Authors: John R. Maxim
Tags: #Horror, #General, #Psychological, #Suspense, #Memory, #Thrillers, #Fiction, #Time Travel
“
Nothing” she answered, wide-eyed.
“
If you're toying with Jonathan ...”
“
I'm hardly
toying,
Uncle Harry. I'm trying to help
him.”
“
You helped him yesterday,” he reminded her, “by giv
ing him a drug whose effect you could not possibly pre
dict.”
Gwen swallowed but did not otherwise react.
“
And today, here you are in what was apparently Laura
Hemmings's house and you are dressed, I presume, to re
semble Laura Hemmings, a woman who seems to have an
tagonized Jonathan in some way.”
”
I
did
help him,” she said stubbornly. “He knows those t
hings he saw were real now. He knows he's not crazy. And he's not afraid of the snow anymore.”
Sturdevant waved that off. “You are playing a very reck
less game with a man who, whether you choose to face it or not, may still be dangerously deluded.”
“
He is not deluded,” she said sharply.
“
Did you see his face just before you left the library?” he asked. ”I won't pretend I know why, but he looked for
all the world like a man who had a few scores to settle.”
“
How would
you
feel, for Pete's sake? In less than
twenty-four hours he found out that Tilden Beckwith was practically his father and that the woman who was practically his mother was badgered out of New York and eventually even out of Greenwich by people who simply would
not allow them to be happy.”
“
Happiness!” Sturdevant snorted. ”I have a feeling
there's far more at stake than that. This is not an episode of ‘As the World Turns.’”
His niece's eyes went flat. “That was patronizing, Uncle
Harry.”
Harry Sturdevant turned toward the window, staring out
at nothing in particular. A plow rattled by, its blade still
up. But no sign of the car Cora described or of his friend
from the library.
”
I think I'd better clear the driveway entrance before it
gets much worse or freezes.” He picked up his coat.
“
You shouldn't be shoveling snow.”
“
At my age, you mean?”
“
Gotcha.” She punched him.
“
These old scores I mentioned,” he said gently, “If I'm
right about them, and Jonathan intends to settle up with the
Beckwiths, he is going to find himself in serious trouble.” He waited for a long moment before finishing his thought.
“But if, God forbid, he intends to settle with people who
are no longer living, I assume it's clear to you that Jonathan
is in deeper trouble than either of us imagined.”
Corbin was pleased with himself. It was snowing hard
and he was walking in it. The houses, although the newer
ones seemed dimmer than the older buildings, remained
solid. Cars remained cars; they did not fade into sleighs and
wagons. If he looked along the street in a certain way he
could still see it as it probably once was, but he felt content that these were Tilden's memories and not his own. At one
point, a few blocks down, he answered a friendly wave
from a man who was no longer there by the time Corbin
raised his arm. He felt none of the old terror. Corbin fully
understood now that the things he saw were real, or had
been once to Tilden. They could not hurt him. They could
not entrap him in another time. It was not altogether unlike going back to the places of his own boyhood and seeing in his mind, but almost with his eye, the events that happened
then. There I am hitting a three-run homer in my first Little
League game. There I am walking that high tree limb on a
dare. There I am in my fistfight with Mike McConnell and him being the first to quit but both of us getting suspended for it. See? he thought. Anyone can see the past. It seemed almost natural. Even if Corbin had known about the tran
quilizing drug Gwen had twice slipped into his drinks, he
would not have given the drug full credit. He was in Green
wich, and he was walking in the snow without fear. Why
shouldn't he feel good?
Anger.
Corbin felt the surge.
Tilden's anger.
He tried to push it away.
Corbin stopped. He bent to pick up a handful of snow
and rubbed it across his face. “What good is this?” he
asked aloud.
Now Laura Hemmings was gone and there was Margaret,
holding a little boy's hand, an embroidered carpetbag at her feet, and they both looked so terribly sad, and as the picture was receding, Margaret was mouthing the words /
love you.
Corbin watched her, first embarrassed and then alarmed
because she was not watching where she was going and
was about to collide with a large, whiskered man who was coming in the other direction. The man was not watching,
either. He was busily winding what looked like a small box
camera and Corbin noticed that he was not wearing winter
clothing.
The two passed through each other.
Corbin felt another surge of anger, but this time he raised
a patient hand as if to stop it. “That's Comstock, right?”
He nodded with resignation. “Is that Anthony Comstock?”
No answer came. Corbin didn't need one. He knew.
“
Comstock is the vice crusader, right?”
Right. Corbin knew that as well.
“
Gwen and I talked about this,” Corbin said. “We don't
know why Margaret should have been worried.”
He listened for his own feelings. He would have been
furious if he had lived here then. Just on general principles.
Here's a man taking pictures of every halfway-decent-
looking female he meets and you know he's going to show them around someplace to try to nail any who might once
have been prostitutes. Corbin would have walked down and
kicked his fat ass. Tilden would have, too. Unless Tilden
was afraid to call attention to himself and therefore to Mar
garet.
“
Then why didn't you just get her out of town? A va
cation. Sail up to Newport or go back down to the Clare
mont Inn for a week or so. See a couple of ball games.”
“
You cannot.” Laura Hemmings took Margaret's hands in
hers. “You will stay here, you will smile sweetly, and you
will go about your blameless life as if that idiot does not
even exist.”
“
Oh, Annie.”
“
My name is Laura. And your name is Charlotte. Even
when we're by ourselves, Comstock or no.”
“
He arrested Carrie Todd this morning,” Margaret said
miserably, “and he claims to have his eye on three others.”
“
You are not one of them, dear. I promise you that.”