The Vision (18 page)

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Authors: Dean Koontz

Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Suspense, #General, #Fiction / Suspense

BOOK: The Vision
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“So what now?” Max asked.

Mary said, “We’ll have to stop him ourselves. We’ll have to go down to the tower.”

Lou stared at her in amazement. “Are you serious?”

“It’s absolutely out of the question,” Max said.

She said, “What would you prefer to do? We can’t just sit here and talk about the weather and the latest books and the newest Paris fashions while he goes on killing.”

Lou recognized his own words, and he had no effective argument against them.

“If we just sit here,” she said, “he’ll kill the queen of the boat parade. And most likely a lot of other people, too.”

“The rain might force the queen and her court inside, off the open deck,” Max said. “Then she wouldn’t be a target.”

“It isn’t raining,” Mary said.

“It’ll start soon.”

“Do you want to bet their lives on that?” she asked. “Lou, we have to stop this man. We haven’t any choice.”

“I don’t want him to kill again,” Max said. “But he isn’t our responsibility.”

“If not ours, whose?” she asked.

Lou saw an uncommon determination in her lovely face. Unshakable resolve in those big blue eyes. He suspected that neither he nor Max could change her mind about this. Might as well argue with a post. He could see that. But he was frightened for her. And as her friend, he felt he should at least try to make her reconsider. “Mary, we’re no match for this man.”

“Why not?” she asked. “Isn’t it just one of him against the three of us?”

“But he’s a killer,” Max said.

“And we’re not killers,” she said.

“Exactly.”

“Knowing what he’s done,” she said, “and what he’d do to you if he had the chance, couldn’t you shoot him if he came at you with a gun?”

Max said, “Of course, in self-defense—”

“That’s just what this is,” she said. “Self-defense.”

“But this psychopath will have a rifle,” Lou said. “And probably a knife. What would we have? Our hands?”

“There’s a pistol in the dashboard of the Mercedes,” Mary said. “Max is licensed to carry it.”

He looked at Max and raised his eyebrows. “You’re allowed to carry a concealed weapon?”

Getting up from his chair, heading toward the kitchen, Max said, “Yeah.”

“How’d you manage to wrangle the permit? They usually reserve those for people in businesses where they’ve got to carry around diamonds or a lot of cash.”

In the kitchen Max poured himself a double shot of Wild Turkey. “We worked on a couple of cases with the L.A. County sheriff’s office. The sheriff saw what dangerous situations Mary can find herself in. He knew I collected guns. He knew I was a marksman, and he figured I wasn’t the type to get excited and accidentally blow someone apart.” Max drank his bourbon neat and quick: a nervous thirst that briefly exposed the tension that lay beneath his studied composure. “So the sheriff got me the permit.” He rinsed out his glass under the kitchen faucet, came back to the dining room, and stood over Mary. “But I’m not going to load that pistol and go out hunting someone to shoot.”

“You wouldn’t be hunting just anyone,” she said. “You’d be hunting a man who has—”

“Forget it,” Max said. “I won’t do it.”

“Let’s talk about it,” she said.

“No use. It’s decided.”

Lou saw a spark of anger in her eyes. Max’s resistance would do nothing but harden her resolve.

She said, “Okay, Max. Stay here. I’ll take the gun and go by myself.”

“Mary, for God’s sake, you don’t know how to handle a pistol!”

She stared up at him without blinking and said, “You take off the safeties and jack a bullet into the chamber, point, pull the trigger—and the son of a bitch falls down.”

Lou knew how stubborn Max could be sometimes. He saw the set of the man’s jaw, the drawing up of his shoulders, and he wanted to warn him off. Max was accustomed to playing father-lover to her, accustomed to saying what would be done and what wouldn’t. But tonight she wasn’t the easygoing Mary they both knew. Even now changes were occurring in her. Conflicting emotions played across her face, but the primary expression was always determination. She was going to make her own decision, and she wasn’t going to heed anyone’s advice. He had never seen such strength in her before, such purpose. It was exciting, attractive. He sat mute, wanting to advise Max against an authoritarian approach but unable to interfere.

“This is absurd,” Max said. “Mary, I won’t let you have the pistol.”

“Then I’ll go without it.”

He glared down at her. “You aren’t going anywhere.”

