“I’m sure you have your reasons. Energies, dynamics…like that.”
“My name is Janice Ravenwood,” she said, ignoring the jab. “I’m a medium. Perhaps you know my books.”
“No. But then, I stick mostly to nonfiction.”
“I think I’m full up with sarcasm now.”
“I’m not being sarcastic. It’s just the way I am. I only believe what I see.”
“You see what you choose to see.” She raised her hand. “It’s all a matter of energies.” Her fingers did a little dance, and the silver bracelets encircling her thin wrists provided the music. “If you had a sensitive nature—I’m speaking psychically, of course—you’d understand. You’d see beyond the physical, as I do.”
“The physical suits me just fine,” I said, nudging the backpack with my shoulder. “Let’s stick with it.”
“As you wish.”
“Run down the plan for me.”
“You bring your backpack. I bring you. We go to the Whistler estate. You meet a few people. From there on out, you’re on your own.”
“Sounds familiar,” I said. I looked around, searching for spectral company, but the little girl was nowhere in sight. “Seems like I’m always on my own.”
Janice Ravenwood stared at the backpack. She didn’t say a word, but her smile knifed into a smirk.
And then she slipped a pair of dark glasses over her gray eyes, and the sun broke through the clouds behind her, and light caught the bottles and a dozen colors were reflected in the polished lenses of her shades.
She turned and started down the trail before I could say another word.
I followed in silence.
* * *
The medium’s Ford Explorer was parked on the beach. “Give me your pack,” she said. “I’ll toss it in the back.”
“I’ll hold onto it, if that’s okay.”
Janice sighed disapprovingly. “Have it your way.”
“Sorry. I have issues. Trust is one of them.”
She laughed, but a wave broke behind her and I hardly heard the laugh at all.
In a moment, nothing remained of the wave but a crust of foam sizzling high on the beach.
“Let’s go,” Janice said.
I got in and buckled my seat belt. The beach was empty—still no sign of the little girl. I sat there with the pack at my feet. Janice Ravenwood got behind the wheel and slammed the door. She keyed the engine, slipped the Explorer into gear, and drove down the beach. Waves broke, but we were sealed in tight and I couldn’t hear them anymore. Just an annoying whisper of new age music coming from the stereo, and the sound of our breathing.
And a fly.
The insect must have followed us inside. It buzzed around the cab and lighted just where I knew it would, on the backpack.
I stared at it. Crawling, fat and black and shiny. Stopping. Rubbing its legs together. Janice Ravenwood saw it too.
She stopped the car and leaned toward me so that her hair brushed my shoulder. In close, I could smell her perfume.
Vanilla-sweet, with a hint of jasmine. It went just fine with the new age music.
Her fingers neared the backpack, but didn’t quite touch it.
Our eyes met. Just for a moment. Janice gave a little sigh, only vaguely theatrical.
Energies, I thought, considering the backpack’s contents. They must be thermonuclear.
It seemed like Janice knew that too. Though her fingers were close, she didn’t touch the backpack.
She was a very patient woman. She turned her hand palm upward, ever so slowly, so that her silver bracelets didn’t make the slightest sound.
We sat there. We sat there a good long time.
Until the fly crawled across Janice Ravenwood’s fingers, into her open palm.
Just that fast, her hand became a fist.
She rolled down her window and released the fly.
“Your good deed for the day?” I asked.
She said, “A wise soul understands the dynamics of mercy.”
For a few seconds we sat there, listening to the waves and the music, smelling the salt air. I guess she thought I needed a little downtime for processing.
Finally, Janice Ravenwood rolled up her window.
She glared at my backpack.
“We really should have put that thing in the back,” she said. “It stinks.”
* * *
The beach gave way to a dirt road that snaked through the redwood forest. We followed that road awhile, past the clearing where I’d parked my truck, and then the dirt road intersected with a two-lane highway that clung to the ragged coastline the same way the bottle house did, as if it might tumble into the sea at any moment.
