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Where the Summer Ends Part 30

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"I think I want to go home."

"I'll see that you get there," Saunders said. "Only this time you stay put."

"Scout's honor." Russ held up three fingers.

Saunders watched him without amus.e.m.e.nt. "And when you get there, you can help fill out a report. Tell us if anything's missing."

"Missing?"



"Somebody'd broke into your house right before we got there."

*X*

Mandarin had a bottle of Percodan tablets for pain-contraindicated, of course, in the presence of recent head injury-and he prescribed himself a couple and washed them down with a medicinal gla.s.s of Jack Daniel's. He supposed he should sue himself for malpractice. After all, he'd only been permitted to leave the hospital after signing an "against medical advice" form. A fool for a physician.

Was it possible for a head to ache any worse than his did? He had a gash above his forehead where the bullet had grazed his scalp, a lump across the back of his skull from his fall, and a terminal hangover. Russ almost wished his a.s.sailant had aimed lower. Saunders' people hadn't turned up any bra.s.s, and Saunders was of the opinion that Russ's attacker had got off a lucky shot with a junk .22 revolver-probably one of his hippie dope-fiend patients. Typical of the times, Saunders judged, and with our boys dying in Viet Nam while sc.u.m like this dodged the draft.

Three break-ins in one night-not to mention the burglary of Stryker's office the day before-hardly seemed random, Mandarin had argued. Saunders had pointed out that these were only a few of the dozens of break-ins that took place each night, and that it was all due to drugs, and that if certain psychiatrists would stick to shrinking heads and let the police go about their business, a lot of this sort of thing would be stopped.

Russ promised to go to bed.

But neither the Percodan nor the bourbon could ease the pain in his skull. And the thoughts kept running through his brain. And every time he closed his eyes, she was there.

I dream of that night with you Darling, when first we met...

Mandarin realized that his eyes weren't closed. She was there. In his room. And she whispered to him...

Mandarin screamed and sat up. His drink, balanced on the back of the couch, fell over and spilled melted ice cubes onto his lap.

The dancing image faded.

Never, thought Mandarin, never mix Percodan and alcohol. He was shaking badly, and his feet seemed to float above the floor as he stumbled into the kitchen for another drink. Maybe he ought to take a couple Valiums. Christ, he was in worse shape now than when Alicia died.

Could a poltergeist direct a bullet?

Russ noticed that he was pouring bourbon over the top of his gla.s.s. He gulped down a mouthful, not tasting it. His hands were steadier.

Could a poltergeist direct a bullet?

Either he was succ.u.mbing to paranoid fantasies and alcoholic hallucinations, or maybe he should have stayed in the hospital for observation. Was he going over the edge? What the h.e.l.l- he hadn't been worth shooting since Alicia died.

Someone thought he was worth shooting.

Could a poltergeist direct a bullet?

Was he haunted?

It wasn't random; Saunders was wrong. There was a pattern, and it had all started that afternoon when Gayle Corrington told them about her poltergeist. A ghostly lesbian who dabbled in the occult and who liked blue. The stuff of one of Stryker's pulp thrillers, but now there were two people dead, and someone- or something-had broken into the homes of everyone involved and scattered things about like a vengeful whirlwind.

Mandarin decided that a walk in the early dawn would do him good. He just might be sober by the time he reached the clinic and his car.

Could a poltergeist deflect a bullet?

*XI*

This one ends on a bright summer morning, and a fresh dew on the roses that perfume the dawn.

Russ Mandarin eased his Jensen Interceptor into the driveway and killed the engine. All at once it seemed absurdly dramatic to him. He really should have phoned Gayle Corrington before driving over to her house at this hour.

Or maybe he shouldn't have.

He closed the door quietly and walked up to the carport. The white Corvette was parked there as before, only before there hadn't been a sc.r.a.ping of maroon paint along its scored right front fender. Fibergla.s.s is a b.i.t.c.h to touch up.

Russ tried the doorbell long enough to decide that Gayle Corrington wasn't going to answer. Either not at home (her car was still there) or a sound sleeper. Russ pounded loudly against the door. After a time his knuckles began to hurt. He stopped and thought about it.

Nothing made sense. Mandarin wished he had a drink-that was always a good answer to any crisis.

