Authors: Michael Marshall
Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Suspense, #Mystery & Detective, #General
I went over to where Tyler was, and squatted down. I could hear
him shifting away as I approached, and sparked the lighter so he could
see my face.
“It’s okay,” I said.
“My mommy’s sad.”
B A D T H I N G S 291
“Yeah.”
“Why?”
“She’s just sad,” I said. “Sometimes that’s how it is. Will you stay
and look after her?”
“Where are you going?”
“I need to look around.”
“But it’s too dark.”
“I know. But I used to live here. You . . . you did, too. You won’t
remember.”
“Mommy said I did. I was very smaller.”
“That’s right. Much smaller.” Looking down at this face, at the
face of someone who should have been my boy, was making me feel
dead. “Give your mom a hug now, okay?”
“Okay.”
I started by confi rming which room we were in. I’d assumed it
was the main living area, and I’d been correct. The much-vaunted ca-
thedral ceiling towered over where we’d been sitting. I believed Carol
when she said she’d already checked out the building, but I knew she
must have done it with a child in tow, and I thought there was no
harm in me looking again.
I didn’t know what to think about what Carol had said, and I didn’t
know how much longer we were going to be left here. I just wanted
to be doing. I needed to do something other than deal with the fact I
was in a house where I used to live, with a boy who was half mine and
a woman I had loved but now barely recognized—and who was either
crazy or telling me things I found hard to fi t into the world.
I started by tracing my way around all the walls along the front of
the building. I moved quickly and did not linger in any room, espe-
cially not my study. Every window was sealed tight, as I knew seeing
it from the outside on the fi rst day I’d been in Black Ridge. I was soon
back in the main area.
“Carol—how many of them are there?”
She didn’t say anything.
292 Michael Marshall
“Carol, I need to know.”
Her voice fl oated to me out of the dark, muffl ed by her arms.
“You really don’t get it, do you?”
I went back feeling my way along the walls. My point had been
that yes, I could break the glass of one of these windows, and then try
kicking out the boards. But they’d been nailed on hard, and it could
take a while and make a lot of noise. If there were people with weap-
ons outside, I’d get shot. I had no idea how many people had taken
me in the parking lot. Carol had said two guys had come for them in
Renton, but that didn’t mean that’s all there was.
It randomly struck me that without my phone I couldn’t receive
a call from the two guys looking for Kyle and Becki, and realized it
would have made sense to have got one of
their
numbers, had I not
been too preoccupied with hiding the fact I was half convinced they
were going to drop me right there in the road. Wasn’t anything I
could do about that now. About that or much else.
Everything was pretty fucked up.
I’d gone almost the whole way around the ground level, moving more
quickly as I realized what a waste of time it was, when I remembered
something I’d noticed from the outside, on my fi rst visit to the house
after coming up to Black Ridge.
I left the outside wall and felt my way across the middle toward
the side of the house that faced the driveway. This took me through
the area I’d once thought of as Scott’s domain, the nonspace in the
hall he used to colonize. I was glad it was dark. In the weeks in which
we’d remained in the house after he died, I’d gone to some trouble to
avoid passing through here. I didn’t want to be able to see it now.
“Carol, I’m going to go try something.”
There was no reply.
I went down the stairs to the lower level. It can’t actually have
been darker down there, but it seemed so. I felt my way past the room
B A D T H I N G S 293
that had served as Carol’s offi ce, then one that had been earmarked as
a den for the boys when they got big enough, and took a left off the
corridor into the utility area.
I knew this had been emptied and swept and scrubbed before we
left, but when I lit my lighter I still expected to see what I’d recalled
on my fi rst visit, shelves stacked with slices of life.
I let it go out again and saw something else, however—a very
faint sliver of light, coming from the corner of the window in the
small storage area at the end of the utility room. It would still take a
while, but at least this window had been started from the outside.
I navigated my way back up to the main room.
“I’m going to try to make a way out,” I told Carol.
“Rah rah for you.”
“Carol . . .”
Truth was I didn’t feel I had much to say to her. With every min-
ute that passed, the things she’d told me sank in a little further, and
while that didn’t mean I believed she’d done anything that had caused
Scott to die . . . I didn’t know what I felt for her, or about her.
I went back downstairs.
I took off my jacket and wrapped it around my arm. Planted my feet
and jabbed my elbow into the bottom of the windowpane. Nothing
happened the fi rst time, but on the second it broke. I froze, putting
my head close to the window and listening for sounds outside. I could
hear the wind, but nothing more.
I tapped my elbow again a couple of times higher up the pane,
using my foot to sweep the fallen glass to one side. Even in the dark
I felt as if I could almost see the fresher air seeping into the room. I
realized I had no idea what time it was, but from the shade of the line
of light at the bottom of the window, I guessed it was getting dark.
I couldn’t see where the nails had been banged into the frame, so I
just rapped my elbow around at regular intervals. Not much happened
294 Michael Marshall
in the way of movement. I couldn’t remember, hadn’t noticed when
I’d been outside, whether it had been secured with nails or screws. If
it was the latter then the boards weren’t going anywhere without be-
ing broken.
I grabbed hold of the frame on either side and placed my heel into
the bottom corner. I pushed against it. I thought it gave, a little.
There was still no noise from the outside apart from something
that sounded like rain.
I kept pushing with my foot, methodically.
Finally, just when she believed her head was going to burst, when
she felt like she was
actually going to go nuts,
Becki caught sight of somewhere she recognized.
