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The Shimmer

Page 17

by David Morrell


  “Thank God, I found you,” he said. “Come on. We need to get back to the car.”

  “No.”

  The rumble of thunder made him think he hadn’t heard her correctly. “What?”

  “Leave me alone.”

  “You’re not safe out here.”

  Page gripped Tori’s hand, but the rain slicked her skin, and she was able to pull away, rushing from him.

  “Tori!” he yelled. “We need to get back to the car!”

  For a panicked moment, Page couldn’t see her. Then lightning revealed her outline, and he charged after her.

  “Tori, you could get killed out here!”

  Page grabbed her shoulders. Standing behind her, he tried to turn her in the direction from which he’d come. She rammed her elbow into his stomach, knocking him away.

  The unexpected blow made him struggle to breathe. Holding him- self, he realized that she’d disappeared again.

  The next time lightning flashed, he saw that she’d gone much farther than he’d expected. He ran to catch up to her. Again he grabbed her from behind, but this time, his arms pinned her elbows to her sides. He linked his hands around her stomach and lifted her, trying to carry her backward.

  She kicked her heels against his knees. When the pain in his legs made him drop her, she spun.

  “You bastard, don’t take me away from the lights again!”

  “Again?”

  “If you’d let me stay, if you hadn’t grabbed me and shoved me into the car-”

  Stunned, Page realized she thought he was someone else. “Tori, I’m not your father.”

  “All I want to do is see the lights! You son of a bitch, you’re always yelling at Mom! You’re always trying to touch me!”

  Page was shocked by this further revelation.

  “Tori, your father died a long time ago! It’s me! Your husband! I love you!”

  Lightning showed her frenzied features as she drew back her fist. Drenched by the rain, he waited for the blow.

  Her fist struck his mouth. His head jerked back, but as he tasted blood, he kept his feet in place, preparing himself for what he knew would be another blow.

  She drew back her fist again. Then darkness made her disappear. The next time lightning flashed, Page saw her staring at him in shock.

  Her shoulders heaved. Some of the drops streaming down her face weren’t rain, he suspected, but tears. Her mouth opened, releasing a wail of anguish. When she clutched him, pressing herself against him, she did so with the force of a blow. Her arms clung to him tightly. With her head pressed against his chest, she sobbed uncontrollably.

  “Scared,” she moaned.

  He could barely hear her in the roar of the wind and the rain.

  “I’m scared, too. But it’s going to be all right,” he promised, tasting the blood from his swelling lip. “I’ll do anything for you. Please, let me help.”

  “I don’t know what’s happening to me.”

  “I don’t know what’s happening to me, either,” Page said close to her cheek. “But believe me, we’re going to find out.”

  With his arm around her, he waited for the next crack of lightning. It split the sky so close to them that he flinched, but its blaze allowed him to orient himself. Behind him, he briefly saw the shape of the observation area and began to recognize the faint illumination of headlights and flashing emergency lights.

  Tori must have seen them as well. As thunder coincided with renewed darkness, she plodded forward through the gusting rain. Page took her hand and moved next to her. If the lightning didn’t provide more visual bearings, they risked going in circles in the field.

  The ground became muddy, their sneakers sinking into it.

  “Cold,” Tori murmured.

  “Think of a hot bath,” Page told her. “Dry clothes. Steaming coffee. Warm covers in bed.”

  “Lost,” Tori said.

  “Then we’re lost together.”

  Lightning fractured the sky.

  Tori pointed. “The fence.”

  Their shoes were weighed down by mud. They slipped in it, holding each other up.

  When they reached the fence, Page shouted to be heard above the wind. “I’ll pull the strands of wire apart! Try to squeeze through the gap!”

  As he used both hands to yank a middle strand up while pressing down on a lower one with his muddy sneaker, he feared that lightning would strike the fence, rush along the wires, and fry both of them.

  “I’m through!” Tori yelled.

