"When? What year?"
"I was twenty-five or -six." He struggled to remember. "I opened the store in 1908, she would come and buy books and talk. She was so beautiful..." His voice was softer with the memory. "She would talk with me. I dreamed about her. She was so beautiful."
What had he been like back then? The brittle body might have once been wiry, the seamed face once smooth. There had been a firm chin and dark eyes and skin; yes, to a woman he might have been handsome back then.
"Were you her lover?" I had to keep from touching him or he"d shake off the trance. Jealousy was foaming up inside; I couldn"t touch him or lose control of myself."I loved her. She was so-"
"Were you her lover?" Stay steady.
His eyes were wide, blind, searching inward for an answer. "I... don"t know."
"What do you mean? How can you not know?"
"I was, in my dreams. I loved her at night in my dreams. She would kiss me." One of his hands stole up to his neck. "She would kiss me. G.o.d, oh my G.o.d..."
I turned away. I never meant to hear this. "Stop."
He became quiet, waiting and unaware while I mastered myself. There was no point in hating him, no point in condemning Maureen; not for something that had happened nearly thirty years ago. She"d loved Barrett and Braxton and then me.
Were there others? Had she indeed loved me?
"Braxton... did you take... did you ever kiss her in the same way?"
"No."
It was something.
"She wouldn"t let me."
Oh, Maureen. Yes, it was something. He hadn"t been that important to her. She"d been lonely and needed someone to hold and touch, if only in his dreams. That was it and that was all.
"When did you last see her?"
"Which time?"
I made a guess. "The first?"
"A year after we met. She never said good-bye; the dreams just stopped, I forgot them. But she came back."
"When?"
"Twenty years later? Twenty-two? One night she walked into the shop. I knew her instantly and I remembered it all. She hadn"t changed, not aged a single day, but I- she didn"t know me, not until I said her name. I was frightened, I knew what she was, what she had done to me and what I would become unless-" He relived his fear quietly, the only outward sign of the inner turmoil was the sweat that broke out on his face. His heart was racing.
"Unless what?"
"I wouldn"t be like her, feeding on the living, sucking men"s souls from them. If I killed her first, then I would be free. I could die free of her curse. I began to hunt her."
"When? What year?"
"In 1931."
So this was the man. She"d run from him, leaving me standing in an empty room, a scribbled good-bye note in one hand and the life draining from my eyes. Five years of hurt, doubt, anger, and fear because this foolish man thought she wanted his soul instead of the warmth of his body when he was young.
"Did you find her?"
"No, but I found out about you. I knew what she"d done to you, but if I tried to help, you wouldn"t have believed me. Your only hope was the same as mine-to kill her-but then you died first and now you"re one of them. I"m sorry I couldn"t have saved you."
It was pointless trying to explain it to him. Whether Maureen lived or died didn"t matter; we"d exchanged blood, and hoped. She"d loved me, and had expressed it by giving me a chance for a life beyond life so we would always be together. But then something had gone wrong.
"Do you know what happened to her? Do you know where she is?"
"No."
"Are you the only one? Are there others hunting her?"
"Matheus, he believed me, he knows."
"Who else?"
"I don"t... the old woman, she must know."
"Gaylen? The old woman here?"
"Yes. She knows something, she knew back then-"
"What do you mean?"
Something b.u.mped against the door.
"I asked, but she wouldn"t-"
b.u.mp. "Hey, open up." A vaguely familiar voice, but not Matheus.
-tell me. She wanted- "Come on out, Fleming."
"-life to live-" "The kid says you"re in there."
"Cheated. She was sick-"
"Who was? Of what?" The other voice was distracting, and I was losing the thread of Braxton"s talk.
"-strong... frightening. I told her my story, but it was you she-"
"Fleming, it"s now or I scrag the kid."
What the h.e.l.l? I yanked the door. He was in a long coat, which changed him enough from the last time, so from a distance he was unrecognizable when he stepped off the elevator, looked at his watch, and walked away. A long coat, which was all wrong because it was only mid-September and still mild. But he wore it because that made it easy to walk into a building with a sawed-off shotgun concealed under it. He shouldn"t have been here, he was supposed to be in a parked Ford waiting for Mrs. Blatski.
He grinned at my surprise, his dimples nice and deep, and without any more expression or warning he pulled first one trigger, then the other, emptying both barrels into the open doorway.
Chapter 9.
I WAS ON the tile floor. It smelled of soap, cordite, burned fiber, and blood.