Janice was right about the backpack. It did stink. I cracked my window and breathed the scent of redwood and fern and sea and earth.
Occasionally, another road led inland through the trees. Occasionally, I glimpsed a house set back among the redwoods, but more often than not there was only the forest itself, as impenetrable as the walls of a fortress.
Maybe it was the presence of Janice Ravenwood, girl medium, but I suddenly considered the possibility that anything could happen in a place like this.
Anything, in the dark shadows cast by trees that were centuries old. Anything, in the black places where no one could see.
Anything. It was quite a concept for a guy like me.
A guy like me didn’t do too well with anything. I did better with nothing. That was a concept I could sink my teeth into.
Nothing in the shadows but blackness.
Nothing in the light but what you could see.
Yeah. I could get a hold of that one. After all, I could see more than most. And what I saw didn’t stretch halfway to the boundless possibilities of anything.
Janice pulled off the highway. Tires shushed along a cobbled drive that wound toward the sea. We descended into the trees, and the shadows. As we left the light, Janice flicked on her headlights.
And we saw what there was to see.
A hundred yards of security fencing flashed by on the left. A spiked iron gate. A guard dog.
The dog had three heads, and three open mouths filled with gleaming fangs.
But the dog was bronze. It didn’t move.
“There’s a security box to the left of the gate,” Janice said. “The code is *666*. Circe said to trust you with it, but I can’t imagine why.”
“Thanks.”
“One other thing.”
“What’s that?”
She smiled. “Watch out for dogs.”
“I’ll do my best,” I said, shooting a glance at the bronze statue. “But to tell the truth, I don’t have much of an imagination.”
“Hang around a while,” Janice said. “We’ll make a believer of you yet.”
I closed the door and watched the medium drive away. Then I punched in the security code and waited for the gate to open.
A fly buzzed by me.
Another one, or the same one.
It flew between spiked iron bars, and into the darkness. And beyond.
3
The security gate swung closed behind me.
A narrow brick path curved to the right, leading to another gate and another keypad. Janice hadn’t mentioned the added security, but it didn’t surprise me. After all, this was Circe Whistler’s home. I imagined she’d made some pretty formidable enemies in her time. To be sure, there was a fine line between careful and paranoid. But if I were Circe Whistler, I probably would have jumped across it a long time ago.
I reached for the keypad and a Doberman sprang from the shadows on the other side of the gate, raking its teeth across the bars and barking up a storm.
Three other dogs joined it in the time it took me to draw a breath. Squinting into the shadows, I saw that the gate led to a large enclosed pen. I shook my head—right about now, Janice Ravenwood was probably having a good laugh at my expense.
I looked for another way to go, and that was when I noticed a brick s
taircase half-hidden by braided vines. Brushing them to one side like tattered draperies, I descended through a lush jungle of ferns and orchids and hanging fuchsias to a swimming pool with a black bottom.
Black, to trap the heat of the sun and warm the water. But the sun was weak here. A ring of ancient redwoods snared the pool, transforming the day to muted twilight, and the water was as dark as the mythic Styx.
Something flashed beneath the water’s surface and caught my eye. Silver ripples broke at the opposite end of the pool, parting the water in a sculpted wake behind armored ridges of blue scale, sharp teeth parted over hellish smiles, and bright red gouts of blood that never flowed. All of it there on the surface for just a moment, and then came the slightest splash and the silver water closed around the thing as it submerged, moving as swift and strong as the steelhead in the little girl’s creek.
Whatever it was, it was coming in my direction. Coming very fast.
The water parted at the edge of the pool. White hands with painted black nails slapped the coping and a woman thrust palm down and carried her weight up and out of the water in one smooth motion, her arms straight now, silver water rolling down tattooed tapestries on her bare shoulders—armored ridges of blue scale, sharp teeth parted over hellish smiles, and bright red gouts of blood that never flowed.
The tattoos must have cost a lot. I figured that was the reason Circe Whistler didn’t want to cover them with a swimming suit.
Circe’s lips pulled back in a smile as she noticed me. She slicked long, too-black hair against her skull and twisted a final splash of water from it.
