“That's odd,” Rebecca said, cocking her head slightly as she absorbed the news, or the lack of it.
“Yes,” Julie confirmed, trying to smile.
Â
“This is certainly the oddest day on record.
Â
Can you excuse us now, Rebecca?”
“You're helping out here, are you, Julie?”
“Yes, I am.”
“Can I help too, then?
Â
It sounds like you need it.”
“You can stay here and answer the phone, if you like,” I proposed.
Â
I closed the top drawer of the desk, then opened a bottom drawer to withdraw the phone book I found there.
Â
“Here . . . you can call everyone in town and tell them what I just told you.
Â
And be sure to tell them not to panic, it's probably nothing.
Â
We're just taking precautions.
Â
Okay?”
Rebecca
Crim
circled around us to finally sit at the desk.
Â
“Okay, anything I can do to help, I will.
Â
But you're sure this isn't related to what Pastor
Felsen
called everybody about?”
“What do you mean?”
“Only that he wanted to have everybody meet at the church.”
Â
She looked at her watch.
Â
“Less than an hour from now, in fact.”
I looked at Julie, then back at Rebecca.
Â
“About the water, you mean?”
She shook her head.
Â
“No, he didn't mention water.”
“Okay, then call people back and you mention it for him.”
Along with the binoculars and camera, I took my file, containing Jeffers' phone number and the fax printout of my face.
Â
We almost made it to the door when Rebecca stopped us.
Â
“Wait!”
We both froze, then turned back in unison to see the black phone receiver now held high in Rebecca's hand.
Â
It was being twisted vigorously in the air as if God Himself was on the line.
“What is it?” I asked.
“It's the phone,” Mrs.
Crim
replied.
But having heard no ringing, Julie and I only exchanged perplexed glances.
Â
“What about it?” Julie asked at last.
“Well, unless I'm mistaken,” Rebecca declared, “it's dead.”
We excused ourselves, and left Mrs.
Crim
standing at the door.
Â
Once in the alley beside the building, Julie gripped my arm, stopping me.
Â
I turned to face her, but she didn't speak.
Â
There was a harder cast to her face now, as though she was holding back panic by force of will.
Â
She deserved more than what I gave her.
Â
“I know, I know, I should have called the police in Creston or Des Moines when I had the chance,” I said.
Â
“Go ahead, you can slap me if you want to.
Â
Might wake me up from this nightmare.”
“What's really going on here?” she asked.
Â
“What's happening?”
“I told you my theory, and I think it's a good one.
Â
But I don't trust that the whole truth will come out at some town meeting, and so we have to get out of here, and get help.”
“But I can't do that.
Â
I can't be involved in this.”
I stared at her, dumbfounded.
Â
“You're already involved, Julie.
Â
Everyone is.”
She bit at her lower lip, turning to look back toward the street behind her.
Â
An elderly couple was walking past the barber shop toward the church, holding hands.
Â
“Rebecca really isn't herself today,” she said, as though trying to convince herself.
“Do you meanâ”
“I mean she's usually a one hundred percent unrepentant bitch.”
“Oh, that's what you mean.”
“I mean she might have stolen the pennies off her dead mother's eyes.”
“Really.
Â
Her?”
“Yes, her.
Â
She looks dazed, too, like she's on drugs.
Â
Like Cody.
Â
Is that a symptom of your virus?”
I shook my head.
Â
“No, it's not.
Â
But maybe they put something else in the water.
Â
A barbiturate, and an anti-inflammatory.
Â
Something to make it work, this time.”
“Work how?
Â
To do what?”
“That's the question.
Â
My experiments with worms was a failure, and I don't know why.
Â
I can't really say more.
Â
You have to trust me.”
She thought about that.
Â
“Trust you?
Â
I don't know if I should, even for this.
Â
How can I?
Â
Rebecca doesn't even know about me, and the few who do won't tell her.”
“What is there to know, exactly?” I asked, and then, seeing her look, added: “Never mind that.
Â
Let's find a car.
Â
We're wasting time.”
I went looking as Julie followed me stiffly, staring along the quiet street.
Â
“This is a good town,” she said from behind me, her voice almost pleading.
Â
“Why would they pick Zion to do whatever they're doing?”
I started to say that it might be for the same reason she was hiding hereâits nondescript remotenessâbut I checked myself.
Â
Instead of offering up some pathetic attempt at relief with levity, I let the question go unanswered.
Â
Then, just as I was about to call to the elderly couple ahead of us, they disappeared into the church.
Â
“Maybe George is in there already,” I said, thinking about his car.
“George never goes in there.”
“Maybe not on Sunday, but what about Saturday?”
Â
Or Judgment Day.
We heard music coming from inside the church, as the door opened and closed.
Â
Julie looked directly at me, then over my shoulder, as something caught her eye.
Â
“Speaking of the devil,” she said.
I followed her line of sight.
Â
In the distance two men emerged from the foliage at the base of the distant hill.
Â
Cody, and . . . Sean?
Already hearing hell's bells ringing in my mind, I ushered Julie quickly around to the front of the building with the back of my hand to the small of her back.
Â
“Find out what's happening, and if you think it's safe to say it, tell everybody not to drink any more water.”
