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Authors: Les Standiford

Tags: #Fiction / Mystery & Detective / General

Book Deal (2 page)

BOOK: Book Deal
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“…my hand is your hand…”

Her lower lip was caught in her teeth, her fingers truly were another’s as they probed and stroked…and yet something was nagging at her, fighting for attention: in your office, he had said. Had she slipped, had she told him where she was? She’d been so careful all these weeks, no clues, no hints…but perhaps he’d just assumed. It was natural, wasn’t it. He was in his office, so she’d be in hers…

She threw off the thoughts, silly, silly, found herself urging upward now, lifting herself out of her chair toward an avalanche of release as great as any she had ever known. She knew that she was speaking aloud now, any thought of typing a distant memory, but it did not matter, for Torsten would have joined her in his own turn, and they were connected over the vast, impossible stretches of ether…her very being had disintegrated, spread across this unknowable space, her consciousness filling with one explosion of light after the next.

“Oh, dear God,” she said, and might have spoken the words again, had she not heard from somewhere the sounds of the door lock clacking, the rush of feet upon carpet, the spoken reply.

“Harlot,” came the voice. “Blasphemer. Jezebel!” The words hissed in her ear.

At first the words meant nothing. They might have been elements of her fantasy, imagined sounds that barreled out of the tunnels of the ethernet along with the images of light and color that rocketed about her brain…

…and then she felt the arm about her throat, and realized that she was being pulled backward, brutally lifted from her seat, her ankles raking the spokes of her chair.

She would have screamed, but the arm was pressed too tightly against her throat, her chest burning, her strength so suddenly sapped that her kicks and thrashings seemed pitiful, even to her.

“Such a disappointment,” she heard, a voice, familiar now, ripe with bitterness. “Did you think I wouldn’t learn what you’d done? Did you think I’d let you threaten everything?”

She felt her heels fly over the back of the chair, felt them bounce against the soft carpet. He was holding her upright, pressed close to him now, and the pressure at her throat seemed even tighter. She fought to get a look at him, but the grip that held her was unyielding. She saw a shoulder, the shadow of a face, the glint of a poster on her wall, a train rolling through the heartland with a message that assured her that life was a journey and not a destination, and then her eyes had come unfocused, were rolling back in her head. The little ticks of sound, the untoward phrase, “
there, in your office
,” how had she let herself ignore the warnings?

“I trusted you,” he said, and his voice was nearly a sob. “I trusted you!”

He squeezed more tightly, and as she began to lose consciousness, she thought his voice had become mocking, echoing the words she had read moments before on her computer screen: “…what is the situation of your work,” he hissed. “…my hand is your hand!”

He was beyond outrage. “…godless…ungrateful… abomination…” The words cascaded in an unintelligible litany, and the words no longer mattered.

How had he known, she wondered? How could he have possibly known? And then, in the next terrible instant, though her mind thundered with agony, she knew the very worst.

That this very man, the man who held her, who squeezed the life from her body, who would kill her now…

…he was the one…he was the only one who could have known…


he
had sent those words…

The outrage of it burned through her, galvanized her into one final act of resistance. She drew up her foot, slammed it down hard on his instep. She heard him gasp with pain, felt his grip loosen. She brought her head forward, found the soft flesh of his hand, bit down as hard as she could. She shook her head violently, her teeth still fastened, until she heard him howl, and his hands flew away. She felt blessed air rush into her lungs, swung her elbow back, felt a satisfying crack as it struck his face.

She heard him cry out again, saw his shadow, cast by the glow of the computer screen, flash across the wall in front of her as he went down, tumbling over her desk, scattering files, the pictures of her family, the spray of summer flowers she’d learned to dry herself. She was already running for the door, her hands grappling for the handle, the metal slipping in her hands like some object from a dream you just can’t hold…

…until mercifully she had it, the door opened, slammed behind her, and she was out in the long hallway, alone. She glanced at the door helplessly—no way to secure it—then bolted away down the hall, her bare feet slapping the cool tile, echoes that died behind her as she run. Door after door flashed past her, bland titles, no comfort in any of them: Media Research, Communications Services, the several portals into Archives. She reached a broad intersection, hesitated, heard a door slam down the hallway behind her.

