by Dean Koontz
Yeah, Holly thought, did it ever.
“When he first came to town and I heard he’d never been to a real school before, been educated by his parents, I thought that was just terrible, even if they did have to travel all the time with that nightclub act of theirs—”
Holly recalled the gallery of photographs on Jim’s study walls in Laguna Niguel: Miami, Atlantic City, New York, London, Chicago, Las Vegas...
“—but they’d actually done a pretty fine job. At least they’d turned him into a booklover, and that served him well later.” She turned to Jim. “I suppose you haven’t asked your grandpa about Lena’s death because you figure it might upset him to talk about it. But I think he’s not as fragile as you imagine, and he’d know more about it than anyone, of course.” Mrs. Glynn addressed Holly again: “Is something wrong, dear?”
Holly realized she was standing with the blue library card in her hand, statue-still, like one of those waiting-to-be-reanimated people in the worlds within the books upon the shelves within these rooms. For a moment she could not respond to the woman’s question.
Jim looked too stunned to pick up the ball this time. His grandfather was alive somewhere. But where?
“No,” Holly said, “nothing’s wrong. I just realized how late it’s getting—”
A shatter of static, a vision: her severed head screaming, her severed hands crawling like spiders across a floor, her decapitated body writhing and twisting in agony; she was dismembered but not dead, impossibly alive, in a thrall of horror beyond endurance—
Holly cleared her throat, blinked at Mrs. Glynn, who was staring at her curiously. “Uh, yeah, quite late. And we’re supposed to go see Henry before lunch. It’s already ten. I’ve never met him.” She was babbling now, couldn’t stop. “I’m really looking forward to it.”
Unless he really did die over four years ago, like Jim had told her, in which case she wasn’t looking forward to it at all. But Mrs. Glynn did not appear to be a spiritualist who would blithely suggest conjuring up the dead for a little chat.
“He’s a nice man,” Eloise Glynn said. “I know he must’ve hated having to move off the farm after his stroke, but he can be thankful it didn’t leave him worse than he is. My mother, God rest her soul, had a stroke, left her unable to walk, talk, blind in one eye, and so confused she couldn’t always recognize her own children. At least poor Henry has his wits about him, as I understand it. He can talk, and I hear he’s the leader of the wheelchair pack over there at Fair Haven.”
“Yes,” Jim said, sounding as wooden as a talking post, “that’s what I hear.”
“Fair Haven’s such a nice place,” Mrs. Glynn said, “it’s good of you to keep him there, Jim. It’s not a snakepit like so many nursing homes these days.”
The Yellow Pages at a public phone booth provided an address for Fair Haven on the edge of Solvang. Holly drove south and west across the valley.
“I remember he had a stroke,” Jim said. “I was in the hospital with him, came up from Orange County, he was in the intensive-care unit. I hadn’t... hadn’t seen him in thirteen years or more.”
Holly was surprised by that, and her look generated a hot wave of shame that withered Jim. “You hadn’t seen your own grandfather in thirteen years?”
“There was a reason....”
“What?”
He stared at the road ahead for a while, then let out a guttural sound of frustration and disgust. “I don’t know. There was a reason, but I can’t remember it. Anyway, I came back when he had his stroke, when he was dying in the hospital. And I remember him dead, damn it.”
“Clearly remember it?”
“Yes.”
She said, “You remember the sight of him dead in the hospital bed, all his monitor lines flat?”
He frowned. “No.”
“Remember a doctor telling you he’d passed away?”
“No.”
“Remember making arrangements for his burial?”
“No.”
“Then what’s so clear about this memory of him being dead?”
Jim brooded about that awhile as she whipped the Ford around the curving roads, between gentle hills on which scattered houses stood, past white-fenced horse pastures green as pictures of Kentucky. This part of the valley was lusher than the area around New Svenborg. But the sky had become a more somber gray, with a hint of blue-black in the clouds—bruised.
At last he said, “It isn’t clear at all, now that I look close at it. Just a muddy impression... not a real memory.”
“Are you paying to keep Henry at Fair Haven?”
“No.”
“Did you inherit his property?”
“How could I inherit if he’s alive?”
“A conservatorship then?”
He was about to deny that, as well, when he suddenly remembered a hearing room, a judge. The testimony of a doctor. His granddad’s counsel, appearing on the old man’s behalf to testify that Henry was of sound mind and wanted his grandson to manage his property.