Like the payoff scare in a monster movie, another splash chopped the silence. Another pair of black-nailed hands on the coping, but but this time it was a man who came out of the water. At least I thought Circe’s companion was a man. I had my doubts—I’d never seen another like him. With a shaved bullet-head and long muscled arms he rose from the depths…with crude brands burned on his pale skin like souvenirs of hell…and it seemed he just kept coming, naked and grub white and breathing like a bellows.
Circe teased the tall freak. “You need to work on your stamina.”
“Try me on land next time.” He panted. “Exclusively—no more of this amphibian shit.”
Circe moved in and kissed the Egyptian ankh branded on his chest. Then she strained high on tiptoes and he bent down, and at last her lips found his. They embraced, and when they came apart I found myself thinking of the steelhead swimming upstream to spawn in the little girl’s creek.
But that was ridiculous. Circe Whistler was a beauty scaled with tattoos, but her companion didn’t much resemble a graceful creature of the water. I didn’t know exactly where he belonged, but the biped act he was attempting definitely seemed an evolutionary challenge. Awkward and insectile and at least seven feet tall, he carried a lean gym-sculpted torso on a pair of skinny legs that looked like they should collapse under the weight. As far as I was concerned, the ugly bastard broke about a dozen laws of nature. He looked like he belonged under a rock.
He gave me the once-over as he dried off. “This the guy?” he asked, and I could tell by his tone that he was almost as impressed as I was.
“Yes. This is the guy.” Circe snatched a towel from a chaise lounge and dried herself, but her eyes never left me. Not the bright blue pair set in the savage angles of her face, not the others that stared out from the faces of demons and children and monsters etched on her flesh.
“Toss me my robe?” she asked.
It hung over a railing at the bottom of the staircase. The freak headed for it. His legs were longer, but I was closer. Besides, he was still panting like a sled dog heading for the Iditarod finish line. By the time he got to the railing, I was holding the robe in my left hand.
Empty-handed, the bugman looked way past distressed.
“You can always take this,” I said, extending the backpack.
“Get that fucking thing away from me.”
He said it too quickly. I had him on the run, and I knew it. I jammed the backpack against the branded ankh on his chest.
Wasn’t that a laugh—the Egyptian symbol of eternal life. “Do you really think you’re going to live forever?” I asked. The bugman’s upper lip started to twitch.
“Now boys,” Circe said. “Play nice, or I won’t let you play at all.”
The whole thing was a joke now. I grinned and slung the backpack over my shoulder, and the freak grabbed a fistful of my right hand, his big hand swallowing mine like an albino spider.
He shook my hand like he wanted to break it. I let him have his fun. “Spider Ripley,” he said.
“Clay Saunders.”
Ripley eyed me hard. But when he released my hand, he didn’t have anything. I still had the backpack, and Circe’s robe.
The robe was silk. I liked touching it. It hardly weighed a thing. I turned my back on Spider Ripley, and Circe turned her back on me when I came near. Another horror movie scare—scales and tentacles and more eyes tattooed on the sleek, muscled plain of her back.
Circe held out her arms and I blinded the monsters, covering her in black silk. She looked better in silk. Her pool time had bought her strong swimmer’s shoulders that tapered to a narrow waist. The hem of the robe fell just under her ass, and the long legs that carried her were white and pure, as surprising as an unmarked canvas hanging in a museum. She wore no tattoos from heel to thigh, but her legs held my attention just the same.
Circe knotted the sash around her waist. “Did everything go all right?”
“I finished the job,” I said.
“Wonderful,” she said.
It wasn’t like we were talking about murder at all.
* * *
We entered the house. Spider Ripley went to dress. Circe didn’t. She seemed perfectly comfortable in her silk robe, and I was perfectly comfortable with her in it.
She led me to a large living room. A peaked wall of windows faced west. The view was beyond spectacular, only slightly marred by the barred security fence that surrounded the entire property.
