Crosscut (45 page)

Read Crosscut Online

Authors: Meg Gardiner

Tags: #USA

BOOK: Crosscut
12.69Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
All right, dumb-ass, any more bright ideas?
Above in the atrium he heard Coyote running. Her footsteps halted, and two floors above him that deathly pale face leaned over the railing and stared down. She pulled back and he heard a door being thrown open. She was coming down the stairs.
The elevator doors slid shut, bumping the janitor’s cart. He tried to push it out onto the walkway, putting his shoulder into it, but the cart was too heavy. He heard the stairwell door bang open. Grabbing a broom from the cart, he backed against the rear wall, jammed the brush against the cart, and shoved. The cart skittered out onto the walkway. He tossed the broom against the window and pushed
close
. Fast. A bunch of times.
Here she came.
She stared at the amulet around his neck, her teeth bared. He hit
close
again and the doors inched toward each other. She lunged.
The doors shut. Coyote’s arm was jammed between them. The knife was out, the point ten inches from his face. With every ounce of strength, he swung the tire iron.
The sound cracked in the air, and her wrist and hand skewed, deforming at an angle below her elbow.
Through the slit in the doors she glared at him. The doors should have opened autmatically, but instead kept pressing closed on her. She tried to push them open, using her upper arm. Her hand and wrist sagged but she held on to the knife. The door began wedging wider. Oh, shit.
He slammed the tire iron against her arm again and again. She growled, now trying to wedge her shoulder in the doors. He hit her again, bringing the iron down like a sledgehammer. The knife dropped from her fingers. Her hand retreated out of sight. The doors closed.
Holy fuck.
The leg, the arm, none of it mattered. She was impervious. Unless he killed her or fried her central nervous system, she would simply keep coming.
He hit the control panel and the elevator began to rise. Outside the glass, Coyote’s translucent face appeared. She watched the elevator pull away, her head tilting back, freaky eyes following him.
She opened her mouth and wailed.
The sound made his skin shrink. He turned his head, trying to swallow, and saw the floor.
“Yes.”
The hunting knife lay in front of him. He grabbed it and pressed six. Leaning back, he tried to catch his breath. Outside, the view soared over the atrium.
Oh, God. He slapped his hand against the glass.
Leaning over the walkway railing to see who was howling was Angie Delaney.
He pounded on the glass. “Angie.”
She looked up, spotted him, and her mouth opened in surprise.
He pointed upward, yelling, “Evan’s on six!”
He slapped his hands to the window again: five fingers and one finger. She disappeared from his view. The elevator continued rising.
Two floors above Angie, staring down over the railing, her face knotted with anger, stood Maureen Swayze.
37
My hands throbbed, numb. The tape bit painfully into my skin. But what was unbearable was the quiet.
All the sounds I’d heard earlier had been overcome by jagged sobs and the words whispering from my lips. “Our Father, who art . . .”
Hell, what was the rest of it?
“In heaven. Hallowed . . .” If I could recite the rest of it, I wouldn’t go insane. If I could get to that part about
deliver us from evil
, then maybe . . .
I heard Coyote wailing.
I cringed my knees together. Come to me, prayer. Come on.
I’m on a highway to hell.
. . . The elevator call button chimed.
I looked and saw Jesse come around the corner.
All my defenses evaporated. I erupted in tears. “Oh, my God.”
He had a knife in his hand. An enormous, serrated knife. He was winded and his hands were shaking. He began sawing at the tape that bound me to the pillar.
“What happened?” I said.
“Got this from her.”
My voice was racked with tears and astonishment. “Got it? Simple as that?”
“Broke her arm with the tire iron, but that won’t stop her. She’ll be coming.”
Concentrating, he fought to steady his hands and sawed into the tape above my wrists.
“Your mom’s downstairs. She’s okay,” he said.
He kept sawing as I broke into another bout of tears. He looked at me, ragged.
“I hope,” he said.
With one last shove of the knife, he cut through the tape. I swung my arms down and he helped me sit up. Blood and sensation flooded painfully back to my hands. I struggled to my knees and fell against him.