“Good heavens, yes,” Jim said, shocked that he was capable not only of forgetting events from the distant past but from as recently as four years ago. As Holly swung around a slow-moving farm truck and accelerated along a straight stretch of road, Jim told her what he had just remembered, dim as the recollection was. “How can I do this, live this way? How can I totally rewrite my past when it suits me?”
“Self-defense,” she said, as she had said before. She swung in front of the truck. “I’d bet that you remember a tremendous amount of precise detail about your work as a teacher, about your students over the years, colleagues you’ve taught with—”
It was true. As she spoke, he could flash back, at will, through his years in the classroom, which seemed so vivid that those thousands of days might have occurred concurrently only yesterday.
“—because that life held no threat for you, it was filled with purpose and peace. The only things you forget, push relentlessly down into the deepest wells of memory, are those things having to do with the death of your parents, the death of Lena Ironheart, and your years in New Svenborg. Henry Ironheart is part of that, so you continue to wipe him from your mind.”
The sky was contusive.
He saw blackbirds wheeling across the clouds, more of them now than he had seen in the cemetery. Four, six, eight. They seemed to be paralleling the car, following it to Solvang.
Strangely, he recalled the dream with which he had awakened on the morning that he had gone to Portland, saved Billy Jenkins, and met Holly. In the nightmare, a flock of large blackbirds shrieked around him in a turbulent flapping of wings and tore at him with hooked beaks as precision-honed as surgical instruments.
“The worst is yet to come,” he said.
“What do you mean?”
“I don’t know.”
“You mean what we learn at Fair Haven?”
Above, the blackbirds swam through the high, cold currents.
Without having a clue as to what he meant, Jim said, “Something very dark is coming.”
2
Fair Haven was housed in a large, U-shaped, single-story building outside the town limits of Solvang, with no trace of Danish influence in its architecture. It was strictly off-the-rack design, functional and no prettier than it had to be: cream-tinted stucco, concrete-tile roof, boxy, flat-walled, without detail. But it was freshly painted and in good repair; the hedges were neatly trimmed, the lawn recently mown, and the sidewalks swept clean.
Holly liked the place. She almost wished she lived there, was maybe eighty, watching some TV every day, playing some checkers, with no worry bigger than trying to figure out where she had put her false teeth when she’d taken them out last night.
Inside, the hallways were wide and airy, with yellow vinyl-tile floors. Unlike in many nursing homes, the air was neither tainted with the stench of incontinent patients left unclean by inattentive staff nor with a heavy aerosol deodorant meant to eliminate or mask that stench. The r
ooms she and Jim passed looked attractive, with big windows opening to valley views or a garden courtyard. Some of the patients lay in their beds or slumped in their wheelchairs with vacant or mournful expressions on their faces, but they were the unfortunate victims of major strokes or late-stage Alzheimer’s disease, locked away in memories or torment, largely unconnected to the world around them. Everyone else appeared happy; and patients’ laughter actually could be heard, a rarity in such places.
According to the supervisor on duty at the nurses’ station, Henry Ironheart had been a resident of Fair Haven for over four years.
Mrs. Danforth, the administrator into whose office they were shown, was new since Henry Ironheart had been checked in. She had the slightly plump, well-groomed, and inoffensively self-satisfied look of a minister’s wife in a prosperous parish. Though she could not understand why they needed her to verify something that Jim knew already, she checked her records and showed them that, indeed, Henry Ironheart’s monthly bill was always promptly paid by James Ironheart, of Laguna Niguel, by check.
“I’m glad you’ve come to visit at last, and I hope you’ll have a pleasant time,” Mrs. Danforth said, with genteel reproach meant to make him feel guilty for not visiting his grandfather more often while at the same time not directly offending him.
After they left Mrs. Danforth, they stood in a corner of the main hallway, out of the bustle of nurses and wheelchair-bound patients.
“I can’t just walk in on him,” Jim said adamantly. “Not after all this time. I feel... my stomach’s clutched up, cramped. Holly, I’m afraid of him.”
“Why?”
“I’m not sure.” Desperation, bordering on panic, made his eyes so disquieting that she did not want to look into them.
“When you were little, did he ever harm you?”
“I don’t think so.” He strained to see back through the clouds of memory, then shook his head. “I don’t know.”