  Page climbed the post and jumped to the ground, where he skidded in the mud, falling to his right knee. Lightning cracked close enough for him to smell it.

  “Are you okay?” Tori asked.

  “I will be in a minute.” Page came to his feet.

  Down the road, headlights glared, revealing the row of cars and people hurrying for shelter. Gusts of rain buffeted them. Some wore ripped clothes and held themselves as if injured.

  “You’re sure you’re okay?” Tori shouted.

  “Better than the way they look,” Page answered. He and Tori ran along the line of cars until they reached the Saturn.

  Inside, Tori already had the keys from her pocket. She turned on the engine and started the heater, but the rush of air was cold, and she quickly shut it off.

  As rain lashed the windshield, Page shivered.

  Tori’s teeth clicked together. Her red hair was stuck to her head. Water dripped from her blouse, her muddy clothes clinging to her.

  Behind them, more headlights blazed as cars pulled out of the line, retreating to Rostov. Thunder shook the car.

  Tori wiped blood from his mouth.

  “I’m so sorry,” she told him.

  Page touched her hand. “It wasn’t really you who hit me.”

  “The past few days, I feel like I stepped out of my life. I don’t understand myself any longer. What the hell is happening?”

  “Whatever it is, it’s happening to both of us.” Page held her, grateful that she let him. He loved her so much that he could barely speak. “We’ll find out together.”

  THREE – EYE OF THE BEHOLDER

  41

  Chilled by his drenched clothes, Brent stood at the back window of the broadcast truck and stared into the murky rain. Behind him, Anita and Luther Hamilton slumped against a wall, sipping tepid coffee from plastic cups.

  The news producer watched as a technician and a cameraman finished stowing the equipment. “Time to head back to the motel.”

  Lightning flashed, showing Brent the last of the crowd hurrying desperately through the rain toward their cars. Several limped or held themselves in pain.

  “I wish we could get a shot of that.”

  “I’m not sending any camera operator out in that lightning,” the producer said. “The storm’s predicted to last several hours. Nothing else is going to happen here tonight. It’s time to get some sleep.”

  “Who needs sleep when there’s a story this big?”

  “And who needs a reporter who passes out from exhaustion?”

  “Where’s Sharon?” Brent asked with suspicion.

  “Back at the motel. She’s resting so she can anchor the morning broadcast from here.”

  “No way. I’ll coanchor with her.”

  “Not unless you get some rest. I know you want to show viewers how hard you’re working, but you’re starting to look scary.”

  When the truck started, making the floor unsteady, Brent sat next to Anita and fastened his seat belt. “Are you hurt?”

  “Bruised.”

  “You did good work today.”

  “And last night,” Anita emphasized. Something flashed in her dark eyes.

  “And last night,” Brent acknowledged. “Tomorrow morning, are you ready to do more?”

  “My car still needs repairs.” Anita’s face was pinched with fatigue. She peered up from under her baseball cap toward the producer. “Am I still getting overtime?”

  “You bet. CNN is underwriting our expens
es.”

  The truck bumped as the driver steered onto the road.

  “But I don’t know what else is left in the story,” the producer said. “After what happened tonight, the police say they’re shutting down the viewing area. Nobody’ll be allowed there tomorrow night. Maybe not for a long time to come.”

  “The police can try, but after what we transmitted just now, there’ll be plenty more curiosity seekers here tomorrow,” Brent said. “It’ll be Saturday. People will make a weekend of it. They won’t like coming a long way and not getting a chance to see the lights. Cops, barricades, an angry crowd-all that makes for great television.”

  “Tomorrow night,” the producer agreed. “But what about in the meantime?”

  “Lots of angles. I need to track down the woman who killed the shooter. Also, somebody told me there’s a radio observatory around here. I bet I can tie that in somehow-extraterrestrials or whatever. And I want to find out more about that airbase from World War II. Maybe we can get a shot of where that kid got himself blown up back in 1980.”