She drew a kind of sobbing breath, turned left, ran down the wide hallway toward the Convocation Center. A huge arena, two dozen exits there, out to the vast parking lot, her car…and then she remembered with a pang that nearly took her legs from under her: the keys. Yes. Still in the pocket of her coat, back in her office.

Her lungs were burning now, her side ached, her throat was raw. Footsteps pounded behind her and she had to keep going. Going somewhere.

She fastened her gaze on the big double doors fifty yards away and forced her rubbery legs to move. She could make it to the hall. And then she could get outside. And somehow she’d find help.

She glanced behind her, found her pursuer had not yet reached the turn. She turned back, thinking she had thirty yards, twenty-five…

If she could just make it through those doors before he saw her, perhaps she’d have a chance. She was gasping when she reached them, clawing at the handles, the first door unyielding, but the second—yes, yes, thank God—swinging open at her touch. She glanced back to see the hallway still empty, then she was through the doors and closing them quickly behind her.

She paused inside the silent cavern of the arena, steadying herself against a stand that held a marble baptismal font, a stack of collection plates, an usher’s candle damper in a notched sleeve. A series of life-sized saints, figures from biblical lore, and some characters who were the outright invention of the Reverend James Ray Willis seemed to stare down at her from their niches along the walls of the vast arena. All the accoutrements of salvation, she thought, none of them much good to her now. She’d lost her claim to grace, that was plain enough. She’d been found out, discovered wallowing in sin and degradation, proven herself unworthy, never mind that she’d been tricked. And damn it, that was still no reason to die.

Her breath thundered in her ears, and she forced herself to rest another moment, savoring the silence that surrounded her, the familiar tang of new carpet and bindery glue and whatever vague residue of beingness still hovered in the air from last Sunday’s visit: 10,000 faithful souls who’d come to hear James Ray Willis proclaim God’s word and would come again the next and the next.

She edged herself up to the tiny window set high in the door, used the breaker bar to balance on her tiptoes until finally she could see. There was a gold-filigree mesh that reinforced the glass and tinted it somehow, giving an undersea cast to the light that streamed through from beyond, but there was no mistaking it: the hallway lay glistening and empty. Perhaps she’d lost him after all. Perhaps he’d lost his nerve, was even now retreating…

She was almost dizzy with the possibility of safety when the face shot up before her, the twisted features no more than an inch away from her own. The snarl he gave when he saw her vibrated the glass between them, and she fell back screaming as the door began to buck in her hands.

She felt herself being pulled outward, into the hallway, and leaned back with everything she had, digging her toes into the carpeting for purchase. She managed to get the latch engaged again, and, still hanging desperately to the breaker bar, pulled the lock switch down by dragging her cheek painfully over it. She was still hanging to the bar when she heard glass shatter above her, and looked up to see his bloodied hand groping wildly her way.

She fell back, felt herself emitting little grunts that were as much expressions of rage as of fear. He gave up trying to reach her then, and began to paw about the inside of the door.
The latch
, she thought.
He’s going for the latch
.

She watched him grope about for a moment, feeling mesmerized, as if she were some poor bird caught in the gaze of a snake…and then her gaze landed on the baptismal font. She staggered to the stand, unsheathed the brass candle damper, and found it satisfyingly heavy. She measured herself, drew back then, and swung, closing her eyes at the moment the thing struck home and his scream echoed down the long hallway outside.

She listened to the curses and moans issuing through the broken window for a moment, realizing that she’d managed to peel away a layer of skin on her own cheek, but the pain and the trickle of blood were nothing to her now. She tossed aside the heavy candle damper and ran up one of the broad aisleways toward a glowing exit sign.

She banged through the swinging doorways into the atrium, and stifled another scream when she saw the figure standing in front of her, hand extended in a gesture of fellowship. A cardboard cutout of the Reverend James Ray Willis, welcoming all who approached into the blessed fold. She slammed the thing aside with a swipe of her arm, sent it tumbling into the always babbling Stream of Mercy that coursed the granite inlay of the entry.

