Authors: Michael Marshall
Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Suspense, #Mystery & Detective, #General
stead?”
Around the café, a few of the other patrons were not being very
subtle about lifting their eyes above the level of the local paper.
“Keep your voice down,” I said calmly. “Did Gerry know?”
She breathed out heavily. “Not in the beginning.”
“Not information you’re going to lead with. I can see that.”
“But I told him later. Before we were married.”
“Everything?”
“Things nobody should have to tell anyone. Especially a man
they love.”
“He didn’t care?”
“Of course he cared. He wanted to go back in time and fi nd the
men who’d done bad things to me. I told him time doesn’t work like
that, and I didn’t need protecting, but . . . from him I didn’t mind.
He did it without making it feel like he was taking anything away
from me. And the thing that happened in Berlin? He said he was
proud of me.”
“I would be, too.”
“You shouldn’t,” she said, suddenly distant again. “Lately, I have
not been so strong. Or so good.”
“What do you mean?”
B A D T H I N G S 187
“People always look after number one, right?”
It seemed for a moment as if she was going to say something else,
but she clammed up.
“This feeling you’ve had,” I said. “Of being watched, in danger.
Did you ever feel it before Gerry died?”
She shook her head. “I felt very sad sometimes, for no reason. It’s
why we had quite such a bad argument about the children thing, on
that day. I just . . . everything seemed to be going wrong. To feel as
if it was dying. And for a few days beforehand I also didn’t sleep very
well. But that’s not the same.”
She hesitated for a moment. “Did you understand those things I
was telling you in the hospital?”
“What do you mean, ‘understand’?”
“Did you understand that none of it really happened?”
I stared at her. “What do you mean? I thought you said it was a
witch.”
“Yes, that’s what I’m saying. They make you believe things that
aren’t true. See things that aren’t there. Those things I said—they
didn’t really happen. None of them.”
I felt wrong-footed and dumb. If you’ve privately decided
someone’s deluded, then you want to be the person to tell them
that. “So . . .”
“It was in my head.” She hesitated, and then seemed to come to a
decision. “It was supposed to stop. But it hasn’t. I was stupid to believe
it would
ever
be taken off. That it even
could
. And yesterday evening . . .
I heard tapping on my window at the hospital.”
“Tapping?” I said, thinking of scratching sounds against the back
of my motel room. “What was it?”
“Gerry,” she said.
“Gerry?”
“He was perched on my windowsill. Outside. Like a big bird.”
I felt the skin of the back of my neck tighten.
188 Michael Marshall
“You know he wasn’t really there, right? And that you were on the
second fl oor of the building?”
She shrugged.
“What . . . was he doing?”
“He was looking in at me as if he had never loved me.” She glanced
away. “It’s why I had to leave the hospital. But it’s too late.”
“The day he died,” I said, trying to steer us back toward matters
I could comprehend. “Do you think he’d changed his mind about
something? You said that . . .”
But then there was a scream from behind us.
I turned to see a woman was backing away from the counter, star-
ing at the server behind it. The blue-haired girl was standing exactly
as she had been, hunched over the big coffee machine. But billows of
steam were coming out of it now. Far too much steam.
As the customer kept screaming, the girl slowly turned from the
machine. Her face was pure white. Her hands were bright red, held
out in front. When she came out from behind the counter you could
see the steam coming off them.
She looked sluggishly over at me as I got up and started toward
her.
I stopped, held up my hands to show I meant no harm. I remem-
bered her name—Jassie—and said it. She looked at me again, con-
fused, with a look of dislocation from everything around her.
“Why haven’t you got a
face
?” she said suddenly, backing away.
I don’t see how she could have mistaken my intentions, which
were simply to help, but her own features stretched into something
that must have been appalling to feel from within: her mouth falling
slack as if melting, eyes wide with utter distrust and horror, as if sud-
denly remembering that no one around her was real and everyone
meant her harm.
She tried to get away from me, not even in the direction of the
door, but stumbling toward the big picture window.
B A D T H I N G S 189
I want to believe that she tripped, but I don’t think that’s what
happened. She did collide heavily with one of the empty chairs—but
it wasn’t that which pitched her forward. She did it herself. She got to
within a yard of the big window and then threw herself headfi rst into
the glass. It shattered.
As her throat was borne down onto the jagged edge below, driven
by her momentum and weight, the window above collapsed into large,
vicious shards that sheered down into her back and neck and head and
smashed to oblivion into the fl oor around her.
It sounded like most of the world’s noises happening at once, and
then there was utter silence.
A few people got up immediately and ran out of the café. The rest
were frozen in place, staring at the remains of the window, the
beached shape straddling across the inside and outside, blood pooling
underneath it so fast it looked like fi lm speeded up. One arm and a leg
twitched briefl y, and for a moment it looked as through the girl was
trying to roll sideways, but then stillness came upon her body like a
rock sinking into water.
I’ve seen the moment of death often enough to know it—but evi-
dently you can recognize it fi rst time around. People started to cry
out then, to talk and shout. A couple got on their cell phones and
started barking at emergency operators.
Ellen meanwhile stared at the prone body with nothing more
than a look of blank resignation.
The woman who’d screamed was mired just outside on the side-
walk, hands fl uttering by her sides, evidently unable to move.
I walked quickly out to her. “What
happened
?”
The woman didn’t seem to grasp what I was asking until I
gently took hold of her shoulders and asked again. “What
happened
in there
?”