Largely because she was afraid to leave Jim alone, Holly tried to convince him that it would be better for them to meet the old man together.
But he insisted she go first. “Ask him most of what we need to know, so when I come into it, we won’t have to stay much longer if we don’t want to... in case it goes bad, gets awkward, unpleasant. Prepare him for seeing me, Holly. Please.”
Because he appeared ready to bolt if she did not play things his way, Holly finally agreed. But watching Jim walk into the courtyard to wait there, she already regretted letting him move out of her sight. If he started to lose control again, if The Enemy began to break through, nobody would be with him to encourage him to resist the onslaught.
A friendly nurse helped Holly find Henry Ironheart when he proved not to be in his room. She pointed him out at a card table in the cheery recreation center, at the other end of which a half-dozen residents were watching a game show on television.
Henry was playing poker with his cronies. Four of them were at a table designed to accommodate wheelchairs, and none wore the standard nursing-home attire of pajamas or sweatsuits. Besides Henry, there were two fragile-looking elderly men—one in slacks and a red polo shirt; the other in slacks, white shirt, and bow tie—and a birdlike woman with snow-white hair, who was in a bright-pink pantsuit. They were halfway through a hotly contested hand, with a substantial pile of blue plastic chips in the pot, and Holly waited to one side, reluctant to interrupt them. Then one by one, exhibiting a flair for drama, they revealed their cards, and with a whoop of delight the woman—Thelma, her name was—raked in her winnings, theatrically gloating as the men goodnaturedly questioned her honesty.
Finally intruding into their banter, Holly introduced herself to Henry Ironheart, though without identifying herself as Jim’s fiancée. “I’d like to have a few minutes to talk with you about something if I could.”
“Jesus, Henry,” the man in the polo shirt said, “she’s less than half your age!”
“He always was an old pervert,” said the guy in the bow tie.
“Oh, get a life, Stewart,” Thelma said, speaking to Mr. Bow Tie. “Henry’s a gentleman, and he’s never been anything else.”
“Jesus, Henry, you’re gonna be married for sure before you get out of this room today!”
“Which you certainly won’t be, George,” Thelma continued. “And as far as I’m concerned”—she winked—“if it’s Henry, marriage doesn’t have to be part of it.”
They all roared at that, and Holly said, “I can see I’m going to be aced out of this one.”
George said, “Thelma gets what she’s after more often than not.”
Noticing that Stewart had gathered the cards up and was shuffling the deck, Holly said, “I don’t mean to interrupt your game.”
“Oh, don’t worry yourself,” Henry said. His words were slightly slurred as a result of his stroke, but he was quite intelligible. “We’ll just take a bathroom break.”
“At our age,” George said, “if we didn’t coordinate our bathroom breaks, there’d never be more than two of us at the card table at any one time!”
The others wheeled away, and Holly pulled up a chair to sit near Henry Ironheart.
He was not the vital-looking, square-faced man she had seen in the photograph on the living-room wall of the farmhouse last evening, and without help Holly might not have recognized him. His stroke had left his right side weak, though not paralyzed, and a lot of the time he held that arm curled against his chest, the way an injured animal might favor a paw. He had lost a lot of weight and was no longer a burly man. His face was not gaunt but nearly so, though his skin had good color; the facial muscles on the right side were unnaturally relaxed, allowing his features to droop a little.
His appearance, combined with the slur that thickened every word he spoke, might have sent Holly into a depression over the inevitable direction of every human life—if not for his eyes, which revealed an unbowed soul. And his conversation, though slowed somewhat by his impediment, was that of a bright and humorous man who would not give the fates the satisfaction of his despair; his treacherous body was to be cursed, if at all, in private.
“I’m a friend of Jim’s,” she told him.
He made a lopsided “O” of his mouth, which she decided was an expression of surprise. At first he did not seem to know what to say, but then he asked, “How is Jim?”
Deciding to opt for the truth, she said, “Not so good, Henry. He’s a very troubled man.”
He looked away from her, at the pile of poker chips on the table. “Yes,” he said softly.
Holly had half expected him to be a child-abusing monster who had been at least in part responsible for Jim’s withdrawal from reality. He seemed anything but that.
“Henry, I wanted to meet you, talk to you, because Jim and I are more than friends. I love him, and he’s said that he loves me, and it’s my hope that we’re going to be together a long, long time.”
