Clark sent a long-suffering look in his partner's direction. "The toxicology reports haven't come back yet," he said to Morris. "In the meantime, we're checking to see if Tracy had any kind of mental health history. Could be that today was the day the voices in his head told him to come home to Jesus, and you and your friend were just in the wrong place at the wrong time."
"Voices in his head," Morris said thoughtfully. "Could've been something like that, couldn't it? Well, good luck with finding out."
As the two detectives left, Something-witz looked back toward Morris, saying, "Yeah, and thanks for all your help, pal."
* * * *
Fenton was in a fury as he drove the rented Ford Focus out of the Hertz lot, the tires screeching. It was 4:12pm.
"Deputy Dawg can't even loan us an official car," Fenton snarled. "All in use, he says. On official business, he says, every fucking one."
He made an abrupt left turn without signaling, cutting off two other cars and prompting much blaring of horns.
"Providence field office can't give us a car because we're outside of their area of operations. We're Boston's problem now, they say. Boston field office says they'll be happy to have someone bring us over a car—tomorrow, or maybe the day after."
"It will not help our situation if you marry this vehicle to a light pole by driving like a maniac," Van Dreenan said mildly. "Besides, I believe I have good news."
"Well thank God and Sonny Jesus for that, because I could sure as shit use me some good news right about now!"
Van Dreenan said nothing, and it was quiet in the car for a few moments. Then Fenton carefully reduced the speed to something more reasonable, and took a couple of deliberate deep breaths.
"Sorry," he said. "You're the last person in the world who deserves to get a bunch of shit from me. I'm sorry, man."
"Entirely understandable," Van Dreenan said. "Forget it. Now as to the good news, there are actually two items."
"I'm listening."
"The first is that Elizabeth's locator was protected by my briefcase and undamaged in the accident. I have checked it, very carefully."
"That's good, although I don't know what fucking difference it makes now."
"The other item is in the context of what you Yanks call 'good news and bad news.' The bad news is that you and I are idiots."
"I've been suspecting that about us, especially lately."
"The good news is that I think we might still be able to catch up with Cecelia Mbwato and her companion."
* * * *
Morris stood watching Libby Chastain for what seemed like a long time. Her bed in the Intensive Care Unit was surrounded on three sides by expensive-looking machines that peeped and beeped and traced wavy lines on a series of small screens. An IV drip slowly fed some kind of clear liquid into her left arm.
Libby's blackened eyes were so prominent they made her look like a raccoon, or a burglar out of some old animated cartoon. A large gauze bandage covered much of the left side of her face. Her right arm was in a cast, and Morris could only speculate on the other damage that was hidden underneath the thin hospital blanket.
The nurses had vowed to chuck him out instantly if he tried to wake Libby up. And so he waited.
Then he noticed the pattern on one of the electronic monitors changing. The shallow curves it had been tracing gradually became deeper. Morris was wondering what it meant, and whether he should call for somebody, when Libby said softly, "How you doing, kiddo?"
Morris stepped closer to the bed. "You don't know how glad I am to hear your voice—even if you do sound like you've been gargling with Drano."
"Kind of feels like it, too."
Morris shook his head slowly. "Libby, I am so sorry about this."
"Could be… worse, I guess. Would be, too, 'cept for those… lightning reflexes of yours. That's twice, now. I owe you."
Morris felt his throat tighten, and he had to wait a long moment before trusting himself to speak again. "You don't owe me a thing, Libby. I haven't been keepin' score about who.'s saved whose ass how many times on this job, but I reckon it's pretty much even."
Libby's eyes closed again, and he was wondering if she had drifted back into unconsciousness when she suddenly asked, "How bad am I?"
Morris related what he'd been told by Doctor Rosenbloom. Then he added, "Most likely it'll be a while, but once you're feeling better, we can sit down and figure out what we're going to do about old Christine, up there in Salem. In the meantime—"
"No!" The vehemence in her voice took him by surprise. "We can't wait. Can't."
"Libby, you're in no shape to travel, let alone deal with a full-fledged black witch when you get there."
"I know. That's why you have to go. By yourself."
Morris stared at her, wondering if the injuries she'd suffered had somehow affected her brain.
After a moment, Libby shook her head—about a half-inch either direction. "No, I haven't lost my wits, along with everything else. You have to go, it's the only way to end it."
"Libby, you need to rest."
"Yes, but not eternally. Not just yet, anyway. And if she makes another run at me now, I'm helpless to stop her. Which means I'm dead."
"That's why I should stay with you. To protect you."
"The way you did this morning?" Her voice was gentle.
"Libby, I—"
"No, hear me out, I'm starting to feel woozy again. I know you saved my life today, Quincey. But she almost killed me. And the hospital won't let you stay here twenty-four seven. Even if they did, you still have to sleep sometime."
Morris's mouth tightened in frustration.
"And remember," Libby said, "if I die, so do the LaRues."
"Christ, I forgot." Libby's death would render all her warding charms in the LaRue house useless. The family would be utterly defenseless against another magical assault by Christine Abernathy.
"Only chance is an end run." Libby's voice was starting to sound slurry. "Remember… aggressor has advantage. This time, you be… aggressor."
