha!” she said aloud. Gwen quickly returned the
small folding umbrella and selected a black, tightly furled
English model. No silver knob. No knob at all. Just a
curved handle. But it did look like a black walking stick.
Who knows? It just might possibly help speed things along.