He ought to call Saunders, tell him about the maroon paint on Gayle Corrington's white Corvette, Maybe just a fender-bender, but it might match up with the crease on the left side of Stryker's Buick, And so what if it did? Curtiss was a terrible driver-he might well have paid Gayle a second visit, sc.r.a.ped up against her car in parking.

Nothing made sense.

Just this: Gayle Corrington had told Stryker something in the course of the interview-while Mandarin had been out of the room. Stryker had been excited about it, had written it into his account of the haunting. And someone had gone to a lot of trouble to make certain that whatever Stryker had discovered would never be published.

Only Gayle Corrington had freely asked Stryker to investigate her haunted house.

Nothing made sense.

Mandarin thought he heard a television set going. Maybe Gayle was around back, catching some early morning sun, and couldn't hear his knock. Worth trying.

Russ headed toward the rear of the house. As he reached the patio, he saw Prissy lying beside a holly bush. At first he thought the little border collie was asleep.

Not random. A pattern.

The sliding gla.s.s door from the patio was curtained and at first glance appeared to be closed. Russ saw that the catch had been forced, and he cautiously slid the gla.s.s panel open, stepped inside.

Gayle Corrington was wearing dark slacks and a black sweats.h.i.+rt. She was hog-tied with her wrists bound back to her ankles, her body arched like a bow upon the couch. Her lips were taped with adhesive, but the cord knotted tightly into her neck would a.s.sure that she would never cry out.

Russ stared at her dumbly. He knew there was no point in searching for a pulse.

"h.e.l.lo, Russ," said Stryker. "Come on in."

Russ did as he was told.

Curtiss Stryker was straightening out from where he worked over the brick hearth. The hearth had been lifted away, revealing an opening beneath the floor.

"Used brick hearth on a mountain stone fireplace. Should have tipped me off from the first-an obvious lapse in taste." Stryker was holding a Colt Woodsman. It was pointed at Mandarin's heart.

"Rumors of my death have been greatly exaggerated," said Stryker.

"You son of a b.i.t.c.h," said Mandarin.

"Probably. But you just stand still where you are."

Russ nodded toward Gayle's body. "Your work?"

"Yes. While you were ringing. Just not quite in the nick of time, Doctor. But don't waste any tears on our Mrs Corrington. She tried to kill both of us, after all-and I gather she was certain that you, at least, were most decidedly dead. This is her gun, and she would be disappointed to learn that her aim was not as infallible as she imagined."

"I don't get it," Russ said. "What are you doing?"

Stryker glanced toward the opened hearth. "Just getting a little social security. Maybe you can understand."

"I don't understand a G.o.dd.a.m.ned thing! I came here to ask Gayle what it was that she told you while I was out of the room that day. Seems that a lot of people are interested."

"You might as well know," Stryker decided. "She wanted me to perform an exorcism."

"An exorcism?"

"Or something to that effect. She'd read my books on the occult, decided I was a better ghostchaser than a priest would be. Maybe she'd already tried a priest."

"I don't follow."

"Then I'll make it short and snappy."

"Is this the point in your story where the villain always explains everything to the hero before he shoots him?"

"It is. I'm afraid this story won't have a happy ending, though. After all, an author has his privileges."

"I wept for you."

"I know. I'll weep for you."

Stryker kept the Colt Woodsman steady in the direction of Mandarin's chest. Russ recalled that Curtiss had always bragged about his marksmans.h.i.+p.

"Our Mrs Corrington changed a few details, and she changed a few names. She played the part of Ca.s.s in the highly revised account she gave us of this house. She and her Libby were medical secretaries. They had access to patients' records, and they knew various prominent citizens who had certain s.e.xual quirks. Knowing their particular weaknesses, it was simple enough to lure them out here for an odd orgy or two- black magic, S&M, any sort of kink their secret selves desired. Then there were the hidden mikes and camera, the two-way mirrors. Made for some lovely footage. Here's a respected publisher who likes to dress up in women's clothing and be whipped, here's a noted doctor who prefers to give enemas to submissive girls. Maybe just a Baptist preacher who can't get a b.l.o.w. .j.o.b from his wife. They knew about them, and preyed on them.