  “Johnny,” Hamilton murmured.

  “What?”

  “His name was Johnny.”

  “Right.”

  The producer said, “Brent, if you start wandering around that air- field, you’re liable to get blown up, too.” He looked thoughtful. “You know, that would make a great story.”

  42

  Raleigh heard the faint rumble of thunder, but apart from some water trickling down a wall, the area beneath the abandoned airbase remained secure. In the cold glare of the overhead lights, he watched his men finish unpacking the last of the wooden crates.

  “Sergeant Lockhart, reassemble the team.”

  “Yes, sir.”

  Within seconds, they again stood before him in a line.

  “Gentlemen, through the door behind you, you’ll find latrines and your sleeping quarters, although you won’t spend much time in the latter. There’s a kitchen, but it isn’t stocked. For now, you’ll need to make do with the field rations you unpacked. When the next Black Hawk arrives at the observatory, it’ll bring steaks.

  “Part of the reason you were chosen for this assignment is that you’re experts in electronics. Behind the door to your right, you’ll find a monitoring station. It was state-of-the-art three years ago. The equipment we brought will bring it up to speed. But before you install it, I want you to take the closed-circuit cameras you unpacked and mount them on overhead corners in every room and corridor. I want every inch of this facility-including the latrines-to be visible on surveillance screens and every second of what happens down here to be recorded. If we’re going to make history, it needs to be documented.

  “Each of you will wear your sidearm at all times. You’ll also make sure that one of the M4s you unpacked is close to you wherever you go. In addition, you’ll wear shooter’s earplugs.”

  Raleigh noted the puzzled look Lockhart gave him.

  “Sergeant, do you have a question?”

  “Sir, are you expecting us to come under attack?”

  “Just taking precautions, given the instability we’ve seen outside. As far as the earplugs are concerned, there are certain audio characteristics to this project that can have… let’s call them damaging effects.”

  A door opened behind Raleigh. He turned to see one of the team members bringing in the dog trainer and the German shepherd. They’d come down via a stairwell-its electronically controlled hatch was concealed among the hangar’s piles of wreckage. All three were soaked.

  “Any problems up there?” Raleigh asked.

  “No, sir,” the dog trainer responded. “Nobody came near this area. The crowd was too distracted by what was happening at the viewing area down the road. Things got crazy there. Then the storm started, and everybody left.”

  “Through that door, you’ll find dry clothes.”

  “Thank you, sir.”

  As the trainer and the German shepherd left the area, Raleigh motioned for Lockhart to come over.

  Raleigh kept his voice low. “If the dog acts strangely in any way, no matter how slight…”

  “Yes, sir?”

  “Shoot it.”

  43

  The Saturn’s windshield wipers flapped heavily in the strengthening downpour that pounded the roof and obscured the headlights. Shivering, Tori almost missed the motel’s entrance. She turned, drove through rain-churned puddles, and stopped at unit 11. After she and Page ran to the door, Page unlocked it and held it open for her with- out entering.

  “Go ahead, take a bath,” he said. “Put on some warm clothes. I’ll drive back to the Rib Palace and get some hot coffee for us.”

  “But you’re as cold as I am. Why should I go first? That isn’t fair.”

  “The last thing you need is to get sick before your surgery. How about hot soup? You want some?”

  Tori barely hesitated. “Yes. That would be great.”

  Page hurried back through the drenching rain and got into the car, turning up the heater.

  Fifteen minutes later, he returned, setting Styrofoam containers of coffee and soup on the unit’s small table. The bathroom door was closed. Hearing the splash of water in the tub, he quickly took off his dripping clothes. The room didn’t have a closet, but it did have hangers on a rod. He hung his clothes there and dried himself with a blanket he found on a shelf. Even with the blanket draped around him, he couldn’t stop shaking.

  He hadn’t packed a lot of clothes and was forced to put on the jeans and shirt he’d worn the night before. They still had the odor of smoke, but at least they were dry.