190 Michael Marshall
“I was just asking her if she was okay,” the woman said defensively,
staring back into the café, studiously keeping her eyes away from the
broken window. “I hadn’t been in for a couple days and Jassie’s usu-
ally so friendly and everything, and I thought she looked tired, or like
she’d lost weight or something, so I just asked if she was okay and she
didn’t say anything and then I saw that she was—”
She stopped, and looked at me. “Who are you? Do I even
know
you?”
I could hear the sound of a police siren, approaching fast. People
were starting to come out of other businesses and onto the sidewalk
now, slowly, heads tilted, as if approaching a box they’d been told they
should not open but were unable to resist. More people were coming
out of the café now, too, milling around outside. On the opposite
side of the street I saw two people come out of the Mountain View,
a young bartender and an older man in a dark roll-neck sweater—
whom I recognized.
The bartender acted like most of the other people did. The other
guy, however, jerked forward, as if he was going to throw up right there on the street. Then he turned and walked stiff-legged and fast
in the opposite direction, not looking back, his hands held up in front
of his face.
By the time I’d got back into the café, Ellen had disappeared. A
cop car came swinging around the corner and into Kelly Street. It
stopped with a screech outside and the sheriff and Deputy Greene
got out.
The deputy stared at the window of the coffee shop with distaste.
“Holy crap.”
The sheriff assessed the situation with a long sweep of his eyes,
and then spotted me. As Greene started to clear people out of the
way, Pierce strode over to where I was standing.
He spoke clearly and quietly. “I want you to get out of here, now.
Otherwise I’m going to arrest you. Do you understand?”
B A D T H I N G S 191
“Are you kidding me?”
“Does it look like it?”
It did not. “I saw that girl at the hospital,” I said, nonetheless.
“Jassie. The day Ellen Robertson had her accident. She was sitting by
herself in a room, with tears running down her face.”
Another police car came tearing around the corner. Pierce glanced
outside as two more cops jumped out. I recognized one of them as the
deputy Phil I’d briefl y met three years before. I could hear another
siren in the distance now, presumably paramedics.
“Your observation is noted,” he said. “Now get out of this town or
I swear to God you’ll regret it.”
I stepped back. “You’re welcome to it.”
He glared at me a moment longer, as if considering saying some-
thing else, but then turned to deal with the chaos unfolding behind
him in the street.
All I had to go on was the man’s throwaway of living a mile up the
road. I rejected a turn half a mile past our old house, and paused at
another a little farther along the other side of the road, but didn’t
see the vehicle I was looking for. A delayed reaction to what had just
happened in the coffee shop was making my movements strange
and jerky.
Two minutes later I came upon a driveway on the right, and
turned straight up it past a mailbox with the name Collins neatly
stenciled on the side. It occurred to me Carol and I had never driven
up the road this far in all the time we had lived here, and I couldn’t
imagine why. Sure, the area was full of interesting stuff to look at
and all of it lay in other directions, but it still seemed odd. I guess
there are some roads you don’t go down until something outside
your control takes you there. The drive curled around to the right
before eventually leading to a circle outside a recently constructed
house, twice as large and half as appealing as ours had been. Lined
up in front of a small, faux-barnlike structure were a compact, a
station wagon, and the dark green SUV. A car for every occasion. I
parked where I was blocking all three.
B A D T H I N G S 193
I rang the bell and the front door opened after a couple of min-
utes.
The man I’d seen outside the Mountain View had managed to
pull it together in the last forty minutes, and probably looked fi ne to
the outside world, including the wife and kids I could hear hooting
and laughing in some room beyond the hallway.
He was halfway into a good-neighborly smile before his face froze.
“Hey,” I said. “Don’t know if you remember me?” I left a beat be-
fore continuing. “We met a few days ago, outside that house for sale,
a mile down the road?”
“Right,” he said stiffl y, knowing this was not the last time he’d
seen me, and that I knew it, too. “Of course.”
“Richard, who is it?”
A woman came out of the kitchen and beamed in our direction.
She was whip-thin, around the same age as her husband, and looked
like someone who was well disposed to the world in general.
“Beginning to think I might be taking the property down the
road seriously,” I said, smiling at her but still talking to him. “Wanted
to ask a couple of questions about the area, before I get the family up
to take a look.”
“What kind of questions?” Collins said.
“Come in, come in,” his wife insisted, coming closer. “Coffee’s
just made.”
“That’s very kind, ma’am, but I’m real short on time. Just a quick
word is all I need.”
She rolled her eyes as if this was another of those funny things
that happened to her all the time, and retreated cheerfully back into
the house.
I stepped back from the front door and indicated for the man to
follow me.
“What do you want?” the man said quietly.
“A word with you. And I’m not leaving without it.”
194 Michael Marshall
He followed me halfway to where my car was parked, and then
stopped. “This is far enough.”
“You want to tell me what happened back in Black Ridge?”
“I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
“I saw you on Kelly Street. You come out of the bar when you
hear a commotion—and you’re close enough to see the color of the
hair of the girl who’s just smashed her head through a plate-glass
window. Instead of staring or turning away, you
run,
run exactly like a guy who’s trying to look like that’s not what he’s doing.
That’s
what I’m talking about.”
“It was . . . well, it was very upsetting.”
“Generically, or personally? Did you know Jassie?”
“No. Well, I knew her by sight, of course. I’ve had coffee in there