To her surprise, tears brimmed up and slipped from Henry’s eyes, forming bright beads in the soft folds of his aged face.
She said, “I’m sorry, have I upset you?”
“No, no, good lord, no,” he said, wiping at his eyes with his left hand. “Excuse me for being an old fool.”
“I can tell you’re anything but that.”
“It’s just, I never thought... Well, I figured Jim was going to spend his life alone.”
“Why did you think that?”
“Well ...”
He seemed distressed at having to say anything negative about his grandson, completely dispelling her lingering expectations that he would be a tyrant of some kind.
Holly helped him. “He does have a way of keeping people at arm’s length. Is that what you mean?”
Nodding, he said, “Even me. I’ve loved him with all my heart, all these years, and I know he loves me in his way, though he’s always had real trouble showing it, and he could never say it.” As Holly was about to ask him a question, he suddenly shook his head violently and wrenched his distorted face
into an expression of anguish so severe that for an instant she thought he was having another stroke. “It’s not all him. God knows, it’s not.” The slur in his voice thickened when he grew more emotional. “I’ve got to face it—part of the distance between us is me, my fault, the blame I put on him that I never should’ve.”
“Blame?”
“For Lena.”
A shadow of fear passed across her heart and induced a quiver of angina-like pain.
She glanced at the window that looked out on a corner of the courtyard. It was not the corner to which Jim had gone. She wondered where he was, how he was... who he was.
“For Lena? I don’t understand,” she said, though she was afraid that she did.
“It seems unforgivable to me now, what I did, what I allowed myself to think.” He paused, looking not at her but through her now, toward a distant time and place. “But he was just so strange in those days, not the child he had been. Before you can even hope to understand what I did, you have to know that, after Atlanta, he was so very strange, all locked up inside.”
Immediately Holly thought of Sam and Emily Newsome, whose lives Jim had saved in an Atlanta convenience store—and Norman Rink, into whom he had pumped eight rounds from a shotgun in a blind rage. But Henry obviously was not talking about a recent event in Atlanta; he was referring to some previous incident, much further in the past.
“You don’t know about Atlanta?” he asked, reacting to her evident mystification.
A queer sound chittered through the room, alarming Holly. For an instant she could not identify the noise, then realized it was several birds shrieking the way they did when protecting their nests. No birds were in the room, and she supposed their cries were echoing down the fireplace chimney from the roof. Just birds. Their chatter faded.
She turned to Henry Ironheart again. “Atlanta? No, I guess I don’t know about that.”
“I didn’t think you did. I’d be surprised if he talked about it, even to you, even if he loves you. He just doesn’t talk about it.”
“What happened in Atlanta?”
“It was a place called the Dixie Duck—”
“Oh, my God,” she whispered. She had been there in the dream.
“Then you do know some of it,” he said. His eyes were pools of sorrow.
She felt her face crumple in grief, not for Jim’s parents, whom she had never known, and not even for Henry, who presumably had loved them, but for Jim. “Oh, my God.” And then she couldn’t say any more because her words backed up behind her own tears.
Henry reached out to her with one liver-spotted hand, and she took it, held it, waiting until she could speak again.
At the other end of the room, bells were ringing, horns blaring, on the TV game show.
No traffic accident had killed Jim’s parents. That story was his way of avoiding a recounting of the terrible truth.
She had known. She had known, and refused to know.
Her latest dream had not been a warning prophecy but another memory that Jim had projected into her mind as they had both slept. She had not been herself in the dream. She had been Jim. Just as she had been Lena in a dream two nights ago. If a mirror had given her a look at her face, she would have seen Jim’s countenance instead of her own, as she had seen Lena’s in the windmill window. The horror of the blood-drenched restaurant returned to her now in vivid images that she could not block from memory, and she shuddered violently.
She looked toward the window, the courtyard, frightened for him.
“They were performing for a week at a club in Atlanta,” Henry said. “They went out for lunch to Jimmy’s favorite place, which he remembered from the last time they’d played Atlanta.”
Voice trembling, Holly said, “Who was the gunman?”
“Just a nut. That’s what made it so hard. No meaning to it. Just a crazy man.”
“How many people died?”
“A lot.”
“How many, Henry?”
“Twenty-four.”