She stood up, faced him. She met his eyes and held them, as if to prove, through the directness of her gaze, the depth of her commitment. She spoke with quiet intensity and with a foreboding tone that chilled Lou to the bone. “I’m up against something so big, so evil that I can only guess at the dimensions like a blind child feeling an elephant’s leg. These past few days have been a living hell for me, Max.”

“I know. And—”

“You can’t know. No one can know.”

“If you—”

“Don’t interrupt,” she said. “I want you to understand. So you’ve just got to listen. Max, I’m afraid to go to sleep, and I’m afraid to wake up in the morning. I’m afraid to open every door I come to, afraid to turn around. I’m afraid of the dark. I’m afraid of what might happen—and of what might
not
happen. Dammit, I’m even afraid to go to the bathroom alone! I cannot live like this. I refuse to live like this. There’s something about this case that makes it different from all others, something that’s working inside of me like acid, eating me alive. This case touched my life like nothing else I’ve worked on, but I don’t know why. Max, I sense, I feel, I
know
that if I don’t pursue this man with every ounce of energy I have and in every way I know how, then he’ll come after me.”

The trivet on the Ouija board moved, but Lou was the only one to see it. It slid to the spot marked
YES
, as if in agreement with Mary’s prediction.

“If I don’t take the initiative,” she said, “I’ll lose what little advantage I might now have. I can’t walk away. If I try to run, I won’t get far. I’ll die.”

Max said, “And if you pursue this man, if you insist on going down to that tower tonight, then you’ll probably die sooner.”

“I might,” she said. “But if I do, at least I’ll have taken responsibility for my own life and death. All my life, I’ve been scared of everything, and I’ve let someone else deal with my bogeymen for me. Not anymore. Because this time no one else
can
help me. The answer is inside of me, and if I don’t find it soon, I’m finished. It’s past time I stopped hiding behind strong men. I’ve got to take chances. When I risk something and fail, I’ve got to suffer the consequences like anybody else. If I’m always pampered, cuddled, and cushioned from shock, then my successes in life are meaningless. I’ve decided that no one—not Alan, not you, Max, and especially not that part of me that’s still a dependent six-year-old—
no one
is going to stop me from living a full life.”

They stood in silence for a while.

The grandfather clock chimed the quarter hour.

Lou said, “Forty-five minutes until he takes a shot at the queen of the boat parade.”

Mary said, “Well, Max?”

Finally he nodded. “We better get moving.”

* * *

Blood. Blood like
ribbons tangled in her hair. Blood spotting her punctured breasts. Blood on her hands, her arms, her belly, her thighs. Blood on the sofa and chair. Blood on the draperies, on the wall. Bloody little footprints of a cat all across the light tan carpet.

Trying to hold down the taste of vomit, Officer Rudy Holtzman stepped carefully around the mutilated body of Erika Larsson, went into the dark kitchen, and turned on the lights. He used the wall phone to dial headquarters.

When the night girl, Wendy Newhart, answered, Holtzman said, “I’m out here at the Larsson place.” His voice was strained and hoarse; it cracked on a couple of words. He cleared his throat. “The lights were on when I got here. Nobody answered the bell, but the door was ajar. She’s dead.”

“Oh, my
God!
Well, I’m not going to tell her father. That’s out of the question. Someone else will have to tell him.”

“Better get Charlie over here with the other squad car,” Holtzman said. “Call the medical examiner right away. And Patmore, of course. Tell Charlie to move his ass; I don’t like being here alone.”

Wendy Newhart asked, “When was she killed?”

“How should I know? The medical examiner will know.”

“I mean, did it just happen before you got there? Within the past half hour?”

“What’s it matter?” Holtzman asked.

“Rudy, tell me! Did it just happen?”

“The blood’s mostly caked and dry. I can’t pinpoint the time of death, but it must surely have been a good many hours ago.”

“Thank the Lord for small miracles,” she said.

“What?”

She had hung up.

Holtzman put down the receiver and turned to see a black cat standing in the doorway between the kitchen and the front room, no more than five feet from him. Its fuzzy white muzzle had been tinted red-brown with blood. Holtzman took one step, kicked out at the cat, missed.

It squealed and ran.

* * *

They arrived at
the harbor at five minutes past seven.

Max parked the Mercedes in a corner of the lot that, in season, served both a restaurant called Italian Villa and Kimball’s Arcade. Tonight the restaurant’s side of the lot was nearly full, while the other side was nearly empty.

The three of them got out of the car.