Morris nodded reluctantly. All right. He would go to Salem by himself, although what he was going to do against a black witch of Christine Abernathy's power….
Libby seemed to read his thoughts. "My bag," she mumbled. "In the locker thing… there. Get it."
Morris found the black leather purse and brought it over.
"Inside pocket," Libby said. "Zipper. Feel it?"
Morris fumbled, then said, "Yeah, okay."
"Open. Find the mirror."
Morris unzipped the little compartment and located the small oval mirror, about four inches from top to bottom. He held it up where Libby could see.
"Take it," she said. Her gaze was losing it focus now. "Prepared… last night. Keep with you when you meet… Abernathy. Mirror spell. Should help, if she…."
And then she was out again.
A few minutes later, the head ICU nurse made Morris leave, and told him not to come back to tire her patient for at least twenty-four hours.
Twenty-four hours? he thought. It'll be over long before then, lady.
* * * *
Using his turn signal, Fenton slowly and carefully pulled over to the side of the road, well clear of traffic. Then he shut off the engine. "Tell me," he said. "The short version."
"We've been assuming that for the locator to work, we had to follow the same route that they did. Since they had a head start, we were always behind them. I take responsibility for that stupid assumption, by the way."
"Whatever." Fenton waved an impatient hand. "What's the rest?"
"The locator, Elizabeth said, should work over a distance of several miles. Which means it should still be able to detect them if they are on one those secondary roads they like so much, while we are speeding along an adjacent highway. The locator will tell us when to leave the highway by indicating that we have passed them."
Fenton rubbed his chin dubiously, but there was something like hope dawning in his face. "They've
got one mother of a lead on us, man."
"Did you have anything else planned for tonight?" Van Dreenan asked him.
Five seconds passed. Ten. Then Fenton broke into a grin and said, "Fuck, no."
Van Dreenan grinned right back at him. "Me neither," he said. "Me, neither."
"The Hertz lady said there was a map in the glove compartment," Fenton said. "Dig it out, and let's figure out how to get to the nearest Interstate."
* * * *
Snake Perkins waited until it was full dark before loading up the Connie with their sparse luggage. Then he went back inside their room.
"All set," he said to Cecelia Mbwato.
She nodded, then went around the room, turning off the lights. They had agreed that there was no reason to have light from the room illuminate her when she came outside to get in the car.
A few minutes later, they were on their way.
"Got that road atlas handy?" Snake asked.
"Yes, right here."
"Good. We don't wanna get lost now. I'll need you to navigate for me."
"To what?"
"Tell me when to turn, so's we don't end up on the wrong road. I been to Salem before, but I never went this way. I can't check the map and drive at the same time."
"Very well."
"There's a pen light in the glove box, I think. Can't risk driving with the dome light on—it'd light us up like we was on stage, or somethin'."
After a few moments' fumbling, she said, "Yes, I have it."
They were talking about everything but what they had spent the whole day doing on the motel bed, with brief breaks for food and naps. Neither would admit to themselves, let alone to the other, that they had just had the best sex of their lives.
Sex between two people who love each other can be hot, passionate, even transcendent.
Sex between two people who don't like each other, oddly enough, can sometimes be almost as good.
But it leads to some awkward moments afterward.
They had been in the car over a quarter-hour before Snake said, "Uh, listen, about what we—"
"Let us not speak of it. We did what we did, and now it is in • the past, to be forgotten, or remembered, as we wish."
Coming from Cecelia Mbwato, Snake thought, that was almost poetic. But what he said was, "Yeah, you're right. I was just gonna say that, myself. Good."
After a little while, though, she said musingly, "There was one thing that was a surprise to me, today."
"What's that?"
"Your cock. It is not nearly as small as I thought a white man's must be."
Chapter 29
Morris had thought about just getting on an airplane. New York to Boston, there must be a dozen flights leaving JFK every day. Then rent a car and drive the last thirty-five miles or so to Salem and whatever awaited him there.
But then he thought some more.
It doesn't really take a lot to bring an airliner down, as the 9/11 hijackers demonstrated all too vividly. Morris didn't know what Christine Abernathy might be able to manage in the way of sabotage—electrical failure, some kind of attack on the cockpit crew, a flight of geese sucked into the engines—but he supposed there were any number of possibilities. And the black witch didn't seem much concerned about what the military calls "collateral damage."
Morris wasn't eager to die, although he thought there was a good chance that he would not survive the confrontation to come. But he wasn't interested in putting a planeload of innocent passengers at risk, just so he could take the most convenient route to his own funeral.
The folks at Avis, he found, were still trying harder. They were not only willing to rent him a fairly new Oldsmobile, but also provided a computer-generated set of maps and directions. The pretty blonde behind the counter, seeing his destination was Salem, even made a cute little joke about witches.
She seemed disappointed when Morris didn't laugh.
He located the blue Olds in the lot without much difficulty, and stashed his suitcase in the trunk. Then he started the engine, took a deep breath, and headed out into the Darwinian chariot race that is New York City traffic.
Morris wondered whether he would ever return to New York, and whether Libby Chastain would still be alive when he did.