Beyond the fence, the Pacific gleamed like a mirror under the setting sun. Jagged cliffs carved by wind and rain dropped to a beach hidden from view by the twisted skeletons of stunted cypress trees, but I had no feeling for the wind that had maimed them. All was still within the house.
There was no wind here at all. Still, the room was as tortured as the trees outside, the difference being that the room had been twisted by man. A circular staircase rose in one corner, writhing with barbed wrought iron railings. Lights grew on spiked steel stems. The walls and furniture were fashioned from carved redwood that was as dead as coffin wood, its live, earthy smell now no more than a faded rumor.
But there was life here, if you were willing to look for it. A bonsai tree sat on a low glass table, its limbs tortured by cunning twists of wire, harnessed just as brutally as the dead things.
The house exuded male pheromones, and I was willing to bet that they didn’t belong to Spider Ripley. Circe Whistler was the owner here, but her father had put his mark on this place and it was as indelible as the mark of the beast. Diabolos Whistler’s daughter could not erase it or cover it over with her own mark, try as she might. Circe’s father had claimed to be Satan’s successor, had built a cult with temples spread as far as Paris and Hong Kong and Rio de Janeiro, and even in death his presence was as unavoidable as the ripe black stench of decay.
I could feel it.
And I could smell it.
I opened the backpack and placed Diabolos Whistler’s severed head on the glass table, next to the bonsai tree. The cult leader’s face wore a twisted expression frozen somewhere between a sneer and a smile, but no length of cunning wire had trained it.
I had trained Whistler’s death grin.
I had done the job with a seven-inch U.S. Army K-bar knife.
“Fucking hell.” Circe’s nose wrinkled. “Couldn’t you have kept it on ice or something?”
It was the wron
g thing to say. I took a deep breath, and the stink of death burned in my lungs. Circe smiled as if she’d made a joke, but I wasn’t laughing. Not after what I d gone through. I wasn’t laughing at all.
I should have kept my mouth shut. I should have held that stinking breath in my lungs and not said a word. But I couldn’t do that.
“I didn’t much notice the stink,” I said. “Maybe because I stink, too. The last shower I had was at a hotel in Baja. That was four days ago. I drove straight through. I would have made it back sooner, but that would have meant flying, and I don’t think the folks at AeroMexico would have allowed my carry-on luggage. I bought a Toyota truck off some surf bum for the trip back. Paid way too much for it. It didn’t even have air-conditioning.
“Your father had it tougher, though. When I crossed the border, I duct-taped his head to the differential. That’s how he got the grease spot on his forehead and the burn mark on his cheek. But I don’t figure it bothered him much. He was already dead.”
“Okay,” Circe said. “Okay—”
“I just wanted you to know that I earned my money.”
“It appears that you did.” Circe knelt and stared into her father’s eyes. Her expressions was completely clinical, almost as serious as the one she’d worn on the cover of Newsweek.
“We’ll be running tests, you understand,” she said. “My father loved going to the doctor. The dentist, too. His medical records are nauseatingly detailed.”
“You act like I made this thing out of papier-mâché or something.”
“My father starting using doubles after he received his first death threats back in the Haight-Ashbury days. That was thirty years ago. Some of them were nearly identical, right down to the tattoos.” She leaned closer to the head, staring into those dead eyes. “All I’m saying is that I have to be sure. You can understand that. After all, we’re talking about a lot of money.”
“You never said anything about doubles. As far as I’m concerned, I fulfilled my contract. I killed the man who lived in Diabolos Whistler’s mansion in Los Cabos. I returned with his head, as per your instructions. Apart from the transportation problem, it was a fairly easy job. Your father was right where you said he’d be. He was all alone, unless you want to count those mummies stacked like so much cordwood in his library. If you want to know the details, he went pretty easy. I came up from behind and stabbed him just above the first vertebra. He gasped a little bit. Then he started mewling. It didn’t last more than a second or two, but it was enough to make an impression. To tell you the truth, he sounded more like a newborn babe than a seventy-three-year-old master of occult sciences.”
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