“No, I'm coming with you.”
I shook my head.
Â
“You can't, Julie.
Â
You said so yourself.
Â
Besides, I may need you to bail me out of jail again.”
“What about Rebecca?
Â
She knows I'm involved.”
I glanced back at the Sheriff's office.
Â
“Take her to church with you, then.”
“But I doubt she's ever gone there before in her life!”
“She's a changed woman, now.
Â
Remember?
Â
She's found religion at last, thanks to my Satan bug.”
“Your
what?”
As I ran north along Main street, and out into the corn, I imagined the conversation Cody and Sean might be having.
What's his name, Sheriff?
Alan Dyson.
Â
From Virginia.
Â
I was gonna call his employer and verify.
No need to do that, Sheriff.
Â
I know him, and he's harmless.
Â
Let him go.
You know him?
About him.
Â
Met him the other day, thought he was a birder too, just passing through.
Â
Just another nut case, though, really.
Â
Said he was looking for UFOs.
Â
I didn't believe him either.
In the field behind the Shell station I
zigged
and
zagged
through the neck-high corn for ten minutes before I got lucky.
Â
Then I added the gun I'd tossed the night before to my collection of binoculars and camera, and walked back to confront Wally once again.
Â
But Wally was gone.
Â
Ditto, my rented car.
Â
The car under which the fake legs had been rolled was an Escort, not a Taurus.
Â
Same color, though.
There was half a glass of iced tea on Wally's desk in the office.
Â
I stared at the melting ice for a moment, considering the ramifications, then I picked up the phone.
Â
That was dead too.
Â
No dial tone.
Â
Nothing.
Â
Searching the desk drawers, I found bullets instead of keys.
Â
So I reloaded the revolver, then went out back to look at Wally's tow truck.
Â
Of course I knew less about hot-wiring than I knew about women.
Â
Or Walter Mills.
Â
Experiencing a wave of hypertensive frustration, I craved more
Xanax
, or even
Halcion
, which in turn reminded me of Darryl's advice.
Â
Wake up and smell the dark roast, buddy.
Â
Break
outta
this jail you're in, find a woman, get a life.
Leaving the truck, I walked cautiously out into the deserted street.
Â
As I considered going to church to see if Julie had a car, I looked from south to north toward the distant bend in the road.
Â
But the questions that mounted in my brain felt like water building behind a makeshift dam.
Damn.
Â
The word ballooned, and echoed.
Â
Had Wally gone to Creston or Des Moines with the Taurus?
Â
Exactly how long would it be before some other lost soul rolled into town?
Â
I imagined waving over a passing driverâa tourist looking for bridges to photograph, maybe.
Â
Or a birder.
Â
Or a lost trucker . . .
Hey, buddy, can you give me a ride to the nearest working phone?
Â
The phones are dead here, and the people are under the influence of something that apparently makes them go to Baptist church on Saturday.
I stood dumbly in the middle of the road, waiting for answers as though waiting was my new profession.
Â
But no car came.
Â
The dead road remained dead.
Â
Only the bark of a distant dog and a faraway squealâlike a pig being stuckâmet my ears, while the sun steadily dropped toward the corn to the west.
Then a flash of light attracted me.
Â
I turned my head slightly toward where the mid afternoon sunlight heliographed off something atop the water tower on the hill.
Â
I stared at, and then squinted at . . . what?
Evidence.
Quickly, I lifted the binoculars, and turned the focusing screw.
Â
Between the branches of a tall maple tree I could see something metallic and shiny up there, now.
Â
Something foreign.
Â
I imagined it to be something like a silver canisterâmaybe a two gallon can.
Â
Then suddenly an arm came into view amid the foliage.
Â
Two arms.
Â
And the thing was lifted away by a man Cody had missed.
I ran toward the hill, my camera and binoculars bouncing on the shoulder straps behind my back.
Â
I worked the revolver out of my pocket as I ran, and kept my finger outside the trigger guard, in case I tripped and fell.
Â
Praying that Walter Millsâor whoever he wasâdidn't spot me, I stayed free of the corn for fear of the sound, and moved quickly across the open ground, wary of my footing.
Â
If I could get close enough to take a photo . . .
Blocked by thickets of some kind of sticky and prickly shrub, I was forced to bull my way through, despite the crackling sound that generated.
Â
I was breathing heavily before I found myself up on level ground again.
Â
Then I lifted my revolver toward the curved underbelly of the water tower.
Â
But I must have been heard or seen, because I could detect no one now.
Â
Not atop the tower, or amid the surrounding trees.
Damn, damn, damn . . .
In frustration, I struggled closer, getting a look at the base of the fat frog tower.
Â
Below the metal ladder, which hung six feet off the ground near the support column, were tracks and assorted footprints in the dirt.
Â
I could make out four different shoe imprints, and took two
closeup
photos of them, kneeling to do so.
Â
Were there markings on top of the tower?
Â
Scrapes to photograph?
Â
Perhaps a puncture or forced access hatch?
Â
I heard nothing in the surrounding
treeline
, only a distant whippoorwill, and an even more distant dog barking.
Â
So I decided to investigate.