Lou drew up his shoulders against the cold. As the storm air had moved in from the Pacific, the temperature had dropped rapidly from a one o’clock high of seventy degrees to a current low of forty-four. The wind had increased, too; it whipped in from the harbor, lashed King’s Point, made the night seem even cooler than it was.

Lou said, “I still think I should go with Max, and you should stay here, where it’s safe.”

“It’s not safe anywhere for me,” Mary said.

“At least if you stayed here in the car—”

She waved one hand impatiently, interrupted him. “We’ve got two weapons we can use against this man we’re after: one is Max’s handiness with guns, and the other is my psychic talent. The two of us shouldn’t split up.”

The sea wind lifted her long hair, made it flap like a banner behind her.

Max put one hand on Lou’s shoulder. “I don’t want her in the thick of the action any more than you do. But maybe she’s right. She’s probably not in any greater danger there than here. Besides, neither of us is going to change her mind.”

“I feel so useless,” Lou said.

“We need someone here in the car,” Max said. “You’re our early-warning system.”

“We’re wasting time,” Mary said.

Lou nodded glumly. He kissed her cheek and told Max to take good care of her.

They hurried into the wind, across the parking lot toward the huge, deserted barnlike building that housed the array of souvenir stands, trinket stores, amusements, and coffee shops known collectively as Kimball’s Games and Snacks.

He got behind the wheel of the Mercedes and closed the door. Through the windshield he could barely see Max and Mary as they drew farther away and blended into the darkness around the clapboard and cedar-shingled pavilion.

A fierce gust of wind rocked the car. Forks of lightning stabbed through the sky, but still there was no rain.

Lou settled back, resigned to his role as a sentinel. If the killer didn’t anticipate Mary tonight, as he had last night, he would probably approach Kimball’s openly, brazenly. If Lou spotted a man moving toward the building, he would switch on the Mercedes’s ignition and alert Max with two short blasts of the horn. The pavilion and tower stood only sixty yards farther along the boardwalk that connected seven or eight businesses on this section of the harbor. The sound of the horn would travel that far undiminished, but it wasn’t likely the killer would recognize it as a signal. Even if Mary was able to foresee the exact time and direction of the man’s approach, the horn would be a welcome confirmation of her vision.

Of course, the psychopath might have anticipated them again and already be at the pavilion.

Lou shifted uneasily behind the wheel.

He thought of Patty Spooner, strangled to death with a priest’s stole. He thought of Barry Mitchell, hideously mutilated.

He looked left and right, peered into the rearview mirror. No one. He squinted at the deep shadows along the side of the pavilion. All was still.

* * *

The black cat
crouched on the top of a seven-foot-high set of bookshelves, no more than eight or ten inches from the ceiling in the front room of the cottage. Its forepaws hung over the edge of the shelf; it was motionless, staring down at Rudy Holtzman with suspicion and contempt.

Filthy damned thing. He hated cats. Always had. And it gave him the creeps just to think about this one eagerly lapping up the murdered woman’s blood.

It made a deep, throaty sound, as if daring him to approach it.

He didn’t want to wait with the cat and the corpse, not even for the few minutes Charlie would need to get here in the other cruiser. He walked down the short hallway to inspect the part of the house he’d not yet seen.

In the bedroom he found an open window, where the wind played havoc with a pair of flimsy curtains and an oilcloth blind that was drawn down only halfway. The recent storms had soaked and badly stained the carpet.

Holtzman was suddenly excited. He studied the room, re-creating in his mind those first few seconds when the sanctity of the house had been violated. He knew that more than rain had come in through that window. He was certain that he’d found the killer’s entrance. And as his glance traveled over the floor, he could hardly believe what he saw. It was one of those lucky breaks you seldom get in police work. Apparently the pistol had fallen unnoticed from a coat pocket as the killer climbed through the window.

Holtzman knelt on the damp carpet to get a closer look at the weapon. He was careful not to spoil any fingerprints that might be on it. If this killer was the same man who had slaughtered those nurses and the people in that beauty salon—and the style sure seemed the same to Holtzman—then the Anaheim and Santa Ana police already had more than enough good prints. So far prints had been of no use in cracking the case because the killer evidently had never had his taken by any police organization in the country. Nevertheless, because he prided himself on being more professional than anyone with whom he worked, Holtzman didn’t grasp the pistol and smear the evidence. He took a ballpoint pen from his shirt pocket, slipped it through the trigger guard, lifted the gun off the floor, and held it in front of his eyes.

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