The impact of the blast had thrown me back against a washbasin, which altered the angle of fall and twisted me facedown. The agony of the shot pa.s.sing through my body left me stunned as few things could. I fought to hold on to sanity and solidity. It was several long seconds before my shivering, jerking limbs recovered enough control to stand.
The door still hung open, and the air was thick with blue smoke. Ten seconds to find my feet, five more to stagger to the hall, but it was long enough. Malcolm was gone.
So was Braxton. He was on his back and not moving. The shot had all but cut his slight body in two. His blood flooded the black-and-white tiles. His face was calm and dreamy. Death had come so fast there"d been no time to react.
Matheus was on his side in the hall, one hand still clutching his cross. A smear of blood was over his right eye and a crimson thread flowed from it into his hair. Still alive.
The studio door opened. There was no time to explain, I vanished before anyone saw me, and sank down through the floors, hoping to reach the ground ahead of Malcolm. A few people were standing in the main lobby of the building. I took the risk of re-forming, but no one noticed; they were looking out the front doors. I pushed past and went outside. No Ford in sight, but there was a man running away, his long coat flapping. My legs gobbled up his fifty-yard lead and I hauled him up short and spun him around.
Watery eyes, a three-day beard, no chin, stinking of booze and sweat, he wore Malcolm"s coat or one just like it.
"Easy, Captain!" he wheezed.
"Where is he? Where"s the blond man?"
"Did what he said, was it good? I get another two bits if it"s good. Was it good?"
"What"d he tell you to do?"
"Wait on the stairs "n run. Captain. Lizzen fer the bang "n run. Good joke, huh?
Was it good?"
It was good, it bought Malcolm enough time to get out another way while I chased down the wino. I ran back to the lobby. The doorman was the first official- looking type, so I collared him, said there"d been an accident at the studio and to call an ambulance, then raced upstairs to look for Malcolm. It was a poor chance at best, he"d be gone by now.
The studio hall was in a mess. Men were peering into the washroom, and a small knot had formed around Matheus. Some woman was crying and another man was holding her. The stage was empty except for the chairs and piano. Crossing the divider between it and the audience, I was stopped by the man in shirtsleeves. He gaped at my shredded clothes.
"Sorry, you have to stay out."
"I"m with Bobbi Smythe, she was on tonight."
"She"ll be backstage, but- The backstage door opened to a hall full of people all looking at me, questions on their troubled faces.
"Where"s Bobbi Smythe?" I asked no one in particular.
"I think she left," a woman suggested.
"When?"
"She was here just a minute ago," someone else said.
There was another set of washrooms down the hall. I opened up the ladies" and called for Bobbi and Marza. No one answered.
"They must have taken the back elevator," the woman told me.
That was down the hall and around the corner, with more people in the way."What the h.e.l.l happened?"
"I heard an explosion."
Was it a bomb?"
"Nan, Big Al must be back an" havin" a party."
"Musta been a gun-Johnny said someone got shot."
"G.o.dd.a.m.ned drunks, s.c.r.e.w.i.n.g up the show."
I ignored their speculations and punched at the elevator b.u.t.ton. This time I couldn"t sink through the floors without getting unwanted attention, besides, the operator might have seen something.
He had, and told me about it on the way down.
"Yeah, the blond, a real bombsh.e.l.l-she stood out from that group like fireworks."
"What floor?"
"They got off on ground a few minutes ago." They?"
"She had some harpy with her. Seemed anxious to leave, and a couple of others, too. What"s goin" on? What happened to you?"
We made the ground floor and I left him guessing. The back hall was empty, so I went around front. There was a cop in the lobby by now, asking questions. I waited until he was in the elevator and scanned faces. No Bobbi, but the doorman was still there.
"Hey, did a blond in a red dress go out? She was with a black-haired woman in green."
"Haven"t seen "em."
"If you do, ask "em to wait."
"Cops say everyone has to wait, n.o.body gets out now."
I went through the ground floor, again checking the washrooms, but with no luck.
They should have left by way of the front; it was a busier street and more likely to have cabs, but then they shouldn"t have gone at all. If she"d heard a man had been shot, Bobbi would have been on the scene to make sure it wasn"t me. Marza must have dragged her out to protect her. d.a.m.n Marza, anyway.
The rear exit was ajar and unguarded-so much for the cops" instructions. It opened to another street busy with cars and nothing else. I called her name, but no one answered.After wasting a lot of time, I finally wised up and drove back to Bobbi"s hotel. It would be the place for them to go since it was closer than Marza"s. Before I reached the elevator, Phil flagged me down.
"What happened to you?" he asked, staring at the hole in my clothes where the sh.e.l.l had gone through.
"Fight." I was in a hurry to get past him.