“Is that them, too?” she asked.
“No. That’s
us
,” Charlie said. “I’ve got a man in there, keeping an eye on every vehicle that comes along the street. He’s got a camera with infra-red film, so he can record license plate numbers even in the dark. He’s also got a portable telephone, so he can call your place, the police, or get in touch with me in a hurry.”
Pete Lockburn parked the green Chevy in front of the Scavello house, while Frank Reuther pulled Christine’s Firebird into the driveway.
The white Ford van, which had been following them, passed by. They watched it in silence as its driver took it into the next block, found a parking space, and switched off its lights.
“Amateurs,” Pete Lockburn said scornfully.
“Arrogant bastards,” Christine said.
Reuther climbed out of the Firebird, leaving the dog in it, and came to their car.
As Charlie put down the window to talk to Frank, he asked Christine for her house keys. When she produced them from her purse, he gave them to Frank. “Check the place out. Make sure nobody’s waiting in there.”
“Right,” Frank said, unbuttoning his suit jacket to provide quick access to the weapon in his shoulder holster. He headed up the walk to the front door.
Pete got out of the Chevy and stood beside it, surveying the night-shrouded street. He left his coat unbuttoned, too.
Joey said, “Is this where the bad guys show up?”
“Let’s hope not, honey.”
There were a
lot of trees and not many streetlights, and Charlie began to feel uneasy about sitting here at the curb, so he got out of the Chevy, too, warning Christine and Joey to stay where they were. He stood at his side of the car, his back toward Pete Lockburn, taking responsibility for the approaches in his direction.
Occasionally a car swung around the corner, entered the block, drove past or turned into the driveway of another house. Each time he saw a new pair of headlights, Charlie tensed and put his right hand under his coat, on the butt of the revolver in his shoulder holster.
He was cold. He wished he’d brought an overcoat.
Sheet lightning pulsed dully in the western sky. A far-off peal of thunder made him think of the freight trains that had rumbled past the shabby little house in which he’d grown up, back in Indiana, in what now seemed like another century.
For some reason, those trains had never been a symbol of freedom and escape, as they might have been to other boys in his situation. To young Charlie, lying in his narrow bed in his narrow room, trying to forget his father’s latest outburst of drunken violence, the sound of those trains had always reminded him that he lived on the wrong side of the tracks. The clattering-growling wheels had been the voice of poverty, the sound of need and fear and desperation.
He was surprised that this low thunder could bring back, with such disturbing clarity, the rumbling of those train wheels. Equally surprising was that the memory of those trains could evoke childhood fears and recall to mind the feeling of being trapped that had been such an integral part of his youth.
In that regard, he had a lot in common with Christine. His childhood had been blighted by physical abuse, hers by psychological abuse. Both of them had lived under the fist, one literally, one figuratively, and as children they had felt trapped, claustrophobic.
He looked down at the side window of the Chevy, saw Joey peering out at him. He gave a thumbs-up sign. The boy returned it, grinning.
Having been a target of abuse as a boy, Charlie was especially sensitive to children who were victims of violence. Nothing made him angrier than adults who battered children. Crimes against defenseless children gave him a cold, greasy, sick feeling and filled him with a hatred and a bleak despair that nothing else could engender.
He would not let them harm Joey Scavello.
He would not fail the boy. He didn’t
dare
fail because, having failed, he very likely wouldn’t be able to live with himself.
It seemed quite a long time before Frank came back. He was still watchful but a bit more relaxed than when he’d gone inside. “Clean, Mr. Harrison. I looked in the backyard, too. Nobody around.”
They took Christine and Joey and Chewbacca inside, surrounding the woman and the boy as they moved, allowing no clear line of fire.
Christine had said that she was successful, but Charlie hadn’t expected such a large, well-furnished house. The living room had a huge fireplace surrounded by a carved mantel and oak bookshelves extending to the corners. An enormous Chinese carpet provided the focus for a pleasing mix of Oriental and European antiques and antique reproductions of high quality. Along one wall was an eightpanel, hand-carved rosewood screen with a double triptych depicting a waterfall and bridge and ancient Japanese village, all rendered in intricately fitted pieces of soapstone.
Joey wanted to go to his room and play a game with his new dog, and Frank Reuther went with him.
At Charlie’s suggestion, Pete Lockburn went through the house, from bottom to top and back again, checking to be sure all doors and windows were locked, shutting all the draperies, so no one could see inside.
Christine said, “I guess I’d better see what I can find for supper. Probably hot dogs. That’s the only thing I have plenty of.”
“Don’t bother,” Charlie said. “I’ve got a man bringing a lot of takeout at seven o’clock.”
“You think of everything.”
“Let’s hope so.”
23
O’Hara trained his
binoculars on an upstairs window of the Scavello house, then on the next window, and the next, eventually scanning the first floor as well. Light shone in every room, but all the draperies were drawn tight.
“Maybe she came home but sent the boy somewhere else for the night,” Baumberg said.
“The boy’s there,” O’Hara said.
“How do you know?”
“Can’t you
feel
him over there?”
Baumberg squinted through the window.
“
Feel
him,” O’Hara said in a hushed and frightened voice.
Baumberg groped for the awareness that had terrified his partner.