He clutched me. “Can you walk?”
“Don’t know; she Tasered me twice.” My voice dropped. “I wet my pants.”
“Join the club.”
I couldn’t tell if he was joking. I tried to get my feet under me and stand up. I wobbled and stayed put on the floor.
“Not working yet,” I said.
“Climb on.”
He jammed the knife and tire iron behind his back and pulled me onto his lap. He was joking about the pants, I realized. He was simply spooked half out of his head. With me slumped against him he turned and carted us back toward the elevator, swerving around paint buckets and sawhorses. My limbs felt weak and tingly. Working at it, I made a fist. Control was returning, but strength was still distant. We rounded the corner and I saw the elevator door jammed open with the potted plant. Jesse wheeled in and muscled the plant out of the way. His shirt was clinging to him and he was breathing hard. He pushed the button for the lobby.
“Anybody out there’s going to be able to see us coming down,” he said. “Can you hold the knife?”
I squeezed my hand again, wondering if I could grip it. The doors began to chug closed.
Ding
. Next to us the second elevator stopped. When we looked we couldn’t see anybody inside, but then the doors opened, and we heard them.
A woman was shrieking. “Shit. Fuck.”
“Get off—”
Thudding sounds and a slap and a loud crash racked out of the elevator, and a cry of shock, pain, and surprise. Mom and Swayze rolled out onto the floor in the walkway.
They were grappling, clawing, pulling hair, and kicking and biting each other. Swayze’s glasses were gone and one side of her face was red, her eye swollen shut. Mom’s forehead was bleeding and her blouse was ripped open.
I jumped off Jesse’s lap, lunging for them, and fell smack on my face. Jesse shoved his way around me out to the walkway.
“Stick the broom in the door,” he said.
“Swayze has the Glock.”
I sloshed around, got my hand on the broom, and tipped it into the doorway so the elevator couldn’t leave without us. And so that Coyote couldn’t get up here in it. Fighting to my knees, I crawled out of the car.
On the floor ten feet away, Swayze punched Mom in the mouth. Mom clawed at Swayze’s face. It was so swollen on the right side that I knew Mom had pepper-sprayed her. Swayze kicked Mom and rolled away, scrambling to her feet. I saw Jesse swing the tire iron, hard, and Swayze drop. She howled and grabbed for him. Mom pulled at Swayze’s lab coat and Swayze wriggled out of it, twisting free. I saw the Glock slide out of the pocket and Swayze swing at Jesse and Jesse trying to get the knife from behind his back and to keep control of the tire iron and not get dumped on the floor. And I saw Mom come up with the Taser.
She jammed it against Swayze’s shoulder, yelling, “Jesse, clear.”
He raised his hands. Mom fired.
Nothing happened.
They held still for a second, looking at the Taser.
Swayze backhanded Mom into Jesse and turned, looking for the gun. I crawled toward them.
“Pocket,” I said.
They didn’t hear me. Swayze fell toward the Glock.
“Mom, her lab coat. The pocket.”
Swayze came up with the Glock. “The Taser’s out of power from making Evan piss herself. There’s not enough juice left for you to shave your legs with.”
Mom was on Swayze’s right side. Swayze couldn’t see Mom stick her hand in the pocket of the lab coat and discover the syringe.
Swayze racked the slide on the Glock. Clutching the syringe, Mom jammed her in the calf and pushed the plunger.
Swayze stared, appalled, gasping. She dropped the gun and pulled the syringe out. Grabbing her leg, she fell in a ball on the floor, screaming. Mom staggered back.
Crawling to Jesse’s side, I pulled myself to my feet. My legs held. I reached out.
“Mom.”
She seized hold of me. On the floor Swayze convulsed. Her head jerked and her eyes rolled back to whites.
Jesse backed into the wedged elevator door. “Come on.”
I faltered after him, clinging to Mom. “I can’t believe you did that.”
Mom stared at her. “She set Coyote loose on your class.” She pulled me toward the elevator, but I hesitated. The Glock lay on the floor beyond Swayze, just outside the door of the second elevator. I needed to get it, but I didn’t want to get close to her. Her face was blue. Bloody foam frothed from between her lips. Her limbs were slamming the floor.
If I stuck close to the wall I could pick my way around her. Letting go of Mom, I took a step.
The bell for the second elevator chimed. The door yawed open, and out stepped Coyote.
 