Following the directions that Avis had given him, he beeped, butted, and bluffed his way out of the city. Within half an hour he was on Route 95, the great north-south interstate that spans the east coast from New England to Florida.
He had been on the highway for only a short time when it started raining toads.
The first of the small creatures landed on the Oldsmobile's hood and just squatted there, looking in at Morris impassively. A couple of seconds later, another one hit the windshield and bounced off, leaving a wet, yellow smear. Just for a moment, he thought the amphibians might have dropped from an overhanging tree—then he realized that state highway departments don't allow trees to grow that close to the interstates. A quick glance in the mirror confirmed that there wasn't a tree within fifty yards of the stretch of road he had just passed over.
Then the toads began to fall in earnest. He could see them strike the hood and windshield, and hear them on the roof and trunk, sounding for all the world like the record-setting hailstorm that Morris had driven through back in Texas years before, when some of the chunks of falling ice had been the size of billiard balls.
The toads were all over the road in front of him, too. Morris wasn't trying to run them over—he was fond of animals, and tried to avoid hurting them when he could—but their sheer numbers made it impossible to avoid squashing some, and he could both hear and feel their bodies striking the undercarriage as they were flung there by the rotation of his wheels. Thinking about the carnage he was causing made his skin crawl.
Visibility quickly became so bad that he turned on his windshield wipers, but GM hadn't designed them to cope with this kind of precipitation, so the improvement was minimal. Morris was giving serious thought to pulling off to the side of the road when the green deluge suddenly ceased. Unlike a rainstorm, there was no gradual slowdown of the shower. It just—stopped. He checked the mirror again to see if amphibians were still coming down in the area he'd just left, but he could perceive nothing out of the ordinary, and the road behind him ran straight for more than a mile.
A minute later, he saw the sign for an upcoming service plaza, and decided to stop there and assess the damage to the car.
Except that there wasn't any damage.
He'd parked the Olds a little apart from the other vehicles in the huge lot, then walked around it twice, slowly.
There was nothing at all on the car to reflect the bizarre downpour he'd just driven through: no scratches, no dents, nothing green adhering to any of the tires. Even the slime on the windshield was gone—if it had ever been there to begin with.
Morris looked up at the cloudless sky for a long moment. Then he shook himself, the way a dog will when it comes in out of the rain, and walked into the plaza's main building in search of something to eat.
Half an hour later, after putting away a mediocre cheeseburger and some over-brewed coffee, Morris was washing his hands in the restroom when he suddenly realized there was something oddly familiar about the man standing to his left. Morris turned his head and looked more closely, his eyes widening. The middle-aged man with slicked-back brown hair was wearing the kind of jumpsuit you often find in institutional settings. He turned from the sink and stared back at Morris with eyes of a soft, luminous blue. He smiled gently.
The man was an absolute dead ringer for that British actor who has played a homicidal psychiatrist in a series of scary, gory movies.
"I knew a fellow once who tried to interfere with Christine Abernathy's plans," the man said in a soft, cultured voice. "She ate his kidneys with a plate of lima beans and a nice glass of Merlot. Or was it Chardonnay? Yes, I rather think it was." He pulled his lips back from his teeth and made a staccato sucking sound like someone inhaling a long strand of spag
hetti.
From somewhere, the man had produced what looked like a police nightstick. He slapped the business end against his palm as he said, "Ready when you are, Mr. Morris."
Morris took a quick step back, then flicked his gaze toward the mirror, to see if there was anyone else nearby who might be either a potential ally or enemy. Two men were standing at the row of urinals, apparently unaware of the confrontation taking place behind them while they emptied their bladders. Morris's glance took no more than half a second, and he was already assuming the fourth defensive posture of Shotokan karate as he looked back toward his adversary.
The demented doctor was gone.
Morris blinked a couple of times, then put his arms down. One of the men who had been relieving himself turned away from the urinal and looked at Morris curiously for a second before leaving the restroom.
Morris turned back to the sink and finished drying his hands—which, he noticed, were not quite steady.
When he returned to his car, there was a gray Toyota parked a couple of spaces away. A woman with long black hair was fussing with the window of the driver's side door. As Morris approached she looked up, an anxious expression on her face, and he could see that she was holding a bent coat hanger. She was tall, slim, probably around thirty.
She was the most compellingly attractive woman he had ever seen in his life.
"Listen, I'm sorry to bother you, but could you help me?" Her voice sounded a little shaky.
"What's the trouble?" Morris was wary, unsure if this was genuine or another of Christine Abernathy's attempts to play with his head.
"I feel so utterly stupid," she said. "I locked the keys inside." She gestured with the wire hanger. "I found this in one of the trash cans, and I've been trying to reach the inside door handle, but the window's only open an inch at the top, and I just can't do it!" The eyes glistened with incipient tears.
Morris glanced inside the Toyota and confirmed that the keys were, in fact, still in the ignition. He made a decision.
"That's because you're going about it wrong, that's all," he said. "Here, let me see."
He took the hanger from her and bent the curved top into a tighter, smaller loop. "Now I'll show you a trick that every good car thief knows. Uh, you don't have a car alarm, do you?"
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