“The darkness,” O’Hara said. “Feel the special darkness of the boy, the terrible darkness that rolls off him like fog off the ocean.”
Baumberg strained his senses.
“The evil,” O’Hara said, his voice reduced to a hoarse whisper. “Feel it.”
Baumberg placed his hands against the cool glass, pressed his forehead to it, stared intently at the Scavello house. After a while he
did
feel it, just like O’Hara said. The darkness. The evil. It poured forth from that house like atomic radiation from a block of plutonium. It streamed through the night, through the glass in front of Baumberg, contaminating him, a malignant energy that produced no heat or light, that was bleak and black and frigid.
O’Hara abruptly lowered his binoculars, turned away from the window, put his back toward the Scavello house, as if the evil energy pouring from it was more than he could bear.
“It’s time,” Baumberg said, picking up a shotgun and a revolver.
“No,” O’Hara said. “Let them settle in. Let them relax. Give them a chance to lower their guard.”
“When?”
“We’ll leave here at . . . eight-thirty.”
24
6:45 P.M.
Christine watched as Charlie unplugged the telephone in her study and replaced it with a device that he had brought with him. It looked like a cross between a phone, an answering machine, and a briefcase-sized electronic calculator.
Charlie picked up the receiver, and Christine could hear the dial tone even though she was a few feet away.
Replacing the handset in the cradle, he said, “If someone calls, we’ll come in here to answer it.”
“That’ll record the conversation?”
“Yeah. But it’s primarily a tracer phone. It’s like the equipment the police have when you call their emergency number.”
“911?”
“Yeah. When you call 911, they know what number and address you’re calling from because, as soon as they pick up their receiver and establish a connection with you, that information prints out at their end.” He indicated what looked like a short, blank length of adding machine tape that was sticking out of a slot in the device he’d put on her desk. “We’ll have the same information about anyone who phones here.”
“So if this Grace Spivey calls, we’ll not only have a recording of her voice, but we’ll have proof the call was made on her phone—or one that belongs to her church.”
“Yep. It probably wouldn’t be admissible as court evidence, but it ought to help get the police interested if we can prove she’s making threats against Joey.”
7:00 P.M.
The takeout food arrived precisely on the hour, and Christine noticed that Charlie was quietly pleased by how prompt his man was.
The five of them ate at the dining room table—beef ribs, barbecued chicken, baked potatoes, and cole slaw—while Charlie told funny stories about cases his agency had handled. Joey listened, spellbound, even though he didn’t always understand or appreciate the details of the anecdotes.
Christine watched her son watching Charlie. More poignantly than ever, she realized what the boy had been missing by not having a father or any other male authority figure to admire and from whom he could learn.
Chewbacca, the new dog, ate from a dish in the corner of the room, then stretched out and put his head down on his paws, waiting for Joey. Obviously, he had belonged to a family that had cared for him and had trained him well. He was going to fit in quickly and easily. Christine was still disconcerted by his resemblance to Brandy, but she was beginning to think it would work out anyway.
At 7:20, the
intermittent, distant sound of thunder suddenly grew louder. A blast split the night sky, and the windows rattled.
Startled, Christine dropped her fork. For an instant she thought a bomb had gone off outside the house. When she realized it was only thunder, she felt silly, but a glance at the others told her that they, too, had been briefly startled and frightened by the noise.
A few fat raindrops struck the roof, the windows.
At 7:35, Frank
Reuther finished eating and left the table to make a complete circuit of the house, re-examining all the doors and windows that Pete had checked earlier.
A light but steady rain was falling.
At 7:47, finished
eating, Joey challenged Pete Lockburn to a game of Old Maid, and Pete accepted. They went off to the boy’s room, the dog padding friskily and eagerly behind them.
Frank pulled a chair up to one of the living room windows and studied the rain-swept street through a narrow chink in the draperies.
Charlie helped Christine gather up the paper plates and napkins, which they carried to the kitchen, where the sound of the rain was louder, booming off the patio cover at the back of the house.
“Wha now?” Christine asked, stuffing the plates into the garbage can.
“We get through the night.”
“Then?”
“If the old woman doesn’t call tonight and give us something to use against her, then tomorrow I’ll talk to Dr. Boothe, the psychologist I mentioned. He has a special interest in religious neuroses and psychoses. He’s developed some successful deprogramming procedures to rehabilitate people who’ve been brainwashed by some of these weird cults. He knows how these cult leaders think, so maybe he can help us find Grace Spivey’s weak spot. I’m also going to try to talk to the woman herself, face to face.”
“How’re you going to arrange that?”
“Call the Church of the Twilight and ask for an appointment with her.”
“You think she’ll actually see you?”
He shrugged. “The boldness of it might intrigue her.”
“Can’t we go to the cops now?”
“With what?”
“You’ve got proof Joey and I are being followed.”
“Following someone isn’t a crime.”
“That Spivey woman called your office and threatened Joey.”
“We haven’t any proof it was Grace Spivey. And only Joey heard the threat.”
“Maybe if we explain to the cops how this madwoman thinks Joey is the Antichrist—”
“That’s only a theory.”
“Well . . . maybe we could find someone who used to belong to the cult, someone who’s left it, and then they could substantiate this Antichrist nonsense.”
“People don’t leave the Church of the Twilight,” Charlie said.