"But they needed another girl-another feminine one for their fantasies-delivered orgies. So they brought in a third girl-and that was a crowd. Ca.s.s-Gayle-liked her better than Libby, and Libby got jealous. She was going to blow the whistle on the entire operation, unless the other girl was sent away. But that was too dangerous, and Gayle was growing tired of Libby. They had a special black sabbath orgy that night, and when it was over they gave Libby an injection of insulin. Your friend, Dr Royce Blaine, didn't give any trouble over signing the death certificate; after all, he was in the photos. Later, when Gayle grew tired of Tina, she married Dr Blaine-probably saved her life; his too, maybe."

"But why did Mrs Corrington call you in on this?" Russ wondered if he could jump the older man.

"Because she really did think she was being haunted. Nothing more than a nuisance, but it preyed on her nerves. So she made up this plausible story, and she reckoned I'd perform some magical miracle, just like the heroes in my stories. But she didn't reckon on how good a researcher I was. I got suspicious-you know: 'Doctor, I have this friend...' and it didn't take long to dig out the facts. It happened while you were off in New York."

"So then?"

"Well, I wrote down my findings, made a carbon for you, then set out for another talk with Gayle Corrington. Of course, then I didn't know about the blackmail angle-I just wanted to confront Gayle with the fact that I knew her part in the story was more than just an innocent bystander.

"She followed me after I left her house, ran me off the road into the lake. By then I knew about the blackmail-she was too upset with me to lie convincingly that night-so I thought I'd just lie doggo for a few days and see what happened. I destroyed my notes, but that little b.a.s.t.a.r.d Brooke Hamilton beat me to my office and stole your carbon of the chapter rough. I caught up with him last night, made him tell me where he'd hidden everything, then destroyed it all-and that little s.h.i.+t. In the meantime, Gayle knew of my carbons, so she was checking out my house, and afterward yours. You walked in on her at my house, and she thought she'd killed you. That's two mistakes. You should have seen her expression when she walked in here afterward. Thought she'd seen a real ghost this time."

"Just Uncle Dudley in a monster suit."

"Just like one of my old thrillers. No ghosts. Just greed. And a guilty conscience that made ghosts out of chance phenomena."

"Now what?"

"I take over the racket, that's all. After a little persuasion, Gayle told me what I already knew-that the films and tapes were all hidden in a little safe here beneath the raised hearth. I've got enough on some of our city's finest and wealthiest to retire in style. I'll just make an appearance later on today, say I was knocked for a loop by my accident, took a day or two wandering around the lakeside to remember who I was."

"What about me?"

"Now that does bother me, Russ. I hadn't counted on your dropping in like this. I think you'll be the drugged-out killer in the story-the one who conveniently takes his life when he realizes what he's done."

"Saunders won't buy that."

"Sure he will. You've been walking around town with a screw loose ever since your wife died-before that maybe. You were the one who blew her diagnosis when she complained of chronic headaches."

"I was your friend, Curtiss."

"Writers don't have friends. Only deadlines. And cheating publishers. And meddling editors. And carping reviewers. And checks that never come when they're supposed to come, and are always short when they do come. I've sc.r.a.ped along for a living at this d.a.m.n trade for over forty years, and I'm still living hand to mouth, and I'm just an old hack to my fellow writers. This is my chance to make someone else pay-pay big."

Stryker steadied the pistol. "Sorry, Russ. I'll miss you. Hope you can understand."

The Victrola behind them made a rattle and whir. There was an audible clunk as the heavy tone arm descended.

Stryker looked toward it for an instant. Russ started to go for him. Stryker nailed him through the upper left shoulder with his first shot. Russ collapsed.

I dream of that night with you...

"Going to be a tough job of suicide now," Mandarin whispered.

"I'll figure something," Stryker a.s.sured him.

Blue were the skies And blue were your eyes Stryker leveled his pistol again. "Very interesting."

Come back, blue lady, come back "There are too many dead!" Russ managed. "She's grown too strong."

"I never really believed in ghosts," said Stryker, lining up on Russ's heart.

Don't be blue anymore.

There was a sudden sc.r.a.ping at the fireplace behind them.

From its brackets, the Parker shotgun swung away from the stone wall. It seemed to hesitate an instant, then slowly fell to the hearth, stock downward.

Stryker turned to stare at it, open-mouthed in wonder. He was still gaping into its double barrels, looking down into the blackness within, when both sh.e.l.ls fired at once.

In the Shadows of the Pines by Laird Barron.

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