Even with her hair shorn, her face scratched, and her arm grotesquely broken, she was striking. Androgynous, and wounded, and intent.
“Ev.”
Jesse pulled on the back of my shirt, dragging me into the elevator. Coyote attacked.
Her shin crunched and slipped when she put her foot down. She fell to her knees. I tangled with the broom handle and stumbled, landing on my butt in the doorway. I crab-crawled backward as the doors began to close, but Jesse and my mom were behind me and there wasn’t room. Hands in, butt in, left foot in.
“You.” She crawled toward me and grabbed my right foot. “You belong to me.”
The door closed, hit my calf, and came open again. Coyote sank her nails into my ankle. With her one usable arm, she began hauling me out of the elevator. She was wickedly strong.
“Jesse, help.”
He grabbed my collar but Coyote was pulling, and that meant she pulled him along with me. I tried to clear the broom from the door but managed only to get it upright. The door shut on my leg again, and this time it stayed closed. What was wrong with these stupid elevators? Outside, Coyote’s voice rose.
“You took my life. You’re mine.”
“Jesse, I’m stuck.” I put my other foot against the door and pushed.
The elevator lurched downward, dropping two solid feet and jerking to a halt. The broom handle, jammed upright in the door, shattered.
Coyote held on. The malfunctioning door stayed closed. My leg was stuck.
“Jesse, this is urgent.”
“I don’t have any leverage. Ev, push.”
“I am pushing. Shit. Shit.” I put everything I had into shoving with my left leg. The door squeezed my shin. Outside, Coyote growled.
Mom climbed around Jesse and braced herself, foot up on the wall of the compartment, hands hauling on the door, trying to open it.
“The tire iron,” I shrieked. “Use it. Leverage.”
She grabbed it from Jesse and wedged it in the four-inch space between the doors and yowled and threw all her hundred pounds against it. The car dropped again. The doors began crawling open.
Yes. I saw my leg. I saw the carpet outside. I saw Coyote’s face. And her good hand, wrapped around my ankle like a bear trap. The doors gradually spread wider, and she looked at me as if I were the meal she’d been waiting for all winter, and she pulled.
“No, no.” I began sliding out again.
Jesse grabbed me with one arm, hanging onto his wheel with the other. “Angie, help.”
The doors closed again on my knee. Above me Jesse and Mom pulled, groaning, trying to get me back inside the car.
Coyote’s hand tightened on my ankle and the car shuddered, the cables groaning. I screamed, knowing what was going to happen in a few more seconds. If my leg stayed stuck I would be mangled to bonemeal.
Jesse yelled, “One, two, three!”
He and Mom pulled, one last almighty effort, and hauled me back. My knee appeared. My calf. My ankle, with Coyote’s hand still gripping it. The car went down. My foot appeared. In Jesse’s hand, the knife appeared.
I shut my eyes. “Do it.”
I felt the blow, the huge momentum behind his swing. I felt blood and pain. I pulled myself back into the elevator.
The car lurched and motored downward with a long, hard drop, as though a gallows door had fallen open. It bounced and danced on the cables and kept going down, the motors humming. Opening my eyes, I kicked and squirmed and pulled my knees up, panting. My ankle was slashed and bruised but still hooked to my leg.
Jesse pushed back. Mom shrank against the glass. I inched back to the wall. We all stared at Coyote’s severed fingers.
They lay glistening in a row on the floor, still attached to the knuckles, blood pooling around them. Jesse had taken off the end of her hand. He put the back of his wrist against his mouth as though suppressing his gag reflex.
“Holy shit,” I said.
They had nothing to add to that.
“Thank you. Both of you.”
The lights flickered. The elevator stopped humming, started again, and slowed. We looked at the numbers and saw three, M2, M1. The car stopped with a thunk and bounced on the cables. The call button pinged and the doors stammered partway open. We were on the mezzanine, and the car was three feet higher than the walkway outside. We were stuck.
 
I pushed
close
,
open
, and
lobby
. Neither the doors nor the elevator car budged an inch.
“Go,” Jesse said. “Get out and start running.”
“What are you going to do?” I said.
He nudged forward. His wheels just fit between the doors. “Jump.”

Other books

Everything by Williams, Jeri
Winter of the Wolf Moon by Steve Hamilton
Run the Day by Davis, Matthew C.
And So To Murder by John Dickson Carr
California Dream by Kara Jorges
Change of Heart by Jodi Picoult
Christmas Moon by J.R. Rain
Sanctuary of Roses by Colleen Gleason