She didn’t know how long she’d been running, lost in the streets
and the rain. Couldn’t understand how it had even
happened
. Okay,
the roads were at weird angles to one another, like no one had a
ruler when they built this place and just slashed out a design with
a knife, but it was a small town, hardly bigger than Marion Beach.
She’d driven up and down it the night before and she
knew
what a
sorry-ass little place it was and more or less how it fi tted together.
So how the hell couldn’t she fi nd her way?
How come every turn she took seemed to lead her down a street
of houses that looked exactly the same as the one she’d just left,
but somehow wasn’t? She was wasted, she knew that, exhausted and
freaked out like never before in her life, and maybe the dead woman
on the bed and the psycho maid had been a little too much—but it
seemed like once you were tangled in this place, it didn’t want you
to get out again.
Plus now John was gone.
The one guy who’d had her back through all the crap of the last
296 Michael Marshall
week had disappeared. She didn’t know for sure, but she feared that
the white truck she’d seen hammering out of the bank parking lot
might have had something to do with that.
She’d tried calling his cell phone, had tried again about every ten
minutes since, but there was no reply and that scared her even more.
Except for last night, when she gathered he’d had shit to deal with,
John
always
answered when she called. He was always there. For her,
for her dad, for whoever. If he wasn’t there now, it could only mean
bad things.
And there was the emptiness. It was only late afternoon, for God’s
sake, but it was like everyone had decided to call it a day already.
There was hardly
anyone
on the streets, on foot or in cars, and those few who remained seemed to be scurrying home as if jerked there
on long ropes. She tried calling out to a couple of them. Either they
didn’t hear, or they ignored her. Went inside, shut the door, good-
bye. The town hadn’t looked like a bundle of laughs the night before,
but at least it had seemed
open
. Right now it was as if it was going into hibernation, forever—as if Becki was some pet that had been caught
outside with a bad storm coming, whose owners had decided that be-
ing safe indoors was more important, and hell, they could always get
a new dog.
She tried John’s phone, again. Once more it just rang and rang.
She shoved her cell back into her jeans and started to walk, taking
one turn and then another onto a street she was
sure
she’d been down
before, but that’s when she saw the strip of familiar lights ahead, and
started to run.
As she came to the top of Kelly Street she was dismayed to see that
pretty much everything seemed to be shut here, too. An Irish bar—
shut. Burger place—shut. What was going
on
? Was it some local
fucking holiday she didn’t know about?
Where the hell
was
everybody?
B A D T H I N G S 297
Then fi nally she spotted someone. A real live person, halfway
down the street, near the pizza restaurant where John had material-
ized the night before. Someone was standing under an awning there
by themselves, smoking, not looking as if they were right about to
go hide someplace. For a wonderful moment Becki thought it might
even
be
John, but quickly realized the silhouette was far too thin, and had long hair.
She kept running anyway, and called out. Anyone was better than
nobody. The fi gure heard her shouting, and looked in her direction.
Becki realized who it was, and called out again.
“Wait,” she said, when she got closer, and saw that the woman was
looking at her like she was a lunatic. “Please, I saw you last night. You
were in the restaurant with him, right? You came out, and said you’d
paid, or something, and then went away? Remember?”
“You mean . . . John?”
“Yes! They’ve got him,” Becki said. “They’ve
got John
.”
“Who has?”
“I don’t
know
.” She started crying. Didn’t want to, but couldn’t
stop. “I DON’T KNOW ABOUT ANYTHING.”
The woman put a cold hand on her shoulder. “It’s okay. Just
tell—”
“It’s
not
okay. There’s a dead person in his room. Someone put it
there and there’s this maid who doesn’t seem to care, and is, just like,
insane
, and they left an envelope full of stuff and John saw it and then
he just took off
. I tried to keep up with him but I couldn’t, but I saw where he was headed and before I got there this truck came out and
when I got there he just wasn’t
there
.”
The woman didn’t look right. Not shocked, or freaked out. She
just looked sad. And odd.
“Look—are you
hearing
this?”
“Who was the dead person?”
“The dead . . . How the fuck would I know? I think . . . I think I
heard him say the name Ellen.” Becki wiped her eyes savagely with
298 Michael Marshall
the back of her fi sts, and looked directly at the woman’s pale, bony
face and sharp eyes. “Why don’t you look even
surprised
?”
“Forget about what’s back at the motel,” the woman said, drop-
ping her cigarette to the sidewalk. “Courtney’s lost. She won’t tell
anyone.”
“Lost? What are you talking about? She’s the maid. She’s right
fucking
there
.”
“I meant it differently. She won’t say anything. She can’t. Don’t
worry.”
“Are you
nuts
?”
The woman pulled a folded-up piece of paper out of her purse and
glanced at it.
“Have you tried to call John?”
“Yes, of course.”
The woman tried anyway, and got the same result as Becki had,
and
fi nally
started to look like the gravity of the situation was getting into her head.
She put her phone back into her jacket, her eyes over Becki’s
shoulder.
“Friends of yours?”
Becki turned, and saw that things had, unbelievably, gotten even
worse.
She started to back away, then realized she didn’t have it in her to run
anymore, especially when she saw there was someone already in the
back of the large, black GMC idling up the street toward them.
“No,” she said dully. “But they’ve got my boyfriend.”
The car pulled over to the curb and the passenger door opened.
A wiry black guy got out, a man Becki recognized all too well. The