  When Tori came out of the bathroom, she found him huddled under the covers of his bed, trying to keep his fingers steady while he used both hands to grip his container of coffee.

  She wore her usual T-shirt and boxer shorts. Her towel-dried hair was combed back. “Your turn.”

  “Somehow the idea of getting wet again doesn’t appeal to me. I think I’ll wait until I’m a little warmer.”

  “I still feel shaky. What kind of soup did you get?”

  “In a place like the Rib Palace, they had only one choice-they call it Fiery Beef.”

  “Sounds like exactly what I need.”

  She pulled a blanket off her bed, wrapped it around her, and sat at the table, opening the container of soup. Watching her, Page sipped his coffee and felt the hot liquid against his bruised lip. She didn’t say anything all the while she ate, spooning the soup quickly. Then she opened the coffee, and while she drank it, she remained silent. Finally she turned to him, her features strained with confusion. “If it hadn’t been for the storm, I’d have walked forever to try to reach the lights.”

  “No,” Page said. “If it hadn’t been for me.”

  “I couldn’t resist. They seemed to be calling me.”

  He considered what she’d said, then gave her an extremely direct look.

  “Let’s pack and get out of here. Not tomorrow. Right now. We can be at your mother’s house by morning. Are you ready to do that?”

  Tori lowered her head and didn’t reply, in effect giving him an answer. He remembered what had happened in the field. After what she had said and done to him, he wasn’t about to try to force her to leave. He wasn’t even certain he could force her to leave. So he came to a decision.

  “In that case, I need to be a cop a while longer. This has gone way past the point where I can just let things keep controlling us. I’m going to find out what’s going on.”

  44

  Page jerked awake, struck anew by the stark reality of what Tori had told him about her cancer and by what had happened the night before.

  So much to adjust to.

  Sunlight crept past the cheap drapes, but he didn’t feel at all rested, even though a glance at the bedside clock showed him that the time was 1:14 and that he’d slept another twelve hours.

  This time Tori remained in her bed.

  Groggy, he went into the bathroom, softly closed the door, and shaved, run
ning the water as little as possible, trying not to make noise.

  When he came out, Tori was putting on a pair of slacks.

  “Sorry if I woke you,” he said.

  “It wasn’t a good sleep.”

  “The same with me.” He touched the shirt and jeans that he’d put on a hangar. “Still wet.” He glanced down at the clothes he’d slept in. Wrinkled, they continued to retain the odor of the fire two nights earlier.

  “Looks like we need to do some shopping,” Tori concluded.

  When they stepped from the room and faced the harsh sunlight, Page was troubled by the number of vehicles streaming past the motel-many more than on the previous day. It took even longer for Tori to find a break in the traffic and steer the Saturn onto the road.

  In town, the streets were filled with cars. All the parking spaces were occupied. Tori let Page out in front of a store called the Out – fitter, where there were so many tourists that he had to wait fifteen minutes to pay for new clothes. It took another fifteen minutes to get into a dressing room. He put on a pair of pants, a T-shirt, and a shirt to wear over it-something that would conceal his handgun. When he came out with his old clothes in a shopping bag, he heard a customer talking to a female clerk.

  “Do people really see lights around here?”

  “Yes,” the clerk answered. “But it’s been years since I went looking for them.”

  “Aren’t you curious what they are?” the customer asked.

  “When I was a kid. But I got used to them.”

  As Page walked toward the front of the store, he heard another customer telling a different clerk, “My wife has diabetes. We heard this place makes miracles happen, like at Lourdes. If she sees the lights, she’ll be cured.”

  Page went out to the sidewalk, where Tori was waiting with two sandwiches and two bottles of water from a restaurant next door.

  Cured? he thought. Wouldn’t that be nice?

  They ate while they walked three blocks to the hospital. There Tori again paused nervously on the hot steps outside the entrance.

 

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