She hurried across the chilly slabs, banged against the breaker bar at the central bank of glass doors and staggered out into the crystal-cold midwestern night. She nearly wept at the sight of her little red sedan, nestled under a vapor light at the edge of the nearby parking lot, for she had remembered something in there as she completed the arc of her candle damper swing: her father’s practical voice echoing in her ears as he handed her another of the gizmos he was fond of bestowing on his children. “You put yourself a key in this magnetized little box here, stick it up under the fender like so, you’ll never have to worry about locking yourself out again.” No matter that she’d never done such a thing in her life, and that he never had either, better safe than sorry his motto, and wasn’t she happy for that now.

She ran across the strip of brittle grass, her bare feet going fiery with the frost that lay there, the pain easing as she reached the warmer asphalt. Moments later, she was kneeling at the rear bumper, her hands groping through a crust of dirt and road grime coating its under edge. Five years since she’d stuck it “just so,” but magnets didn’t wear out with time, did they?

Right beneath the license plate, wasn’t that where she’d left it? Or was it the gas cap? Or the trunk lock? She’d nearly given up, was ready to run on across the lot, not more than a mile out to the highway and there would surely be someone to help there, even at this hour…when her hand found the little case under a mound of dried mud and she wrenched it free, shearing off one of her fingernails in the process.

She tried to open the rusted case without success, banged it a couple of times against the asphalt, tried again. She held the thing to the light, realized she was pushing the top of the case in the wrong direction. This time pried it back at the cost of another nail. Key in her palm now—
safe, safe, I’m going to be safe
—she rose and, seeing the lights of a car approaching across the vast expanse of parking lot—it couldn’t be him, no way it could be him—and ran to the door of her faithful sedan and felt her feet strike a patch of ice on the asphalt.

She fell so quickly she hardly had time to brace herself. One hand struck the ground, sending a bolt of pain up her wrist, her cheek bouncing off the ice. She lay stunned for a moment, blinking as the lights of the approaching car washed over her.
Key
, she thought,
key
! And felt the key still clutched in her good hand. She tried to scramble to her knees, but her wrist crumpled and she was down again, her face, her lips, dragging the asphalt as she desperately scooted and clawed.

A car door opened and slammed closed. “Here, here,” she heard from somewhere above her. A woman’s voice, soothing, kind. She caught a glimpse of sensible black shoes, stockings that ended at the knee, a hemline of dotted Swiss. It might have been her grandmother, someone’s grandmother, she was thinking…and then felt hands lifting her up.

“What’s all this?” the woman’s voice came to her. She stared at the woman, who propped her against the door of her idling car. It
was
a grandmother: felt hat, crumpled veil, spray of flowers. And there was another figure coming out of the driver’s side and through the glow of headlights: a tall, gaunt, balding man in an ill-fitting dark suit, the very uniform of a farmer-parishioner, and that was the stock in trade of the Reverend James Ray Willis.

She felt a surge of relief, safe now among the salt of the earth. “I’m all right,” she managed.

“Of course you are, dearie,” the woman said. She turned to her husband then and smiled. “She says she’s all right, hon.”

“Why, heck, yes, she is,” the man said, and he was wearing the same smile.

“Wait,” she said. “Are you…?” But she would never finish the thought. For there was an arm about her throat once again. And a terrible pressure. And a bombshell of light that loosed her across the skein of space at last.

***

The next service, a Saturday, they arrived early, found seats in the vast center section of the Convocation Center, on eye level with the pulpit. These were the best seats, they’d decided, trial and error over the past several months. Sitting elsewhere, you could get the effect, sort of, but it was a lot like trying to watch a big-screen TV from the corner of a room.

“It’s a waste of time getting here so early just to sit,” the tall man told his wife.

“Did you have something better to do?” she asked him.

“We got us traveling on our agenda. We could be at the airport, watching this on TV.”

BOOK: Book Deal
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